Image provided by: Rogue River Valley Irrigation District; Medford, OR
About Central Point herald. (Central Point, Or.) 1906-1917 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 9, 1916)
CENTRAL P O IN T f H F P A I P NOV. C entral P oint H erald 9 , 191 « FIGHTING Af, ELEPHANT. A Bishop’s Story of an Exciting Ex- + $i<9‘9 9 9 9 $ i9 ‘9 <9 9 9 9 9 9 4 9 4 ♦ parlance In Africa. The strongest opponents to the ad 9 ADVANCE IN FARM VALUES. <9 W m . K. B row er . Publisher vance o f civilization In west Central <9 The advance In farm values <v Africa, says Bishop Lainbutb, the 4 A n I noependent local newspaper devoted to has been almost beyond belief <9 Brummel Outshone and Methodist missionary, are the wild ele 4 in the interests of Central Point and the Kojfue , Beau recent years, says the Farm 9 Iciver Valley. phants. They breuk dowii feints, 4 Then Snubbed the Regent. and Fireside In 19u0 the census <9 trample gardens, pull up trees and <9 found the average acre value for <v I HIS PAPF k la kept on file at the D ake A d I even telegraph poles, because they ob 4 1 VERT (HI NO AGENCY, ÌNC-, 427 ! the country *15.57. Ten years 9 ♦ TE ha\e sold over 200 pieces of popular Booth Muiii Street, : Angeles. and 779 Market j ject to anything strange In their fa Street, San Franeiico. where contracta for adver* i STORY OF A FAMOUS CRAVAT. ♦ later It was *32.40. in 1912 It <9 miliar haunts. One savage monster sheet music. Have you secured your ttaioa can be made for it ♦ was given as *30.25, iu 1913 as 4 nearly wrecked a small steam launch share ? The racks w ill not hold the <9 *38.10, In 1914 as *40.10, In 1915 <8> P u b lish e d E v e r y T h u r sd a y . After Hie Hietoric Quarrel With Wales belonging to the mission on the upper <9 as *40.85 and In 1910 as *45.55. 4 Sub«« iption price, $1.00 per year, in advance. music we have in stoc k, say nothing of It ls explained that the un- <9 the Beau Won a Sartorial Triumph reaches of the Kongo. The boat, with three white men, In the new music w e have on the road. Get precedential Increase In the last 9 That Almost Choked Hie Royal Mae- cluding the bishop, and a crew of five yours while getting is good. Y o u r own sel year—almost *5 an acre—has 4 H ! I tar With Envy and Dismay. negroes, hud tied up on the edge of a been caused in part by a reac- <9 ection of any of our 15c sheet music, vocal or It was Beau Brummel who was de- forest in a quiet bend of the river, A tlon In the south, following a 9 instrumental for only 5c each, in lots 20, or I scribed as “ the glass of fasblou and stout plank s,as laid as a gangway temporary depression at the he- 4 the mold of form,” and today there are from the how to the hank, and the 4 ginning of the war, and in part 7'/2C each in less quantify. Think of being ordinarily only two things which the crew worked until nightfall cutting 9 by the stimulus given by war <9 able to buy mucic for less than w e paid for it and piling flrewood for the boat’s fur name of the famous dandy of the Eng <9 prices for the exportable surplus. IRONING DAY MENU. wholesale before the raise. Sale continues nace. Then they came on deck for lish court suggests. One Is an arbiter <9 4 | of fashion, the other the Incident In their evening meal. The three white 9 4 9 9 9 $ > until Novem ber 15th. Come in and try the T U U S D A Y -B R E A K F A S T . which Brummel asked o f a companion men were already at dinner when a Bllced Peaches Cornmeal Mush. music on our piano. Make yourself at home. I of the Prince of Wales, “ Who Is your fearful yell from the natives brought Vegetable llueli. Bacon Rollsi CANNING PUMPKINS. them out of the cabin to see a large 1 fat friendV’ Brown Bread Toast. Coffee. Iu 183(1 Beau Brummel still was Uv- elephant viciously attucklng the wood- Proper Blanching and Sterilization Ee- LUNCHEON I lng, and the New York Mirror, a week pile. The blacks went ashore with Cold Tongue. Potato Salad. •ential to Success. Jlukir.g powder Biscuits. ly puhlleation “ devoted to literature firebrands snatched out of the cook [Prepared by United States department of Iced (jrurige Tea. Cup C ake* and the tine arts,” printed a biograph stove to drive the monster away. But agriculture.] D IN N E R . ical sketch of him as a tigure In con be paid no attention to them until he In making pie fillings of pumpkin and Jellied Bouillon. temporary history. Heading It today had demolished the woodpile, when he squash they are cut Into convenient Baked Stuffed Blueflsh. makes very reul a character now little whipped one man with his trunk heels sections and the cores and skins re Ilaelie.. Browned Potatoes. over head Into the river and chased the moved. The pumpkin or squash Is Stewed Carrots. Cucumber Salad, | more than a tradition. iced Watermelon. "F or an obscure individual without others hack Into the boat. then cooked for thirty minutes and re Thundering after, with red gullet duced to pulp and packed in the glass I fortune or runk to have conceived the Idea o f placing himself at the head of open, tusks Hashing and trunk flailing Jar or tin can, adding one cupful of Tasty Pastry. society hi a country the most thor- the air, he planted both tremendous sugar and one teaspoonful of salt to ^ S A I.I.Y I.U.NN.—Ono ami one-half oughly aristocratic In Europe, relying, fore feet on the gangplank. It bent each quart of pulp. Partially seal the cupfuls of Hour, two ounces of too, upon no other weapon than well until It cracked uuder his weight, hut Jar or tin can nnd sterilize In the hot THE PEASANT’S RIDDLE. ! huttcr, fiiut of milk, one teaspoon SACKING A THEATER. directed Insolence; for the same indl held stoutly, although the whole boat water hath outfit for one hour. Then fill of suit, three eggs, one half yeast careened and seemed ready to capsize. vUliml to have triumphed splendidly And How the Sicilian Kept the Prom remove and tighten the covers and in cuke ami one-quarter cupful of sugar. What New Yorkers In 17S5 Did For an In another moment the elephant had vert the glass Jars to see that the tops ise He Made to the King. Scald milk, let cool uud when uboui over the highest and the m ightiest-to Offensive Play. crossed the plank and was astride It fit tightly. I f tin cans are used cap have maintained a contest with royalty A Sicilian laborer told us tills story. 100 degrees, or blood warm, stir In the Here ls nn account o f the sacking of with hind feet on the shore and fore butter, sugur, suit and Hour, heat well, Itself and to liuve come off victorious He says hls mother told it to him and tip. a theater iu New York from the Ga then nild yeast cake, that has been dis cu n hi that struggle—for such a one feet on the boat. There he stood, In preparing squash or pumpkin for when he was a child. It sounds like solved in one lablcspoonfiil of worn, no ordinary faculties must have been afraid to advance or retreat, a gigantic canning, to be Inter fried, creamed or one of Grimm's tales and is undoubt zette o f that city of May 3, 1705: "The play advertised to he acted last water, ami eggs; heat live minutes, demanded,” the Mirror aafil In Its Issue Image of baffled rage. In hls fury he baked, the Bquash or pumpkin is cut edly very old folk lore: began stamping with those great fore Monday evening having glveu offense pour In well greased square paus and I o f June 4, 183(1. Into uniform sized cubes, blanched In “ My mother told me that lin e tlieru It will ho well to recall here that feet, nnd the boat rocked crazily back boiling water for ten minutes and was a king who saw a peasant «'ork to sundry nnd divers inhabitants of let rise In warm place for three hours, which doubles the hulk; hake In mod | George Bryan, Brummel's father, was and forth. plunged quickly Into cold water. Pack lng iu a field and asked him ho«' much 1 this city, who thought It highly Im Wluit might have happened if the erate oven for thirty minutes Send r.ord North's secretary; that the son the Jar or can full of the cubes, adding be earned. And the peasant said. proper that such entertainment should to table hot This can tie prepared the lat i t-.ii and later at Ballol college ac monster had come aboard with all his water containing one level teaspoonful ‘Four carliul a day.’ 'What do you do he exhibited at this time o f public dis night before uml ready to hake fur quired a reputation for being a “ swell frenzied weight can only he Imagined, of salt to each quart, and fill In the with your 4 carlinl?' asked the king tress, when great numbers of poor peo for the captain by this time had fetch dresser,’’ and tliut still later he was breukfust. space about the cubes with boiling hot 'One I eat, the second 1 put at interest, ple can scarce find means o f subsist Florida Corn Pone.— Into cups of favorite of the Prince of Wales, who ed the only rifle on hoard and. risking water. Place the rubbers on the cans the thitd I return, and the fourth I ence, whereby many persons might he rornmeul mix one teaspoonfnl o f salt was to become George IV. of Great all on one shot, had thrust the muzzle and caps tn position, hut not tight If throw away.’ This puzzled the king, tempted to neglect their business and almost Into the gaping mouth and and it teaspoon fill o f sugar Scald Britain. The Mirror related the fa tin cans are used cap and tip. Ster and lie asked the peasant wbat he squander that money « ’hich ts neces with two cupfuls of boiling wutcr and miliar story of the "fat friend,” lrnmor pulled the trigger. sary to the payment of their debts and lllze In hot water hath for one hour meant. And the peasant said: Fortunately the bullet lodged in the tallzcil In a Punch cartoon, explaining let It stand until It becomes lukewurui “ 'I buy my food with one. I feed the support of their families, a rumor The Jars or cans are then removed and base of the brain. The elephant tum Then add In,if an ounce of compressed the circumstances which led up to It. covers tightened and the Jars Inverted my children with the second, and that was spread about the town that If the yeast dissolved In a little cold water A mutual friend had dared Brummel bled to hls knees and Into the n-ater is putting money out at Interest. I ( piny went on the audience would meet If too stiff reduce II with warm water to give nn order to Wales, who was next the hank, bis bulk thrusting the to cool. Certain substances in some foods can feed my old father with the third, nnd with some disturbance from the multi to a consistency to retain its form, then prince regent, and at a dinner the bout aside so suddenly that It snapped that is paying hack what has been tude. then put in a halting pan ami let It dandy said to him, “ Wales, ring the the bowlines nnd sent the men stagger attack the container and dissolve the given me. I give the fourth to my “ This prevented the greatest part of tin, which then enters the food and Is rise four hours; hake lit a moderate bell!" The prince did so and when Ing to tlie gunwale. wife, and glvlug her money is throw those who Intended to have been there considered harmful. The use of lac oven until thoroughly done Better servant appeared said, “ Show Mr At the next government trading post ing it away.’ from going. However, many people eaten fresh uml warm, hut Is very nice Brummel to Ids carriage." It was t the captain had two splendid tusks to quer lined cans preveuts this solvent " 'That's a good riddle,’ said the came, and the play was begun, but ton. oil after It Is a day or two old. repay tin* regent for this public luimll show as the result of hls cool daring; action to a great extent. Such products king, 'and I must tell It to my friends ■ soon Interrupted by the multitude, who ( In esc Square*. (Jut of a pint ot lat Ion that Beau Brummel uttered tils hut, to hls astonishment, he was ar as rhubarb, berries, pumpkins, squash Promise mo that you won't tell any ! hurst open the doors nnd entered with and beets exert a strong corrosive ac milk take enough to wet up n quarter famous question the next day in tli rested for shooting the elephant with one the answer till you have seen my ! noise and tumult The audience es of a cupful each of Hour urn) coin stre"t The prince wns growing cor out a license. It was with great dlffl tlon on tin and should be packed in face a hundred times.’ So the peasant caped In the best manner they could. MHI, h. seasoned with a half teaspoon pulent and sensitive of the fuct, so culty that the government official » a s tho lacquered cans. Much experience fill each of salt mid paprika Add this feud between the two was launched convinced that the animal had been in ¿mining vegetables and fruits Is promised, and the king went back to | Many lost their hats nnd other articles hls palace and asked them the riddle ‘ of raiment. A hoy had hls skull frac- to the remainder of the milk scalded with the remark. shot In self defense. Even then he necessary before the canning of meat Nobody could answer, hut one remem In a double holler Stir constantly un ! tured nnd was yesterday trepanned. It Is u 11 old story up to tills point, but confiscated the Ivory.—Youth's Com products ls undertaken, and the opera bered seeing the king talk to a peas ' Death Is his. til the mixture thickens then occasion Several others were tlon should he thoroughly understood the Mirror proceeded with some facts panion. ant, so he went to the peasant nnd ally for twenty minutes Add the yolks which probably have never been pub sorely set upon nnd injured. But we Meats, unless thoroughly sterilized and asked him about it. P.ut the peasant o f two eggs beaten up with a quarter llslied since. Hruuiuiel boasted that heard of no lives lost. The multitude properly canned, are liable to produce said: 'I can’t tell you. I promised the cupful of creamed butter and a ha If lie would put the prince regent out of CARE WITH ELECTRICITY. highly poisonous products of decompo king I wouldn’t tell the answer till 1 Immediately demolished the house and ctlpftll of prated cheese. As soon ns fashion, made Ills plans at once and carried the pieces to the common, tlflon. Proper blanching, sterilization these are rooked turn out Into a shal sprang his coup at n brilliant hall Extreme Caution Should Be Uaad In etc., of course are essential to success had seen his face a hundred times.' »h ere they consumed them In a bon 'Oh, that's easy!' said the king's friend low pan and when cold cut In shapes given by the Duchess of Devonshire la canning any kind of fruit, vegetables and he took n hundred lire out o f hls fire.” Handling All Fixturea. la y these In a baking pan apart from In the Mirror's own words: “ Electricians think nothing of touch or meats. pocket, and every piece of money had each other, cover thickly with grated "W hen the whole assembly were con ing with their Ungers a 110 volt or 220 American Inventive Ingenuity. the king's face stamped on It. cheese, reheat and brown In a quick versing upon his supposed disgrace, A Conor«»« W«ll Platform. volt A. C. or I). O. switch to ascertain Of the epoch making inventions of "So the peasant told the king's friend oven. Brummel suddenly stood In the midst whether It Is alive or not," says the A well platform made o f concrete Is the answer to the riddle, nnd the king's the world during the past fifty years, o f them. Could It he Indeed Brum Electrical Experimenter. "On the oth ono of the most pleasing and satisfac forty-eight In number. Americans are met? Could It tie mortal who thus ap er hand it Is claimed In a number of tory Improvements I have ever made friend went back to the palace mid snid to the king, ‘I can guess your rid credited with thirty-five which Include peared with sueli an enclncture of ra t* < <\) W * / authentic cases on record that 110 to ray farm, writes a contributor to dle now,’ and he did. Then the king the telephone, typewriter, cash register. Hunt glory about his neck? Every eye volts, such ns Is used for ordinary light the Farm Progress. A frame four feet became angry and snid: 'You couldn’t Incandescent lamp, talking machine, was upon him. fixed In stupid adnilru lng circuits, bus sufficed to produce fa I square nnd four Inches deep ls built tloh; every tongue, as It slowly reeov tal results to a human being. There and placed on s clean level space of have guessed It. That peasant has electric furnace reduction, electrolytic broken Ills promise." So the friend had alkali production, transparent photo ered from Its speechless paralysis, fill EXERCISE AND HEALTH. fore It behooves eveiy one to take the to tell the king how he had fooled the graphic film, motion picture machine, tered forth, 'What h cravat!’ " utmost care In handling electrical ap peasant.” —Cleveland Plain Dealer. buttonhole sewing machine, carborun And then the description o f the ern pa rat us of any nature, no matter 8imple Rules For Developing the Body dum, chain stitch shoe sewing ma vat which confounded the guests at whether It Is a small toaster or an In • nd Keeping “ Fit." chine, single type composing machine, nocent looking electric light switch of "It Isn’t m*tvssnn to k I t © * lot of the Duchess o f Devonshire's ball: Also Spoke tn Devon. continuous process match machine, “ There It stood, smooth and stiff, yet the push button variety. time t«> tin* J«»l* of Looping fit/* said Though “ some" Is recognized as an chrome tanning, disk plow (modern 'A good point to keep tu mind would flu* physical director o f West i'otnt light amt almost transparent; delicate Americanism today, It has really been type), welt machine, electric lamp, re Military n<mloiny. “ Ten or fifteen min* as the nmslu o f Ariel, yet ttrtn as the lie to exercise extreme caution In ma borrowed from us, one of our verbal cording adding machines, celluloid, au lit is of sotting np oxoi’ctsc In tin* morn spirit o f Itegulus; bonding with the iill’tiIntlux all lamp sockets or switches emigrants that have found u wider ap tomatic knot tying machine, machine ing and ii walk every day not neeea- grace of Apollo’s looks, yet erect with during or directly after a severe storm plication in a new environment and hire* the majesty o f the Olympian Jove for making barbed wire. etc.--Popul*r which may have blown down high volt mo ills a long one. hut one In which visit us now with a "Made In U. s. A." without a wrinkle, without nn Indents Science Monthlv. age «Ire s so ns to cause them to drop v- u iiuiivh hrl; hly Ilk«» a soldier, with stamp on them. The word Is still part What a cravat! The prince re across low tension wires supplying your head mul chest up and your tdioul- tton ground. Two blocks o f two Inch ma of the vernacular of De"on tTelgn ders hack will work wonders. Po you gent saw and shook, and, uttering a house circuits. valley district), where you may he Diving Dee Credit. "Those having electric lights In their terial are cut so as to make a twelve greeted by "It did rain zum isoniei," know why so many men are narrow fa llii g u rg le fro in lam entìi th è » a d d is i Inch square. Ivi g » h Id i surround ed bis ro v a i tlio ra x " I presume Mr. Orabcoln. the emi homes should always exercise the chested and weak? It Is because they to Indicate the extent of a recent down Underneath these Is placed a frame nent capitalist, poses ns a self made greatest care III manipulating any of iicNei I iuno given themselves a chance he n a * h e s n l to w h lsp o r » I t t i d iam ay pour. Devonshire hns furnished the man?" h lm ! W h a t a g r a v a ti' T h e tri the devices connected to such service ten Inches square and two and oue- to hreal he and never have given their flitted States with other verbal emi unipli w a s c o m p le te ." "W ell. no. Mr. Grnbshaw frankly n the bathroom especially they should half Inches deep. It will he noticed muscles enough exercise. T h e M lrro r ad d isi that th è B rin ce o f never touch the socket or wall switch that this arrangement will form a one grants. such ns "guess." "ealklate” admits that some of Ills biggest deals "Many people, men, women and chil and "reckon." all now branded as could not have been put through with while standing In the bathtub or with Inch shoulder for the blocks to rest dren, art» semi Invalids most of their W a le s sont ib i em Issa ry to Beau Bruni American goods —l.ondon Chronicle. out the aid of his lawyers."—Blrmlng wet feet on a floor where there Is any upon and also give the platform a half lives heoau.se of the lack of h few min luci to te a m th è secret o f thè »u n d e r Inch slope In all directions from the ham Age-IIerald. utes of dally exerelse ami also because fui crea tim i In n e c k w e a r uml flint water, as these accidents happen at the center. Since the two renter blocks they have never been taught a proper B riin im el seut back w ord, " T e li y o u r most unexpected moment. They are practically Immune from danger If they must be removed to admit the pump posture and earring«» such, for In m aster tliat voti lu n e seen bis m aster, It w as not uiitil hls dehts fo rce d litui would Just tnke the trouble to see that cylinder they should be tapered slight * 4 + 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 t + + 4 + t i t . H t . 4 . < . i i ^ ^ 4 ' > + 4 4 H 4 4 . ! - i 4 4 + 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 * ^ stance. as we Insist upon at all timet ly ou the outside edges. hey always stand on ii dry floor. In cadet« a position in which every to ttee fro m K iig la m l and to take thè One and one half sacks o f cement organ of the 1 hm 1> | s held In its proper olw eure poslttou o f B rltlsh consti! at are sufficient for a platform of this place, with ample space to carry on its Cacti. In l-’ rance. w h e re he con traeteti TREES ON PASTURE. size, and by adding old fence wire for own particular function without re m ore deh ts and Analty dltsl Insane In reinforcement and an anchor bolt for striction. Mini in which every muscle of 18 10 . th at thè secret o f th è c r a v a t l>e Poor Location R««ult* In Lo«« of Fer the pump brace you will have "a thing carne k now ti T h e M lrro r salii: the I hn I v I s furnishing Its own trail« tility. of beauty and a Joy forever." “ T h e re « a s forniti a fte r hls depar- port at Ion. so to speak and not depend Perhaps one o f the greatest sources ♦ ing upon other tnu»cU»s to do for it tu re w rttteu upon a sheet o f pn|>er ♦ f loss o f fertility from pasture »oils Corn Silage Compact. what it was int«»mled It should do for tlissi hls lutile th è f o l l o » Ing eplgram ♦ results from the poor location of ahnde >f s.-orn 'S tari li ls thè m an.' ♦ Eight tone o f corn silage can he etor j Itself. ♦ trees and hntsh. aeeordlng to the au ''T h e c ra v a t o f Brtim tnel « a s m erely ed In the same space required by one * ♦ "Proper posture and carriage, with ♦ shoulder« «Apiare, chest arched, head star-h ed 1 le n c e fo rtti staroh w a s filtro thor of the “Grazing Industry of the ton o f hay or. approximately. 4(8' cubic ' ♦ Blue Grass Region," a bulletin recently feet One ton of alfalfa hay contain« , ducasi lu to e v o ry c ra v a t In E u ro p e ."— etc« t am! body well stretched from the ♦ published by the department o f agrl about 1.800 pounds dry mstter or 1.000 ' ♦ waist up, will o f their own account K an *as C ity Tim es. ♦ ulture. Trees and brush, he states, pcuude digestible nutrients: eight tons contribute much toward relieving our hould always he set on the higher of well restored corn silage contain I St. Bernard Oogs. j , .pi»» ..f the many petty and not *ew The trne St Bernard dog orlgltiated portions o f the fleld ami not along the ■lout 4 . 2(81 pounds dry mstter or 2.8(8' o f the serious ills from which they luniks o f running streams, as so often pound* digestible nutrients. There ♦ are now »uffertng They nn* the foun tu the fourteenth eentury. ts-iug a ♦ s the case. With good grass the ant fore the same s>aoe will store nearly dation of robust health ami should be cross Is'tneen a sheph *rvl dog front ♦ nulls do not grste more than one-third three times as much digestible nutri ♦ Insisted upon in children from the very Wales and a Sontidlnnvlati crosshrced. ♦ the time. The rest of the time Is ents In the form of corn silage na In beginning until they become a habit balf Pane and half l ’yrenoan mastiff ♦ pent lying down or stnudhig Iu the the form of alfalfa ♦ The last pure descendant o f the trlbe slid as such will dlsplneo the disease ♦ bade fighting fllo« Hence much of nus biirled Is-iu-Hth an avalanche In breeding, alouchy habit now ho preva ♦ 1.50 the manure that 1« made docs not get Dwerf Fruit Tree*. IHlil. ♦ lent among people of all age« and sts si k directly on the land that produced D warf fruit trees are ornaments! There ls a perfect a|<ecluien of a true th us \\ orld « Work si Bernard dog In the Natnral lllstory the grit«*. If the manuro produced and easily cared for; they fruit much * hlle the animals are not grazing Is eoi’ner than standard trees nml are muséum at Berne, where the stuffed ♦ deposited on the to|>a of the hilts it» particularly suitable for small gardens ♦ T h s rs A rs O ther*. laaly of the fanions Barry ls presorved ♦ " It 1 very strange that no one has Tlierv ls | lent y of st Bernard hlood beneficial effect* on the gras« mar be The quality of the fruit Is equal to ♦ ted for several rods from the hill that o f standard trees and with protwr ever l> • al le to rind ( ’iipts’.n Kidd's lefT. however, crotHil wlth other car* will t>e superior sides. It ts easyi.ty? believe that it one- treasure. «trains and the famé o f the brecd Dwarf cherry trees will produce a half to tw '-thirds o f the inahure Is 'Oh. »e ll. Captain K dd Ii i’t the • an never t>ert»h. cat from pasture fields and none Is crop of fruit In two or three years only limn who has put Ids tins Med the crop* must gradually de The sweet varieties are the «'congest reul estate and couldn’t get It cut.” — I Mau Is Immortal till hit work la groweri and are as twautlful ae any teriorate. bt Louie Fust Dispatch. done Williams. : shrub when In flower ♦ ECLIPSED A PRINCE 2 0 0 Pieces Sheet Music Sold w T /g k it c h e n ^ ¿ C upboard •99999999994 Music at less than Cost H u ll’s Music S to re A Our 19 16= 19! 7 Offer î All Oregon Papers Central Point Herald 1 year $1.50 Evening Telegram 3 months 1.00 The Leading Republican Paper of the State Rural Spirit i year 1.00 A weekly paper for the fanner and stockman Poultrv Life 1 year Devoted to progressive poultry culture in the Northwest Total Value $4.00 py Into All Four Papers for $ 2 .5 0 Actual Saving on OiTer of $1.50 : I : i i