r
NEWS ITEMS
About Oregon
For Sprains,
PRESIDENT
OUTLINES
Rose Festival Dates
Strains or
MEDIATION GROUND Lameness
a
Of General Interest
J u n e 7 , 8, 9.
Special Rates on All Railroads.
The
Hotel Oregon
Cor. Broadway and Stark Streets
Announces that its regular mod
erate rates will preva 1. Make
reservations now.
V .
V
Winners of Industrial Prizes to
Attend 0 . A. C. Summer School
United States Is Pledged to Work for
Harmony Among Nations.
Rub It In
HANFORDS
HIGHER DIPLOMACY IS URGED Balsam of Myrrh
A
Veal, Pork,
Beef, Poultry,
Butter, Eggs &
Farm Produce
Address Before Peace League Inter For Galls, W ire
preted as "Feeler” Looking to
Ending of European War.
T o th e Old R elia b le Everd in ff house w ith a
record o f 45 years o f S q u a re D ealings and be
assured o f
Top Market Prices.
F. M. CRONKHITE,
45-47 Front Si.,
PORTLAND, ORE
B y buying d irect from us a t w holesale p rices
and save th e p lum ber’s profits. W rite us to
day your needs. W e w ill give you our rock-
bottom "d ire c t-to -y o u ” prices, f. o. b. rail or
boat. W e actu a lly save you from 10 to 35 per
cen t. All goods gu aran teed.
N orthw est head q u arters for le a d e r W a ter
S y ste m s and F u lle r
Joh n son E n gin es.
&
STARK-DAVIS CO.
2 1 2 T h ird S t r e e t .
FARMERS
P ortlan d . O regon
PRIMARY
ELECTION
I f every can o f cream com ing in to Portland
cou nts as a vote
H AZELW OOD CO., PO RTLA ND
is elected by a larg e m a jo rity . T h e l#*st house
in O regon to re ceiv e th e products o f th e farm .
M ake us your n e x t sh ipm en t o f C ream , E gg s.
P ou ltry and D ressed M eats.
H A Z E L W O O D CO. P O R T L A N D , O R
KIRK’S ARMY AND NAVY GOODS
3 rd a S tark S ts .. P ortland , O re .
A Full Line of Big Values at Low
Prices. SEND FOR OUR CATALOGUE
H ID ES , P E L T S , C ASCARA SA R K,
W OOL AND M O HAIR.
We vent ill you kite. Write lor price: end sh ppmg less
TNI H. F. HORTON CO. Portland, Ore., Seattle, wn
Farmers, Ship
Y ou r n e x t lot o f V e a l, H ogs, Pou ltry, M ohair,
W o o l. H ides. P e lts . E tc ., to S C H M A L Z , if you
w an t b e tt e r p rices. C heck mailed you day a fte r
arrival. M arket inform ation, tags, e tc ., prom ptly
supplied. B e e f hides, lT' -c lb.; c a lf
Ask your neighbor to try us. W anted. 200 Veal
and H ogs; 1000 B roilers and 11-
W
today
fo r tag s, m entioning th is paper.
F . H . S ch m alx
Co.
Paid-up cap ital 110,000.
Portlan d , O re .
A.
Thi* Trade Mark Meant
T h e fin est Violins, Mandolins.
G u itars.
B a n jo s and B a n jo
Mandolins, th at can lie mad ?.
Made in Oregon o f Oregon
wood, w hich is the fin est in the
w orld. Bad violins made into
good ones. W rite for illu sU at-
ed circu la rs and d etails to
T H E C O U L T E R C O ..
227' k Wish mu no St,
PwtUaá. Ore
I f you cannot come to
Portland to g e t your
eyes fitted. I will send
you my method o f te s t
in g eyes by mail.
N ot
as desirable as person
al serv ice b u t mu«h
b e tte r than going w ith
ou t g la sse s needed or
try in g to fit you rself
O u tfit s e n t on ap plication . S T A P L E S , the Jew
eler-O ptician. 266 M orrison s t.. P ortlan d. O regon
Double Tread Ponctur: Praof Tires
Made from your old on*»
I,a st long
aa Brand New TIKK.N W rite u«
OREGON VULCANIZING CO..
650 W aahinffton S t..
Portland. Ore.
Mother.
•‘Please, Mrs. Shea.” said the little
girl from the house next door, "mother
says would you be kind enough to
come over and take care of baby for
a little while?"
"Why. certainly,” replied Mrs. Shea
"Is your mother ill?”
“No'm. but she's writing a paper on
‘The Proper Care of Infants,' and she's
afraid she won't be able to get It done
In time to read before the Mothers
Club tomorrow afternoon.”—St. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
B u sy
LI M l M B N T
Washington, D. C .—President Wil
son declared here Saturday night be
fore the League to Enforce Peace that
the United States was ready to join in
any feasible association of nations to
preserve the peace of the world against
“ political ambition and selfish hostil
ity” and in service of “ a common or
der, a common justice and a common
peace.” He expressed the hope that
the terms of peace which end the pres
ent war would include such an arrange
ment.
Outlining suggestions for peace,
which the President said he hoped the
United States would make when it has
the opportunity to do so, he included
provision for absolute freedom of the
seas, a contention which has been the
keystone of ail the diplomatic discus
sions with Germany and Great Britain,
and virtual guarantees of territorial
integrity and political independence.
Officials interpreted the President’s
address as a preliminary feeler for
peace in Europe.
He outlined the
conditions on wihch the United StateB
would move if it made a formal medi
atory offer with the idea, it was un
derstood, of learning how such sug
gestions would be received abroad.
“ I am sure,” said the President,
“ that the people of the United States
would wish their government to move
along these lines:
“ First—Such a settlement with re
gard to their own immediate interests
as the belligerents may agree upon.
We have nothing material of any kind
to ask for ourselves and are quite
aware that we are in no sense or de
gree parties to the present quarrel.
Our interest is only in peace and its
future guarantees.
“ Second — An universal association
of the nations to maintain the invio
late security of the highway of the
seas for the common and unhindered
use of ail the nations of the world and
to prevent any war begun either con
trary to treaty covenants or without
warning and full submission of the
causes to the opinion of the world—a
virtual guarantee of territorial integ
rity and political independence.”
The fundamentals of a lasting peace,
President Wilson said he believed
were:
“ First — That every people has a
right to choose the sovereignty under
which they shall live.
“ Like other nations,” the President
said, “ we have ourselves, no doubt,
once and again offended against that
principle when for a little while con
trolled by selfish passion, as our
franker historians have been honorable
enough to admit, but it has become
more our rule of life and action.
“ Second — That the small states of
the world have a right to enjoy the
same respect for their soverignty and
for their territorial integrity that
great and powerful nations expect and
insist upon.
“ And, third, that the world has a
right to be free from every tfistrub-
ance of its peace that has its origin in
aggression and disregard of the rights
of people and nations.”
The outstanding lesson of the world
war, the President said, had been that
the peace of the world must henceforth
depend upon “ a new and more whole
some diplomacy.”
Cuts, Lameness,
Strains, B u n c h e s ,
Thrush, Old Sorea,
Nail Wounds, Foot Rot,
Fistula, Bleeding, Etc., Etc.
Made Since 1846.
_
Price 25«, 50c and $1.00
sK
a
OR ^ RITE
All Dealers
Shattering Auto Records.
Shattering all existing records be
tween Portland and Spokane, F. W.
Vogler, northwest, representative ol
the Reo line, and H. C. Harris, f&ctory
representative of the line, arrived in
Spokane Tuesday in a 1916 Reo four
cylinder touring car. The actual run
ning time between Portland and Spo
kane was 20 hours and 59 minutes for
a distance slightly in excess of 475
miles, an average speed of almost 23
miles an hour over all kinds of roads.
Not satisfied with making a Port
land Spokane record. Mr. Vogler and
Mr. Harris also set marks between
Pendleton and Dayton and Colfax and
Spokane. They made the run from
Pendleton to Dayton in two hours and
38 minutes and drove from Colfax to
Spokane in two hours and three min
utes.
It is seldom that the trip from Port
land to Spokane Is attempted by auto
mobile aud because it has been made
so few times many motorists think il
can not be made. According to Mr
Vogler It is as nice a three day tour
as there is in the northwest, the seen
ery along the route comparing favor
ably with any in the country.
Feel
Comfortable
After Eating?
Is There
NAUSEA
HEARTBURN
INDIGESTION
DYSPEPSIA
By All Means~TRY
X T O S T E T T E R ’S
STOMACH BITTERS
Glad Occasion.
"Rafferty,” said Mr. Dolan, “what
would be your feelin's If you should
hear a man speaking with disrespect
of the American flag?" ,
“My feelings would be those of great
delight. I could think of n"*hin' more
joyous than the pleasure
was going
to take In giving him a licking."—
Washington Star.
WIFE TOO ILL
TO WORK
German Fliers Raid Riga.
Berlin— An air raid by a German
flying squadron on a Russian aeroplane
IN BED MOST OF TIME
station at Papenholm on the Island of
Oesel, in the Gulf of Riga, is an
nounced in an official communication
Her Health Restored by Lydia
issued by the war office.
“ Thursday night a German air
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
squadron again dropped bombs on a
Compound.
Russian aeroplane station at Papen-
halm,
on
the
Island
of
Oeael.
The
How the Situation Developed.
squadron obtained lucky hits, mostly
Indianapolis, Indiana. — " My health
"I understand you are now one of on the air station itself. In spite of a
was so poor and my constitution so run
the officials of Crimson Gulch ”
heavy fire directed against them, all
down that I could
"Yep.” replied Bronco Bob “I come
our aeroplanes returned safely.”
in on the prohibition ticket.”
not work.
I was
"And how Is prohibition working
thin, pale and weak,
Villista
Cache
Is
Found.
out?”
w e ig h e d Lut * J
"Fine. We've got It fixed now so
Field Headquarters near Namiquipa,
pounda and was in
th a t nobody but the particular friends
bed m o s t o f the
via wireless to Coulmbus, N. M.—A
o f us authorities can buy or sell a
time. I began tak
Villista cache of machine guns, rifles
d ro p .” —Washington Star.
ing Lydia E. Pink-
and ammunition was unearthed Mon
ham's V e g e ta b le
day in a canyon near here by towns
Salt to the Sheep.
Compound and five
people
of
Namiquipa
working
under
One of the best means of combat
m o n th s l a t e r I
The And, which
ting the stomach worm in sheep is to American direction.
weighed 133 pounds.
have a plentiful supply of salt mixed was officially reported to General J . J .
I do all the house
with a suitable quantity of a reliable Pershing, expeditionary commander,
worm powder where the wool pro ia regarded as important, not only work snd washing for eleven and I can
ducers can get at it at all times. Salt because of the quantity of armament truthfully say Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg
Is an essential element in the care of discovered, but because it reveals a etable Compound has been a godsend
sheep, as it makes the food more change in the spirit manifested toward to me for I would have been in my grave
palatable and also stimulates the di the American troops by the natives. today but for it. I would tell all wo
gestive system
men suffering aa I was to try your valu
able r e m e d y M rs. W m . G reen , 332
Newspaper Black-Edged.
Difficult.
Athena— “ Whoever dreamed to see S. Addison Street, Indianapolis,Indiana.
A sign In an American barroom
There is hardly a neighborhood in this
the Bulgarian flag supplant the Greek
reads:
country, wherein some woman has not
"Gentlemen shooting at the bar flag in Macedonia? Ju st for this we found health by using this g^od old-
keeper will please to try to avoid hit have maintained mobilization at the
ting the mirrors, whlrh are the largest coat of the economic ruin of the coun fashioned root and herb remedy.
If there is anything shout which you
In the state aud a credit to the town.” try .”
—Tit Bit*
M. Venizeloa, the former premier, would like special advice, write to the
thus writes in the Herald, the Venizel- Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn,
ist organ. Feeling runs high over the Maas.
Bulgarian invasion of Greece. The
Herald appeared with a black border
I f y«« have tried oth er method*, modes cu lt* as a token of national mourning.
C Gee Wo
T r y C h ir o p ra c tic
or system * o f h ealin g and have not received relief,
you have tried th e w rong th in g O»4rof»ractnrs
have been so cce sefu l in rem oving the cause« o f
diseaae w here o th e r m ethod* failed
If
are
■irk or rilin g, have a trouble o f kmg «tending. I
wiil be please. 1 to eon aolt and give you a spina!
aaalysw . w hich coats yoa nothing.
Texas Militiamen Report.
San Antonio, Texas- Rapid decreas
es in the number of Texas National
guardsmen who did not respond to the
call to mobilize for service on the bor
DR. H. L. CHANDLER
der were reported Monday at Fort San
502-3-4 Broadway Bldg Portland. Ora. Houston. Of the original 114 who
.
were cited for court-martial, only 41
remain who still are liable for trial
P. N. U.
No 23. 1910
and it ia confidently expected that be
fore the hearing opens next week the
r * —v+ti«s to
number wilt be reduced to leas than a
I W a u—
ta..
do sen.
yrm
*«■•*«—y« i H onm
Urmmátm
R U n r rm f q l h«rh
«! rem ette« cur« • I
k-rri« * f ailm en t* o f
■non and women vritfc-
fr m
th«
w om lerfu
b r i s asad v e fF ta o N * « k t f k ara unknown u>
(b e B r i e a i w « i» e * o f th i* • -wintry
W rit« for bia<M and f i r t o l a n ,
Send stam p
C O N SU L T A T IO N V H b L Add ram
TW C G m Wo Orane Mtécac Ca
M k S rVrat R t . Portland. O f t
Mmttam Papar.
Arrangements have just t>een com
pleted by J . A. Churchill, Superinten
dent of Public Instruction, for sending
the boys and girls who won the capital
prizes in the industrial club work at
the State fair last fall to the Oregon
Agricultural college for the Boys’ and
Girls’ Summer school.
Twenty-one
children were successful in winning
these prizes at the State fair last Sep
tember.
The capital prizes consist
of membership in the short course at
the Agricultural college with all ex-
penses paid. It represents the highest
Hward in each project offered in the
Industrial department at the State fair
last year. The prizes are made possi
ble through contributions made to
Superintendent Churchill for the fur
therance of this work by public-spirit
ed men and women of the state. Those
who received these awards are: I.eland
Charley, Brownsboro; Gertrude Court
ney, La Grande; Earl Stewart, Cot
tage Grove; Homer Bursell, Mon
mouth; Hazel Bursrll, Monmouth;
Clifford Cook, Yoncalla; Carmen Jones,
Pendleton; Esther Miller, Medford;
Warren*McGowan, Independence; Har
old Reynolds, Independence; Earl
Cooley, Salem; L. M. Bowles, Dallas;
Rudolph Mullinhoff, Boring; Teddy
Fones, Carlton; Exie Morgan, The
Dalles; Florence Wharton, Roseburg;
Marion Lowe, Nyssa; Mae McDonald,
Dallas; Muriel Blume, Albany; Paul
Jaeger, Sherwood; Claus Charley,
Brownsboro.
The Boys’ and Girls’ club work
which is carried on co-operatively by
the State department of Education,
the Extension service of the Oregon
Agricultural college and the U. S.
Bureau of Agriculture, is increasing
in interest to such an extent that clubs
are being formed in every section of
Oregon. Since the first of the year
Superintendent Churchill has had two
field workers, N. C. Maris and L. P.
Harrington, continually engaged in
forming clubs throughout the state.
The work of the Agricultural college
in sending to the members of these
clubs, bulletins on how to select seed
care for the growing crops and also
bulletins on canning and sowing, has
made a wonderful advancement in the
standard of the work done by the
school children of Oregon. The ex
ample of Claus Charley of Jackson
county shows what a wholesome in
fluence one boy may have in this work.
At the State fair in 1914 he won the
state prize on his corn.
The next,
through the efforts of the county
school superintendent and one of the
Medford banks, fifty boys of Jackson
county were supplied with seed corn
selected from Claus Charley's prize
winning corn. Each of the fifty boys
raised from one-eighth to one-fourth
of an acre of corn, the amount which
each boy planted being determined by
the age of the boy. The exhibits of
corn coming from these boys to the
State fair in 1915 were said by judges
to exceed in quality fully 100 per cent
the corn exhibit of 1913.
“ As a result of thiB work,” says
Superintendent Churchill, “ we can
feel certain that in the next genera
tion there will be a group of expert
farmers and home-keepers in every
rural community of Oregon.”
Coos County Voters Favor
$362,000 Road Building Bonds
Marshfield — Complete returns from
the 58 precincts in Coos county give a
majority in favor of good roads bonds
of 618. As soon as the count was
completed the County court issued an
order of the election being carried.
The county precincts, with a few ex
ceptions, those in the northern portion
of the county, including Lakeside,
Templeton, Kentuck and Haynes Inlet,
and a few others, voted heavily against
the bonds, and the success was due en
tirely to the heavy votes in the cities.
Coquille hail a handsome majority, ami
Bandon gave the bonds a great boost,
being nearly a three to one majority.
The issue calls for the expenditure
of $362,000 for lining and grading, and
it ¡B not expected the fund will pro
vide for any hard surfacing.
The money will be expended be
tween Marshfield and Coquilie, Co
quille and Myrtle Point, Bandon and
Coquille, North Bend and North Inlet,
Bandon to the Curry county line.
The argument in favor of bonding
was that money s|ient from the bond
issue would release the usual road
levies to be expended upon branch
roads.
Whiskey It Confiscated.
Pihdleton— Holding that th« barrel
of whiskey was in very bad company
and, except upon clear proof to the
contrary, should be disposed of, Circuit
Judge Phelps’ handed down a decision
reversing the decision of Justice of the
Peace Joe Parkes, and confiscating a
52-gallon barrel of whiskey in a lodg
ing house, in company with some beer,
which was found to 1st used for illegal
purposes and confiscated, A claim for
the whiskey was won in the Justice's
court.
District Attorney Frederick
Steiwer appealed the rase.
Baker Courts In Conflict.
Baker—As the result of a “ pardon“
given by County Judge Messick, Frank
Schrack, sentenced to 10 days in the
county jail by Justice of the Peace V.
L. Hubbard, because he would not send
his daughter to school, enjoyed two
days' liberty, but he is back in his cell
again. Judge Meeeick ordered Sheriff
Anderson to release Schrack Saturday.
Schrack returned hia tirade against
officials and boasted of his release, so
the word of his freedom got to Justice
Hubbard, who ordered the sheriff to
put the man back in jail.
Roseburg Votes Municipal Railroad.
Roseburg By a vote of nearly seven
to one, the taxpayer* of Roseburg
went to the polls Tuesday and author
ized an amendment to the eity charter
making it possible for Roseburg, aa a
municipality, to construct and operate
a standard-gauge railroad from this
eity to Rock Creek.
NORTHWEST MARKET REPORTS;
WE INVITE YOU
GEN ER A L CROP CONDITIONS
Portland — Wheat — Bluestem, 99c
per bushel; fortyfold, 92c; club, 90c;
The Northwest Auto Company of Portland takes this means
red Fife, 90c; red Russian, 90c.
of extending a personal invitation to all and every one
Hay—Eastern Oregon timothy, $24
to make its Portland offices their headquarters during
(£24.60 per ton; valley timothy, $21(g
Rose Festival Days, June 7th, 8th and 9th, and trusts
22; alfalfa, old crop, $17@18.
that this will result in meeting our old friends again and
Mill feed—Spot prices- Bran, $26<£
making many new ones.
26.50 per ton; shorts, $29(<i29.60; I
rolled barley, $31.50^432.50.
Corn— Whole, $36 ton; cracked, $37.
Vegetables- Artichokes, $1 dozen;
tomatoes, $4.25 per crate; cabbage,
F. W. VOGLER, Pres.
C. M. MENZ1ES, Salesmanager
$2.50<u3 per hundred; garlic, 10c per
Broadway at Couch St„ Portland Oregon.
pound; peppers, 26c; eggplant, 20@
25c; horseradish, 8 Jc; lettuce, $2(<i
2.40 per crate; cucumbers, $l(c£1.25
per box; spinach, 4(n6c per pound; as
paragus, 90c(£$1.25 per dozen; rhu
barb, lè(<tl2c per pound; peas, 7i(<i8c;
DR KORINFk S DISTEMPER REMEDY
is MMithinir to the o rg an s o f hreathinir and is a w on
beans, 12ic; celery, $3.50 per crate.
derfu l remedy fo r eouirhs. colds, sore th roat, c a tarrh
Potatoes — Jobbing prices: Oregon,
and heaves, and w hen fev e r is p resent it rem ove* it
quickly w ithout in ju ry to the anim al.
$1.50<£J.75; California, new, 3(<t3ic
per pound.
Dr Korinek’s Gall Powder
thi"„r
Onions—Oregon, $1.60(t(.2 per sack;
Malls, sore shoulders, w ire cu ts and old ulcerated sores.
California red, $2.25.
D r. K crtne L’ s Absorbent Blister f e r s a S S i " ,
Green Fruit Strawberries, Oregon,
o f soavin s. rinjr-bones, side-bones, lum py-jaw in c a t
tle. bony enlargem en t* and prom oting the ripening process o f abcei
$2.50ot3 per crate; apples, $1<£1.75
Any o f the follow ing rem edies w ill quickly co rre c t any o f th e ailm ent* for w hich they are
per box; gooseberries, 46c per pound;
recommended:
cherries, $11.75 per box; canteloupes,
DR kORINEK’S COUC CAPSULES
DR KORINEK’S WORM CAPSULES
DR KORINEK’S KIDNEY CAPSULES
DR KORINEK'S TONIC CAPSULES.
$5 per crate; apricots, $22.95 per box.
DR KORINEK’S FEVER CAPSULES
DR KORINEK'S PHYSIC CAPSULES
Eggs — Jobbing prices:
Oregon
DR KORINEK’S DIARRHOEA C A PS U IFS
A
sk
your
dealer
for
K
orin
ek's
Rem
edies.
They
are gu aran teed . O r w rite d irect to
ranch, candled, 23i(t(.24c per dozen;
KO R1N EK R EM ED Y CO., K e n to n S ta tio n , P o rtla n d , O regon
uncandled, 23c.
Poultry—Hens, 16(£16tc per pound;
stags, 12c; broilers, 25(<(,30e; turkeys,
live, 18(u.20c; turkeys, dressed, choice,
Sheep in England.
23(a25; ducks, 16(qil8c; geese, 10c.
In Great Britain there is one sheep
Butter — Extras, prints, 27 OH 29c; or lamb for each 2.5 acres of the
firsts, 26c; cubes, 24(<t25c; butterfat, total area. In the 36 farm states In '
No. 1, 27c; No. 2, 26c, delivered Port America there is one sheep or lamb
land; store butter, 18(£20c.
for each SI x acres
Veal—Fancy, 11c per pound.
The British farmer handles his land
on
an intensive husis and feeds ills
Pork—Fancy, lie per pound.
sheep
on forage-crop pastures. Such
Hops— 1916 crop, lOtttllc; 1916 con
pastures not only increase the fertility 1
tracts, 1 l(<j.2 lc.
the land but also free the sheep
Wool— Eastern Oregon, 20@S0c per of
from many Internal parasites contract
pound; valley, 33(«36e.
ed through grazing upon permanent
Cascara Bark—Old and new, 4c per pastures. In particular the use of a
pound.
succession of forage crop pastures will
Cattle — Steers, choice grain and prevent stomach worms, one of the
pulp, $8.90(<L9; choice hay, $8.50 OH most prevalent and disastrous scourges
8.85; choice grass, $8 OH 8.60; good, of young stock, and will enable the
$8.15(1(8.50; medium, $7.60(88; cows, farmer to market by the end of June
choice, $7.6<X«t)7.75; good, $6.76(87.26; or the first of July, when market
medium, $6.25((<i7.25; heifers, $5.50(8 prices are usually the highest, the
lambs that were horn in the late win
8; bulls, $3(u.6; stags, $4.50(87.
ter or early spring.
Hogs — Prime light, $8.90(89.10;
good to prime, $8.60 OH 8.86; rough
To keep clean an healthy take Dr.
heavy, $8(u,8.60; pigs and skips, $7.50 Bierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They regu
® 8 .
late liver, bowels and stomach.
Sheep-— Yearlings, $8.25(<i9; weth
ers, $8(u9.05; ewes, $7(88.26; lambs,
Watchful Waiting.
$9(89.60
________
Tommy had a cold In his head,
which confined him to the house, so
BAKING
he was allowed to Invite his young
Washington Fruit Crop Is Late.
friend, Jack, to tea.
POW
DER
Olympia, Wash. — For the whole
Afterward the two small boys com
state of Washington this year's fruit ! menccd playing hide-ami seek, and
crop is from one week to two weeks Tommy rushed Into the dining room
later than normal, according to Assist and asked his father to conceal him.
ant State Commissioner of Agriculture This Ills father did, behind a big arm
Morrison. Soft fruits were materially chair.
Presently In came Jack, and Instead
damaged by the hard frost of May 10,
beginning his search, calmly threw
11 and 12. The cold weather of last! of
himself down on the rug before the
winter did more damage than the fire.
frosts of spring, however.
Light | "Come. Jack,” said Tommy’s father,
cherry, raspberry, blackberry and to-! "aren’t you going to look?”
ganberry crops are predicted for West
“No fear,” was the Bmall boy's calm
retort. "I'm waiting till he sniffs!”—
ern Washington.
Reports from Yakima county place London Answers.
the apple crop there at 65 per cent of
O K ° O i u n c e s f o r
a maximum crop, pears at 53 and R ES lN to L S P E E D I L Y H E A L S
Q P
( M o r re
e U
l i r r a a i n t » p o u n d « n d
l u t t i lo r a ( jU M l u l
ITCHING,
BURNIN
G,
8
K
IN
S
peaches at 40 per cent. Cherries are
Usually reslnol ointment, with res
cut down to 18 per cent, prunes and
plums 40 and apricota 26. Notwith Inol soap, stops Itching at once, quick
standing general damage to Washing- ly and easily heals distressing cases of
rash, ringworm, tetter or
ton apple orchards, it is estimated that eczema,
similar tormenting skin or scalp erup
increased acreage in bearing will pro tions. and clears away pimples, red
duce more carloadH of fruit this year ness, roughness, anil dandruff, when
than were shipped last season.
other treatments have proven useless
Physicians have prescribed reslnol
Hogs Sell Dime Higher This Week. for twenty years, while thousands
whose skins have been healed say,
An increase of 10,000 hogs to date "What reslnol did for us It will do for
this month over 40,000 gain for the you." Try It! All druggists sell res BASOLU SOHXat. MO U.Xalb t n . . Zm oklja, B. T.
year lookB as if not all the hog raisers inol soap and reslnol ointment.—Adv.
f* no mow necessary
hail "absolutely” gone out of business
t ha n S m a l l p o x . Arm?
Look Closer, John.
yet, says the Portland Live Stock Re
experience has demonstrated
Teacher
(In
the
rhetoric
class)—
the almost miraculous effi
porter. The past week wasn't very
cacy, and harmlemne««, of Antityphoid Vaccination.
strong as far as prices were concerned. Johnny, give u sentence with 'scene'
Be van inaird NOW by y«»ir physician, you and
in
it.
four family. It Is more vital than house Insurance.
Barely a nine-cent level was main- i Johnny—An' I seen her on his lap
Ask your physician, druggist, or tend for "Hava
tained after Monday and from Thurs- l Teacher—No, Johnny, that's not
you lud Typhoid?" tell lug of T y p h o id Vaccine,
results
from use, and danger from Typhoid Carriers.
day $8.96 was about the top.
right; now can you tell me what is
IHC CUT TER LABORATORY. ftMthHEV, CAL
Hog trade opened up briskly on a wrong?
M
v a c c in e s a a ea u M i
. a. a o v . u e s a s a
curtailed receipt basis, quite a num
Johnny—Well, perhaps she wasn’t.
ber of hogs were weighed up to pack- ' It was sort of dark and how was I to
era on arrival, buyers being anxious know?—Purple Cow.
for their supplies. Packers' first bids
Eyes Inflamed by expo
8 lack ers.
sure to Sun, Du5t and Mind
were at $►
but as high as j
British Foreman ( 'omposltor—Three
[uic kly relieved by Murlae
$9(tt9.10 on an excellent load was real more of my men have enlisted this
(cUemedy. NoKinzrting,
ized later as the market warmed up. morning.
- 1 ■ it. A»
Butchers’ bid was up to $9.10 on ordi
Kdltor—Ah! A wave of patriotism. Y ‘"ir Druggist*« 90
MurlecE>a
nary quality.
Bulk of the packer I suppose?
SalvSinTubet’ 5e. Fnrlitv ktilih*t»elre«j»k
stuff, however, brought $ 8 . 96 ( 0 . 9 .
Foreman Compositor — Well! Per Dnigtpai» Ot Murlae f >c Ucmciiy C«.. Chicago
haps that's the way to put It, but they
say they would rather be shot than
Mohair Season Now Nearly Over.
set any more of your copy!—Passing
Time for Everything.
Portland — The few lota of mohair Show.
A celebrated author thus sketched
remaining in the Willamette valley ,
out his dally program to an Interview
Shah« Into Tour Bnoea
are being taken up at reduced prices.
IllHe at 11: breakfast at 12; at
A llen’« Foot-K aae. « pow der fo r (h e fo o t. I t cure« er:
The aggregate quantity remaining un painful,
sw ollen, » m a rtin « , « w c a tln s f« e t. H i If«« tention to mall; a few afternoon calls;
sold is small and should quickly be dis n«w cho-w cany. Hold b r «11 P r im a l"» « a d d 8«<w
Store«. D o n 't «crep t, e n y « u h e tltu te . S am ple a ride in the park. dinner; the theat
posed of.
SkhK
A ildrcee A H. (llm eted . U llo r . N Y.
er, and then to bed.
There is criticism in some quarters ;
"But w h en do tu do your literary
of a local buyer who made the an
Did He Go7
! work?" he was asked.
Johnson—I wonder If Mr. Jonrs
nouncement that he would pay only 36
"Why, the next day, of course, " was
cents this week, and charges of manip meant anything personal by giving me • her reply.— Pickings
ulation are made. The growers will a ticket to a lecture on "Foola"?
Jackson—Why ?
Only Chance.
remember, however, that it was this
Johnson—Because the ticket says,
same buyer who started the advance at "Admit One."—Christian Herald.
‘‘Your wife is eating too much fluffy
the opening of the season, and was re
! stuff flown town. She ll have to change
sponsible, more than anyone else, in
her d iet’’
Pome.
"Don’t know how I'll manage It
getting the farmers more money for
The days are growing longer.
I doe. unless I get the druggist to In-
their mohair than they ever before re
In steady little spurts;
j stall a mashed potato sundae or a hash
The days are growing longer.
ceived. It is his privilege to reduce
t mousse."—Loulavllie Courier-Journal.
But not the ladles' skirts.
his buying price at this time, when
— Boston Transcript
the auppy is practicality exhausted, if
The Cause.
he sees fit.
“What make« Stiffens such a queer
A Mean Remark.
Bryan threatens to bolt--Newapaper i lead color?”
Fund From Estray Cattle,
"I guess It is the plumbago his wife
headline.
Rvery bolt haa Ha nut—New York nays he's got In hia back."—Baltimore)
From a fund of $90,000 received in
American.
payment of strayed cattle that roamed Bun.
the ranges of Montana, all but $7000
has been paid to rightful owners.
When these rattle were shipped the
board of stock commissioners sta
tioned at every market point an in
spector who took the brand of every
animal unloaded from Montana and
When run down after a hard winter kinds of distressing conditions. An
also received from the commission
house a copy of ita report, «bowing the —when life indoors haa brought about antidote for this uric acid poison ta to
a stagnant condition In the circulation take hot water before meals and "An
net return for each animal «old.
—moat everyone Is filled with uric uric.” Ask your druggist for Doctor
Portland Live Stock Reporter.
•ctd especially Is this so of p-ople Pierce'« Anuric, or send Doctor
past middle age. This uric acid In the Pierce’s Invalids' Hotel and Surgical
Curry Lamb Lose Reported Large. blood often cause« rheumatism, lum institute In Buffalo, N. Y . a dollar bill
Marshfield, Or. — Reports coming bagr. swelling of hands or feet, or a for a full treatment, or ten cents for
a trial package.
from Curry county predict the loea of bag like condition nnder the eye«.
"Anuric" is ft recent scientific dis
Backache, frequent urination or the
many lambs on the rangee this sum pains and atlffneea of the joints are covery by Dr. Pierce. "Anuric” drives
mer. Game Warden Adams, who re also often noticed. Dr Pierce says the uric acid out of your body. It la
cently had been over a large territory that everyone ahould have a good a uric and solvent so effective that it
adjacent to Rogue River and
its sweat every day—should drink plenty eliminates these poisons, cleanses the
branches, aaid coyotes had been play of pure water and exercise In the open system, allows your over worked kid
ing havoc among the herda of atwep in air a« much aa poaalble. This help« neys to resume their normal fractions,
Just a few days’ treatment with
several localities. Sheep raisers who, to throw out the poisotmu« uric acid and
"Anuric” will convince you because It
in other years, had driven their flocks thru the skin and the "water.” But brings lasting relief to your painful,
ruck persona aa are past middle
to isolated ranges earlier in the year, for
age It'« often Impossible to do thla aching rheumatic Joints—no more
are keeping them in the lower altitude« and lime salts are deposited tn the backache nr dizzy spells. Try U now
until the lamb« are matured so they arteries, vetaa and Joints, causing all and be coavtacadl
will not be eaay pray for the coyotes. ,
Northwest Auto Co.
I
------
J
You need
never worry
about results in
baking if you use
It has been a stand
by for a quarter of
a century. Guaran
te e d u n d er a ll
pure food laws.
a
m i
DAISY FLY KILLER
TYPHOID
o o u c ih s
unokr u
Sore Granulated Eyelids,
Eyes E
Backache? Hun Down?
Tired? Clean the Kidneys
with Hot W ater and “Anuric”