The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, March 20, 1930, Image 8

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    THE HERMISTON HERALD
A BOX
OF BOOKS
1
FOR THE
LIBRARY
by n I. Walak.)
P’
. H I L I P CROSS cared nothing for
girl».
“Selfiah pig», always calling
every fellow ‘Gimme! Gimme!
B at they aren't going to call me that 1"
Philip Cross could well have an­
swered their calling and never missed
a g ift or so. His Income tax had to
be died on a large-sized blank by an
auditing firm that made a speciality
of this type of work. Philip Cross
paid but scant attention to the Income
tax business or any other business for
that matter.
A tall, spare young fellow, Philip
was the epitome of a red-blooded he-
man, a lover o f the great out-of-doors.
H e was all of that. More, he w e t a
shy lover of romance. And romance
had never come to him. Nothing had
ever come bis way, as he himself said,
except gimme g ir l*
Oh, they were
quite, quite delicate about l t l
Yes,
indeed 1 But people, especially o f the
feminine persuasion, cannot talk for
any great length e f time without re­
vealing th eir Inmost souls and person­
alities. And Philip had found only
greedy softs.
H e treated It In a laughing fashion
th a t comtdetely and successfully hid
his disappointment
H e wanted a
home o f his own. a w ife who watched
fo r his coming, a rose hedge, a dog or
tw o w ith faith fu l eyes and maybe—
who could tell— little ones running
w ith outstretched arms to meet him.
And so fa r he had had only dreams
th a t were growing fain ter and talnter
w ith the passing of the years.
"B ut w hat do you care, anyhow?”
asked his best friend, Ralph Donald-
son. “You’ve plenty o f money. You
can afford to give and give and give
and still never notice that there's any­
thing gone.'*
B ut Philip Cross shook his head
stubbornly. H e would have what he
wanted o r nothing a t all.
Then one day ha read In a magazine
artic le about a woman who, f a r from
the center o f civilisation, had started
a llbsary. A t tha start she had only
her own newspapers, magazines and a
very few volumes o f books. T he neigh­
bors had fe lt free to borrow thi
In time tourists who passed and paused
sent a few volumes to her upon th eir
return home. T h e volumes grew so
numerous that a little one-room shack
was erected by the neighbors across
the road from her house. I t was no
thing of beauty but It was certainly
destined to bo a Joy forever out In
th a t p rairie country. Boys rode fif­
teen and eighteen miles on horseback
over the rough roads to borrow a book
fo r a grandparent or some one who
was til. She had never, so the article
said, bought a book, so Philip de­
cided cynically that she was getting no
rake-off of any sort from publishers
or book stores.
T v e nothing to do fo r a month,”
Ph ilip told Ralph, "so Pm going to
drive out there and take the old lady
a couple of hundred volumea o f science
and economics and heavier stuff. I
suppose the m ajo r p art la light fic­
tion. Anyhow, Pll like to look over
the library shack and see w hat they
have.”
"How old Is thia old lady?” asked
Ralph curiously.
Philip shrugged.
“H ow should I
know? Miss Lavtnla H ill Is her name.
Lavlnla I
She must be eighty or
ninety from the name alone.
And
people don’t get so big-hearted until
they’re well on the shady side o f life.
I f she were sixty or seventy years
younger she’d certainly be the girl
o f my dreams.”
"W hy under the light of the sun
don’t you express the books Instead of
driving 'way out there on ru tty roads?”
asked Ralph.
Again Philip shrugged.
’T v e a
fancy to see the place— and the old
lady, too. Besides, who can tell? I
might happen to meet the girl Tve
dreamed about, Ralph. Maybe they
'm ake 'em that way out there.”
W ithin a hundred miles of his goal
Philip very nearly decided to return.
T he roads were fa r worse than any
he had ever encountered. Indeed, In
some places there was no road except
where horses’ hoofs had beaten down
the long grasses so slightly that he
could hardly discern any path at all.
H a kept going along, m ile a fte r mile,
nntll a boy came out o f an unpalnted
shack to talk. Philip genially stopped
the motor and leaned hack for a chat.
“So you're going to see Lavlnla
H l l i r the boy said. Then he sighed.
He would not explain that sigh to
Philip In spite of repeated coaxings,
and so Philip went on a fte r a few
momenta, wondering why the boy had
sighed.
He came upon the shack w ith Its
sign "Public L ibrary" much sooner
than he had expected to.
It was
wholly unlike the grand city libraries.
A girl dressed In fluffy pink clothes
was going In the door and with keen
masculine Interest Philip Jumped out
to follow her. obe had evidently not
heard the quiet purr of the motor, for
she was humming a gay little tune
when he entered. Philip’s lipa curled;
be was used to foibles like this on the
part o f g irls But her look was one
o f genuine surprise when she turned.
"You’ve quite a library h ers" said
I ’falllp, feeling aw kw ard before bar.
H e r eyes regarded him seriously
“Yes." she said briefly.
“I ’m looking for Mlsa H ill— Lavtnla
H ill,” he said.
" I have a box
books for ber.
Immediately her expression changed
Dimples appeared in her soft cheeks
Sparkling-eyed, she said eagerly, "Oh,
have yon?
L e t’s open them up—
please!”
"But they’re for Miss Lavlnla Hilt,'
he said.
" I ’m Lavlnla HUI," aha told him.
" I’m the librarian and the district
school teacher end they’ve even asked
me to perform marriages when the
traveling preacher was too long In
com ing!”
“And w hat’s your— honorarium for
all thia work?" he asked brusquely.
She laughed.
" It's more ’honor*
than honorarium as you probably
think of money,” she said. "I'm sup­
posed to get $35 a month, but In the
four years I ’ve been here I haven't
bad too many salary checks. But they
—like me,” she defended when he re­
mained s ile n t
*T should think they would,” be
said shortly.
H e was scowling as he brought in
the box o f books, but the scowl was
only on his face to keep his feet from
dancing and hla eyes from telling her
too much at once. H e knew now why
that fellow back on tbs road bad
sighed. Lavlnla H ill wasn’t going to
be there much longer I f Philip Cross
could help l t l
of China
Magellan Really First
to Circumnavigate Globa
I t Is often said that Ferdinand
Magellan did not really clrcnmnnvl-
gate the globe because he was killed In
the Philippines before hts famous voy­
age around the world was completed,
and that accordingly the honor o f be
Ing the first circumnavigator o f the
earth belongs to Juan Sebsntlan del
Cano who returned to Spain In the
Vittorio w ith 81 o f the survivor, of
the expedition. Magellan waa killed
April 27, 1521, In a battle w ith the
natives on Mactan Island, which Is
124 degrees east longitude. In 1312,
however, while Magellan was still a
subject of Portugal, he sailed as fa r
Banda laland, about ISO degrees
longitude east o f Greenwich. There­
fore he, and not h it subordinate Del
Cano, deserves the credit o f having
been the first circumnavigator of the
globe.— Pathfinder Magazine.
R ic h R e jo in d e r
W inthrop was In the habit of put­
ting on airs when he met any o f his
friends. One night he happened to
arrive very late for a dance to which
he had been Invited.
"I'm most terrib ly sorry," he said,
to hla hostess. “I was unavoidably
detained. As a m atter o f (act. I was
dismissing my second footman."
’’Really?” broke In an acquaintance,
who waa standing near them. "Now.
Isn’t that curious? Pve Just been dis­
missing my fifth parlor maid."
A look of Incredulity spread over
Winthrop's face.
“ Yonr fifth parlor maid?" he re­
peated.
Yes," said the other; "my fifth
since July."— London Answers.
V aeiferoea M otor
D riv e r of Antique C ar— Isn't she
purring along beautifully?
Friend (lou dly)— Whst?
D river — Isn’t she purring along
beautifully?
Friend (yellin g )— What?
Driver— Isn't she purring along
beautifully?
Friend (screeching)— I can’t hear a
word you say for tha Boise o f tbs
ballv eticlnn.
COD LIVER OIL
IS GREAT NEED
Found Indispensable Where
Chicks Brooded Indoors.
Eccentric Daughter of
Famous Concord Divine
Miss M ary Moody Emerson, Ralph
Waldo Emerson’s eccentric a u n t lived
In her shroud, says Van Wyck Brooks
In Scribner’s Magazine.
She had
ztttcbed it all herself and when death
refused to come she had put It on as
a nightgown, then as a daygown. She
was even seen on horseback once, In
Concord, cantering through the village
s tre e t attired fo r the grave, with a
scarlet shawl thrown about her shoul­
ders.
Miss Emerson was the daughter of
the form er minister of Concord, who
had died In the Revolution, She was a
dwarf, four feet three Inches tall, with
a bold pinkish face, a blue flash In her
eyes and yellow h air cropped close un
der a mobcap.
She was short and
erect as an adder abont to strike.
She conld not alt, she could not
sleep; a demon drove her pen. For
she had survived, a witness o f the
lofty and terrib le religion o f John
Calvin, to rebuke what she regarded
aa the poor, pale, unpoetlcal hnmanl
tarianlsm o f the new day. H e r voice
waa the voice o f a sibyl. Issuing from
the caves o f the p ast
She was queerer than Dick’s hat­
band. She was thought to have the
power o f uttering more disagreeable
things In tw enty minutes than any
other person living.
She kept pace
w ith nobody; she bad received, she
sold, the fatal g ift o f penetration, and
her mission was to undermine the
vanity o f the shallow.
Was some high m atter broached In
conversation? D id some rash suppli­
ant Invite Mlsa Emerson's opinion?
Mrs. Brown," the sibyl replied,
“how's yonr cat?”
Waa some lad J
praised too warm ly In her presence?
She pricked the panegyric; “Is I t a
colored woman o f whom you are
speaking?**
"Give ns peace In our
boarders,” she wrote on one occasion,
and, when shown the misspelling, she
said It would do aa It was.
POULTKT
•MTS
Unloading 8oy Bean Cake at Dairen.
(P rep ared by th e N ation al G eographic
i ociety, W aeh ln gton , D. C.)
S
W here chicks are raised Indoors
tnd not in direct sunshine, they need
cod liv e r oil In the ration. T he ma­
terial does not cause bowel trouble
is many poultrymen seem to think.
“Inflam m ation of the bowels and
sim ilar troublee w ith ghlcks Is due to
ane o f four causes— a virus, round
worms, tape worms or chronic coc-
ridlosls,” says D r. B. F. Kaupp, poul
tryman a t the N orth Carolina State
college. “Not only does our experi­
mental evidence role out cod liver oil
as a cause o f thia bowel trouble, but
It seqms to ra le out feed altogether.
W e have found that cod liver oil la
Indispensable where chicks are brood
ed In batteries or Indoors.
It pro­
duces greater resistance to disease
and. promotes better health.
Thia
means better growth and more eggs.
To date no substitute for this materia)
In the ration has been found.”
Doctor Kanpp says that he has data
on hundreds of tests made during the
past 15 pears. In no case has serious
bowel trouble developed where cod
liver oil was used. In the rests, oil
was mixed w ith the mash at different
times. Some of It was held four to
tlx months before the feeding experl-,
ments were completed and in no case
did the records show, either clinically
o r In post mortem, a serious bowel
trouble.
T he test did show that there are too
many flocks of weuk constitutional
vigor and high death rate. Yet when
the vitam lne deficiencies were supple­
mented w ith a good grade of oil and
mineral supplements used along with
proper proportions of protein, health
w ith all its natural resistance to dis­
ease was built up.
H ealth, vigor and strength must be
put Into the chicks early In life by a
rich, properly balanced starting mask
Bays Doctor Kaupp.
w ith five nations participating.
At
the conclusion of the Japanese-Chi­
H E plan of Great Britain to re­
nese w ar In 1885, Japan not only ob­
turn to China the territory of
tained Korea, over which China
Wel-hal-wel which she has had
claimed a pretectorate, bnt also the
under lease since 1898, and
large island of Formosa w ith an area
the insistence by China that other spe­
of nearly 14,000 square miles, off the
cial prlvlllges to foreign nations be
central Chinese coast.
abrogated, turns attention anew to the
From that time on the political pot
foreign patches maintained In China.
boiled furiously smodg the nations
These regions, which have actually
wishing to follow In Japan’s footsteps,
been transferred, either by lease or
and at one time the world waa In­
cession, are not to be confused with
formed of a new lease of Chinese ter­
the so-called “spheres of Influence,"
ritory nearly every month. Germany
which are more or less Indefinite and
tried to lease Kiaocbow bay on the
many o f which are not recognized by
coast of Shantung In 1806, bnt China
the Chinese.
refused her offer. In November, 1897,
W hat once threatened to be the
Germany seized the bay ostensibly be­
great International "sport” of annex­
cause two German missionaries had
ing parts of China began w ith the a r­
been killed in Shantung. In Decem­
riv a l o f the first Europeans In the F a r
ber the Russian Asiatic fleet steamed
Bast.
Those who blazed the tra il
into Port Arthur, 200 m llei north of
around Africa, across the stormy In ­
Klaochow, and announcement waa
dian ocean, and up the east coast of
Poultry raising should be made one
made that It wonld winter there. In
Asia to rich Cathay, were the Portu-
March, 1898, Germany obtained a 99- o f the most profitable Industries on
gueae. F o r h alf a century they came
year lease of approximately 100 square the farm . There are thousands of
and went In their trading ships, but by
miles on the shores of the bay which farm s In the country today where a
1577 they fe lt the need of a station
few fowls are kept that are given no
to facilitate their commerce, and set­ she had seized; and the same month
Russia obtained a 25-year lease to attention whatever, aside from an oc­
tled a t Macao on the southern coast
Port A rth u r and a part of the Liao­ casional feed Of corn and other grain,
of Chino.
A region of about four
tung
peninsula, w ith the rig ht to ex­ says the Southern C ultivator. They
square miles was set aside for them
a re le ft to shift fo r themselves, to eat
tend the lease.
partly as a reward for assistance In
Only a few weeks after the leases w hat they can find about the yards
breaking up piracy In the nearby wa­
had been granted to Germany and and barn lots and to roost on fences
ters, and has been claimed by Portu­
Russia, Great B ritain obtained a lease and trees In w in te r and summer. And
gal ever since.
Formal transfer of
on the shores and Bay of Wel-hal-wel, yet, th e ir owners w ill tell yon that by
this tiny fragment of China was made
almost equidistant between Port A r­ the sale o f chickens and eggs from
by the Chinese government in 1887.
thur and Klaochow.
This British these neglected mongrel broods half
Not only Is Macao the site o f the
lease was not for a definite number of the food and doth-ng of th eir families
first European claim staked out on
years but provided th a t It was to run Is supplied. Like soils that are never
Cathay’s coast, bnt it has cultural ties
for the period during which Russia manured and h alf cultivated, the ré­
w ith Europe closer k n it than the po­
should hold Port A rthur.
L a te r in ta m a are ten-fold more than are de­
litical relationships of controverted
April Franco entered the competition served. T he fa n n e r should be a suc­
areas to the north. I t contains the
and took a 99-year lease on the Bay cessful ponltryman. H e has many ad
oldest ruin in China that la associat­
of Kwang Chow and approximately vantages fo r carrying on the business
ed w ith Europe, and the tam arind and
23 square miles o f territory on the profitably that the average breeder
banyan shade the gardens where the
mainland.
dosa not possess. I f he has an Im­
Portuguese Chaucer, Cameons, com­
In June G reat B ritain Increased her proved breed o f fowls and the neces­
posed h a lf of the Luslads, one of the
holdings at Hong Kong by leasing for sary accommodations tn the way of
h alf dozen world’s great epics.
99 years 356 square mllea of addition­ houses and yards, and knows bow te
Inevitably, too, one associates the
al territory on the mainland and ad­ feed and care for his flocks, he can
location of Mncao, on a peninsula Jut­
ditional islands aggregating 20 square raise chickens at a very small cost
ting from an Island In the delta of the
miles In area.
In November, 1899,
Canton river west of Hong Kong, with
France added to ber lease at Kwang
that colony of Portuguese Americans
Chow a group e f Islands dominating
oa the very tip o f Cape Cod, made
the bay. F in ally In 1900 came one of
famous by Joseph Lincoln.
the most ambitious steps of all In the
According to experiments conducted
English Obtained Hong Kong.
acquisition o f territory— the occupa­ a t the poultry department at the State
M ore than two and a h alf centuries
tion of M anchuria by Russia. Thia College o f Agriculture In New York,
passed a fte r the founding o f Macao
brought on the Russo-Japanese war there Is a very small margin of profit
before China waa again called upon
a fter whicb both Russia and Japan In growing capons compared to selling
In the name o f commerce to give uway
removed their troops from Manchuria the cockerels as broilers. Feed seems
more o f her territory. By that time
which reverted to China but w ith the to be the greatest Item o f extra cost.
all the commercial nations o f Europe,
provision that Japan should have cer­ In some sections, relatively low feed
and the United States as well, were
tain economic concessions.
costs and a high price fo r capons on
engaged In the remunerative China
Changes Sines W orld W ar,
account ot good demand might make
trade. Friction arose in the early part
There has bead a greater m ortality the business very profitable. In other
of the Nineteenth century between
In the recently
acquired
foreign localities the m atter of feed, housing
British traders and the Chinese, and
patches In China than In the earlier and labor over the period o f six or
a fte r a w a r In which G reat Britain
ones.
When M anchuria reverted to eight months very often eats up the
was victorious, China, as a part o f her
China, Japan succeeded to Russia's margin between the price obtainable
Indemnity, In 1842 gave G reat Britain
claims to Port A rth u r and the Liao­ fo r the broilers and the price for the
the island of Hong Kong, a few miles
tung peninsula, and obtained an ex­ capons. On the other hand capons
from Macao.
This Island with an
tension of the lease te 90 years. The have proved exceptionally profitable
area of 82 square miles and one of
other territories remained with an un­ fo r many.
,
the best harbors In the world was
changed status until the World war,
actually ceiled and became a part of
Soon a fter the outbreak o f hoetllltles
the British empire.
In 1800 Great
Japan stormed and took the German
Britain leased three square miles of
Many people w ill remember thaï
leased territory o f Klaochow in Shan­
territory on the mainland opposite
they bad to pay from 75 cents to $1.25
tung.
Hong Kong and shortly afterw ard this,
The Klaochow lease to Germany a dozen for eggs last fall and winter
too, was ceded.
covered an area along the coast rough­ I t w ill not be necessary to pay sucn
This Island became the show colony
ly ten or twelve miles In diameter. In high price» If eggs are preserved I f
of Great Britain In the Orient. It is
addition there was a neutralised sone w ater glass now when they are low
a world port where celebrities and
.83 miles wide skirting the entire Bay eat In price. Whenever they can be
foreign war craft arrive ao frequently
obtained. In fe rtile eggs should he pre
that the din o f official salutes Is a l­ of Klaochow. On the leased plot Ger­
served, ns they keep better. For in
most constantly echoing from the gran­ mans had built a typical German town,
stroctlona. w rite to your state college
Tsingtao. T he agreement had Includ
ite p ea k * It la next to the oldest and
ed concessions to build railways out­ o f agriculture, county or home dent
la many ways the model foreign-
side the leased and neutral areas. In onstration agent, or to tho Depart
owned community In China.
o f Agriculture.
Shantung proper; and coupled with
Contrary to popular belief, there la
the railroad concessions was the right
no city o f Hoag Kong. T hat well-known
to e x p u lt mines la tones twenty miles
name belongs to the laland and the
wide traversed by the railroads.
mainland. The city of h alf a million
I t w ill pay to separate young cock
The 255-mlle railw ay line from
Inhabitants which la the capital o f the
Tsingtao to Tainan, tha capital of orels from tho pallets when eight to
Island and the colony Is officially Vic­
tea weeks old. This w ill give the pul
Shantung, was opened In 1804.
toria. Bnt the name le seldom heard.
lets a chance fo r better development
As
a
result
o
f
the
adjustments
since
To tha Islanders the beautiful ter­
and enable the ponltryman to force the
the
World
w
ar,
there
are
only
fire
raced town Is merely “the city."
patches of China new form ally gov­ cockerels tor m arket. T im e and labot
Grabs by Other N a tio n *
erned by foreign nation». T hree of w ill bo saved by hopper feeding the
A fte r Great Britain acquired Hong
these, Portuguese M a c s * British Hung grain to tho growing chicks a fter five
Kong laland and the patch of mainland
Kong, and Japanese Formosa, are weeks old. Put the grain and masti
there was a lull in the staking out o f
owned outright by the governing na­ hoppers out on the range and todnee
claims by foreign nations to Chinese
tions. O f the long time leases, only a maximum of exercise. T h a t hi
territory- Whet may ba called China's
Port A rthur and Kwang Chow remain. th e chirks eat to the sunshine,
period of "Intensive land losses” be­ T h a form er la ander tho contra! ad this prasaetaa vigor sad vitality-
gan bs 1880 and extended to
Janaa. the la tte r of F ra n c *
T
Poultry Raising Made
Profitable to Farmer
Cockerels as Broilers
Preferred to Capons
Preserve Eggs Now
Cull Young Cockerels
M r. Jlmpaoa waa hurrying
he waa la te to r dinner. B e stumbled
oa tha doormat and ta ll sprawling Into
the hall.
“M am ma,” exclaimed son W illiam ,
"papa came In before he got h e r * ”—
M illions now ns« Russ B all B in *
M akes clothes snowy w h i t * Get tha
genuine.— Adv.
v ,
Speed, hut—
"Speed Isn’t everything.”
Edsel Ford, a t a dinner in D e a r­
born, was talkin g about a irp la n e *
" I f in any degree you sacrifice safety
to speed you are more foolish than
the Yorkshire drummer,” he w ent on.
"T h e Yorkshire drum m er bragged
th a t he covered more customers In a
given tim e than any man on the road.
When he was asked how he did it, he
answ ered;
" ’Ah pops ’ead tn a t door. “M a m ­
in’,” I a a y * "M a m in ’,” says .they.
“Owt?” says L “ N ow t," says they.
“M arnln '," says L “M a m in ’," says
they. And off I goes to t ’ next shop*."
—D e tro it F ree P re s *
1 *" V -
ilf r M s a s
J 7 . B C l I . L a f e e s P o w d ee
quteUv ssmc I h s vous cooptad os
à e d M n si œ t i t e Hrtat cteou d m
”M ABc3iLLEPMe Powder e u t e /
Í Ada t e l roua
I i l » pyk«s«rrtSc and10c,
1
Sm d for I n s literal compta
- - - “ ttaWataam
C o m p le x io n R e q u i s i t e s
Oklahoma Girl
Strong as Boy
“Louise Alice was
fre tfu l, nervous and
a ll run-down from
whooping c o u g h , ”
says M rs. F . J. K olsr,
1730 W est 22nd St.,
O k la h o m a
City,
Okla. “T h e little I
_________ could force h er to
eat wouldn’t ever digest She be­
came underweight, sallow and weak.
"Then I- decided to try C alifo rn ia
F ig Syrup, and the resalts surprised
t n * H e r bowels started working Im ­
mediately, and in little o r no tim e
she waa eating so she got to be a
pest a t the table, alw ays asking us
to pass th in g * H e r weight Increased,
her color improved and she began to
romp and p lay again lik e other chil­
dren. N o w she’s the picture o f
health, and strong as a boy.”
Pleasant-tastlng, purely vegetable
C alifo rn ia F ig Syrup acts surely and
quickly to cleanse your child's stom­
ach and bowels o f the souring waste
th a t la keeping her half-sick, billons,
sallow, feverish, listless, w eak and
pony. B u t I t ’s more than a la x a t lv *
I t tones and strengthens the stom­
ach and bowels so these organs con­
tinue to act norm ally, o f th e ir own
accord.
O ver fo u r m illion bottles used a
year shows I t s . popularity. Ask fo r
I t by the fu ll name, "C alifornia F ig
Syrup," so you’l l get the genuine en­
dorsed by physicians fo r 00 y e a r*
B elated " F irs t N is h *”
A unique "prem iere” is scheduled
for the coming operatic season a t
H a l l * Saxony. I t is th a t o f Jacqu-
Offenbach’s opera
"M ariella,” the
manuscript of which bad mysteriously
disappeared before it was copied or
printed. Recently, by a mere chance,
the manuscript has been discovered
and now “M a rie lla ” ’w ilt have Its “first
night” over fifty years a fte r it was
w ritten and long a fte r the composer’s
death.
Have Kidneys
Examined By
Your Doctor
T ake
Salts to
Wash’ Kidneys
W ELL OR MONEY BACK
■RiTTEN ASSlJRA^CXwrjívcta,
PARKER’S
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Superficial Flesh Wounds
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POETRY
■ e r r -----------------
to w rit* tr F B
r o M
e - know how.
INrORMATIC
ADDS
BOX S * OTTAWA, OHIO.
to
R . I . R a d * B a rre d R o c k *
WhitoLaghome—all from care­
fully supervised flocks of largo birds and
mature breeders. Including world’s rec­
ord strata. Also W .L . pulista, yearltag
hens and day-old turkay* w rite for
prices a t coca aa everything potato to
greatly increased demand. Prompt
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•ddiommaATaoBY
1st A w *
-
Oregon ft Caibnu Dnctorj
If
Bask Pains You or Bis
Bothers
Hotel Roosevelt
Flush your kidneys by d rinking a
q uart o f w a te r each day, also tak e
salts occasionally, says a noted au­
th o rity, who tells ns th a t, too much
rich food form a acids which almost
paralyse the kidneys In th e ir efforts
to expel I t fro m the blood. They be­
come sluggish and w eaken; then you
may suffer w ith a dull misery In the
kidney refpon, sharp pains In the back
o r sick headache, dlzxlness, your
stomach s o u r* tongue is coated, and
when the w eather is bad you have
rheum atic tw in g e *
T h e urine gets
cloudy, fu ll o f sediment, the channels
often get sore and irrita te d , obliging
you to seek re lie f tw o or three times
during the n ig h t
T o help neutralise these Irrita tin g
a d d * to help deanse the kidneys
and flush off the body’s urinous waste,
get fo u r ounces o f Jad Salts from any
pharm acy here; take a tablespoonful
In a glass o f w a te r before breakfast
to r a few d a y * and your kidneys may
then act f i n *
T his famous salts Is
made from the a d d o f grapes and
lemon Juice, combined w ith llth la , and
has been need fo r y e a n to help flush
and stim ulate sluggish kidneys; also
to neutralise tho ad d s te tho system
so they no longer Irrita te , thus often
relieving bladder w eaknee*
Jad Salts Is Inexpensive, cannot In­
ju re and makes a delightful
cent U thla-w ater
O n e s /F O R 7 X A A D ’y Mcmcr M rteb
__ m eats t o r e show er or ta b , 01.001
XU W . Fork SA Coffee Skop. Gera,
Start Now
MOLER
WMMMB • I l w H laarninff. PoRlttnn t t i t m I
f fto t u r a s w— H j . M a o tta ra . Wrlta for ca ta lo g
P ipa V aivaa, Fittings
Farm Tools & Supplies
A L A SK A JUNK CO.
First
T aylo r S t a , Portlead, Oregoa
HOTEL ROOSEVELT
on P
HAMoneom new «wc m oto .
Hotel Hoyt ~ ^ “’> -
PORTt^ P-o»gpo'
» d ' h ^TS u T5K7 v »,,
th
W . N. U , P O R T L A N D , N O . 12-1880.
P u r e s t W a te r
W a ter derived from deep w ells la
so pure th a t It doe» not require any
sort o f purification.
Just a shake or two
completes the toilet!
cornoi^Ta/ann**
Ive^eaaptaaata*
.— .- g yo«* toilet
.............■ ■ l i i
■ M l l l l l l l l l l l ' HII
—