Image provided by: Rogue River Valley Irrigation District; Medford, OR
About Central Point herald. (Central Point, Or.) 1906-1917 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 14, 1911)
C E N T R A L P O IN T H E R A L D , T H U R S D A Y , D E C E M B E R 14, 1911 The Week In School. Prominenl Mdnufdclurer here. A man should be free to select his own physician. The responsibility is his.- Gladstone. 1 think it is much more wholesome for the public to take rare o f itself. Huxley. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Studebaker, o f South Bend, Ind., were here for a few days during the week the guests o f the Beall families, just south of town, the familien lieintf old time friend». Mr». Studebaker was a former Oregon girl, | But how ran we hope to do ao when the public »rhool» are rom in, to be run »omethin« after the following program which ,» Clipped from the Saturday , ha' ">K b« rn » " ‘J r“ IHt"i in I)oUK l«« county where her mother. Mr». Van 'lenl»,»< h. waa one o f the p.oneer »chool tea.h. TH, and Mr». Ann Beall waa one >f her pupils. Mr. Studebaker is head | of the great Studebaker Manufaetur- : ing company, makers o f all sorts o f j wheeled vehicles, including the popular I E. M. F. automobiles. He is on a tour of the coast now visiting his company’s agencies and while in the valley he i spent a day or two with Sullivan & I Hanley, who are agents for this county, j This is Mr. Studebaker’s first visit to the valley and he is so pleased with the country that he has declared his inten tion of returning next summer when he will enjoy a big hunt in the mountains with Tyson Beall and other friends. Mr. and Mrs. Studebaker left for the south on No. 16 Sunday morning. Evening Post. Ed.| Monday’s Adenoidal Day Bring bandages and salve; For Doctor Jones will cut away The adenoids you have. No doubt you will be overjoyed. When Doctor Jones is through. To know no fretful adenoid Again will trouble you. Tuesday will be Tonsil Day O f that please make a note; For Doctor Brown will rut away The tonsils from eac h throat. Bring cotton, lint and vaseline, This class meets sharp at ten, * And tonsils will he snipped off clean Nor trouble you again. Wednesday is Appendix Day For ( ’lasses A and B; When Doctor Smith will cut away This superfluity. Please don't forget the day, as said The classes meet at ten. Bring needles and a spool o f thread To sew you up again. Buy Red Cross Seals. The fight against consumption has broadened. It includes all Oregon, The fund obtained from the sale o f Red Cross Seals will be spent this year where it is contributed. This may mean new life to some victim o f the Great White Plague within your own Thursday’s Antitoxin Day acquaintance. So kindly he prepared; Suppose some one you knew were Bring gauze and antiseptic spray. stricken w ith tuberculosis and that one All right arms will be bared, became no longer useful, but a menace. Or left arms if you so elect. Would you be willing to contribute a Be punctual, pray do; few cents to help the sufferer back to For Doctor Puncture will inject health? The scrum shai^ at two. There are thousands o f unhelped vic Friday’s Vaccination Day tims of tuberculosis in Oregon. Other For fall and winter terms; thousands are exposed to infection. Those who have fresh scars will stay We must not only help the sick but we For antityphoid germs must protect the well. Red Cross Seals Half a billion’s the amount. sold at a cent each will provide a fund Classes meet at four. with which to finance the campaign to Doctor Green will make the count keep the Great White Plague away Doctor Gray will pour. from you out o f your home as well as Saturday's Reaction Day - to seek out those whom a little care Thermometers at three; may save. Bring stetho. copes and Doctor Gray Buy Red Cross Seals! Have a part Will make blood-counts to see in a splendid fight. Every seal is a How science triumphs o’er disease bullet. Eire bullets against disease. How antitoxins rule. Buy Red Cross Seals now! Paste one Now mark the weekly program,please on the back o f every letter you mail each is a message o f hope. You will And don't be late for school never have a larger, nobler opportunity to do real good at so little cost. Central Point Should be Représenle«! Drinks ink like a camel. Conklin Self Filling Fountain Pen at Eng land’s. 35tf Careless about Appendicitis In Central Point Many Central Point people have tomach or bowel trouble which is likely to turn into appendicitis. I f you have constipation, sour stomach, or g i ■ on the stomach, try simple buck thorn hark, glycerine, etc., as com pounded in Adler-i-ka, the new German appendicitis remedy. Mary A. Mee, druggist, states that A S IN G L E DOSE o f this simple remedy relieves bowel or j tomach trouble almost IN S T A N T L Y . A Redmond bank has made arrange ments to In ing in several carloads of sion .] oixl dairy stock for ranchers o f that section, following the same plan as R AI SI NG C H I C K S IN S N O W D R I F T S . tuat o f Bend capitalists in furnishing Here’s to the hero who braves blow, brood sows to farmers in that locality. snow and zero and raises broilers In Redmond, with a large areaof irrigated dfalfa growing all about it, should nature’s danger zone! Your first attempt at brooding chicks make an ideal dairy center. In snowdrifts? Well, keep your peepers on the Oregon apples grown at Talent by peeps, furnish the judgment, and here Houston Bros., captured a big prize at > are the main principles. the recent National Apple show at j Remember this is a nature fake Spokane. These growers got first stunt. Winter affords no range. Thus | prize for a carload o f Yellow Newtown extra room for air and exercise is apples. They carried away $300 cash, essential. merchandise worth $200 more, besides A brooder 0 by 3, with high, roomy banners and cups. hover and floor on one level, will bouse i , from thirty to forty chicks, breed con Rtdl [stole transfers. sidered, until weaned from heat and Ore. & Cal. Railroad Co. to A. moved to dry, cozy quarters. Bed with sandy loam until «hicks Weatherby, D., in Tp. 38, 1 W ; know food from indlgestibles, then use $ I 08.22, cut clover, alfalfa or straw in sun par l\ I. N eff et ux to Frank M. Amy, lor for scratching. W. !>., in Medford; $1500. Bird babies sleep much at first and W. H. Stinson, trustee to D. T. must have warm, even temperature. JTse a regulator on hover, heat from Lawton, W. I)., in Medford; $10. 90 to 100 degrees at first, chick'« ne W. G. Aldenhagen et ux to C. J. tlons the indicator. Olson, W. D., lot IS of Eagle Heights Too cold, the chicks pile tip; too Fruit Farms add; $10. warm, they pant and desert hover; W. B. Jackson et ux to John Bil lings. I)., lot 0, blk. 1 of Jackson’s add. to Medford; $650. Harry <\ Stoddard et ux. to R. W. Prescott, \V. O.. in Eagle Heights Fruit Farms; $2000. Ansel Gilson et ux. to W. W. Cam eron, \V. D., SO acres in Sec. 2 7, Tp. 39, 3 W ; $10. Lott a I. Ford et ux. to Fred A. McDonald, W. D., 60 acres in Sec. 26, Tp. 37, 4 W; $10. [These articles be reprinted illustrations must not without special p e r m is and W l i e e z i n K i " I I I » lunj rs i n d i c a t e s t h a t is (ill s t r u c t i i i K I I I » a i l ' p a s s - P u b l ic H e a l t h C o m m it t e e , Oregon State Federation of Women’s T o exploit the resources and aid In the development of the American northwest, the Northwest Develop nient league will place a permanent exhibit, o f the products of the soil lakes, rivers, forests and mines of the various states in a great display mom and show them to thousands of people who pass through and vinit the city of St. Paul the gateway t< the northwest territory. This state has been Invited t occupy several hundred square feet of this spare without cost as the St Paul association of commerce has en tored Into a contract with the league to furnish the display rooms In one of the new buildings o f that city rental free, if the league will fur nlsh. light and maintain the display The offer has been accepted. C’en tral Point should avail herself of this opportunity o f getting her pro ducts before St. Paul’s resident and traveling public. The plan is simply to show pvnrj person who transfers in St. Paul «► well as those who visit and live then a comprehensive exhibit of the pro ducts of the following states Min nesota. North Dakota, South Dakota Montana, Idaho, Washington and Oregon. The exhibit will be con ducted without prejudice, the leagu« publishing uniform Information about each state in attractive book lets, distributing them and securing the names of all visitors which wil he furnished the ( ’omuiercinl club» and state immigration officials of each state. "W e ought to show from ten to twenty thousand people every mont I this exhibit we are sure we wIP show more than five thousand or tiie average and during the tourist season as high as thirty thousand a month." said Secretary Will A Camp bell. More than 100,000 people r year, many o f them right on theli way to look over ( ’nnada. will get our literature, a lot o f personal In formation, see the exhibit, have theli names sent to people who will follow them up and become wise as to what ts possible in the American north best. "It Is the bigg« at thing which ha^ happened for a long time and the St Paul Association of Commerce shows the breadth o f Its work for better agriculture and a better developed northwest by the generou softer of space In the great Commerce build Ing." C ltlbs. M A L IL A U D 'S SYKIM |l M I S » M D K K IIorX O lis t i l » pill ej t m s o t h a t it <';m 1». » '•Ululi.I'll l ip ¡111(1 e j e c t e d . P r i c e 50 « ' ¡ m il $ 1 . 0 0 p e i • b o t t l e . S old Home dressed dolls at Lesmeister’ s.37 Holiday books and stationery at Les- meister’s studio. 31t37 Begin. Jan. 3. Continue Four Weeks. YOU ARE INVITED Every citizen o f Oregon is cordially invited to attend the Bnort courses « » f the Oregon Agricultural College, beginning Jan. 3. Eleven distinctive courses will be offered in Agriculture, Mechanic Arts, Domestic Sci ence and Art, Commerce, Forestry a n d Music. Every course is designed to H E L P the student in his daily work. Make this a pleasant and profitable winter out ing. N« j tuition. Reasonable accommodation«. For beautiful illustrated bulletin, address H. M. T E N N A N T . Registrar, Corvallis, Ore. F A R M E R 'S B U S IN E S S C O U R S E BY C O R R E S P O N D E N C E 31t37 Christmas Holiday Fares OF THE Southern Pacific Account the Christmas and N ew Y ear Holidays, a special rate fo r students and others has been authorized from all points o f One and One-Third Fare For the Round Trip. SALE DATES FOR STUDENTS. From Albany, Corvallis, Forest Grove Mt. Angel Dec. 20th, and 21st. From McMinnville and Salem, Dec. 21st and22d From Dallas: Dec. 22nd and 23rd. From Eugene: Dec 16th and 17th. Finat return lim it January 8, 1912. OTHER SALE DATES Between all stations in Oregon and California where regular fares are less than $15.00 December 23, 24, 25, 30 and 31, 1911 and Janu ary 1, 1912. For full particulars call on nearest S. P. Agent, or write to, John M. Scott, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon. by Mimi M a n , A. M ee. A BROODER IN A B L IZ Z A R D — 23 DF.OREI.S B E L O W ZERO. natural, they lie content like little lambs and play peep with you from the hover. I f languid at morn, It’s lamp fumes, soot, bad air, too much heat or supper or lice, and crushed chicks show that, heat’s too low. When chick begins to assert itself, eats, runs, »crutches, you begin to ramlify temperature more and more as chick is able to bear it, letting in abundance of fresh air without drafts and later letting them run Into a dry outside apartment, free from drafts, open on top to free air and sun. Winter furnishes no worms, bugs, seeds, grass, grit, so you must nature fake. Let chick assimilate yolk first day, then Rentier a little grit and flue dry sweet breadcrumbs. Lend from this to good chick feed, then on to wheat and O f all Improvement.«» that can be «•racked corn, grain always thrown made In the farm home to lighten wo into tli«' litter to Induce exercise. man’s work and make it convenient Cottage cho«‘sp, fine cut bon«», raw perhaps the most desirable Is that moat and beef scraps are substitutes which will give a handy and alum dant supply o f water and. coupled with this, drainage facilities which will make it possible to dispose of waste water without the use o f palls. It is a pretty poky farmer who spends valu able time pumping water for stock by hand and lugging It In palls, and it would seem that on any farm where more enlightened methods are in vogue for watering the stock a Ilk«» Improvement should be made in the water system in use In the house Such n convenient water system should not be viewed as n luxury, but merely an Improvement which common con sidération and decency demand. A Canadian cow, a Jersey, hua re cently closed a second year’s test which entitles her to the title o f best cow o f any breed in the Dominion Her name Is Rosa Undo of Old Basing, and she is owned by a breeder o f Red Deer, Alberta. In her first year’s test, which closed February 25, 1910, she gave 10,870 pounds of 5.37 per cent milk, which yielded 719.0 pounds of 80 per cent butter. In the second year’s test, which closed May 23, 1911, she gave 11,270 pounds of 5.3 per cent milk, from which 802 pounds of 80 per cent butter were made. Then cream and sklmnillk sold in the two years brought $523.05, and two calves were produced which could not be bought at $250 apiece. Tills cow paid? It would seem so. An amusing If somewhat unique In Ident was related to the writer the other day by a real estate agent setting forth the reason why nn«>thor agent with whom he was acquainted fail«»«! to land a party of a score or more of friends whom he had escorted many miles to a section most o f the merits o f which were on the land company's ««Ivertlsing matter. The agent In question looked the proposl tlon over pretty carefully and advise«! his friends not to buy. telling his real estate friend some time later that he was convinced that any man who would defraud his friends by selling them such land was a reprobate and would go straight to hell The writer has been at a loss to trace the do* adence In the belief In a hell fire with the alarming development o f the real estate business, but In the above Incident there seems to Is? a clew. It nay be suggested for the protection of he greedy unwary that ministers everywhere devote one sermon a Incl Good cheer at Christmas time de month to the mooted subject pends on our bodily comfort. So he lentally It would take the kinks out o f sure your home is well heated by using many a hearer, put a curb on the real Hock Springs coal Ellsworth has just ♦»state swindlers and keep a lot o f hard earned money where It rightly received another big car. 34tf belongs. Chop suet for mince-meat at the Hand painted gifts at the Pasadena ’cntral Point Meat Market. Shop. 36 U6 » •r es. 0 . A. C. Short Courses i S N O W B A L L S HATCH ED ON « HUls-TM » « PA Y . for bugs and worms, but must be fed sparingly at first. A mixture of bran, mids and cornmeal, two o f bran to one o f others, should be before them to peck at and afford cheated chicks a chance t«» fill up. Water, grit and charcoal are every day necessaries, l.ettuce and tender sprouted oats are prime greens Fet'd four or five times dally nt first; alternate feeds. and f«'«'«l according to necessity and no more. DON’T S. Don’t argue with a know it all. Don’t f«»rget that business Is b usiness and life Is life. You are here to live as well ns to make money, <o don’t r«>b life o f Its sweet honey. Don’t pose as a martyr when an other wins a prize A real sport takes bitter medicine with a ¿mile and licks the other fellow after while. Don’t complitn about chicken being tough tf you raised It yourself. Vnclent hens are ba«'k numbers on up to dare plants. Don’t buy high priced eggs ind set them under lightweight hens Ileus differ In heat, ao bo discreet. 1 4 Two Weeks More Closing O ut Sale AT CUTHBERT’S $40,000 stock of FU R N ITU R E , RUGS, R A N G E S Prices . Sacrificed It’s up to you to save over half on what you need. ] it’s a real bargain.