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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1913)
""ID ISM j r-M i . ..... Hi ten t"'. I'll:! fJc.t ti. iJIrlw,, j 1! ALCOHOL 3 PEH I'lM r AVcgclabPrcparationforAs- aiimiainigiiictooaanaRcgula ting (lie Sioaiaclis aiuLOowelsof Promotes Diseslionflieftful ncss and Rest.Contatas neither Opium.Morph.iac nor Mineral. WOT MARC OTIC. tcipt oroUDc&wnniam jthcSmna Jppermint -UiltrtviiuteSida MrmSrrd Clmitkii Sutjir hatumut tlanr. Ancrfect Remedy for Ctmsflpa tion , Sour Stomach.Dlarrtaa Worras,Convulsions.reverisit ncss andLoss or Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Hears tne Ix Signature Am of 6 ZVY.V A (Wui Ktv'iim-y-jiVj.sitM fail m- nm In Use For Over Thirty Years wis iSSi Exant Copy of Wrapper. THE CINTHUH COKHNV. NCW TORII CITY. NORTH BEACH NOW IN FULL BLAST Why not plan your Summer Vacation at this wonderful resort, reached by rail to Portland via A TIM I DOWN TIIK COLUMBIA few A REST BY THE OCEAN 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. " Scrubbing Unnecessary Enamel your walls and woodwork and secure a finish that is hard and smooth, non-absorbent and sanitary. Enameled surfaces do not require scrub bing. An occasional wiping with a damp cloth will keep them looking clean and fresh. ACME QUALITY ENAMELS (NEAL'S) are easily applied. They cost no more than ordinary paint and save you time, trouble and worry. Our "Home Decorating" booklet tells you how you can "do it yourself" at trifling cost. Ask for a free copy. Case Furniture Company, HEPPNER, OREGON CARE NEEDED IN FEEDING ENSILAGE. "HORSE SENSE." NATURE TELLS YOU A groat ninny silos are being built this summer, and the owners will bave their first experience feeding ullage next winter. There Is no denying the fact that silage hns a high feeding value, but thoso who ure Inexperienced should use caution In feeding if they would get best results. When the feeding of silage is begun it must be given in small quantities or the cows and calves will scour and get off feed. If the feeding is begun while there Is pasturage and pumpkin or other green feeds ore in use the danger of scours will not be so great, and almost a full ration may be giveu at the start. Spoiled silage Is something that must never be fed. When feeding begins, as soon as the silo is tilled, there will be none spoiled, but where several weeks Intervene before feeding begins there will be a considerable ortion on top that must be thrown away. Sjwlled silage makes a very good mulch for use in the garden. Tlie amount of silage to be given depends to a great extent upon the cow, as some animals require more ft i i i ' $ i ffhf 1 Photo by American Press Association. At his country estate, Elkins Park, Pa., Peter A. H. Widener, the well known Philadelphia capitalist, mnln tnins an establishment that is one of the finest In America. The place Is visited frequently by friends of Mr. Widener who desire to set up country places and want to get pointers from his methods' of doing things. Besides greenhouses and flowerbeds that are among the mar vels of beauty, Mr. Widener main tains a dairy that Is a model. He has some fine stock, which is his pride. One of his good cows, a Jer sey named Oxford's Bella, Is shown here with her calf. y A few "snips" with the pincers removes rough corners of the y hoof, which if left on might re- 'y suit In lameness and possibly '( the loss of the nnlmal. y At the Canada experimental farms, in a horse feeding test It y was found that com and bran five to two, or hurley nnd bran y five to two, could be substituted for outs and bran in the same y proportions, although both the i corn and barley were less pal- X, atuble than the oat ration. When the horses rub their tails 1 It Is sometimes a ign of worms, f To effect a remedy feed equal I parts of salt and wood ashes ev- ery day for u week. i Experiments have proved that ? it is not profitable at the ordi- y nary cost of .doing It to grind grain for horses doing ordinary v work. It might pay In the case 'i of very hard worked animals. f Carrots must be fed sparingly y y w y to working horses. Cut them in & slices. They are a laxative end x y affect the kidneys also. 4 y $ HANDLING A VICIOUS BULL than others, and upon what other feed they are getting. I would con sider forty pounds per day about the proper amount A bushel basket makes a very con venient measure, as it holds enough for one feed. Observe the cows, and if any do not clean their portion up give a smaller amouut at the next feeding. Never allow any silage to remain in the mangers, ns It will spoil quickly and taint the milk. I do not believe that silage can be very highly recommended as a horse feed. It will do for colts and idle horses, but will make the working horses soft Silage may be safely recommended as a feed for sheep when given in moderation. When fed In any great amount it causes a loosening of the bowels nnd bus other bad effects. Tea or clover silage is more valuable than corn silago as n feed for sheep. The feeder must not lose sight of the fact that silage in itself is not a balanced ration by any means. Al ways ieea urau, onmeai, gluten or other rations rich in protein in con nection with the silage. Where a good legrme Is fed also a smaller quantity of the mill stuff should be given. Farm Progress. Use of Double Loop Help to Teach Him Who's the Boss, We suppose every one has a recipe for the treatment of troublesome bulls. This advice on the subject is taken from Hoard's Dairyman: In the first place, bulls get unruly largely because of the superabundant energy that is wrapped up in them. They ought to he made to work every day on a tread power or In some other way and get real tired. That will do more to .re press their "masculine rage" than any thing we know of. Second, if a young bull gets the no tion in his bead that he is lwss, take him out on the meadow or where the snow Is deep enough to make a fair cushion nnd throw him with a double loop a few times. That will put more sense of his inferiority in the hands of man into his thick head than anything we ever tried. The double loop Is made In the fol lowing manner: Take a half Inch rope, say, twenty reet long, pass one end through the uose ring. leaving about six feet in front, thence up be tween the horns. Then pass the rope around the body just back of the fore legs and make n half hitch at the backbone; thence back to the hips, making another turn around the body just in front of the hind legs, with a half hitch at the backlmne. and carry out the rope over the tall six or eight feet in the rear. Let two men take hold of the end In front and two more ti the rope in the rear and give a stout pull together, when down goes Mr. Bull ns If he was shot. Hold him down by the head n few moments and let him up. Likely enough be will make a lunge at the men In front, but another slow pull brings him to his side with a bang. Throw him two or three times In this way, nnd it will take the conceit out of him w-onderfully. Von have not struck I'jm nor hurt him. nor Is his anger aroused, tie is simply non plused and completely beat at your power over him. We have known of several very cantankerous bulls that were kept quite decent by an occasion al dose of the double loop. As Many a Heppner Reader Knows Too Well. When the Kidneys are weak. Nature tells yon abou it. The urine is natures index. Infreauent or too freqnent pansaee. Other disorders suggest kidney ills. Doan'g Kidney Pilla are for disor dered kidneys. People la this vicir.ty testify to their worth. Mrs. 0. Boles, 1100 E. Webb St., Pendleton, Oregon, saya: "I had great tenet) from Doan'g Kidney Pills when suffering from a bad back and disordered kidnets. Another of the family has used Doan'a Kidney Pills rff and on for years for ki'ney weak ness and has bad the best of results. Doan'a Kidney Pills deserve our en dorsement and we give it willinglv. Foi sale by all dealers. Price BO cents. Foster-Milburu Co., Butfalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan'e and take no other. If You want your house moved see J. II. Cox. tf Jim Shiftless and His Pig, Uncle Cornpatch, as quoted by the Progressive Farmer, says his neighbor, Jim Shiftless, has a pigpen "about eight foot square, with an old door for a roof, a little trough In one end an' a smell that reaches half a mile down the field. Jim's one pig Is in this pen. an' he must enjoy life in hot days. "Of course hogs Is hogs, an' so Is some men, but I dou't'see how any man can expect to git any profit out of a hog kept in a little pen all sum mer, an' I don't see how he can think little enough of the bog an' the rest of the neighborhood to keep a pen so uasty that a man don't like to go close to It "I keep my hogs in the pasture this hot weather, where there Is plenty of grass nn' pea vines an shade an' wa ter, an' then I go out an' rub 'em In the aide with the toe of my boot, an' they grunt an' git fnt, an" we all enjoy it together. I don't think I'll ever sell Jim Shiftless another pig." Beef Cows and Dairy Animals. A beef cow is square and blocky, while the dairy cow Is wedge shnped and angular. The one stores nutri ment In ber body; the other gives it off. The one Is a miser and stores all that slif gets into her system; the oth er Is a philanthropist and gives away all thnt comes Into ber possession. American Agriculturist Argument For th Silo. The fact thnt one acre of silage will feed three cows for six 'months, while it will take six acres of the old fash ioned corn fodder to feed the same number that long, ought to be convinc ing argument In favor of the silo. WHEN AN ANIMAL CHOKES. Corn- Measures to Be Taken to Meet mon Emergency. The following is taken from Farm nnd Fireside: "Few emergencies which arise on the farm are more easily dealt with than choking. In case of this kind we have never known the white of nn egg, when poured down the sufferer's throat to fail to give relief. "To administer the egg quickly and surely it should be broken into a. wide mouthed bottle. When such a bottle is not quickly available, however, any ordinary bottle mny be used by using a funnel to get tle egg into it. and where a funnel Is not a hand one can he made by rolling a piece of paper Into the desired shape. "When everything Is rendy the ani mal's bend should be raised ns high ns possible, the bottle thrust far back In the tbront nnd the contents emptied. The egg will immediately pnsst down and make the throat passi-s and the offending obstacle so sinootn thnt It will pass on into the stomach." Balance Between Plants and Animals. As a rule, there is less chance for failure and less financial discomfort when crops are short on the farm where there Is a nice balance botween plants and animals. Those; -bo make it a point to raise plenVy of ft?d nnd keep as many anlmnls ns will con sume the feeds economicnlly are tsunl ly more prosperous than those who keep too many animals and buy feed for them or those who depend solely upon crops. Farm and Ranch. 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 of 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 in many phasesof AGRICULTURE. ENGINEERING, HOME ECONOMICS. MINING. FORESTRY. COM MERCE. Pharmacy. TWO-YEAR COURSES in aqricul- TURE, HOME ECONOMICS. MECHANIC ARTS, FORESTRY. COMMERCE. PHARMACY TEACHER'S COURSES in manual training, agriculture, domestic science and art. MUSIC, including piano, string, band instruments and voice culture. A BEAUTIFUL BOOKLET entitled "Thb Enrichment of Ri'rai. Life" and a Catalogue will be mailed free on application. Address II. M. TexnanT, Registrar, (tw-7-15 toJ-9) Corvallis, Oregon. Fins For tha Cow. The host crops that can be raised for the dairy cow are alfalfa and corn si lage, and both these are great drought res biters. The Sort of Sows to Keep. rig flesh is more rapidly and cheaply made than any form of pork, hence feed the sow liberally nnd stimulate deep milking qualities. Piw-ard any sow that Is a poor milker, for poorly nourished pigs will be poor pics in spite of other good environments. Farm Journal. f 1 PEOPLE who do not know Should know that FRIEDRICH "THE TAILOR" turns nut tlie It'st fitting ami l'st made clnthos in Heppner OUR flflST TRUST COMPANY. It, Like Our First Bank, Was Estab lished in Pennsylvania. It was in Italy that the art of backing as known in our times was first introduced. The earliest bank established in modern Europe was that of Venice, which waa founded in 1157. It originated in a loan which the state raised during the great war of the republic with the Greek empire, 1150-1171. The bank of Genoa was founded about 150 years after the bank of Venice. Maeaulay in his "History of Kngland" has a partial descrip tion of the operations of this bank, which existed from 1320 to 1708. Previous to the year 1G94 there were only four considerable banks in Europe, but cn the 27th of July of that year a charter was granted by William and Mary for establish ing the Bank of England, which for opulence and extent of circula tion has for many years been the greatest in the world. The fi rat bank established in the United States is known in financial history as the Pennsylvania bank. It began operating on July 17, 1780, and since that time Pennsyl vania has figured conspicuously in the banking affairs of the country. Besides being the home of the first bank in the United States, Penn sylvania has the distinction of hav ing the first bank incorporated un der the national banking act. Char ter TvTo. 1 was given to the First National bank of Philadelphia. That slate is also the home of the first trust company. In 1S09" the Penn sylvania company, a corporation to write insurance on lives and grant annuities, was organized in Phila delphia. In 1836 this institution was authorized to execute trusts. Not until fS53, however, was it empowered to act as executor and administrator. V. C. Jenkina in National Magazine. A Housewife In the Making. Miss Emery had given little Tim a simple problem in addition that lie failed, to work out. "Numbers are dry," she reasoned with herself and determined to make the lesson more interesting. "Suppose," she began engagingly, "your mamma sent you to the store to buy three pounds of lamb, two pounds of potatoes, half a pound each of carrots and turnips and one pound of tomatoes. What would yotfhave then?" Tim shook his head, but Mary bell, only a year older, raised an eager hand. ' "Well, Marybell ?" said the teach er, with a sorrowful glance at little Tim. "Stew!" said Marybell sweetly. Youth's Companion. Racing at Ascot. Racing at Ascot dates back a great number of years, and it is recorded that Queen Anne was the first royal personage to patronize the fixture, in 1711. The first and second Georges were not great pa trons of the turf, but they bred race horses on a large scale in order to encourage their subjects, and George III. gave a plate of 100 guineas to be competed for. Ever since those times the groat annual festival on the famous Berkshire heath has met with rovnl favor. jjipplp Astcnisliing Accuracy! It is a distinct pica 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 service. That's why we offer you I he amwott Vff . "Tit SUrJ 77nWr tf Amrric" Tbis 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 Oxen on the Farm. There la In many parts of the conn try a reversion to the use of oxen. Well mated and properly broken, they make a reliable farm team and can be I Licensed Embalmer Lady Assistant J. L. YEAGER FUNERAL DIRECTOR Phone Residence. Heppner, Orep'on urned off at a pood profit when th. TC TT P"RTNTTT NTf P PP ThP H -T A Vlftllt Tt