Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19??, June 04, 1909, Image 3

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    HONOR TO REGUURS
President Taft Speaks on Noted
Field of Gettysburg.
OPPOSED TO REDUCTION IN ARMY
Expects Congress, With Aid o f Hot
Weather, to Adjourn by June
20— Monument Unveiled.
Gettysburg, Pa., June 1.— Yesterday
was the day o f tardy honor to the “ reg­
ular” at Gettysburg.
An imposing
shaft o f granite, erected by congress
to the memory of those o f the regular
army who fell in the three days’ battle,
was unveiled by the president’s daugh­
ter, Miss Helen H. Taft, while the
president paid tribute to officers and
men o f the United States army, past
and present.
The president puts himself on record
as opposed to any reduction in the
standing army. He told o f the preju­
dice that often had arisen against the
possible aggressions o f a regular army
and a professional soldiery, and o f the
corresponding difficulty in arousing
that love and pride in the army which
expresses itself today and has fre­
quently expressed itself in the past in
behalf o f the navy. The president as
serted that the services of the regulars
had never been commemorated ade­
quately by congress or the nation.
“ The profession nf arms always has
been an honorable one,” he declared
" A l l honor to the regular army of the
United States. N ever in its history
has it had a stain upon its escutcheon.”
On the way to Gettysburg from
Pittsburg, the president’s car was side-
tracted at York for two hours and dur­
ing his stay he made a brief address,
in which he declared again his hope for
the early enactment o f a tariff law,
adding:
“ I have been called an optimist for
predicting that congress would adjourn
by June 20. Perhaps I am. But if
the Lord is good to us and the weather
gets hot enough in June, I think our
national legislators w ill be mighty
glad to get out o f those two close
chambers at Washington.”
Four regiments o f the regular army
were here to participate in the exer­
cises. There also was a personal es­
cort to the president composed of vet­
erans o f the regular army who fought
in the Gettysburg campaign.
The
president was taken for a drive over
the battlefield. A t several points he
alighted and stood on the prominences
overlooking the valley below and the
mountains in the far distance.
The ceremonies o f the unveiling
were simple.
Miss T a ft pulled the
silken cord that released the flags
draped about the monument. In fall­
ing one o f the flags caught on a bronze
eagle decorating one o f the inscribed
tablets. A trooper gave the flag a
tug, but it could not be released until
a large hole had been torn in the folds
o f the stripes. A fte r the president’s
speech, Secretary Dickinson presented
the monument to the battlefield com­
mission. A fte r the unveiling the pres­
ident reviewed the troops. A mounted
battery of artillery which recently
Berved in Cuba was a source o f much
interest. When the review was con­
cluded, the president hurried to his
train.
,
TO R N A D O K ILLS 32.
Town o f Zephyr, Texas, Demolished
and Ruins Burned.
Brownwcod, Tex., June 1.— A tor­
nado o f great fury struck the little
village o f Zephyr, in the eastern por­
tion o f Brown county, at 1 o ’clock this
morning and left a path o f death and
destruction seldom paralleled.
The
death list has reached a total o f 32,
and the number o f seriously or fatally
injured will reach 50.
The storm formed a half-mile west
o f Zephyr and swept down upon the vil­
lage, cutting a wide swath directly
through the residence and business dis­
tricts, Nearly 50 houses were demol­
ished. Lightning started a fire which
destroyed one entire business block.
No effort was made to fight the fire,
as the care o f the dead and injured de­
manded the attention o f everyone.
A section employe rode a handcar to
Brownwood and spread the alarm. In
two hours the Santa Fe railroad was
speeding a special train to the scene of
the storm with nine surgeons and a
score of Brownwood citizens.
Hundreds o f persons directly in the
storm’ s pathway saved themselves by
taking refuge in storm cellars. More
than 12 bodies were terribly maimed.
County Clerk Thad Cabler and w ife
and two children, who had gone to
Zephyr to spend the night, were killed.
The big stone school building and two
churches were demolished.
Brownwood hurried her second relief
train at 12 o'clock today, laden with
provisions, clothing and necessary ar­
ticles and carrying 40 nurses. Three
persons are still unaccounted for to­
night.
Two children were found dead late
today two miles from town, having
been blown that distance. A special
train will leave Zephyr tonight for
Temple, carrying the more seriously
injured to a hospital.
The storm
swept the earth for a distance o f prob­
ably less than a mile.
Surgeons from Brownwood found a
desert scene awaiting them. The hill­
sides at Zephyr were covered with de­
bris of all kinds, carcasses of animals
and human bodies. The ruins were
dimly lighted by the burning build­
ings, and the cries o f the injured rose
above the roar o f the elements which
threatened a second storm.
A hog roaming through the streets
was killed while attempting to devour
the body o f an infant. Bodies were
found twisted about trees and in every
conceivable attitude. Residents walked
the streets almost naked.
Houses
which had escaped the storm were
turned into hospitals. One house col­
lapsed on a fam ily o f nine without ser­
ious injury to any o f the occupants.
Brownwood, which organized the relief
work, has the situation well in hand.
AIRSH IP BREAKS A L L RECORDS
UMTEWITHAMERICA!
Zeppelin Travels 456
Without a Stop.
__________
____
V IE N N A S T E «M C L E A N IN G & D T E W O R K S
224-26 Third S tre e .. 1 ortlan d, O rego n
Great Britain Wants Naval Alli­
ance With United States.
( e stiv atio n
AUSTRALIA IN FAYOR OF POLICY
P la n ,
British Would Guard Atlantic and Un­
cle Sam Take Care o f Pacific
—Leave Out Japan.
London. May 29.— Overtures looking
to a naval understanding between
Great Britain and the United States
have been made by the British govern­
ment through Ambassador Bryce, in
Washington.
Premier Asquith had
this fact in mind when speaking re­
cently in what was regarded as a cryp­
tic manner o f a “ two-power” standard
for the British navy. The premier
hopes that such an understanding may
be reached with the American govern­
ment as shall enable Great Britain al­
most to denude the Pacific o f British
warships of a formidable class in re­
turn for givin g America certain assur­
ances respecting the naval situation in
the Atlantic.
The suggestions made by Mr. As­
quith through Ambassador Bryce fo l­
low the lines lately laid down in an ar­
ticle by Captain Mahan on the naval
position which has attracted wide at­
tention in authoritative circles in Eng­
land. The British cabinet feels that
only an understanding with America
can enable Great Britain to maintain a
two-power standard in Europe.
“ I f the Americans w ill look after our
interests in the Pacific,’ ’ said a respon­
sible naval authority this afternoon,
“ we will take care o f all American in­
terests in the Atlantic and Mediterra­
nean. We recognize the difficulty of
inducing America to break with the
tradition o f not entering into entangl­
ing alliances, but we are not without a
hope that the situation in the Pacific
may lead the authorities in Washington
to think favorably o f a proposal which
would admit o f their concentrating the
American naval strength in that ocean”
The British government is inclined
to seek a naval understanding with the
United States on account o f the possi­
bility o f Japan’s declining to renew
the Anglo-Japanese alliance when it
expires. Australians never cease to
urge the mother land to separate its
policy from that o f Japan in the Paci­
fic, and try to unite the strength o f the
English-speaking race in that part of
the world.
SM UGGLING
PLO T
UNEARTHED.
Federal Officers at Chicago Arrest
Leaders o f Scheme.
Chicago, May 29.— Government pros­
Miles ecution o f eight alleged leaders o f a
gigantic Chicago smuggling syndicate,
and the proposed arrest and indictment
Berlin, June 1.— Count Zeppelin, o f others was outlined today by United
whose remarkable performance in his States District Attorney Syms. Seven
first airship brought unbounded honor hundred Chinamen are alleged to have
smuggled into the United States over
to the inventor, accomplished today
the Mexican border by the syndicate
the most striking feat in his career.
during the past 12 months, being se­
He guided his Zeppelin I I from creted in dining cars by cooks and port­
Friedrichshafen to Bitterfeldt, a dis­ ers on through trains.
Immigration authorities caused in­
tance o f more than 456 miles without
dictments to be voted by the grand jury
landing. The journey, lasted nearly 22 for the Chicago district for the follow ­
hours, and, so far as known tonight, ing:
P U T LIN C O LN ABOVE ALL.
Bob Lung, El Paso, Texas, a rich
Count Zepelin is still in the air on his
Chinaman, restaurant owner and finan­
return journey to Friedrichshafen.
Hollingsworth Protests Against Honor
He has already beaten all records for cier, in whose kitchen plans for carry­
Paid J e ff Davis.
dirigible baloons, with the opportunity ing on the smuggling scheme were
Washington, June 1.— Memorial Day o f greatly improving the performance. formulated, now locked up in the Cook
was generally observed here yester­ It was announced that the count would county jail pending tria l; Robert W.
day. A ll the government departments come to Berlin and land at the Tempel- Stephenson, a former railroad brake-
and practically all the business houses hof parade ground. Hundreds o f thou­ man, El Paso, Texas, now in ja il here
in default of $5,000 bail; Carlos Save-
were closed in order that tribute might sands gathered there this afternon.
The emperor and empress, several of dra, a Mexican, alleged to be the chief
be paid the nation’s dead. The prin­
cipal exercises were at Arlington, un­ the princes and the leading officials and smuggler; Jose Parra, Mexican; Sam
der the auspices o f the G. A. R. Every officers were present. Toward even­ Wah, alleged agent for the Chicago
grave was marked with an American ing searchlights were set at work in office o f the syndicate; W. H. Clark,
flag, while flowers were strewn every­ anticipation o f the approach o f the air­ Lincoln, Neb., under arrest at El Paso,
where.
Appropriate exercises also ship. Soldiers kept an enormous space and Chin Yin Qual, an alleged agent of
were conducted at the Soldiers’ Home clear until half-past 10 at night, when the syndicate.
National cemetery and other burial a dispatch from Bitterfeldt announced
places in the city.
that the airship was returning to the
Forest Fires in Michigan.
A t the Soldiers’ Home Represent­ starting place at Friedrichshafen,
Negaunee, Mich., May 29.— Forest
ative Hollingsworth, o f Ohio, was one which caused intense disappointment. fires are raging in this section o f the
o f the speakers. He referred to the
upper peninsula and reports from Dal­
recent discussion in the house when he
Thirty People Rescued.
ton say the town has been destroyed.
protested against placing the head of
Port Townsend, June 1.— The large When the fire threatened Dalton last
Jefferson Davis on the silver service of launch Skidoo, with 30 people d rift­ night a special train was ordered and
the battleship Mississippi, declaring ing helpless in the Pacific ocean be­ the inhabitants, with as much o f their
that “ it would be a dark day indeed cause of the breaking down o f her en­ possessions as they could carry away,
for the republic when the name of gines, was rescued today by the life ­ vere taken to a place o f safety. Many
Abraham Lincoln ceases to be revered saving power-boat Audacious, and iishing and camping parties in the
above all other figures o f the civil war towed to Neah bay. The Skidoo is a woods are in great danger, and their
period, or when it shall be replaced by fish-buying boat owned in Anacortes, fate will probably be unknown for sev­
that of Jefferson Davis in the hearts which cruises near the entrance o f the eral days. No rain has fallen in this
and affections o f the American people. Straits o f Fuca. Today she was out district for several weeks.
The thought o f it is as shocking as the with an excursoin party o f Anarcortes
first thrill o f horror that followed the people, came disabled and would have
Taft Busy in East.
firing on Sumpter.”
gone down with all on board but for the
Tokio, May 29.— The papers here in
Audacious.
editorials discussing the action o f Pres­
Strikers Capture Dynamite.
ident T a ft in offering the Chinese min­
Ex-Corn King Is Miner.
istership to John Hays Hammond, pro­
Sisson, Cal., June 1.— Armed with
knives and rifles, a party of striking
Baker City, Or., June 1.— Excellent fess to see in it a sign o f an ambitious
lumbermen at McCloud, 14 miles east showing of mineral in his Baker County Eastern policy on the part of the new
o f here, drove the guards away from mines has caused George H. Phillips, administration in the United States.
the powder house tonight and is now once the center o f attraction through­ It is well known that T a ft is greatly
affairs, and
in possession of a ton or more o f dyna­ out the nation as a “ corn king,” to interested in Oriental
mite, according to telephone advices place more money in development there is a strong feeling that his ad-
received here tonight. Shortly after work. He is spending a few days in ministrtion will mean much in the de­
the message was received communica­ the Granite mountains west o f Baker velopment o f more friendly relations
tion with McCloua was interrupted and City. When asked if he ever expected between America and the East, and
it is not known whether the wire was to enter the pit again, Mr. Phillips especially with Japan.
cut or not. Sheriff Howard o f this said: “ No, I am done. I would much
May Take Taft to Alaska.
county is at McCloud with 40 or 50 rather pin my faith and fortune to
deputies.
Baker county mines than to play the
Puget Sound Navy Yard, Wash.,
grain market.”
May 29.—It is rumored here that the
Wireless Saves Steamer.
crui-er St. Louis, which is making
Removal to be Opposed.
ready to go to sea early next month,
Guymas, Mex., June 1.— Through
Indianapolis,
June
1.— Delavan w ill take President T a ft and his party
the use o f wireless telegraphy, the
American steamer Precursor, rendered Smith and Charles R. Williams, own­ to Alaska this summer. The destina­
helpless by a broken propeller, was ers o f the Indianapolis News, charged tion of the St. Louis is not officially
rescued from a dangerous position and with criminal libel in having pub­ known. A draft o f 70 men was rej
towed into this port yesterday. The lished articles alleged to have inti­ ceived yesterday from the cruiser M il­
Precursor had drifted aimlessly for mated corruption in the purchase of waukee. A like number o f men were
three days. A tug was sent out and the Panama canal zone by the United transferred from the cruiser Maryland,
brought the steamer into port. Some States government, will appear before which came from San Francisco.
o f the passengers had become uncon­ Judge Anderson in the United States
Floods in Mississippi.
trol able from fear and had to be district court in this city next Tuesday
to oppose the removal for trial to the
locked in their staterooms.
Jackson, Miss., May 29.— The town
District o f Columbia.
o f Quitman is submerged as the result
Spain to Try Reform.
of a flood. A ll business is suspended
Onions Prolong Life?
and the residents have been forced into
Madrid, June 1.— A bill providing
Bellefontaine, O., June 1.— Mrs. Re-j the upper parts o f their houses. Some
for the reorganizatoin o f the Spanish
The
postal service was adopted by the becca Bums, who assorted that when have had to move out entirely.
chamber o f deputies todav.
The b ill, a child she saw George Washington, ; loss from high water is heavy through­
provides for lower postal rates, a par-, died here at the age o f 111. She at-[ out the state. Miles o f railroad tracks
ceis post, a money order system and a tributed her longevity to eating onions have been destroyed and the loss to the
railroads is estimated at $1,000,000.
postal saving"’ bank system.
twice each day.
Count
IT WILL SAVE YOU MONEY m M M B
___________
(o r
F arm
Ham .
The many very marked changes in
farm life would lead one to believe
that the large farm Is, or soon will be,
a thing of the past. The high price
of farm help, the necessity for better
cultivation and furming, fewer and
better bred stock, better care of stock,
better buildings for bousing the hay,
grain and stock, has or soon w ill bring
the small furm, and. so planned and
arranged that a greater variety of prod­
ucts are raised.
Many instances are known where the
man who had struggled for years with
200 to 500 acres, barely made a living,
and o f doubling their Income by sim-
h »H O I
ÌM K Ì.L .
# «/ > «.
ply renting out all of the land except
fifty to eighty acres. That several cows
must be kept on such a farm goes with­
out saying, not only for the monthly
Income nnd profit, but for the manure
that is necessary to keep the soil alive.
Present sanitary requirements call
for many devices and appliances that
cannot be installed on the small farm,
but cleanliness and kindness is within
the possibilities of any of us, and while
it is true that to bouse the cows in
the same building with the horses has
some disadvantages, it also has its ad­
vantages, and to build separate build­
ings for both, is not only expensive, but
calls for extra help in caring for and
feeding them.
A careful study of the barn shown
in the illustration herewith will show
what we will call a condensed arrange­
ment, and, while the cows are in the
same bam with the horses, a good,
tight partition separates them from the
horse barn, to keep out the dust and
odors. For the same reason the silo is
located where shown, for silage, no
matter how well cared for, has an
offensive odor, that is readily absorbed
by milk.
The floor plan Is self-explaining, the
dlo is an ordinary stave structure, with
wire cables for hoops, as the cable is
not so easily affected by contraction
ind expansion ns the solid Iron hoops.
The crib has the foundation left out
is shown, and the floor Is of 2x0 inch
studding, with one-half-inch spaces be­
tween. The siding is drop siding, the
same ns the bnlance of the barn, but
the top and lower edges nre beveled,
ad a one-half-inch space is left be­
tween each board. This construction
allows a free circulation of air, and
keeps out the rain, suow and wind.
The small amount of corn that drops
through the floor is eaten by the poul-
----- 3t> ----
That
d a m a g e « Corn.
R a a lly
R e g u la t e d
G a te .
The gate hanger illustrated In the
drawing Is very handy for use where
It is desired to let hogs pass from one
pasture to another
while cows a r e
confined to one. As
shown, the hanger
Is a piece of strap
iron bent around
the post nnd sup­
ported by pegs.
These pegs may be
Inserted In holes
at varying heights.
This Is also a good
device for raising
ADJUSTABLE HANULR. ^
^
th 8
snow In winter.—
Sam Avery, in Farm and Home.
A ll In Management.
Folks sny that If you want any class
of stock that can always be sold at a
profit, from weaning time until totter­
ing old uge, you want a mule. We do
not raise mules, so can not speak from
experience. This much we do know,
however, several good friends of ours
have been dickering in mules for years
without mnking any money. Perhaps
these are the exceptional cases that
prove the rule. Others have raised
and bought mules and made good
money. We surmise it’s more the man
and his management than it is ths
mule, that reaps the profit. The sams
man dealing In razorbacks might maks
some money.— Farmers’
Mall
and
Breeze.
F ertiliser
for
Potatoes.
For potatoes the pnst year we used
1,200 pounds of fertilizer to the acre,
one-third applied
broadcast nnd the
rest scattered in the furrow, brushing
the fertilizer into the soil of the fur­
Æ.«* A x *
row before planting the seed. After
planting, the surface was kept well
try and hogs. The studding are 12 stirred to prevent weeds starting and
feet, and the lower story is 8 fe e t; the cultivator was run often enough
the cow stalls are of cement, with gut­
to keep down the weeds. A little hand
ter, and all stalls have pounded clay hoeing was done. The yield was 250
floors. It will pay to plaster the walls bushels per acre. The crop followed
and ceiling of the cow barn with ce­
corn and the land was very thorough­
ment. After the silo has been used for
ly harrowed
before potatoes
were
several years, it Is intended to lath
planted. Plenty of harrowing and lib­
and plaster it with cement
eral use of fertilizers may be depend­
It will pay to use good material
ed on to give a good crop.
throughout, provide a good foundation
and roof, and to keep all exposed wood
R o t a t i o n o f F o r e a ta .
work well painted.
The necessity of the rotation of
As the various climates demand
crops Is well recognized among mod­
slightly different construction, and the
ern fnrmers, nnd now it appears that
lumber used Is not the same In all
in India nature is seen practicing th«
sections. It would be simply a waste of
same thing in the forests. The soil
valuable space to describe them here.—
J. E. Bridgman, In S t Paul Dispatch. becoming exhausted after a long period
of one kind of forests, seedlings of
other species gradually replace th«
F e rtilis in g the G arden.
Don't be afraid of getting the soil old trees as they die out. On the
too rich for any of the vegetables Indian soil, the deodar tree has been
whose leaf or stem Is edible. I f you observed taking the place of the blue
cannot have plenty of well rotted pine, pine and oak slowly exchange
manure, a top dressing of nitrate of places, and spruce and silver fir have
soda Just before planting will furnish been noted gradually extending Into «
the plant food needed of nitrogen, but forest of falling oaks.
other elements may be needed for a
proper balance. Wood ashes. If avail­
able. are a good source for potash, but
sulphate or muriate of potash may be
used Instead and frequently a dressing
of hyperphospbate Is beneficial.
I f one Is growing only a small gar
den for home use, the droppings from
the poultry house will furnish enough
fertilizer to keep the soil In a good
state of fertility; but If growing truck
on a large scale, it would be well to
inquire of your experiment station
wbat commercial fertilizers would be
of most help in securing maximum
crops of the vegetables you wish to
grow.
MÂPLEINE
The corn is often damaged by ths
roots being broken In deep cultivation.
This is not the case to a serious ex­
tent early In the season, when the corn
C o n ju g a l C o m p lim en t«.
is small, but the check to the crop may
Said he, “ I might meutiou,
be quite marked If cultivated deep
M j dearest Maria,
late in the season, when the corn has
That you’re iu the class of
reached a height of 2 td 3 feet or more,
A Mis. Sapphira."
particularly If the previous cultivation
has been shallow or neglected. I f dry
She retorted, “ I might say.
weather happens to follow such treat­
Without any bias.
ment the damage to the crop Is much
That you could give pointers
Increased
When not followed
by
To one Ananias.**
some form of cultivation that will level
Which shows that in certain
down the ridges left by the large shovel
Emergencies dire,
cultivator, the ground will dry out
More ways than one are there
quite deeply and in the furrows be­
To say, “ You’re a liar.’*
tween the ridges this drying readily
-Balti more American.
reaches the roots of the corn. To
G e ttin g Person al.
obviate this as much as possible, when
HdgCSJ' — You don’t never see me stand-
the old-fashioned large shovels
are
used, the work should be followed as in' in a bread Hue 1
Muggsy—That's 'cause yer wif. run* a
soon as possible with something to
clothesline.
level down the surface. Unless there
Her
Frien ds.
Is something to be gained by it, deep
Nan— 1.11 Uarllnghurn says her ateady
cultivation should not be followed.—
la the tallest young man in the city.
Oklahoma Station.
Fan— She says so, does she? Well, Lll
always was good at drawing ths long
C o -O p eration A m o n g F a rm e rs.
Men in all other lines of business beau.—Chicago Tribune.
organize and work together. Farmers
T h e O n ly A u dien ce«
are beginning to see the need of con­
“ Does anybody reud real poetry now­
certed action, but as a rule we still adays?”
work single-handed. At Lombard, 111,
“ I presume the publisher« glanc« at
about twenty miles west of Chicago, It before Bon d in g It back.”
the farmers who produce milk for sals
I la s c u lt n s C y nlclsas.
In the big city have tried several times
“ Tour wife acema to bs delighted
to organize in order to force the milk with the new flat.”
trust to pay them a price in accord­
“ O, yea. it has all the modern Incon­
ance with what the customer pays, but venience».”— Chicago Tribune.
the trust is always able to hire some
So D iffe r e n t.
farmer to break the rules of the local
association or to talk against the proj­ When Music, heavenly maid, was young,
When simple songs were simply aung,
ect to such an extent as to defeat Its There were no thrifty artisans
ends. That Is one great difficulty in To put the melodies in cans.
forming protective measures among
N o D ifficu lty A b o u t T h at.
farmers. There are always a few men
Teacher (at night school)— Give me
In the community who are willing to
sacrifice future advantages to gain a some illustration of tha “ survival of ths
dttest.”
few cents in present price.-—Agricul­
Shaggy Haired Pupil— Any handsome
tural Epitomist.
widow.
B reed in g
C orn.
Cleaned and Bln
cknd. 1
TW
na s « UÉI
___
W C m
cnasaitd will
insta. We ds«n brinai a-
press and suil order business. Wntn for p
A flavoring used the same as lemon or vanilla.
By dissolving granulattd sugar in w ater and
adding . lapleine, a delicious syrup is made and
a syrup better than maple. Mapleine is sold by
grocers.
I f not send 35c fo r 2 oz. bottle and
recipe book. C rescent M f g . Co., Seattle. W n .
N o t T h a t.
Aspiritig Soubrette (pouting)— I know
well enough you think my acting is k
joke.
Manager—O, no, my dear young ladjl
Anything but that. It's a tragedy.
Mothers w ill find Mrs. Winslow's Soothing
Byrup the bust rem edy to use for their ch lid itg
during the teething period.
At
the
N ig h t
S c h o o l.
Teacher—Give me an example of what
is meant by “ masterly inactivity!”
Hoy with the prognathous face— A base
ball pitcher delayin’ a game so it’ll hAve
to be called on account o’ darkness.
DO YOU W A NT A T Y P E W R IT E R ? Tha
W holesale T y p e w rite r Go,, 37 M ontgom ery St.,
San Francisco, w ill h ell you one at 40 to 75 par
cent discount from factory list, all makes on m ar­
ket. all fu lly guaranteed.
Oat
of
It.
“ Mrs. Browu says that she’ll never
wear one of those 500-button gowns”
“ Why not ?"
“ Her husband has only one arm."
—Detroit Free Press.
P I T Ç St. V itu s’ D ance ana orvous uiw
I 11 3 nently cared by Dr. 1 .in o’ « G reat Nerve Ra«
■torer. Send fo r FREE $2.00 tria l lx>ttle and treatise.
Dr. ¡ L 11. Kline. Ld.. 931 Arch St.. Philadelphia, Pa.
W ebster K nocked
O n t.
Jinks— Why do you say eyether and
nyether?
Winks— I heard John L. Sullivan
use that pronunciation at the theater,
and he’s from Boston, you know.—
New York Weekly.
Over fifty years of public confidence
and popularity. That is the record o f
Hamlins Wizard Oil, the world’s stand­
ard remedy for aches and pains.
There’s a reason and only one— MERIT.
The
Hush
to
the
C ity.
“ Willis, how came you to leave th«
farm and move to town to make your
living?”
"I got tired of the smell of de.d’i auto­
mobile.”
ODD BITS OF FACT.
The United Stutes consumes 80,-
000,000 pounds of tea annually.
A man can Insure against loss In
For Infants and Children.
lotteries with a company at The Hugue.
There are more doctors per capltu In
New York city than anywhere else In
Bears the
this country.
Signature
Sealing wax contains no wax.
The Dutch throne has forty-one pos­
sible claimants.
A Q u ic k P r o c e s s .
Potatoes steeped In sulphuric acid
“ They say that skin food will fill out
and subjected to pressure make an ex­ the hollows.”
cellent substitute for Ivory in the
“ So will a two-inch steak.” — Kansu
manufacture of billiard balls.
City Journal.
CASTO R IA
The Kind You Have Always Bought
N o b le
H en.
Tha hen will set and the hen will lay,
And the hen will roost up high;
But one good thing we can say of her—
The hen will never lie.
— Yonkers Statesman.
A l l Who
Would E n jo y
good health, with its blessings, must un­
M lsan derstod .
Court Officer (after adjournment)— derstand, quite clearly, that it involve* the
Mr. Skiles, will you see that ths jury is question of right living with all the term
comfortably fixed?
New Bailiff— Fixed. Mr. Jinx? Fixed? implies. With proper knowledge of what
Great Scott, who's going to put up the is best, each hour of recreation, of enjoy­
money I
ment, of contemplation and of effort may
be mado to contribute to living aright.
C a u sa o f tha R a s h Aet.
"You’re the editor, ain't you?” asked Then the use of medicines may be dis­
the caller, a man with thin lips, high pensed with to advantage, but under or­
cheek bones, and a sharp nose.
“ Yes, sir,” answered the man at the dinary conditions in many instance* •
simple, wholesome remedy may be invalu­
desk. “ What can I----- ”
“ Wall, air, I've been readin’ your pa­ able if taken at the proper time and th«
per purty regular for about twenty-seven
years, but you bad an article this morn­ California Fig Syrup Co. holds that it it
alike important to present the subject
ing----- ”
"That you couldn’t Indorse? I ’m sorry truthfully and to supply the one perfect
for that, but you know such things are
likely to happen now and then, and----- ” laxative to those desiring it.
“ That wasn't what I was goin* to aay.
Consequently, the Company’« Syrup of
That artirle pleased me so well that I Figs and Elixir of Senna gives general
thought I ’d come around and subscribe
for the paper. How much la It?”— Chica­ satisfaction. To get its beneficial effect*
go Tribune.
buy the genuine, manufactured by th*
California Fig Syrup Co. only, and for sal«
T he Professor D em urs,
“ Don’t quote Slobson to me," protest* by all leading druggists.
•d the doctor. “ 1 know Slobson, and
he's a regular freak.”
"My friend,” gravely chid tha profes­
sor, “ you should be more careful in your
use of the English language. Anything
that is regular can’t be a freak, and any­
thing that is a freak can't be regular.”
Worms
"C ru ra ret» are c erta in ly fine. X g a ve a frien d
one when the doctor was trea tin g him fo r cancer
ot the stomach.
T h e n eat m o rn in g he pas»ed
fou r p ie c e »o f a tape worm.
H e then go t a box
ami iu three d a y » he passed a ta p e w o r m 48 fo ot
Iona.
It was Mr. M att Freck, o f M illerabu rg,
Dauphin Co., Pa. I am qu ite a w ork er fo r Casca-
rets. I use them m y s e lf
ia and find them beneficial
----
r moat any disease caused by im pure b lo od ."
Chas. K. Condon, Lew iston , Pa., (M ifflin Co.)
Pleasant. Palatab le, Potent, T a s t e Good.
D o G ood. N e v e r Sicken, W eaken or Gripe.
10c, 25c, 50c. N e v e r sold In bulk. T h e genu­
ine tablet strm p ed C C C. G uaranteed to
• o r a o r you m o n ey back.
921
DAISY FLY KILLER
piseed
aay*
heat, i-1eei., orna*
mnntel, c o n »«• n-
Irut, cheap. Last«
a ll »«a eo a . Can
not ai 111 or tip
over, will not eoil
or injure a n y ­
thing Guaranteed
effective.
O f all
dealers, or sent prepaid for M cent«.
Prof. R. A. Moore says that pains­
taking in breeding corn has raised th«
average corn production in Wisconsin
from 25 bushels per sere In 1001 to
41.2 bushels per acre In 1907. This In­ HAROLD SOMERS, ISO DsKalk Ass., r tly ik , N. Y.
crease is worth striving for in every
State and on every farm.
DR. W . A. W ISE
22 Years a le a d e r in Painless Dental
W ork in Portland.
Out-of-Town People
Should rem em ber that our f >rce is so arranged
that W E C A N DO T H E IK E N T IR E C n O w K .
B R ID G E A N D P L A T E W O R K IN A D A Y I f
necessary.
P O S IT I V E L Y P A I N L E S S E X ­
T R A C T IN G F R E E \vh n plates or bridges are or-
lerod. W E R E M O V E T H E MOST S E N S IT IV E
T E E T H A N D ROOTS W IT H O U T T H E L E A S T
P A IN . N O S T U D E N T S , no uncertainty.
F o r th e
N ext
F ifte e n
D ays
W e w ill g iv e you a good 22k gold or porce­
lain crown f o r .................................................$8.58
22k bridge tee th ............................................... 8.60
Molar crow n ....................................................
1,08
Gold or enamel fillin gs..................................... 1.88
Silver fillin gs..........................................................88
Good rubber p la tes......................................... 8.88
The best red rubber p la tes............................ T.08
Painless extractions .............................................18
A L L W O R K G U A R A N T E E D 15 T E A M
D r. W . A . W is e
N o tes o f th e
F ig
P re s id e n t an d M a n a g e r
Pea.
Give growing pigs food to produc*
bone and muscle rather than fa t
The pig should have a warm, dry
bed kept clean and free from dust
No domestic animal responds so
quickly to good treatment as th« bog.
O e a t r o fln f Stam p«,
Thrifty hogs turn grains Into money
Here are two ways of destroying quicker than any other domestic anl-
stumps by means of adds: In the fall mal.
bore with an Inch auger 10 Inches deep
The thrift and condition of th« moth­
Into the stump. Into this put one half er determine to a great exteDt wbat
pound of vitriol and cork up very tight. the pig will be.
When a hog has to be driven to his
The stump will probably be rotten in
•bout eight months.
Another w a y ; feed usually a mistake baa been made
|
Bore with Inch auger 18 inches deep In his feeding.
When fed dry shelled corn is more
Into stump and put In one ounce of
saltpeter and then All the hole with economical than cornmeal to feed t«
water and cork. In about six months fattening hogs.
take out the plug and pour In about
Beauty in form and appearance la
a gill of cce! oil and set tire to It. not ■ safe Indication of the value of •
This should burn the stump nearly up. | sow as • breedee
I
coffee
TEA
! ^
3 PI 6 E S
The Wise Dental Co.
(INC.)
JUST RIGHT
oossnai
FoariANO. one.
Th ird and W „ h in r t o n Sts.
P O R T L A N D , OREGON
BARINO POWDER
» EXTRACTS
P N U
N o . 2 3-0 «
E
H E N w r i t i n g to ie d ve r t li
m e n t i n a t h i s pa p er .
(RESCENT Egg-Phosphate
BAKING POWflFR
WILL DO Ali.
THAT SVI
hw « m m
row ota wai
c »»»
d o :; m it r i
A FULL POUND 25c.
Get It from
your Grocer