Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Yamhill County reporter. (McMinnville, Or.) 1886-1904 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 20, 1899)
Easily Gotten Over. Pains and Aches Of Rheumatism Make Countless Samples of merchandise carried by a Thousands Suffer. traveling salesman are heid, in Kansas But this disease is cured by Hood’s Sar saparilla, which neutralizes tiie acid in the blood. If you have any symptoms of ( rheumatism take Hood's Sarsaparilla at once and do not waste time and money on unknown preparations. The merit of Hood’s Sarsaparilla is unquestioned and Its record of cures unequalled. City, P. & G. R. company vs. state (Ark.), 41 L. R. A. 333, not to be bag gage within a statute regulating charges on excess baggage. Weasels and skunks are enemies of the careless poultry keeper. All poul try should be kept in quarters made secure at night from these depredators. Is America’s Greatest Medicine for rheumatism Openings for ventilation should bo covered with wire screens. Hood’s Pil s cure«11 liver ills. 25 cents. Hood ’s Sarsaparilla No Mystery to Him. “Have you paid any attention to the race problem?” asked the thoughtful man, as he laid down his paper. “Have 1?“ answered the very small man with the massive diamond. “I’m the felloXv who taught Tod 81oan how to ride.”—Washington Star. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE only oats or peas. A mixture of both these grains would probably make a better winter protection to the soil than either alone. These will not live after heavy freezing. !>ut their leaves will make a mulch that will protect the sur face from being beaten down by rains. When this mulch Is plowed under. It should uot be bur el more than three or four indies. Tiie cutaway barrow will do It deeply enough. Ownership of Wedding Presents. A oripole from a sprain is one who A recent decision in Springfield, neglects to use St. Jacobs Oil to cure it. Mass., as to the ownership of wedding Prompt use of it brings prompt cure, presents is that where su< h presents and the trouble is gotten over easily. are sent to the bride before marriage, as is the custom, the presents are her Woman’s Weapon and Tool Box. Keeper—Then she picked the catch property, and remain so even if a sep on her handcuffs, dug through a two- aration takes place after marriage. foot wall of stone, took out a pane of View of » Layman. plate glass bv removing the putty, Bill—What do you reckon that doc and then opened the big lock on the tor tumps me all over de chest fer? gate. What tools had she? Jake—Tryin’ to see how much dough Matron — None whatever. Stay. I you ha<l in your inside i>ocket, of Good gracious, I forgot to take away course.—Cincinnati Enquirer. her hairpins! lie Knew Not All. Keeper—Then pursuit is useless. He—You think you know it all, She still has them.—Stray Stories. don’t you? Him—No I have never been able to figure out any reason for you being alive.—Indianapolis Journal. CFRED By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion ot the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper feet hearing, ami when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the inflamma tion can be taken out and this tube rest »red to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed i forever; nine cases out oi ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing 1 nt an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any Case of Deafness (caused by' catarrh) that can nut be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.' , a ~ F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O Sold by Druggists, 75c Hall’s Family Pills are the best. Bamboo pens still retain their hold in India, whete they have been in use for more than 1,000 years. If you want the best wind mill, pumps, tanks, plows, wagons, bells of all sizes boilers, engine*, or general machinery, see or write JOHN POOLE, foot of Morrison •treet, Portland, Oregon. A New Invention—Flying Top. The latest invention of considerable merit is the “Flying Top,” invented by a Western boy. It is so easy to operate, that a boy six years of age can manage it without any difficulty. The top is constructed on the principle of a flying machine and by simply pulling a cord, ascends from 50 to 300 feet, or, until its momentum ceases, when it gradually descends . like a parachute, still spinning when it strikes the ground. flTO t'Prmftn"i*ny Cured. 3« ni«(>r nervotisnea • ■ I • *Tter il.'SL .¡ays use ot Dr. Kime's i.riut Nerve Restsrrr. -id lor f K»L »4.011 trial bottle and crrotlse. DR. R. H, . -I x s1., Juul., yau Arch strset, inilauelpuia, Fa. REGAINED HEALTH. Gratifying Lettera to Mrs. Pink ham From Happy Women. "I Owe You My Life." Mrs. E. WoomisF.R, Mills, Neb., writes: “D ear M rs . P inkham :—I owe my life to your Vegetable Compound. The doctors said I had consumption and nothing could be done for me. My menstru&tion had stopped and they said my blood was turning to water. I hal several doctors. They all said I could not live. 1 began the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it helped me right away; menses returned and I have gained in weight. I have better health than I have had for years. It is wonderful what your Com pound has done for me.” "I Feel Like a New Person.- Mrs. G eo . L each , 1G09 Belle St., Alton, Ill., writes: " Before I began to take your Vege table Compound I was a great sufferer from womb trou ble. Menses would ap pear two and three times in a month, causing me to be so weak I could not stand. I could neither sleep nor eat, and looked so badly my friends hardly knew me. “ I took doctor’s medicine but did not derive much benefit from it. My drug gist gave me one of your little books, and after reading it I decided to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound. I feel like a new person. I would not give your Compound for all the doctors’ medicine in the world. I can not praise it enough.” The Tibetans have a week of five days, named after iron, wood, water, The rivers in Northern Russia were feathers and earth. frozen this year before the end of Oc I never used so quick a cure as Piso's tober. Cure for Consumption.—J. B. Palmer, Box 1171, Seattle. Wash., Nov. 25, 1895. TRY ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE, A powder to be shaken Into the shoes. At this season your feet feel swollen, ner vous and uncomfortable. If you have smarting feet or tight shoes, try Allen’s Foot-Ease. It rests ami comforts; makes walking easy. Cures swollen and sweating feet, blisters and callous spots. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain and is a cer tain cure for Chilblains, Sweating, damp or frosted feet. We have over thirty thou sand testimonials. Try it today. Isold by all druggists and shoo ¿torec for 25c. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen 9.01m- Bted, Lo Roy, N. Y. No fewer than 2,401 patents have been taken out on processes for making sugar and salt. Hogs are fattened on oranges in Paraguay, am.1 orange-fed pork is said to be very good. Prunin',' Peach Tree«. Peach growers are gradually learning that the peach tree will not only stand very severe pruning, but that It does best under suit treatment. Where this Is not practiced, long, slender brandies form, and these produce fruit mainly a^ their outer extremities. This overloads the branches and causes them to break down even when the tree Is producing no more fruit than it could easily carry if properly distributed. If the brandies were cut back to within Roof Thatchios:. Good, straight rye straw is probably two feet of the trunk they would throw ns desirable material as can be secured out numerous fruit spurs and produce for thau-hlng. To get rid ot the grain, j fruit dose to the trunk and main hold the bundle, without cutting the branches where it could easily be sup band, so that the cylinder of the thresh- ' ported. Trees handled In this way will er will strike the heads. When the grain also produce more perfect fruit. Such Is nil removed throw the bundle to one severe cutting back may be done with side and do not let it go through the out any injury whatever If performed machine. The straw will then be while the tree is dormant. Although straight and in good condition for peaches are reckoned an uncertain crop, it is still one of the most profita thatching. Arrange the rafters as for a shingle ble fruits that can lie grown In locali roof. Use for sheathing 4-lnch boards ties adapted to It. Select the finest placed about a foot apart. In thatch varieties and give high culture and It ing, the work is done on exactly tiie will require but little fruit to give you same principle as shingling. A course a good money return.—American Farm ot small bundles (a) Is first put on all News. the way across tiie lower edge of tiie Mode Poultry Pay. roof. Take a small bunch of tiie A writer in a Western paper says: I straight rye straw, even the butts by standing tiie straw perpendicularly and often read in the poultry journals that It is not much work to take care of lifting several inches from the floor, then letting fall suddenly. Tie the end poultry. I have always found It just of a ball of strong string to the lower the reverse. Still I like It for the out pieces of sheathing next to the cornice, door exercise and natural love I have riace the bunch of straw against it and for pets. I also found it very remunera pass the string over the straw down un tive. but I find there is as great a de der the sheathing, back to the left and mand for that article called common sense in poultry raising ns in everything else. The third year I gave poultry my attention I kept a strict account with the biddies. I had thirty-two Light Brahma liens and forty half-bloods for sitters. In the early spring I sold nine ty-two sittings of eggs, twenty-two half-bloods for sitters, and raised nearly 700 chicks. 1 sold some for broilers and some for breeding purposes, and packed over 150 dozen eggs during tiie summer. I sold all the culls Thanks giving, and nt the end of the year tiie THE WAY IO THATCH. books showed a balance in my favor of bring it up over the bundle the second j $7(11.34. Since that time 1 have kept time. But in another bundle of straw no accurate account, but am satisfied to and repeat the operation until the first continue uiilll I find something better. course Is completed. — Farmer's Review. Put on the second course in the same way, having the bundles in tills cover A Cow for Every Acre. We do not hear so much as we used the cracks of the first course and the butts extending to the edge of the roof. to do about the importance of pro The third and remaining layers are put ducing enough feed on an acre to keep on in the same way, except that the a cow through the year. It can lie done butts of these are always about a foot by growing earn as the main feed. But above the butts of the layer below, just that Is not always, nor generally, econ as the lower edge of one row of shingles omy. for if all the land is kept In corn is several inches above the one just be it must require more manure than low it. In the engraving b, c and d where It can be every three or tour show the relative positions of the third, years seeded with clover, and after all fourth and fifth courses. Always cover the soil would be less fertile than after completely the twine which holds on a clover seeding. Besides, more depends one course witli the lower part of the on the milking character of the cows next above it. just as the nails in one than on their number. The best dairy course of shingles are covered by the men prefer rather to reduce their herds next layer. If tiie work Is carefully in number, and still get as much milk done, the roof will be waterproof and and butter as formerly. Tills makes will last for many years. the labor much less, aud if the lessened number of cows leaves more land not Portable Swill Barrel. I have not seen nny device that beats needed to keep them, it can probably mine for lightening the labor of swill be given to other uses that will pay ing the bogs or transporting slop. I much better.—American Cultivator. Guessing Weight of Stock. Warmth and Strength. The cold of winter certainly aggra vates rheumatism, and at all seasons St. Jacobs Oil is its master cure. It imparts warmth and strength to the In 1850 the highest house in New muscles, and cures. York city had only five stories. Among the industrial novelties are No household is complete without a bot aluminum carpets and steel billiard tle of the famous Jesse Moore Whiskey. It is a pure and wholesome stimulant rec balls. ommended by all physicians. Don’t ne When coming to San Francisco go to glect this necessity. Brooklyn Hotel, 208-212 Bush street. Taxes on beaids are leived in Japan American or European plan. Room and board $1.00 to $1.50 per day ; rooms 50 cents ese cities. to $1.00 per day; single meals 25 cents. made mine of an old cultivator, witli a Free coach. Chits. Montgomery. To Cure a Cold in One Day pickle barrel that cost 25 cents. I first Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. bend the iron B, as shown in the first Mrs. Richard King, of Texas, owns All druggists refund money if it fails to Illustration, at the spindle, then fit it 2,000 square mi'es of land in that state. cure. 25c. around the barrel, then bend For the other spindle, using the grip shown at 1 for the hub. and the grip shown at 2 to fasten on the barrel. With this, a boy In securing the COM M BIA AGENCY can carry 25 gallons of slop as easily for 1899; one day’s delay may result in your Competitor getting it. We aré the only bicycle as I can carry a bucketful. This device bouse having a delivery point in the North Is left at the kitchen door, ami • le west. Prompt delivery of all orders assured. Dealers who handle the CO-IA'.OIi and whole day's slop Is put In 1!. and Is all II A KT FORD line will have a double advant hauled away at once, at the same hour age over others who do not. We have im- Firoved the quality of our products, while our each day, so that the pigs are not ncrea>ed output' enables us to reduce our squealing around the trough all the prices, as follows: time. The trough projects through the Columbia Chainless ......................... ............... >75 no Hartfords................................................................|A5 00 Columbia Models 57-58................... 50 00 Vedettes. Strictly Up-to-Date......................... 25 00 fence, so I can dump the slop in to sixty Columbia Models 45-49, '.'8 pattern, ’99 im We job bicycle sundries. head of hogs and not get my clothes provements......... „..................... -...................... 40 00 Write for terms and discounts. DON’T DELAY.... POPE MANUFACTURING CO., Controlling Oregon W«»hlngton, Montana .nd Idaho 132-34 Sllth St., Pd ftllDd, Of A SWORN STATEMENT. I, C. R Rollin«, M. D , of Grass Valley, Or., voluntarily make the following statement: After having my teeth extracted I have had five sets made at intervals of about nine months, three in Portland one in *an Francisco and one in Spokane. With neither of the>e have I been able to eat a meal s victuals or even an appla or ripe peach. On December 10. 181*4, I had my f» x mad Dr 8 r ->• r, 1.0.0 F T< mp a, First and Alder, Port and. Or., and within twent minutes after the time they were put into my mouth I was able to eat a common hard win: r apple and a piece of dried venison, and at this time. December 13th, have eaten everv meal since with thé greatest comfort and with no trouble at all. They are a perfect flt and sati^facu rv in everv respect. C. R. ROLLINS, M. D. Reference*: French Br. s. Rank. The Dalles, Or.; Sherman Co. Bank, Wasco, Or.; Wm. Hold* r. Sheriff of Sherman Co.: Drs. A. 8. Nichols and Brother, Port.ana, Or. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 13th day of December, 1898. [S eal ] JOHN OGILBEE, Notary Public for Oregon. TEETH WITHOUT PLATES ..JUST OUT.. Hoot. Crowned. Bridire« Made. 1’alnleas tilling and extraction. Dr. T. H. White, 0. M*RTEL' s | Relief st Last rnrwru I Praised bv thousands of —, pHtnuH I laillea as safe, al k C U A 1 TT I ways reliable and without | UluMLC, 1 an equal- \A«k drugaist for Oil | Dr. MartePf* French Female I ILLS' 1:11« In metal b> x wtth “ ------------------- 1 French Flag on top in Blue, Wh’te and Red. Insist nn ha<1n« the genuine •Re ‘t* Women.” mailed FREBIa plain «ealad letter w th uttlinotJals and particulars. Address. FRENCH DRbb CO.. 3SI and ¿43 Fearl St.. N.T. THE FLYINC TOP. The r**«***t Invention of th* «?* We will ,*nd ««mpl*. prepaid, on rec-lot of 25c. We rive «p<- ctxl price, to «rente. Tnomand« of men .nd w< ■ i< n can make to a d.v «citing f,nr noveltic. PACIFIC COAST NOVELTY CO.. 1»1 First street, Portland, Or. One of the best ways of training tiie eye to judge both of live and dressed weights of animals is offered at •’butch ering time.” If the farmer has some barn scales It Is easy to secure the live weight of animals at any time. But there Is great difference in the amount of waste In killing ami dressing, even among animals of the same breed. It Is this kind of knowledge that the buy er learns by long practice, and unless farmers want to be cheated In selling live stock they must learn also. The boy on the farm should be encouraged to make Ills guess as to how much each hog or beef would weigh, both alive and after It was dressed for marketing. It Is knowledge that every boy on the farm should try to gain. Mak'ng Neat,foot Oil. Every farmer who kills a beef should save all the feet and get the oil out of them. This Is called ueatsfoot oil, and Is valuable for many purposes. Almost everybody understands how It Is made. All th.it Is u.ed 1 at.er thoroughly washing the hoofs to remove dirt Is to put them In water and keep the water boiling several hours, until all the oil rises. The four feet of a full-grown beef will yield about a pint of neats- foot oil. Of course It as much trouble to boll a few hoofs as It is to care for a great many, but neatsfoot oil Is valua ble enough to be worth saving, even If the feet of only one animal can be pro cured to extract It from. Storing Apple« «nd Grope«, If apples are kept in the cellar they should l>e ¡»laced in the copies! and most airy part. It Is treat to keep them In a slieil or garret until there Is danger ot freezing and then put In the cellar. To keep well, apples should be kept in re ceptacles as air-tight as possible. The barrel should never be left uncovered. soiled, as shown In the second picture. Open the barrel and take out a suffi The device can be Improved by cutting cient quantity to last a few days and out a shallow curve from top of the bar then nail the cover on again. rel and riveting on a tin spout, as Do You Know Your Farm? shown.—J. Brlnlnger. In Ohio Farmer. We want to ask you. farmer friend. Corn Field« in Winter. The bare corn field Is no better pul verised by winter freezing than if some fall crop were sown, and left In winter to cover Its nakttdness. Wberevy crim son clover will live through the winter, that Is. of course, best, as winter earth covering, for It will often make consid erable growth In the spring. But there should be something sown, if If you are perfectly familiar with your whole farm? Have explored all its acres and know what Is on the under side as well as on top? Do you know just how deep certain land should be plowed and what crops are best adapt ed to same? If you do. then you are on the high road to prosperity. Just keep right on. and you'll get there.— Farmers' Guide DR. DARRINS Water Power Abandoned. CURES. Baker City Republican. Those who are disposed to doubt Dr. Darrin’s cures will have their doubts shaken on reading the following card from Mr. John Martin. o( Cove, Or. Mi. Martin is a man well and favora bly known to all of our readers, and n man of 20 years’ residence in Union jountv. His case will go far to estab lish the skill of Dr. Darrin: For the benefit of the afflicted as well as Dr. Darrin, I will state I bad been afflicted 10 years with hydrocele »nd other troubles before being treated »nd cured by Dr. Darrin, five years »go, in Portland. 1 am liappv to say the cure was perfect and permanent, «ml I am now a well man. I reside at Jove, Or., and will gladly answer any inquiries. JOHN MARTIN. Dr. Darrin'« I'lace of Bunin*.««. Di. Darrin gives free examination to »11, and when necessary gives medi cines in connection with electricity. The poor treated free from 10 to 11 iaily. except medicines. Those will ing to pay, 10 to 5; evening, 7 to 8; Sundays, 10 to 12. Deafness, catarrh, eve, nose and 1 throat, heart, liver, stomach, lung troubles, errors of youth, blood taints, gleet, impotency, varicocele, hydrocele, «tricture, gonorrhea and syphillis a specialty. Cross eyes and hydrocele operated on until January 12. All ahronio male and female and private diseases treated at reasonable tates. No cases published except by permis sion of the patient. All business rela tions with Dr. Darrin strictly confi dential. Letters of inquiry answered. Circulars and question blanks sent free. Batteries and belts furnished when necessary. Office, 265 Moiriaon street, Portland. M etftlfi. Four hundred years ago only seven metals were known. Now there are 51, 30 of which have been discoveied within the present century—Chicago Inter Ocean. The famous incline railway at P*og. pect Park, Niagaia Falls, is to be wper< .«ted electrically according to a recent decision of the Ne v York State Park Commissioners. Heretofore this rail way lias always been operated by watet l«»wer, but in view of the fact that during tiie great ice bridges, wh<D tourists flock to see this marvelous sigh,, from all over the state, the rail* wav is usually inoperative. This has been due to the chocking of the intake with ice and very often too low water. As there is no other means of access without a tedious descent and ascent, the tourists have been greatly incon venienced, and the management have lost considerable money. With abun dant electric power available from the Niagara Falls Power Company the elec tric operation of the load appears to be most apropos. Germany and X<*ia Minor. It Is Inevitable that Asia Minor shall even tually pass from the possession of Moham medanism, and whether Germany accomplishes the task or not, the bultan must yield to a Christian nation. It is just as inevitable that diseases of the digestive organs must yield to Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. The disorders of this kind are usually called dyspepsia, consti pation au<l biliousness. The Betters are equally good for all such complaints, regardless of the name. One of Many. Mrs. Weeks—What business is your busband engaged in? Mrs. Meeks—He operates in stocks. "Is he a ‘bull’ or a ‘bear’ ?” “Both, lie’s a bull at the stock exchange and a bear at home.”—Chi cago Evening News. Th« Thing to Do. When the Sciatic nerve gives its worst torment in the shape of Sciatica, the one thing to do is to use St. Jacobs Oil promptly and feel sure of a cure. Perfectly Harmless. Dix—I once knew a young man who smoked 50 cigarettes daily without any particular harm resulting there from. Hix—Is it possible? Dix—Yes; and the only notioeable effect was the death of the Btnoker.— Chicago Evening News. y, Heroes of the W at with Spfcin C’ n s - ! • . I r* A a I & C4 ? u à G thousands of them, aTe suf fering from lingering dis eases induced by life in poisonous southern camps, the result of changes of climate, or of imperfect nutrition caused by im proper and. badly cooked food. Sleeping on the ground has doubtless developed, rheumatism in hundreds who were predisposed to the disease. In such cases the Boys of ‘98 may take a lesson from the experi* ence of the Heroes of the Civil War Hundreds of the Boys of’63 have testified to the efficacy of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills foT Pale People in driving out malaria, rheumatism and other diseases contracted during thtir days o$ hardship and pnvation in the army, These pills Are the best tonic in the world. Asa Robinson, of Mt. Stirling, Til., is a veteran of the Civil war, haying served in the 83rd Pennsylvania Volunteers. He went to the warn vigor ous farmer’s boy aud came buck broken in health, a victim of sciatic rheu matism. Most of the time he was unfitted lor manual labor of any kind, and his sufferings were ut all times intense. He says : ‘ Nothing seemed to give me permanent relief until three years ago, when my attention w: s called to some of the wonderful cures effected by Dr. Williams’ Pink T ills f r ¡’ale People. I had not taken more than half a box when I nofietd an improvement in my condition, and I keep on improving steadily. To them I owe my restoration to health. They are a grand remedy.”—J//. Detune rut- Message. At druggists, or sent.postpaid,on receipt of price,50ct$ per box, by th« Di. Yfilli/krT»* PAedictne Co., B»* V, bchenectidy.H.Y. $40 CASH, $45 INSTALLMENTS 1899 BICYCLES “Bent. Wheel«« <»n E hf II».** 1899 Ideals 822.50, |25, 830. Send for catalogue» Live agents w anted everywhere. FICKI» T. MKHR1LE CYCLE CO., PORTLAND. SPOKANE. TACOMA. Cut Rate1':“' W oodard, Chirkc ft Co.. |.<7i:TiLiVi»,r<»it. YOUR LIVER Is it Wrong? Get it Right. Keep it Right. Moorfl'* Revealed Remedy will do It. Three doses will Liako you feel better. Get it from your druggist or any w bolesale drug house, or trout Stewart dt Holmes Drug Co., Seattle. MACHINERY Bloom timo, quantity. For Mills, Mines, .«hops and Farms; Steel Log doom all ging anti Hoisting Engines; Hoe <’hieel Tooth Saws, Albany GreaMJ, etc. ROSES. may uay be had In Plant at any Pía In large they aummei et Roses TATUM&BOWEN 27 to '.lñ First Street Portland, Or. 34-36 Fremont Htreet, Han Francisco. RUPTURE CURED. We guarantee to tit every ease we undertake. Don't put it off; write for particulars at once. <•. 1«. WimifUlUA < <>., Kwpert Truss Fitters, 1U8 .^econd Street, Portland, Or. CURE YOURSELF! Bi< <4 for unnatural in flam mat Iona, Irritations or ulceration* uf in u c o u 4 membranes. Painless, and not aatrin- gent or poiBonotu. Mold by »ragglata, «»■nt In plain wrapper, expreß, prepai*!, for • •r 3 bottles, 9t.75. rcular sent on requert. IVII KN writing to advertisers pleas« I fl mention this paper.