Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 14, 1913)
1? 3 ALCOHOL 3 PEN CENT. AVegefablePreparalionforAs similaling (iicFootfantlRcguta ting Uie Sumachs andBowctsof Promotes DitfestionJCkerful ncss and Rest-Contains neither OpiumMorplune nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. flimita Seed" Mx-Smna Jtuvrminr- . ItiCaitoualeSik Cltnifint 'Sugars Hw&jrww ttmn wis aoLi. w AnprfcctRcmedv forCfmsftoa tion , Sour Stomaeh.Dlarrtioea Worms ,Coitvulsions.revcrisiv ao or nessarulLOSSOFSiLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORKL Exaet Copy of Wrapper. It ,. ' Tana mrrr wa NORTH NOW IN FULL- BLAST Why not plan your Summer Vacation at this wonderful resort, reached by rail to Portland via A Till I S.Kt) DOWN" THE IsfcaJl'ASS U1 Columbia AND Steamer Trip dowm the Columbia via O. W. R. & N. Steamers "T. J. Potter" or "Hassalo", daily except Sunday. Surf Bathing, Fishing Tents and cottages for rent Good " hotel accomodations. Excellent restaurant service on boats. INFORMATION FURNISHED ON APPLICATION TO J. B. HUDDLESTON, Agent. Marred Made r v A scarred or scratched table, or a cnair on which the finish is marred, or any woodwork where the finish isn't what you would like, can be made new with ACME QUALITY VARNO-LAQ It's also good for floors. It will stand hard wear, because it's made from the best floor varnish. Varno-, Lac not only renews, but it also stains and varnishes at , one application. You can change oak or pine to a . mahogany or walnut or dark oak finish, or any of the expensive hard wood finishes. And it's easy to do I you can do it yourself. Our book, "Home Decorating" tells you how to do all kinds of home painting at trifling cost. Ask for a free copy. Case Furniture Company, HEPPNER, OREGON am For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years Era ii TMI CCNTAUH COHMHYi HIW 0 CITY. . A REST ocean Surfaces New BEACH GOOD CHEESE MADE FROM BUTTERMILK In bulletins from tho Wisconsin ex periment station the making of cheese from buttermilk was pretty fully de scribed, says Hoard's' Dairyman. Tula caused somewhat of a stir In the dairy world, ami since it results in the utili sation of large quantities of butter milk wasted every year it Is well worthy of consideration. Buttermilk makes a very acceptable cheese, nud the profit in the enter prise will depend entirely upon wheth- V Photo by American Press Association. Speaking generally, the agricul tural shows In England, especially the exhibits of tine live stock, at tract more attention than they do In America, since the breeding of good specimens of the domestic an imals lias been pursued for centu ries there. Even In the preat city of London, biggest In the world, the exhibits of cows, sheep, horses, etc., attract much attention. The picture shows the head of a fine Holsteln cow exhibited at a re cent show In Agricultural hall, Lon don. er or not a steady market can be de veloped for it Being a perishable nroduct. very much like cottage cheese, it will keep only a few days. The fact of the matter is there is very little difference between butter milk cheese and cottage cheese, ex cept that the former has a buttermilk flavor. racking and selling this cheese re quire special attention since the pub lic is not familiar with the product It may be shipped in butter tubs and retailed in paper pails or other small packages. It will keep for a week r ten days in a temperature of 50 to CO degrees, but it can be kept longer if the temperature is lowered to 32 de grees or below. Buttermilk cheese has been sold at 3 to 5 cents a pound at the factory and retailed at 7 to 12!s cents. If color is desired this may be secured by adding cheese coloring as used lu cheddar cheese. The making of this buttermilk cheese is inexpensive, as the drainage racks, siphons, etc., can be constructed by any one. When only a very small amount is desired the ordinary uten sils of a creamery can be utilized. How Fences Spread Disease. A doctor holds a postmortem on a badly Infected subject His knife or scalpel slips, and he cuts a finger. Blood poison and death ensue. A tu berculous cow Is stung by an insect She goes to the barbed wire fence nud scratches the Itching spot, breaks the skin and leaves Infected blood on the barbs, which dries, but the germs re main dormant, waiting for perhaps a healthy cow to come along, and she does nnd scratches and automatically inoculates her blood with the tubercu losis germ. This isn't theory. Any surgeon or bacteriologist will O. K. all the above as to germ transference. A cow "hooks" another, draws blood with the tip of her horn, which, when smeared with dried infected blood, is just as deadly as the sharp barbed wire. No keeper of valuable horses permits a foot of barbed wire on his ranch. Farm and Flreslda Why Keep "Robber Cowsf It is as Impossible to estimate the productiveness and value of a cow as it is to guess the exact number of bushels of corn a certain field will yield. The scales and a Babcock tester when rightly used will accurately de termlne whether any of your cows are grafters Just as surely as a pair of farm scales will show the exact yield of corn. Don't put up with a "robber cow." Orange Judd Farmer. Indigestion In Calves. Indigestion in older calves is usually due to unclean milk or feed, unclean vessels, close confinement In dark, in sanitary stalls and irregular or exces sive feeding. In some cases it appears to be due mainly to sheer -weakness and inability to digest The Profitable Cow. A good cow, well fed and cared for, will give a larger return for the feed consumed than any other animal. This statement stands without challenge to day as successfully as it has stood through the ages. Cabbage Good, but Not For Silo. Cabbage is a very good feed for dai ry cows, but owing to Its watery com position It cannot I put Into the silo. Hoard's Dairyman. 1 GENERAL STOCK NOTE8. To have horses of endurance give the colts a chance to devel op their muscles. With good care, good stock looks better, does better nud pays better than scrubs. Too often when stock Is fed for a certain market it is sold at a disad vantage. So far as can be done, select the largest and best sows for breeders. The cost of feeding an animal increases with its weight but not In direct proMrtlon to its weight Keep the bogs quiet clean nnd comfortable If you expect the best gain from the food supplied. Good breeding and good feed ing are so closely related that they must go together. One Is useless without the other. If sheep are lu a good, thrifty condition at the start two months of good feeding will properly fatten for market BLACK LEG IS FATAL Bad Calf Disease May Be Prevented by Timely Uee of Vaccine. Blackleg of calves is almost invaria bly fatal In twenty-four to thirty-six hours and has so few symptoms that the animal is usually found dead or nearly so with one or more swellings resembling bruises on the side, belly or the upper part of the legs. The owner usually assumes that the calf was kicked or hooked to death and so skins the animal and leaves the car cass to spread the infection. Blackleg may always be recognized by the swellings which contain bub bles of gas in black, clotted blood. When the skin over the swelling is rubbed it gives a peculiar crackling sound. The hide should never be broken, but the body buried deep and covered with lime. After two years cattle seem to be immune to blackleg, and it is not caught by horses, sheep or pigs. It is not contagious: but like the germ of lockjaw, it is in the soil of certain fields and is caught in slight scratches, not deep wounds, due to bushes or wire fences. An animal with such a scratch lies on infected ground, and the infection is taken. On this account it is seldom epidemic and therefore attracts less attention than it would if it were more abuudaut at one season. There is no cure known for this dis ease, but it may be prevented by vac cination, with the vaccine issued free by the United States department of agriculture. It is only a small Job to vaccinate calves, and, as it gives com plete immunity, it is a cheap insur ance. Do not delay until you lose a calf, but you may rest easy when you have calves between four months nnd two years and apply the vaccine. Ameri can Agriculturist h r 4 . ! 5 1 if; 5 Photograph by Kansae State Agricultural college. In experiments made at the Kan sas State Agricultural college, Man hattan, Kan., It has been demon strated ttat corn alone does not make so good a ration for hogs as corn combined with alfalfa. The two hogs In the picture show the difference. They were litter mates before the butcher's knife reached them. The smaller of the two was fed on corn alone, a "burn out" ration. The larger fellow had corn and alfalfa hay. Notice the difference? Not Too Many Pigs! Eight pigs Is a good bunch for a young sow to raise. If there are any more in the litter tt might be well to do a little pruning, especially if there are any weak, runty ones among them They will be pretty sure to be crowd ed out and die anyway, and If taken away early It will give the others a better show. Iowa Homestead. Keep the Colts Away. The colts should not be allowed to follow their dams while they are in harness. Put the colt In the pasture while Its dam is in harness P.oth will soon become accustomed to this, and little annoyance will be noticed. Amount of Water For Cows. Tho ordinary milk cow should drink from ten to fifteen gallons of -water a day. For each gallon of milk a rmr re quires nlxint four Mini one-half uilna of walcr. NATURE TELLS YOU As Many a Heppner Reader Knows Too Well. When the Sidneys are weak, Nature tells yon ebou it. The urine is natures index. Infrfauent or too frequent paesaae. Other disorders snggett kidney ills Doan's Kidney Pills are for disor dered kidneys. People in this vicinty testify to their worth. Mrs. O. Boles, 1100 E. Webb St., Pendleton, Oregon, says: "I hsd great tenefi from Doan's Kidney Pills when suffering from a bad back and disordered kidnes. Another of e family has UBed Doan's Kidney Pills off arid on for years for ki ney weak ness and has bad the best of results. Doan's Kidney Pills deserve our en dorsement and we give it willingly. Fot sale by all dealers. Price fiO cents. Fostcr-Milburo Co.. Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's And take no other. If You waut your house moved see ,T. H. Cox. tf 105 Acres Situated on the Long Tom a tributary of the Willamette River running through one of the best sections of Benton County. 15 Acres cf Alfalfa the rest is scattering timber, easily cleared, and is all good bottom land. $60 per acre and very reasonable at that. 24 Acres Good Plow land at $80 per acre. All of the above land is espec ially adapted to poultry raising and small fruits, especially loganberries. Directly on electric line and within 14 miles of Corvallis, the seat of the Oregon Agricultural college. For further particulars, address L. C. ATHERTON, 753 Brazee St., PORTLAND, OREGON. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE BEGINS its forty -fifth school year SEPTEMBER 19. 1913. DEGREE COURSES manyphasesof agriculture, engineering, home economics. Mining, forestry, com merce. PHARMACY. TWO-YEAR COURSES in agricul ture, home economics. Mechanic arts, forestry. commerce. pharmacy TEACHER'S COURSES manual training, agriculture, domestic science and art. MUSIC, including piano, string, band instruments and voice culture. A BEAUTIFUL BOOKLET entitled "Tub Enrichment of Rural Life" and a CataloouB will be mailed free ou application. Address H. M. TknnanT, Registrar, (tw-7-15 to -9) Corvallis, Oregon. PEOPLE who do not know Should know that FRIEDRICH "THE TAILOR" turns out the lost fitting nnd lest made clothes in Heppner Licensed Embalmer Lady Assistant J. L. YEAGER FUNERAL DIRECTOR Phone Residence. Heppner, Oregon IS IT PRINTING ? 10 BEGIN AT (EE Of ia'orest to every community in the Columbia Rir Basin, is the an nouncement made within the past few days by Major Mclndoe,, U. 8. Coma of Engineers that work on the north jetty at the month of the Columbia will be commenoed in October. The original estimte of $1,000,000 as the cost of this improvement has been in creased to 6,000,000 and it expected that 5,000,000 tons of rock will be required in the work, The Govern ment officials have announced that the south jetty, which was rnmmenced in 1885, is now comulete and that the task of transferrins ttie equipment to the north side of the river will be takeD np at once. It is expected that confining the current to the narrow channel between thi two jetties will result in a permanent depth of not legs than 40 feet on the bar. SCHOOL NOTES. By Supt. Xotson. On the 24th ult. , I visited the school in District No. 59, which is under the diiection of Miss Winnifred Oaten. Thirteen pnpils were present. The windows are provided with good window-boards and shades. The library books are keDt in a good book case. I Doted some excellent draw ings and map work displayed. Teachers who have not completed the reading circle work for the year 1912-13 should do so at once. Last year, owing to the fact that the law was new aud not well understood, it was necessary to allow extia tine to some teachers, but this year there should be no delay. All certficates must be reaistered annually, and evi dence of the co.ntletion of the read- it K circle work should be filed when the cerificate is sent in for registra tion. School boards would do well to delay signing contracts until the teacher's certificate is registered. Blanks for report opon the reading circle work may be obtained by writ ing Ihe county supsrintenrlent. It is to he hoped that parents and pupils will keep in mind the children's exhibit at the fair. There is a val uable training in the preparation of these exhibits, and every pnpil who can place something in the exhibit, should do so. New Land Scrip. By Special Act of Confess nearly 2000 acres of approved Land Scrip is now available FOR USE ONLY IN OREGON. It is the BEST and CHEAPEST script nut on the market in several years. WILL GO QUICK LY TO PATENT. Take any land subject to homestead entry. Can furnish in applications from forty acres up. as lorg as it lasts. We guarantee validity. THE PRICE WILL ATTRACT YOU. If yon need some of it prompt action is necessary. Write or Wire us. THE COLLINS LAND COMPANY. HELENA. MONTANA. Insur yonr auto. W. W. Smead can give you cheap rates in a good company. Repair work of all kinds done LEE CANTWELL. AstonisKin? VV? J Accaracv! It is a distinct plea sure to sell a watch that will literally astonish its owner by its wonderful accuracy a watch that will stay accurate year after year through all kinds of sendee. That's why we offer you aniiffott "It taUri TimebfrtfAmerle" Thi9 watch is a marvel of ac curacy, thinness and beauty. Made in all sizes, for men and women. Also Hamilton " movements sold separately to fit almost any case, ' Oscar Borg Jeweler and Optometrist See The G.-T. About It