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About Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19?? | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1909)
Little Soldiers MAPLEINE In your blood are the millions of corpuscles that defend you against disease. To make and keep these little soldiers healthy and strong, is simply to make and keep the blood of the ri*lit quality and quantity. This is just what Hood’s Sarsaparilla does — it helps ttie little soldiers in your blood to fight disease for you. It cures scrofula, eczema, eruptions, catarrh, rheumatism, anemia, nervous ness, dyspepsia, general debility, and builds up the whole system. V a lu e . “ O, George 1” cried the young bride, " I ’ ve split one of m.v finger n ails! And there's no $5,000 insurance on the finger, eith er!’’ “ N ever mind, dear,” said the young husband, kissing the injured digit. “ 1 t'e worth $5,000, just the same.” “ Isn’ t it worth $5,250. George?” sh* asked, snuggling up to him. “ I t ’s the oni that has m.v engagement ring on it.” C H A P T E R I X . — (Continued.) “ Rut, Maude, my darling— !” "Y es, and intend to remain so,” laugh ed the girl merrily. "A n d the sooner the fact is broken to Mr. Pearman that he is not ‘ my destiny’s lord,’ the better.” “ Stop, child— listen to me,” and the nervous tremor in her mother's voice ar rested Maude’s madcap humor instantly. She knew every inflexion o f that dearly loved voice, and her quick ear detected S a tis fa c to ry . eoming trouble, much as the sailor fore Sm ith— I used to h ave a g re a t deal sees the storm in that peculiar sobbing #f trouble w ith m y teeth, so I finally sound the wind sometimes gives forth had them all e x tra cted and an a r ti shortly before the tempest hursts. In a second she dropped quietly on ficial set put I d . her knees by Mrs. Denison’s side, and Jones— A n d are they s a tisfa cto ry? S m ith — You bet th ey a r e l W h y, I leaning on the arm o f her chair, said, “ Tharp's more to come, m other; you ean alm ost eat w ith them. haven’ t told me all yet.” A r tfu l U r c h in . “ No. my dearest; I had hoped so dif- Llttle B o y— M am m a, I wish you'd ferently. I mean— I told your fnther, in find out who it was hypnotized me, am? short------ and here Mrs. Denison fa irly punish ’em severely. broke down, and wept copiously. M am m a__’W h a t ? Maude petted, soothed and coaxed, as Little Boy— While you was out I was sho had 1dolne 0,1 » previous occa- ii j . . . , . ,, S10n* and between the showers of tears pulled right into the pantry and forted ,parn(K| how much thoy were in the hiln(ls to eat a lo t o f those mince pies you of the Pearm ans; how that their remain- ■aid I mustn’ t touch. ing at Glinn was an impossibility unless the Pearmans came to their assistance; T h e I le a l D is p u te . and how her hand was the price they “ But, honorable insisted the edu placed on standing in the breach between cated Japanese, “ you class us wrongly. Harold Denison and his creditors. About W e are not Mongolians.” the foregoing o f their own claims the “ In that case,” said the California poor lady wisely said nothing. Better statesman, shrugging his shoulders, “ you Maude should think her future husband will have to settle your differences with ! stood chivalrously forward in her father’s Noah Webster— not with me. l i e says support, with the prospect o f her fair you are.’* «e lf as his guerdon, than she should Mire '111 tn know that her hand was the sole bribe "H e n ry,” said the lieh old uncle, "if which induced him to forbear seizing upon you think I am likely to die suddenly Glinn. gome day when I least expect it you may The saucy smile had left the g irl’s lips as well rid your mind of that idea. There by the time she comprehended the sad Is nothing whatever the matter with my story. It was replaced by a pale, anxious heart.” look, such as had never been seen before “ You’ll never die o f enlargement of it. on Maude Denison’s face. anyway, uncle,” cheerfully acquiesced the “ You can’ t mean this, mother,’’ she spendthrift nephew. said, at length. “ You surely don’ t wish that I should marry this man, whom I TH E T R U E M A P LE FLA V O R . can’t say I dislike, for I don’ t even know him enough to tell whether I do or n o ; Housewives Welcome a Maple Flavor ¡hut that I am to take this man for a hus- band without any reference to my own That Has the Real Maple Taste feelings— you don't intend that, do you?” Vermonters have a reputation for “ I don’ t know what w ill become o f us the quality of the maple syrup pro it you don’ t, Maude,” gasped Mrs. Deni duced in their state. It is but a few son. years since the discovery was made of “ And is it not possible that we could a method of imparting this delicious live without Glinn?” inquired her daugh flavor to dishes without the use of ter. maple syrup. The new flavoring ex “ W h at would your father do?” moaned tract was appropriately named Ma- the mother once more, truer to him even still than to the child she adored so. pleine. “ I t is h ard !” ' said Maude, and her • Strange as it may seem, Vermonters themselves cannot tell the difference young face grew stern in expression as between syrup made with Mapleine | she spoke. "D o you think it quite fair and that which comes from their own I that I am to throw my life’s happiness Green Mountain state. This is due to ! away at eighteen to save Glinn? Mother, j I know nothing o f the world, but a man the purity of the ingredients and the surely brings a bad introduction to a care used in the manufacture. | girl's heart who seeks her as Mr. Pearman Mapleine is perfectly healthful, is would apparently seek me. I don’ t think purely vegetable and makes a syrup rm a romantic fool, hut I never thought that is equal to any and superior to t0 leave your side in this wise. O f course many brands of maple syrup that are i know girls do marry for m oney ; hut — placed on the market. hut— I had— had hoped I should be dif- Flavoring for cakes, icings, bianc ferent,” and here Maude was seized with mange, sauce, etc., that is delicious an hysterical choking in the throat, and has all the piquancy and delicacy ; which though it only drew a few tears of maple syrup can be readily made ft"0™ lift ° 'vn eyes, brought forth another by the addition of a few drops o f , shower from Mrs. Deuisou’s. Mapleine to a little water in which I 1 real|y am shoeked' tor the sak,‘ of granulated sugar has been dissolved. ! my readers, at the amount of tears intro- Mapleine syrup makes such dishes a s ' lnto„!hls my f > r-v" ‘l ,n- rice taDioca up! would have made an rice, tapioca, stale stale bread bread, etc etc., simnlv simply 1,rellas . heading to this chapter; but appro" what irresis tble to children am I to do? You see. Mrs. Denison is Mapleine Dainties is the title of a one of t,lose womon who natura„y dis. booklet full of wholesome receipts p u b -1 8olve ¡nt0— may I say, mist?— on the most lished by the Crescent Manufacturing trifling occasions, and come down in tor- company, who make Mapleine. The rents when things go hard with them. booklet will be sent free to anyone And, bear in mind, she was performing who asks for it. You can buy Maple the hardest task that had ever fallen to ine of your grocer. Try it, you’ll like her lot as yet. it as thousands o f others have. Here “ N o use crying about it, mother,” said is a sauce for puddings that is deli Maude, gulping down her agitation brave cious : ly. “ I am going up to my own room to Whites of two eggs, one and one-half think it all over; but come what may, cups of granulated sugar, one cup of I feel at present you w ill have to let Mr. milk and one teaspoonful of Mapleine. I Pearman know that I m grateful for the Mapleine can be used anywhere that ■ honor he has done me, ^>ut respectfully decline anything further. other flavoring extracts are used. W hen Maude reached her own room, she sat down and began to inuse over all Tom m y— Paw , what is three card her mother had told her. Had it come to this really, that it rested with her to save monte? I Mr. Tucker— I t ’s the most diabolical. her parents? W hat was she to do? infernal swindle that ever anybody— er have said before that she was not like er— O, it’s some sort of gambling game the young ladies o f this world. She was with cards, I believe, Tommy.— Chica rather behind the age in many o f her ideas. She was very young, and had. go Tribune. moreover, a tinge o f that dear old-fash W h e r e It L a n d e d H im . ioned romance about her which is at such W ith a dazed look in his bloodshot a terrible discount in these utilitarian eyes the man who had been on a jag for • days, W hat can there be to think a week or more and had wandered over about?’ cries Belgravia. “ Preserve me the country In a half delirious condition fr0m such an imbecile daughter!” shrieks without knowing where he was go in g, Tyburnia. But Maude, after thinking for came to himself. half an hour, with set face and knit He was in a strange city. brows, suddenly rose with a smile rip Everything around him looked unfamil pling over her pretty face, and while the iar. midday sun still glinted through her bon- “ Officer,” he said, stopping a police nie brown hair, sat down to w rite to man. “ what town is this?” Grenville Bose. “ Anaconda,” answered the policeman. “ H e always gets me out of scrapes,” “ Then I ’ ve got ’em again !” he groan she murmured, s o ftly ; “ he must out of •d.— Chicago Tribune. this, though” — and her*» she even laughed — “ I ’ m afraid Gren w ill think this what A H e n s o n f o r H e lp in g s The poor help the poor m ore than he calls a ‘big un.' ” S e e 'n ie d t o A w a k e n the rich help them. M e m o rie s . An official o f the C H A P T E R X. D epartm en t o f C h a ritie s In N ew York Grenville Rose dwelt in the Temple. recen tly rem arked th is trait. There, in a couple o f pleasant rooms, he “ E ve ryth in g has its cause. Its simple read musty law hooks, the latest period and s trik in g cause, i f w e can but And icals, and waited for business. Though It,” he said. “ Once, in a m iserable there was very far from being any asceti slum, I heard tw o little girls ta lk in g ' ^sm about Grenville Rose, yet he stuck ■bout this m atter of p ov e rty and * 1 soberly and honestly to his . trade. . . . . I f the couldn’ t help it. work didn’ didn t come, he couldn w ealth and helpfulness. « • t v ».., I*, i* » He was always in the way, and an assidu- \\ ny Is it, said the first, th at the , , n* * • , r, . I ous attender at the W estminster Courts, poor alius is m ore w illin to help us But if vou arP “ ( ’oke on Lyttleton,” than the rich/ strongly impregnated with the departed "T h e seeoml child replied prom ptly. I .fla tu s o f Krskine and Kllenhorou*h. you • nd not w ith ou t *.<ine bitterness, 'Th em annot show it until you net an opening w ot don't mind givin' is the ones wot The beginning of the legal profession is doomed to be principally observation. A t •ta rs poor.’ ” torneys are far from being speculative on X o t M n f In It . the subject of undeveloped talent. It is Bartender— Say, what do you thin’x not given to everyone to have Sir Jonah of this idea o f runnin’ cities on ths com Barrington’s chance of a friendly judge, who insisted on his continuing the case mission plan? Alderman (from the ’ Steenth W a r d )— he had begun, in consequence o f his lead I don’ t know much about it, but I ’ m agin er being temporarily out of court. So that It. The— er— ooramissions an* mighty whether Grenville Rose was a coming law ■mall and they don’ t go to the right peo yer, or a pretentious impostor, was still p le concealed in the womb o f time. In the — - • meanwhile, the nothing he had to do he. Ills Specialty. at all events, did conscientiously— more, William Jackson— I hear you en a good deal, than can be predicated of gaged a deaf and dumb man yester many o f us. H e strolls leisurely out o f day. his beoroom, in dressing gown and slip Proprietor of Quick Lunchroom— pers, the day after Maude’s resolution, Ye* and glancing round his breakfast table, take* little notice o f the heap o f letter« “Going to make a waiter of him?” that lie thereon. His attention, on the "N o ; be ■ going to mak« ilgna»” aaatrary, ia arrested by the abseno* a f ed. and the knowledge that he was A LF A L F A IN W E S T E R N O R E G O N . erless to help her even a hair’s breadth A flavoring a ted the same as lemon or ▼ snlUs. in her bitter anguish. Better to stand By dissolving granulated sugar in water ana No Other Crop O ffers So Many At adding Mapleine, a delicious syrup is made ana by her deathbed than this! a syrup betterthan maple. Mapleine it sold be tractions to the Farmer. Our nineteenth century training makes grocers. If not send J5c for 2 os. bottle and recipe book. Crescent M fg. Co., Seattle, W e . us bear such trials well. But do not be H. D. Scud i '. t Department of A'.-ronomy. Orseun Aar cultural Col cue. CorV—«». lieve, my brethren, that when the mask is dropped, feelings are not much the O f all the crops produced upon the same as o f yore. B itter tears are shed farm perhaps no other offers so nuny necessary to supply immediately avail stomach or when the plant is wet, and over worthh s women, and deep lamenta* attractions and advantages to the able plant food such as well rotted barn to prevent rooting, hogs should b « l tious made over rotten investments in the young ringed. I farmer as does alfalfa. As an im yard manure, to carry the Where cut and fed green to I privacy o f the bed chamber. The matu- prover of the soil it has few equals and plants through the first two years until cows, there is no danger of bloating. I tinn 1 razor sweeps the chin at times w’ ith their deep feeding roots are establish- no superiors As forage for all classes An acre of alfalfa will furnish pas a strange fascination for one strong free Such fertilization as barnyard ture for about ten g« od sized hogs, or stroke at the jugular v e in ; a morbid feel* of live stock, whether used as hay, j ed. ing to end all this weary struggle, and gieen feed, or pasture, it is unexcelled manure or green manure (like rye or summer green feed for ten cows. cut the knot of existence. A well-known in yield, feed value, palatability, and vetch plowed under) is best applied to Mothers w ill find Mrs. Winslow’ s Soothing writer, the other day, laid down : “ It was permanency of growth. To the farmer the crop preceding the alfalfa or by Syrup the b si remedy t«r use tor their ohUdmo better to be bored than to be miserable.” keeping cows, hogs, or poultry, it is of preceding it with clover or vetch. Uatlug the teelhiug period. I can’ t say I agree with him. I would paramount value in that it is practi- Aside from its plant food and moisture rather be miserable. i tally the only forage crop that will retentive value the humus from such S e v e r e O p e r a t io n . For more than an hour docs Grenville supply green feed continuously through fertilization is of great assistance to “I never saw anybody that suffered pace his apartment, mu ing over Maude’s the dry summer months of this region. the alfalfa bacterial activities. from throat trouble aa much as my Uncls letter. But no! he can neither see help to In addition to these advantages it is Preparing for alfalfa in the preced George used to." said Mrs. Lapsling. "He be rendennl, nor even anything to justify superior to all other crops in quickly ing crop is also important in enabling had it so bad that finally the doctors had the slightest interference on his part. improving and maintaining the appear- the prospective grower to clean up the to make an incision in his sarcophagus Then he thought savagely o f the old duel 1 ance and so lin g value of farm lands. weeds. Weeds, because of their more and remove a part o f it.” ing d a ys ; how easy it would have been to rapid growth, heavy draughts on TYPEWRITERS “ New V ia lb l. Yeat.” All mskss have picked a quarrel in those good old Lack of understanding of the peculiar- rebuilt like new. a’ tee. ] i rices. Two Smith- times, and run his chance of disqualifying 1 ities of the plant and its requirements, available plant food and moisture, and i Denr.-R mimttoa from ills to R ‘>. Supplies fo r all Pearman through the medium o f a pistol has caused many failures of first at their shading, are higlhly injurious to 1 milker. Mnchinee rem . il at to ».50 monthly. Tbs Hence by preced 1 1 l>ewriter Eachanire. - e Montpoinery. H an E ran ciac bullet. But we have changed all that; tempts at growing ti e cr«p in Western the young alfalfa. and when we quarrel nowadays, w’e em j Oregon. This has led farmers to be ing alfalfa with a thoroughly cultivat D l l l 'e r o i i c e o f O p i n i o n . ploy counsel instead o f firearms. I sup lieve that alfalfa is not naturally ed crop such as kale, corn, potatoes, Vestryman (m aking another attempt While this to or roots, all o f which do best heavily to light his c ig a r )— I don't like these pose it is all for the best, though I take adapted to this region it there was more politeness in general a certain extent is true, yet the diffi manured, the ground is made clean and noiseless matenes. society when the being rude had to be culties in the w y may and have been fertile for the alfalfa. The Rev. Dr. Honeywell. I do. I re so speedily justified. The causes of failure to secure a ceived a fee o f $50 once for marrying a largely overcome. The splendid re (T o be continued.) deaf and dumb couple. sults obtained by the state experi stand of alfalfa are generally a poorly some condiment he peculiarly affects. A f ter indulging in a solo on the bell, w’ hich produces no apparent result, he opens the window and runs up the vocal scale on “ W illiam ,” terminating, crescendo, in “ W il-li-a m !” which seems to produce some slight commotion, at length, in a hoy with a pewter, and a companion fur nished with shoe brushes, who are light ening the hours by pitch and toss. Satis fied with this result, he first opens the morning paper. Grenville Rose is not in the least ad dicted to the pursuit or study of racing; still, like most men o f his age about town, lie very frequently hears it talked of. He knows the names o f the prominent favor ites for the coming great three-year-old events o f the season. Has he not more than one friend who has asked him to book himself for a Grenwich dinner in the event o f some Derby contingency com ing off satisfactorily? He throw’s his eye lazily over the sporting intelligence, and under the head of “ R etting on the T w o Thousand,” he perceives “ F ive to tw’o against Coriander— taken freely.” “ S’ pose he’ ll about win. Suit Silky Dallison down to the ground, I presume; not that I know much about it. But as he hath bidden me to the consumption of clicquot and bait, if Coriander w’ ins at Epsom, it is fair to presume he’d ’»ike to see him well through ‘ his smalls,’ to be gin with.” Ah ! we go blundering on in our blind ness and ignorance. Can even the most far-sighted o f us ever predicate twenty- four hours ahead? W hat a mess P ro vi dence makes o f our intricate calculations! W h at shallow’ fools w e seem, after all our stu d y! I wonder w’hat G renville Rose w’ould have said, if anybody had hinted to him that w’ ithin ten days his destiny would be bound up with Coriander’s? Can you not fancy his laughing re to rt: “ I never ra c e ! 'W h a t’ s Hecuba to me, or I to ITecuba?’ ” Y e t it w ill be so. G renville tosses the paper on one side, and in a careless way takes up his letters. Tw’o or three are thrown asid e; but his pulse quickens, and his handsome fea tures flush a little, ns he catches sight of that firm, delicate hand he knows so well. Maude’s letter had been near the bottom o f the pile, or he had not glanced over the paper before reading it. That cousin o f his had wound her w ay into his heart strangely o f late. H e hardly knew him self how’ it had all come to pass. H e had bullied her as a boy ; he even, till quite lately, had snubbed her as a man. He had liked her, ay, loved her, in cousinly fashion, all his life. H ow w’as he to have dreamt that the gaw’k.v school girl who accompanied him in his fishing expedi tions at Glinn was to grow’ into the love ly girl Maude had of late blossomed into? He was no fool, and had as much com mand over his passions as five-and-twen- ty, that sets up for no superlative virtue and lives in the w’orld, can usually lay claim to. That anything could be more injudicious than a love affair between himself, witli mere undefined prospects, and the daughter o f his ruined, spend th rift uncle, no one could be more clearly aware. That if Maude Denison married, it must be somebody with means and po sition, he thoroughly understood. That he should at present marry anybody, he quite recognized as an impossibility. And yet. with all these theoretical axioms distinctly present to his mind, he was forced to admit to himself that he w’as over head and ears in love with his cousin. That he had never even hinted it to her was a fact upon w’hich he gave himself most extraordinary credit. That she had as yet given him no earthly reason to sup pose he w’as anything to her but Cousin Gren was a circumstance that he brooded over sulkily and desj>ondingly. W ith these correct and high-principled views, it should have been made matter o f great gra tu lation ; but you see it w as not. I am afraid it will ever be so. The right people never do fall in love w’ ith each o th er; while, from the days Helen left Menelaus to the present time, the con verse o f the proposition seems inexhausti ble and unchangeable. Rut all this while Grenville Rose had been reading Maude’s epistle. H is face darkens as he does so, the brow’s contract, and a curse breaks at last from his lips in a low’ , guttural tone that bodes bad times for somebody, supposing that Gren ville possesses power equal to his incli nation. “ That brute P ea rm an !” he muttered. “ M y instinct didn’ t fail me. B etter I ’d have dislocated his cursed neck by throw ing him down stairs that night than this. And the poor child appeals to rpe to help h er! W hat can I do?” Once more he glances at the letter— again he reads the paragraph : “ Gren, dear, you have been my resource in all my scrapes since I can remember. Do come to my rescue n ow ; what am I to do? M y childish troubles o f bygone days were not o f much account, whatever they might look at the time. This seems extinguish ing the sunshine o f my life on the thresh old— as if I was doomed, as I heard you say not long ago. I have said I cannot, I flare not. Both papa and mother say 1 am to decide for myself. But it isn’ t so — you know’ , Gren, it isn’ t. T h ere’s papa, more sneering and gloomy than ever, sug gesting that we had better make the most of Glinn during the remaining few weeks that it remains to us— as I have decided to give away the property. Mother, of course, all tears; and papa bullies her worse than ever. Oh, tell me what to do. (¿ren, for I am very miserable. I can’ t stand it much longer— I know’ I can’ t. I shall have to give in ; I cannot hear to see mother always in tears. I almost w’ ish I was dead, I do indeed ; and yet I don’ t want to die.” “ Yes,” he mutters, after reading it through for about the twentieth tim e; “ it’s easy to see the whole thing. My precious uncle intends you shall marry Pearman, so that he may finish his days in Glinn. M y aunt, poor soul, is weeping a Dead Sea over the arrangement, and having her soul harried out besides. Maude— Maude, mv darling, how can I help you? Pretty chance o f a pauper like myself being much use on the occasion,” he mused, with a bitter sneer. “ M i* never says, poor child, by the way, what sum. if any, would stop the gap— though, of course, thpre must be a price. However, that is a question there is no use in rais ing. O f course it’s thousands; and to raise a few hundreds would require all my ingenuity, to say nothing o f terminating in my eventual destruction ; not but what it’s little I ’d think c f that just now, to save Maude. M y love, I am p ow erles*!” And Grenville Rose leaned his head upon his hands and tasted the bitterest aorrow this world can afford— that o f an appeal for m ecor from th« woman whom ho lor* ment station and o her growers in dif prepared seed bed, poor seed, or the P I T « ht. V ita s’ Ounce nna rvons illnesses perms- ferent parts of Western Oregon should wrong t me or method of seeding. The I I I J nently cared l.y Or. 1 .In c’ s (ir e s t N e rv e Ks> Sem i fo r FREE $2 00 tr ia l b ottle and treaties. convince the mi st sk. ptical of the causes of the failure o f the crop to erorer. D r. it. U . K lin e . LU., 1X11 A rch St., P h ila d elp h ia , Fa. U n iq u e C o p y o f A n c ie n t R e c o r d « , great future of (he crop in this state. grow after a good stand has been se I l i a l * r o l r u c t i-d E S e r t . F u ll o f H is t o r ic a l M a t e r ia l. As authentic and accurately measured cured, are either lack of alfalfa bac “ Muriel, I love you !” Here Is an opportunity for some rich yields to illustrate the possibilities of teria, the need of lime, pasturing when “ Is— ia that all you hava to aay, Rtp collector of books, or for some library the crop here, those recorded at the too young, an impoverished soil, over dolph?” that likes to place upon its shelves experiment station may be cited. The crowding with weeds, a shallow soil, “Great Scott, Muriel, it has taken ml tomes which are valuable as records of average of all tbe yields of the station poor drainage, lack of cultivation, or eighteen months to snv that!” improper after treatment. A crop field for the last eight years has been bygone days, says the New York World. The way Hamlins Wizard Oil soothes The opportunity in question is a book 6.2 tons of cured hay per acre yearly, properly started and cared for should believed by Its present owner to be the or where cut as a soiling crop, 26.3 produce steadily without reseeding for and allays all aches, pains, soreness, swelling and inflammaion is a surprise only copy in existence, which was print tons of green feed per acre. This field fifty years or more. Owing to the excessive rainfall of and delight to the afflicted. It is sim ed in Osnnburg, Germany, in 1628. It has the ordinary heavy clay loam soil winter and the heavy weed growth of ply great to relieve all kinds of pain. is valuable not so much for its age as typical of the Willamette valley, and j has received no irrigat on, fertilization early spring, fall sowing of alfalfa has for the wealth of historic material It A p p ly liiK n S o re T est. or special treatment whatever. Any not proved as successful as spring sow Young W ife— John, how does my new contains. ing. The ground should be plowed where in Western Oregon where cer hat strike you? This book is a history of the see of tain primary requirements of the crop deeply in the fall if possible, manured Husband— I'm delighted with It, Ara Osnaburg, the first Saxon-Germanic are satisfied, the same or bettor re and replowed early in tho spring. church, from its foundation by Charle sults should he obtained. It only be Where plowed rather late in the spring, bella ; it’s neat, sensible, and------ Young W ife — I knew i t ! 1 told that magne, in 772 A. D. It relates his hooves the beginner to secure the best the land should be disced and harrowed m illiner I didn't believe it would suit me^ nomination of its first bishop, St. Wlho advice obtainable as to methods of before plowing. I f the soil is in the and I'm going to take it right back 1 of Frisia, and contains, first, the order growing; start with a small piece; ex least sour, from 1,000 to 2,000 pounds For Any Disease or Injury to and series of the bishops of Osnaburg, periment with it until its requirements of unburned lime— ground or in the with an epitome of their origin and are learnpd; gather experience from lump— should be applied very early in the eye, use P E T T IT ’S E Y E S A L V E , characteristics, from 772 to 1623 and his failures and persist until success the spring, or in place of this, from absolutely harmless, acts quickly. All 1688 , when ltd Frederick, Const of ful. The reward of such persistence 500 to 1,000 pounds of water slaked druggists, or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. lime may be sown about April first. Hohenzollern, cardinal of Holy Ro is ample. I 'u r e F i c t i o n . The primary requirements of alfalfa A fter the spring plowing the ground man church, and Francis William, Singleton— Have you seen the mags Count of Wartenberg, successively oc- are a deep, well drained, sweet ard should be frequently harrowed to get fertile soil, free from weeds. The rid of the weeds, conserve the moist zincs this month? They're just full cupied the see. Second, the acts, canons, statutes and lands most nearly meeting these re ure and bring the seed bed into a uni of Illustrated fiction. formly fine state of tolth. Marryat— Yes, and the greatest plecw decrees of the synods and councils of quirements are on the slopes of the The seed should be sown from April of Illustrated fiction in them Is the the church held at Alemania, Cologne rolling lands of the valley bottoms; the slopes and tops of the hills sur 20th to May 1st. Just preceding the “ad" showing how stylish you’d look and Osnaburg in 122.1, 1260, 1310, 1322, rounding these valleys, or the deep sowing the land should be inoculated til "So and go’s $7 suit.”— Philadel 1360, 1423, 1412. 1536, 1621, 1628, au sandy loam river bottoms well above with the alfalfa bacteria by scattering phia Press. thenticated by notarial certificates. the water level. The ordinary valley over the seed bed about 200 pounds per Third, the apostolic mandate of Inno acre of soil taken from the surface foot low flat lands are not suitable. cent VI., dated from Avignon, 1360. to The deep feeding tap roots upon of an old alfalfa field. This alfalfa Wilhelm, archbishop of Cologne, “De whose length these plants depend for soil should be mixed with about 400 vita, habitu et honestate clericorum et securing plant fond and moisture, make poundB of the surface Boil of the new For Infants and Children. monachorum.” a soil eight to ten feet in depth imper field to facilitate its even sowing. To Fourth, the confirmation of the Caro ative. Although alfalfa prefers a avoid exposing the inoculated soil to line constitutions of Carolus IV.. Ro sandy loam, yet it has proved equally the sunshine, which injures it, it Bears tha man emperor, ratified by the council of prosperous on the heavy clay loam should be sown on a cloudy day or Signature soils, a heavy clay subsoil or hardpan towards evening, and immediately har Constance, 1423. Fifth, the ceremonial of the assem delaying hut not stopping the root rowed in. H I « M o n o to n o u s L ife . I f an acre be once successfully inoc bly of the major synod of Osnaburg, growth. “You know him, don’t you? Ht*« f ulated, the next year it will furnish a Owing to the need of its roots for 1628, and the historic sermon of Pater fine mush ian. IMn.vs second fiddle In on« Gulielmus Aschendorf, S. J. “De vitus air, alfalfa, especially when young and soil supply for inoculating other land. of the best orchestras in the country.” prcpcedentibus temporibus enutis et during the growing season, is easily N o faith should be placed in inoculat “Yes, I’ve known him since long be> injured by standing water either above ing the soil through the purchase of fore he was married. lie plays seconl adhue durantilms.” The book belonged In 1043 to the or below ground. Root growth stops inoculated seed, as under ordinary con fiddle In his own house, too.” ditions this method is seldom success great library of the Bollandists at Ant at once on striking water-saturated ful. werp- On the title page, in the hand soil, hence the water table should not Immediately following the inocula be less than eight to ten feet below writing of Father Jean de Holland, the Prescription for the surface of the ground during the tion the seed should be sown at the I Illustrious “ancient,” are the words: growing season. Overflow from streams rate of twenty pounds per acre, care | Nervous Men and Women “Do mu s prof. Soc. Jesu, Antwerp, in winter when the plant is dormant being taken to secure pure seed of good | T ry It 1643.” (House of the professed of the does not cause much injury, even if germinating qualities. Germination Society of Jesus, Antwerp, 1G43.) may readily be tested by placing an ®<»®® ®®®«® ixaxsi® m m ® sxgxsexixMxi continued for Beveral weeks. When the Bollandists were expelled O f even more importance to the al average 200 of the seed between moist The impairment o f the nervous force in men by Joseph II. of Austria, their library falfa plant than a deep and well- blotting paper, laid between the fares and women ia first manifested by extreme ner- was seized and sold at auction. It was drained soil, are the bacteria which of two dinner plates and pouring a vouaneaa, aleepleasneaH. dread, worry and anxiety without reason, trembling of the hand» and limbs, purchased for the monastery of St. Nor- produce the nodules on the roots, little water in the lower plate from with the alightest exertion, heart palpitation, con* stipation, kidney trouble and a general inability bert at Tongerloo. When these monas through which the plant is enabled to time to time. to ad rationally at all times a* others with health The seed may be broadcasted and in their l>odien do. tics were afterward driven out by the draw upon the free atmospheric nitro In u hulf pint bottle Ret three ounces o f syrup French revolutionists, their library was gen, enriching the plant and the soil harrowed in, but a more even and v ig sarHuparillu compound and add to this one ounc« orous stand is secured, especially if compound fluid balmwort. and lettuand two hours; with this most valuable of all the plant pillaged and the book came into the then Ret one ounce compound essence cardiol. and possession of Father Jean Francois Van food elements. Conditions unfavorable | the surface soil iB a little dry, by drill one ounce tincture cadomene compound (n ot car de Velde, S. J., president of the Uni to the activities of these bacteria ing one half of the seed at a time, dam om ); mix all tORether. shake well and take f teaspoonful after each meal and one at retiring. versity of Louvain. His autograph is cause a corresponding lack of prosper crosswise. The ordinary grain drill may be used with the grass seeder at ity in the growth of the alfalfa. Like on the opening page. O ffe rin g ; ■ » In d u c e m e n t , The book, which is in Latin. Is hound the plant roots, these bacteria require tachment so connected as to deliver “ T o make it an object, brethren,” the seed into the grain tube*. Follow abundance of air in the soil, upon Said shrewd old Pastor Leach, In vellum and In perfect preservation, which to feed, and also a neutral or ing the seeding the ground should be “ T h e higher you raise my salary, belongs now to Joseph A. Donovan, rolled well and then very lightly har slightly alkaline medium such as is T h « shorter sermons I ’ll preich .* Rochester, N. Y., who is willing to sell supplied in limestone soils, in which to rowed. The seed should always be — Chicago Tribune. it for $10,OCX). sown alone, without a nurse crop of work. Unfortunately the lack of lime in any kind. U p to H e r. The field should be mowed whenever Western Oregon soils, in addition to The young houeswlfe was engaging the prolonged wet season and the pre the weeds begin to shade the alfalfa, her first cook. vailing heaviness of the soil, causes or whenever the growth comes to a "O f course," she said, “1 don’t want long exclusion of the air from the soil standstill or begins to turn yellow; or to have any trouble with you.” and a tendency towards acidity or sour when the new shoots of the second “Thin It do lie up t’ yersilf. mn’ain.” ness which is very favorable to the al growth begin to appear; or when the replied the kitchen lady. “ If yez make falfa bacteria. Hence it is, perhaps, plants show one-tenth in bloom. The no complaints 01*11 make no trouble." that in a majority of Western Oregon cutter bar should be set about 5 inches soils these bacteria are not present, above the ground the first year, and Not Guilty. Ckeuists \Ue System and must be supplied by artificial inoc the first cutting^, if light, be left upon “Conductor,” complained the lank ulation after the harmful acidity has the ground. It is imperative that the EjfccXuaVVy: spinster passenger, “that man !n the op- been corrected. This correction is ac crop should not be pastured the first IMjsite seat is winking at me!” "H e complished in naturally well drained two years. Dispels colds and Headaches says he doesn’t mean to wink at you,” soils by application of different forms Every year about April first a dress dv\c\o CcnsYypaYxon; W ater slaked lime most ing of 100 pounds of land plaster explained the car official. He’s trying of lime. should be applied, and while the quickly and directly corrects soil acid A q \ s naVwraYly, acXsXwdy as to keep the eye that’s turned toward ity— ground unhurried lime more slow ground is still soft, thorough cultiva you shut, ma’am.”— Judge. (x L a x o A w t • ly but less expensively— while light tion should be given, with the disc A SiiKiccntlon. annual dressings with land plaster harrow set straight and weighted and Best jov MsnW&xueo. andClvWd The Mistress—Jane, the dishes you keep it sweet (more or less indirectly) run crosswise, followed by the common have been putting on the table of late by making the heavy soils more open harrow. This cultivation keeps out Ycn.-\/ou\\(^ and 0\d. were positively dirty. What have you and friable. The land plaster also as grass and weeds, splits the alfalfa To g e l vVs btnfcJxcioV ejjects, sists in making potash ccmrtounds for crowns and thickens the stand; keeps to say about it? a\w ays b u y \be Gewuvae* The Servant— I think, ma’am, that which alfalfa has great need, more the surface Boil mellow and helps con manufactured by tke you ought to get colorisl dishes. They available, but to avoid loss through serve the moisture to carry the crop leaching should be used only in small through the dry months. I f the soil is won’t show tlie dirt at all.” poor a top dr« ssing of well rotted ma amounts. Sympathetic. The need of a fertile soil for alfalfa nure applied in the fall will prove ben Father (proudly)— I believe, my growing, while not generally recogniz eficial. It is well to let the alfalfa go Though the into the winter with a six or eight-inch SOLO BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS dear, that hoy of ours knows as mucii ed, is highly important. plant draws its most important food, growth. as I do. one size only, regular price 50* per bott1,. In Western Oregon the common va Mother— Yes, poor little fellow! It’s nitrogen, from the air, yet it is a heavy riety of alfalfa should be used, prefer feeder upon the other plant foods of too had that he doesn't know any P N U No. 19-OP the soil. On naturally unfertile soils, ably Montana grown. more. In pasturing alfalfa, to avoid bloat or those run down by continued wheat IIF !«f w r i t i n g t o a d v e r t i s e r « p i « or oth' r improvident farming, it is ing, cattle and sheep sh< uld not be al E c o n o m y. m e n tio n t h i s p a p e r . lowed to go on the Held with an empty “This stove," said the clerk to hi* CHANCE FOR A B IB L IO P H IL E . C A S TO R IA The Kind You Have Always Bought ElmViS Sewva CALIFORNIA Fic S y r u p C a w Irish customer, "is the best stove In the house. It is the stove of economy. It saves half the coal ulll.” “Give me two of tblm,” replied the Irishman, " I ’ll save all.”— Success. A S n s s c t l t . T itle , “What's he done now?” "I<e<turlng on ’ The Decline of I’oetry.’ ” "Wrote verses himself, didn't he?" "Yes, and they were all declined.”— Cleveland I’laiu Dealer. A b O a n re of P re v .B tlo a . Jlm m ie-H ow dld you know I golng to call? Iler I.ittle Bieter— I saw Nell ing tbe plus out of her beit— I'udL B COFFEE TE A SPICES BAKIR0 POWDER EXTRACTS JIKSI RI0HT CLOSSET fi DEVERS ^___ PORT LAN D. ORE. J p lf H P ( R E S C E N T Ess-PhoRPhM» HU I DO AU nur am iihurwni rwvM« a u C DO ARO ob : î K i m B A K IN C P O W D E R A FULL POUND 25c. PUTNAM FADELESS ’ SSL0/ m or* «GOd* b r ig h t « U ld (aster c o lo n than an y other dy*. •nd la gu-arar*— H • « —*— - — • — ----- — - - - M W to dye. I c olo rai L 1 S < r< w ool l/rtt, for . Quincy, LK