PIMPLES NO AMERICANS LOST
MT tried all kinds of blood remedies
which failed to do me any good, but I
have found the right thing at last. My
face was full of pimples and black-heads.
After taking Cascarets they all left. I am
continuing the use of them and recom
mending them to my friends. I feel hue
when I rise in the morning. Hope to
have a chance to recommend Cascarets."
Fred C. Witten, 76 Elm St., Newark, N. J.
Pleasant. P a latab le. Potent. T a s t e G ood.
D o Good. N e v e r S ick en .W ea k en o r Gripe.
10c, 25c, 50c. N e v e r sold In bulk. T h e genu
ine tablet stam ped C C C . Guaranteed to
o ^ re o r yo u r m o n ey back.
922
Mexican Authorities Now Place
Dead at 2,000.
RELIEF MEASURES BEING TAKEN
Homeless and Destitute Estimated at
15,000 to 20,000— Bodies o f
800 Are Recovered.
COFFEE)
TEA SPICES
Monterey, Mexico, Aug. 31.— With
800 bodies recovered and buried in
Monterey up to nightfall, 2,000 is now
the estimate o f the city authorities of
those who lost their lives throughout
the valley of the Santa Catalina river.
The number o f homeless, many o f them
destitute, is placed between 15,000 and
BAKING POWDER
» EXTRACTS
JUST RIGHT
Q3>-
O0SSET
a DIVERS )
PORTLAND. ORE.
20 , 000 .
W hy
Ha
Favored
Them .
Friend—Why do you encourage these
woman’s suffrage meetings? Surely
you don’t approve of them?
Husband—Approve? With all my
heart! I can come home as late as I
like now without finding my wife wait
lng to ask questions.—Kansas City
Journal.
Do your feet ever feel tired, achy
and sore at night? Rub them with a
little Hamlins Wizard 01. They’ ll be
gl%d in the morning, and so will you.
In fallib le .
"Are you. Indeed, a really and truly
fairy?” asked the little girl.
“ Yes, I am a fairy. I live here in
the woods, but nobody but good chil
dren ever sees me.”
"But how do you fix people so they
can’t see you?”
"I lend them money/*
The recipe has never been known to
tell.—Cleveland Leader.
Th oaich
There
Is
No
In cen tive.
First Hunter—You know they have
passed a law in Florida permitting the
killing of alligators?
Second Hunter—O, well, I suppose
we’ll keep on killing them, Just the
same.
Mother« will find Mrs Winslow's Soothing
Byrup the b<-st re m ed y to ubo for their children
the teething period.
during
At
the
Sum m er
R esort.
"I'm sorry," said the maiden, "but
you'll have to go now.”
"But it’s only 10 o'clock,” replied
the young man.
" I know, but we can't have the ham
mock any longer. There's so much
company in the house that pa has to
sleep out here and I Just know we're
keeping
him out of bed.”— Detroit
Free Press.
A te s t a i d
u n t.iu e .
Tramp (outside the gate)—Madam,
may I ask does your dog bite?
Mrs. Jaye (In the garden)—Yes. he
does; and please don’t come In. We
are very particular about what we
feed him on!—San Francisco Examln-
Knew
He
W anted
It.
"Yus, Bill, mark my words, the
thing wot's goln’ to make England Is
tariff reform—an' no mistake."
"W ot be tariff reform. 'Enery?”
"Why, tariff reform is—er—well. It’s
*—er—what they tell yer at the meet
ings.”—London Punch.
C le a r W i n . o i M o n e y .
Saplelgh—The doctor says there's
something the matter with my head.
Sharp— You surely didn't pay a doc
tor to tell you that!—Boston Tran
script
CRESCENT
V ±
,
— . — . --------- ----
D
A !/ l a i r *
■ S AA § \
11
F w l a ll s
—
does all tbat the
high priced baking
powders will do and does
better, it raises the
dough and m akeslight-
er, sw eeter and bettei
D ia lA / lE L D
risen
•St.ld by gro
I I I v V I I I
IA
cers 2 5 c per pound. M
B w # II
you w ill sena us your
,
. . .
narae and address, w e
n i l send you a book on health and baking powder.
CRESCENT MFC. CO. Seattle, Wn.
ALBERTA WHEAT LAND
$15 P e r A c re
10 Y e a rs * T im e
These lands o f Canadian Pacific R ailw ay
produce from 35 to 50 bushels o f wheat. 75
to 100 bushels o f oats, per acre. A ll near
railw ays, towns and schools.
P ositively
the best w heat land proposition fo r men
o f moderate means.
N o crop failures.
Send U da for free illustrated literature.
Special ra ’ es 1st and 15ih o f every month
IDE M C ARTH Y LAND CO.
Genl. Land A gfa . Canadian Pacifie R. R
425-<!6 Lumbermen's Building
P O R T L A N D . OK
-fOWERj
wear well
and they keep you
dry while you are
wearing them
4 .3 0 0
EVERYW H ERE
ouapamtffo watepppoof v
CATALOG FPU
cam
The Chinese Doctor
This wondefu! man ha«
made a life study o f the
ropertiee o f Roots,
lerbe and Barks, and
1« giving the world the
benefit o f jis services.
B
No Mercery. Poisons
or Driers Used. No
Operations or Cot tint
Guarantees to euro Catarrh. Asthma. Lnnr.
Stomach and Kidney troubles, and all Private
Diseases o f M n ami Women.
A S U R iC A N C E R CURE
Just received from Pekin. China- mafa, aura
ond reliable. U ..failing in its works.
I f you cannot call, write for symptom blank
and circular. Inclose 4 cents in stamps.
CONSULTATION TREE
The C. Gee Wo Medicine Co.
^*2
Tacoma, Wash., Aug. 31.— Local
railroad officials are authority for the
statement that the railroads reaped a
harvest o f some $8,000,000 in cold cash
as a result o f the opening o f the three
Indian reservations, the Spokane, Coeur
d’ Alene and Flathead. O f this amount
the Northern Pacific is credited with
receiving the lion’s share o f about $5,-
000,000. I t is now expected that the
lucky winners in the drawings will
spend about $1,000,000 which will find
its way into the railroad’s pockets in
taking up their land.
.
C. Gee Wo
, fir r t M -. (o r . M o .r i. o - . P o r t l « « d . Or.^
Twelve Hundred at Least Drowned in
Mexican Flood.
Monterey, Mex., Aug. 31.— Twelve
hundred and perhaps more people per
ished Friday night and Saturday in the
flood which swept a large portion of
this city.
Conservative estimates
place the property loss at $20,000,000.
Fifteen thousand people are homeless.
More than 500 bodies have been recov
ered.
The river has fallen considerably,
and while still high, the danger is
over. Seventeen and a half inches of
rain fell during Friday, Saturday and
Sunday.
The greatest loss o f life occurred
Saturday morning between 9 and 11
o ’clock, when the large bu idings on
the south side of the river commenced
to crumble. Many o f the houses had
from 100 to 200 persons on their roofs
and all disappeared in the flood.
In one school building 90 women and
children were drowned.
They had
hurried to the school for safety, but
the water drove them from room to
room until they were all clustered in
one room.
While two priests were
performing some religious rites, the
walls fell and all were swallowed up
in the seething waters.
Thousands of persons were standing
on the north bank of the river, unable
to render aid to the unfortunates on
the buildings on the south side, for
nothing could have lived in the current
o f the Santa Catalina, which was half
a mile wide and flowing swiftly.
A TT A C K PO STAL M ONO PO LY
French Strikers Combine to Compete
With Government.
Paris, Aug. 31.— In a few days the
French postoffice is to have an active
competitor in the shape of a new co
operative postal association, formed by
some 150 dismissed postal servants.
These, under the direction of MM.
Barbut and Simonnet, the postal offi
cials who took a prominent part in the
recent strike, are organizing a service
in all those branches o f the postal bus
iness not claimed as a monopoly by the
postoffice. This includes uie distribu
tion o f newspapers, circulars, samples,
catalogues, etc., also the collection o f
accounts and debt collecting.
The new association, which will
start operations on Monday, is known
as the “ Laborieuse.” It is understood
already to have been promised the cus
tom o f some 90,000 firms, tradesmen
and private individuals, who at the
present utilize the French postoffice
for distribution o f their trade circu
lars, samples, account collecting, etc.
Each of the 150 members o f the “ La
borieuse” has subscribed a $20 share.
Besides this, the association has at its
disposal a working capital of $4,000.
Members o f the co-operation w ill be
employed in turn in different depart
Other Towns Feared Lost.
Mexico City, Aug. 31.— Further re ments.
ports indicate that other river settle
ments have been swept away.
The
INVESTIGA1 ION IS ASKED.
town o f Cadareyta, situated in the riv
er bottom, is said to have been destroy Cunnirgham Denies Fraud in Alaska
ed and it is feared there ha9 been heavy
Coal Land Grants.
loss o f life in the country district ad
Seattle, Aug. 31.— C. C. Cunning
jacent to the Santa Catalina river.
The fact that the water mains in Mon ham, who represented the 33 claimants
terey are broken has forced the people in the so-called Cunningham coal land
to use old polluted wells for drinking claims in Alaska, which are being in
vestigated by the government, and who
water.
was aboard the steamer Ohio when it
was wrecked, returned to Seattle to
HUGE ORDERS PLACED .
day with the other survivors and de
dared that the charges the claims have
Railroads Spending Millions for New been illegally filed upon, and that Sec
Equipment.
retary o f the Interior Ballinger had at
Chicago, Aug. 312.— The manage tempted to compel Special Agent
ment o f the Rock Island has just placed Glives o f the land office, who filed a
orders for equipment and power which complaint with President T a ft recently
will necessitate an expenditure o f ap to permit the issuance o f patent on the
proximately $9,000,000.
The orders claims, is absurd.
“ Enemies o f Secretary Ballinger are
consist o f all kinds of freight cars, lo
comotives and passenger equipment, in grave error in charging that he is
and are among the largest given by any involved in any scheme to turn over
Western railroad system in several the coal lands to parties represented
by me,” said Mr. Cunningham.
years.
“ We court the fullest investigation.
A large portion o f the equipment and
power will be in the nature of facilities I feel certain it will be found the lands
and w ill not be to replace old and worn- have been legally filed upon. Should
out equipment.
The officials o f the it be found there has been any irregu
Rock Island agree with President B. L. larities in filing, it will be found the
Winchell that the prosperity o f the entries have been made in good faith,
country will soon be as great as when and the errors are due to technicalities
shippers were besieging the railroads in the present law.”
Mr. Cunningham denied the Guggen
for transportation facilities.
heim and Morgan interests are backing
him in his claims.
Rich Harvest fo r Roads.
Indian Mine Discovered.
Hamilton, Mont., Aug. 31.— A fte r a
search extending over a quarter o f a
century an old Indian gold mine has
been discovered by a hunter named
Shipman in Ravalli county.
Twenty-
seven years ago Indiana were regular
viators in Hamilton with samples of
rich gold rock, which they exchanged
for food and provisions. All efTorts to
locáte their source o f supply failed.
With two prospectors named Bennett
and Jones, Shipman began operations
and tests o f the quartz have shown it
to be worth $4,000 net per ton.
SUCKERS
A J T o w e r C o . B o s t o n . u s a .
T ower C anadian C o . u m i t c o . t o o o w t o .
The Santa Catalina river at Monterey
has subsided sufficiently to permit a
passage into the district lying to the
southward. People who had been sav
ed from the Hood o f Saturday morning
had been without food until today,
when they were supplied with a small
amount of bread and beans.
Once on the south side o f the river,
evidences of the terrible destruction
wrought by the flood were seen on
every hand. Five blocks o f the dis
trict were as though they had never
existed and in the remaining portion
bodies were being taken from the ruins
and interred by a party of gendarmes
sent across for the purpose.
A t 4 o’clock 400 bodies had been re
covered and buried on the hillside south
o f Santa Luisio. The same number of
bodies were interred yesterday.
Thus far no Americans have been re
ported lost. Reports from down the
river say many bodies have been recov
ered, but there are many that will nev
er be found. The bed o f the river is
filled with sand. The authorities are
doing all in their power and the gov
ernment has sent $50,000 for the relief
o f the sufferers.
Contributions have
been received from San Antonfo and
New York firms who have agencies in
this city.
Many houses have fallen from the
effects o f the continuous rains which
have occurred during the 72 hours end
ing at 12 o’clock Sunday. During this
time 2 1 ^ inches o f rain fell in Monte
rey and up to the Santa Catalina can
yon.
One o f the buildings destroyed was
the San Francisco church, which was
built in 1852. The barracks of the rur-
ales was washed away and all military
equipment was lost.
Battles Rage In M orocco.
Lisbon, Aug. 31.— A dispatch from
Melilla to Diario de Noticias sayg that
reinforcements have been sent to Res
tinga and Elarbia. which has consider
ably weakened the Spanish position.
The Moors took advantage o f the op
portunity and have been bombarding
Alhucemas day and night. Word to El
Mundo says that a great fight took
place at Cabomore and Sidimusa Sun
day.
The Moors lost 650 and the
Spaniards about 300.
Keystone State Dries Up.
Reading, Pa., Aug. 31.— Drouth con
ditions are worse today than at any
period in the hietory o f the Schuylkill
valley in 50 years. But one and a half
inches o f rain has fallen in this vicini
ty since July 1.
Many wells and
springs are drying up.
The potato
crop will be a failure.
Pasture is
scarce and many farmers are feeding
hay and bran.
rr .r n t a
DEATH L IS T GROWS.
Greece Grants Reforms.
Athens, Aug. 31.— The crisis in po
litical affairs, which reached its height
in the mutiny of the local garrison and
the formation o f a new cabinet, has
subsided. A decree was published to
day granting amnesty to the troops
concerned in the mutiny.
Among the
reforms demanded by the troops were
that command o f the army should be
entrusted to three officers of the rank
o f general, acting under the supreme
authority of a royal prince, the other
members o f the royal family in the
army to be treated as ordinary officers.
Wells to Be Appointed.
Victoria, B. C., Aug. 31.— Lord
Grey, governor general, and hia party
reached Union bay this
morning.
They returned from Yukon by the
cruiser Quadra and will arrive here
early tomorrow.
Countess Grey is
waiting Hia Excellency here.
A ban
quet and large garden party Is being
arranged. It is understood His Excel
lency upon arrival will sign the order
in council appointing W ilmer C. Wells
lieutenant governor o f British Colum
bia, in succession to Dunsmuir, the
atter resign in g at bis own request.
th a t
St a nd
N o t.
Peaches are more liable to rot In
damp and muggy weather than when
cool and dry.
Some varieties are
mors subject to rot than others. That
all varieties with fuzz on them are
less liable to rot than the smoother
varieties does not agree with my ex
perience.
Neither can correct conclusion be
drawn from one or two season's ex
perience, for soil, location, fertilization
and culture also are factors In the rot
problem.
Fruit on a rankly-grown
H o m e m a d e D itc h U lic g e r .
A complete homemade ditch digger tree Is much more subject to rot than
may be made by following the de on one more moderately grown. Yet
I think the weather has more to do
scription here given.
The bed piece, five and a half Inches with It than any one factor. One
long. Is cut out of a hard plank two year all our early peaches were quite
and a half Inches thick, bolted at each subject to rot. while the next year
end and In the middle to prevent split there waa very little rot. Yet with un
ting. The rear half Is nine Inches favorable weather Champions were
wide and the front half six Inches practically a total loss. Crosby, stump
and late varieties practically free. 1
wide.
The diggers are made of steel bars do not think the matter of fuzz vs
two and a half Inches wide, three- rot worth considering as a factor In
quarters of an Inch thick and twenty- setting an orchard, except people do
four Inches long. They are fastened not wish to buy fuzz.
In regard to hardiness of bud, a
to the plank by a right angle turn and
bolted. The two rear diggers are held good frost peach well grown will stand
firmly by a rod with nuts inside and more cold than any other peach tree
we ever had on our grounds. And
varieties of the frost type (I f I may
call them so), Crosby. Pratt’s, Hill's
Chill, etc., are more hardy In bud
than many other varieties, especially
of the Crawford class, but with the
varieties of the Chinese type, which
bear young and have a hardy bnd.
what little hardiness, If any, the fuzzy
varieties possess above them Is much
T H E 1IIUUEK K q l’ IPPED.
more than offset by their fallings.—
out, the points being spread out so
H. Mead, Massachusetts.
that the bed piece can easily drop Into
the space when the ditch is two feet
H a n o lln e va. a H i r e d M a n .
or more in depth. The front digger
Then there's our gasoline engine, i
Is the same size, but set in the middle. kept track of It once for three weeks
All are held firmly by brace rods and It pumped water to the house and t<
sharpened like the flat end of a pickax. the barn, separated the cream of twen
A wheel Is set under the front end to ty cows and churned and worked all
steady the movement and is braced the butter on 5 gallons of gasoline at
backward. An adjustable draw Iron 15 rents a gallon. It saws the wood
Is placed above, through which the and works
the corn-shredder and
rod may pass at any height suited to makes Itself generally more useful In
the depth of the ditch.
Its way than the average hired man
The handles
are also adjustable, and at a small fraction of his cost
raising them as the digger drops low Then, the barn Is a great comfort
er.
There's a cement basement under the
In hard subsoils one wll save the stable— the only one of Its kind In
cost of this simple device in digging this part of the State. The manurs
seventy-five rods of ditch. In our falls through traps In the stable floor
hardpan sections of the east, which al and Is preserved Intact and put out
ways need drainage, one does not feel on the land at least four times a year.
encouraged to dig ditches with pick That’s another thing that gives us no
and shovel when more than half the end of advantage over our neighbors
fertilizer In their
energy is required to loosen the dirt. They pile their
With this machine the toughest sub barnyard and let the best part of If
soil when dry handles as rapidly as bleach and drain and wash away with
out returning It to the soil which ab
loose sand.
solutely demands It.
K e e p i n g ('re a m Sw eet.
We have 150 acres of level, black
The first step in keeping cream soli that plows like soft putty. Be
sweet Is to keep It as clean as pos
sides corn, oats and wheat, we raise
sible. Clean cream cannot be produced hay, flax and enough vegetables for
by filthy methods of milking nor by
our own use. But we have found that
handling the cream or milk in unclean
we can make far more money from
utensils. Milk cans, stirrers and palls
our pure bred cows than directly from
should be thoroughly scalded In hot
the soil.— Success.
water and dried and exposed to the
sunlight and pure air.
V e n tila t io n o f Stable.
The next step Is to remove the ani
mal heat from the cream a9 soon as
possible after separating.
Run the
cream from the separator Into a con
venient utensil for cooling. A 3 or 5-
gallon shotgun can Is most conveni
ent. Cool the cream In well water
by stirring. In a few minutes It can
be reduced to the temperature of the
water. After the cream Is cooled It
can be added to the cream contained
In the supply can used In delivering
cream to the station. The cream sup
ply can, while being filled and held for
delivery, should be kept In water at
as near the temperature of freshly
pumped water as possible. The aver
age temperature of well water In
Kansas Is about 56 degrees. With It
cream can easily be held at 58 or 60
degrees, and at this temperature will
remain sweet for delivery In good
Bhape at the station.— Kansas Farmer.
Red
C lover
v a.
T h e K in d Y o u H a ve A lw a y s B ou gh t lias borne th o signa
tu re of CUas. II . F le tc lic r , and lias been m ade u n d er hia
personal supervision fo r o v e r !H> years. A llo w no one
to d ec eive you in this. C ou n terfeits, Im itation s and
“ .Tust-us-good’ ’ a re hut E xperim en ts, and en d a n ger th e
h ealth o f C h ildren —E x p erien c e a ga in st E xp erim en t.
What is CASTOR IA
C astoria is a harm less su bstitute fo r Castor O il, P a re
go ric , O rops and S oo th in g Syrups. I t is Pleasant. I t
coutuins n eith er O pium , M o rp h in e n o r o th er N a rco tic
substance. Its a g e is its gu aran tee. I t destroys W orm s
and allays Feverishness. I t cures D iarrhoea and W in d
Colic. I t relieves T e e th in g T rou bles, cures Constipation
and Flatu len cy. I t ussimilutes th e F o o d , regu lates th e
Stom ach and B ow els, g iv in g healthy and n atu ral sleep.
T h e C h ild ren 's P a n acea —T h e M o th e r’ s F rien d .
The Kind You Ha?e Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
In U s e F o r O v e r
C o m parison .
No
" I admit I have the fault you men
tion," said the conceited man, self-
complacently, "but It's the only fault
I have, and It's a small one."
"Yes,” replied Knox, "just like the
small hole that makes a plugged
nickel no good."—Catholic Standard
and Times.
D o u b t.
On one occasion an ignorant quack
was called by mistake to attend a
council of physicians in a critical
case. After considerable discussion
the opinion was expressed by one that
the patient waa convalescent. "Con
valescent!" said the quack, "why,
that’s nothing serious. I have cured
convalescence in twenty-four hour*."
—Sacred Heart Review.
Pettit's Eye Salve.
No matter how badly the eyes may
be diseased or injured, restores normal
S a m e T h in g : T h e r e .
conditions. All druggists or Howard
Traveler (inspecting the village from
Bros., Buffalo, N. Y.
tho car window)—Seems to me the
streets of your little town are awfully
R e a l is t i o M u alo.
dirty.
Critic (as the composer plays his
Uncle Welby Gosh (on the station
fast piece)—Very fine. But what Is platform)—I know It, mister, but we’re
that passage which makes the cold so blamed busy making plans fur &
chills run down the back?
Drearyhurst Beautiful that we hain’t
Composer—That Is where the wan got no time to clean ’em.
derer has the hotel bill brought to
him.—Fliegende Blaetter.
E ff c o t « o f th e M e d ic in e .
E x p la n a tio n
( o n iln u :.
”Pld you write this report on my
fecture. 'The Curse of Whisky’ ?”
“ Yes, madam.”
“Then kindly exphiin what you mean
by saying. ’The lecturer was evidently
full of her subject.’ ” —London Opin
ion.
S h a k e In t o Y o u r S h oe s
Allen*« Foot-Ease, a pow der fo r the feet. It rurea
painful, sw ollen, sm arting, sw eatin g fe e t. Makes
new shoes easy. Sold by all D ru g gist* and Shoe
Stores. Don’ t a ccep t any su bstitute
Sample
FR E E . Address A . S. Olmsted. L e Roy. N . Y
B le s s in g
In
Doctor—Did you give your husband
the powder I left, Mrs. Mulligan?”
Mrs. Mulligan—Indade OI did, sor. An*
he’s been blowin* me up ivir since.—
Judge.
OWARD K m iR TO N - hmnymt ami rhea.'at.
Lend VI He. Colorado. Hpocimen price«: Gold.
Silver, Lead. $1. Gold, Silver. 7C
h >; Gold. 50c: Zina
orOoppar, CL MaUiae envelopesu<l fu ll price list
«out on application. Control and Umpire work so
licited. Keiorenco: Cttrbouute National Bank.
H
D ls g n ls e .
"Sometimes
our disappointments
come to be recognized us blessings,”
said the ready made philosopher.
"That’s a fact,” answered the flip
pant person. “It’s always a sweet re
lief to me to discover in the morning
that I forgot to wind the alarm clock.”
—Washington Star.
H er
G ifte d
R e la t iv e .
•’I’ve got a cousin on my mother’s
side,” remarked Mrs. Lapsling, "who
can do anything with her left hand
that she can do with her right. I tell
you, It’s a great thing for a person to
bo amphibious.”
F a ir
E xch an ge.
OR W
A. W IS E
¿2 Years a Leader in Painless Denta.
Work in Portland.
Out-of-Town People
Mamma—Have you been taking your !
cough medicine, like a good boy?
Tommy—No, ma’am. I let Polly Should remember that our force Is so arranged
taste it an' she liked It, so I traded It | that W E C A N DO T H E IR E N T IR E C R O W N .
B R ID G E A N D P L A T E W O R K IN A D A Y if
to her for a orange.—Cleveland Lead necessary.
P O S IT IV E L Y P A I N L E S S E X
er.
T R A C T IN G F R E E when plates or bridges are or-
dered. W E R E M O V E T H E M OST 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 LEAST
P A IN
N O S TU D E N TS , no uncertainty.
For the Next Fifteen Days
A lfalfa.
Some of the old-time dairymen are
coming around to the belief that red
clover such as was grown around Den
ver twenty-five or thirty years ago. Is
better forage for the production of
milk than is alfalfa as grown nowa
days. Certain It Is that we are not
now getting the quality of milk that
was produced a quarter of a century
ago, when nearly everybody had a
little patch of clover. It was quite
natural, however, that we should have
exchanged the old friend for the new,
for the reason that red clover Is bien
nlal In Its habit of growth and under
the most Ideal conditions will not fur
nish more than two cuttings of hay
In a season. On the other hand, al
falfa Is a perennial plant, and when
once established will continue to pro
duce four and frequently five crops
In a season for several years In suc
cession, and this Is why our dairymen
have clung to it through all these
years like a pup to a root. We are
loth to concede that red clover Is the
better forage In the production of
milk, but It does look that way, and
we know farmers In different parts
of the State who are taking up Its
culture
quite extensively.— Denver
Field and Farm.
3 0 Y ears.
T M C C t N U U f l i J M H N V , T T M U R R A Y S T R C C T . N E W Y O R K C IT Y .
Q U A LITY OF IN S T R U C T IO N
----------- T U B -----------
W e will g iv e you a good 22k gold or porce
lain crown for ............................................... $3.50
22k bridge tee th .............................................. 3.50
Molar cro w n .................................................... 5,00
Gold or enamel fillin gs.............................
1.00
Silver fillin g s ...............................................
.60
Good rubber p la tes......................................... 6.00
The best red rubber p la tes............................ 7.00
Painless extraction s..............................................50
A L L W O R K G U A R A N T E E D 15 YEARS
H I G H - S T A N D A R D S CHOOL
This diagram shows method of con
slructlng a fresh air Intake where the
soil conits to or near the top of wull
aa found in many bank barns. An ex
cavation Is necessary and a retaining
wall Is built around the open space
marked C.
of its kind in the Northwest, we invite
the investigation of those who want the
heat in a practical education. Let us prove
superiority. Call, phone or write. Cat
alogue, business forma and penwork free.
PORTLAND BUSINESS COLLEGE
“The School of Quality”
D r. W . A. W is e
P ie s id c n t and M a n a ge r
The Wise Dental Co.
(IN C .!
Third and " '.- h in . t o n SU.
PO R TLA N D , OREGON
No. 36-0*
P N U
w
I I E N w r it in g to a d v e r t!s e r e p i
W e e d S e e d s In M a n u r e .
Tenth and Morrison 8 Portland, Oregon
m e n tio n t h is p a p e r.
It Is well known that there Is con A . P. A r m s t r o n g , L L . B .. P r i n c i p a l
siderable risk of Introducing new
weeds by the purchase of manure and
hay and other feeding stuffs. E. I.
Oswald, of the Maryland experiment
station, undertook to obtain more def
inite information on this point, espe
cially
as
regards
dissemination
through manure, by studying the ef
fect of the fermentation of manure
handled In different ways and of pass
ing through the digestive systems of
animals on the vitality of various
seeds. Including seeds of about fifty
of the worst weeds found In Maryland.
In experiments In which the manure
In the«« days o f progressiva farming no nun can afford to neglect Lis farm equip
A F ru it T ree D octor Fake.
remained for six months In a barn
ment. It Is just as essential that ths farm should have the benefit of the best possible farm
The latest fake practiced on farm yard heap and for a short while In
machinery and most modern labor saving devices as it is that a properly conducted factory
ers Is done by a man who visits the piles, as when shipped In carload lots
should have it. and «yen more so. We have in our extensive stock, labor Laving machines
place and claims that he has been from cities, It was found that In the
o f all kinds, machines that increase profits and make the farmer the most independent man
gent out by the State to examine fruit first case there was no danger, and
on the earth: machines that make farm life more enjoyable and tend to keep the young
man satisfied with farm work. No farmer ever invested his money to better advantage
tree diseases, sayg an exchange. The In the second case little danger of d l»
than when he bought one of the machine« mentioned below. These are lines which are in
fellow will go over the orchard and trlbutlng live weed seeds.
season NOW and are goods which should Interest every farmer who desires to make a
mark all trees which he claims are af
success of farming. Kramer Rotary Harrow Attachments, (shown here). Hoosier Drill*,
fected. Shortly after his visit a con
T o G a a rd A g s ln a l C at W o r m «.
(shown here). J. I Case Plows. Sandwich Hay Presses. Dick's Famous Feed Cutters,
federate will appear and say that he
Hoover Potato Diggers. Double Action
Tar paper placed around cabbage
has a preparation which will cure the and tomato plants will keep off cut-
and Rightlap Cutaways. Stover Gasoline
Engines. New Iowa Cream Separators,
disease for which the tree is con
worms.
Insert the paper In the
Myers Pumps. Etc.. Etc.
demned and will contract to Inject a ground, making a circle about 4 Inches
Do Y O U R SELF and us a favor by
fluid Into the roots for a certain price. In diameter and 3 Inches deep.
asking for our
^ -
Both men are swindlers and ihould be
BIG GEMOtAL CATALOGUE
run off the place with a shotgun. The
Handling
Ml l l c.
only men pOWowered to Inspect orch
It must not be forgotten that clean
ards are the county RlspecWPa, _ who liness and coldness are the tw o jp w e f'
are known to most fruit |j£<
lea In handling milk.
He Seeks Jail on Wager.
London, Aug. 31.— A young London
doctor who had just finished his sutdies
in medicine at Oxford made a wager to
make a tour on foot through Switzer
land and to have himaelf arrested in
several towns for the purpose o f study
ing the Swiss prison condition. When
he arrived in Geneva the young doctor
G ra in or Btttterf
engaged in a quarrel with a policeman.
Every dairy butter
Thus he soon succeeded, in having him
self taken into cu gld w He waa fined product Is known to
good quality can now
5 francs and rel
all of their surplus at 25
pound the year round. A n ^ .y«t the
Si
| 2 K J £ £ e* Record.
Provi
MW«-. Aug. 31.— A quality designated as '’fg M io n coun
world's
p M a R e a d on the ¡surfsee try butter" n e a r ly ^ ^ fy s sells below
by *ut2
>«V«iWimade off here yes- that price and dSfTng four or five
terd ^H
le submarine Narwhal dur- summer month^RFoes as low as 12
•
trials.
During 25 cents. W h y - ^ p y will its makers bo
rn j^ ^ n tn 300 miles, the Nar- content fo f * w methods that spell
12X knots an hour with- positive lose? Who can and will an
swer this question?—Tho Rural tat
YOUR -
FARM EQUIPMENT
IS I T C O M P L E T E ?
( .
W a r m .,
on cabbage worm la
best known of all garden
both as a larvae and In tho
adult stage, when It becomea the com- :
mon spotted, white cabbage butterfly.
The young plants should be sprayed
with arsenate of lead, 1 ounce to a
gallon of water, and the foliage kept
covered until they begin to head np
well. Water heated to
130 degrees
Fahrenheit will destroy
all worms
which It hits, without Injury 1« ths
plants.
PORTLAND
OR.
SPOKANE
WASH.
BOISE
IDAHO.