Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, November 23, 1911, Image 4

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, NOVEMBER 23, AÖ11-
Saved Many From Death.
W. I.. Mock, of Mock, Ark., be
lieves lie has Hatred many liveB in
IliM 25 years of experience in tile
drug business. "What I always
like to do," lie writes, ‘.‘¡a to recoin-
mend Dr. King's New Discovery
for weak, sore lungs, hard colds,
hoarseness obstinate coughs, la
grippe, croup, asthma or other
bronchial affection, for I feel sure
that a number of uiy neighbors are
alive and well today because thee
took my advice to use it. I hon­
estly believe itn the best throat and
lung medicine that's made.” Easy
prove he’s right. Get a trial bot-
free, or regular 50c or $1.00 bot-
1 •. Guaranteed by Chas. I. Clough
“1 am pleased to recommend
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy os
the beet thing I know of and safest
remedy for coughs, colds and bron­
chial trouble.” writes Mrs. L. B.
Arnold of Denver, Colo. "We have
used it repeatedly and it has never
tailed to give relief.” For sale by
Lamar’s Drug Store.
B. I
f
FAMILY
RECIPES-
* ■ « « « »
4
4
*
CLOUGH,
r
-
- -
_•
Reliable Druggist.
to a Threefold Trial
ter and by Air—The
Among
Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy
primitive
communities
&
We carry a Large Stock of
Hardware,
Tinware, Glass
and China,
«
Oils, Paint, Varnish, Doors, Window
Sashes,
Agents for the Great Western Saw.
ALEX McNAIR CO
ReHable Merchants in Tillamook County.
ÄF
V
«•1
I
for backache, rheumatism, kidney or bladder trouble, and urinary irregularities.
Foley Kidney Pill» are tonic in action, quick in results. Refuse substitute«.
Chas. I. Clough, Tillamook
the highest type of a pure straight
whiskey blend.
aged in wood
tbe opinions of the majority
Pure Food Laws
straight whiskey—all whiskey -old whiskey
AMERICAN IMPORTING CO
Distribute
Astona
Ore
Ensilage will take the p|
ture in the feed of a|| iir
'*!
su fur us tbe particular ¿Lt*?*'
Stuck Subsist* on JSIS|U„ ’/H,
Kansas Farmer. For exawL
alone will not fatten tbe
ture Is a valuable adjum-, tots?*'
grain ration, and In Just th»lf* ‘*‘!
silage valuable to tbe bo-
o * *
common belief that enslla„
food for cattle only and that h” ‘ *
sheep and horses d0 uot Ihrj 3W
Keep this in min(l_eUsilaW «J*
bad a
initiated.
The earliest secret societies were
religious rather than political. In the
mysteries of Persia, India and Egypt
as Inner ring of priests formed an ex­
clusive association whose members
gradually became the repositories of
tbe bulk of the learning of the com­
munity. Severe tests of courage and
nerve were imposed upon all aspirants
for admission to the order. Among the
■gyptians the neophyte was takeD
down a deep shaft In one of tbe pyra­
mids and subjected to a threefold trial
by fire, by water and by air.
He had to walk across a grating of
red hot Iron bars, with narrow inter­
stice* whereon be might tread I d safe­
ty, to swim a wide and dark channel
communicating with the Nile nnd to
hong suspended by two iron rings over
an sbyss in tbe blast of two swiftly
revolving wheels. Even then he had to
andergo prolonged fasting and silence
and to take an oath of secrecy ere his
initiation was complete.
A secret
brotherhood of nobles, partly religious
and partly political, which aimed at
tbe concentration of knowledge and
power in the hands of its members, was
established by Pythagoras at Crotona.
In tbe south of Italy. For a time It
succeeded In gaining the supreme di­
rection of affairs, but after the Syba­
rites had succumbed to the Spartan
discipline of tbe order it was suppress­
ed by a rising of the discontented.
During tbe middle nges tbe unset­
tled nnd lawless condition of many
countries engendered by the weakness
or tbe absence of their nominal rulers
was especially favorable to the growth
of secret societies. Toward the close
of tbe eleventh century Hasau-ben-
Sabah, a Mohammedan fanatic who
bad been a fellow student with Omar
Kbayyam at Naisbapur. seized the cas­
tle of Alamut and founded the sect of
tbe assassins. It is still a moot point
whether tbe word which their evil
deeds have given n permanent place in
tbe languages of Europe as a synonym
for murderers be derived from the
founder's name or from the hemp opi­
ate basbisli wherewith they were
wont to fuddle their brains to a pitch
of sudden frenzy. The Venetian trav­
eler Marco Polo tells of an Ingenious
plan adopted by tbeir chieftain to In­
sure tbe unquestioning devotion of his
dupes.
This was no less than the
creation of a sham paradise with lux­
urious gardens, rivers of honey and
wine and hourls. all complete. Thither
the man selected for any dangerous
exploit was transported in a state of
Intoxication and on bis return was
told thnt be bad been given a foretaste
of his life after death.
The terror of their name soon spread
through Europe.
No potentate was
safe from the vengeance of a sect
which regarded death in the execution
of their lord's decrees as the gate of
paradise.
King Philip Augustus of
France, contemporary and foe of Rich­
ard Coeur de Mon. having Incurred
their enmity, was so afraid ot them
that be dared not stir abroad without
his gourds around him. and perhaps
bis fear appeased tbe ruthless sbelk,
for their plane rarely miscarried, The
order was ultimately crushed In 125«
by an Irruption of Mongols under Hu-
Izku Kban.
In Germany tbe violence and an-
areby that prevailed after tbe outlaw­
ry of Henry tbe Mon. when every pet­
ty baron tyrannized witbout let or
hindrance over all whom bls power
could reach, led to tbe Institution of
a very different secret society, whose
functions were purely judicial.
Tbe
"vehmgeriebt" was an attempt to
check tbe Ik-ease of the feudal lords
and to secure tbe due chastisement of
crime
It was tbe proud boast of this
court rbst It Judged In secret and pun­
ished in secret
Every member was
i
sworn to reveal all crimes that came
tv bls notice, even if committed by
those nearest and dearest to him;
hence It hwame a maxim of the Ju
rists of the tlaie. ’Non frater a fratre.
non hoepeo ab boepite. tutus."
The
sentence of tbe court involved outlaw-
ry. degradation and death: the con­
demned was declared "vebmbar" and
wa» relentlessly pursued by at least
lOO.tXH dagger»._Ix>ndon Globe.
complying with both the United States and State
Kentucky in tbe American Agricultur­
ist. This draft blood gives them tbe
bone and weight, while the Kentucky
blood gives them tbe style and finish.
I think that a colt standing three feet
five Inches to three feet six Inches
high, property cared for wbeu weaned
at fifty-tbree to fifty-five inches, wbeu
in
tendeucy to militate against the sur­
vival of the dissenter.
Liberty of
thought and action, qualified only by
the rights of others, is a comparative­
ly late growth. But thought dies bard
and wbeu denied open expression Ilves
Is secret imparted to a few chosen as­
sociates until the times are ripe for it
to be divulged. Thus a few thinkers
and tbeir disciples would band them­
selves together Into a secret society,
and the instinct of self preservation
would cause them to guard against
their secret being revealed to the un­
£
II
OF ENSIUI
The best mules are out of mares
wltb from one-fourth to oue half draft
blood In them, writes J. F. Cook of
have always been treated with scant
Coughs, Colds and CrouD
DAIRYMEN’ AND
S SUPPLIES
STEEL STOVES & RANCES
THE GREAT ECONOMY
coMlderatlon, and overt dissent from
NAVE HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION
During the past 86 years no rem­
edy has proven more prompt or
B. A Davin, 627 Washington St., ConnernTlll*
lad., is in hiw 85th year. He writes us: “I have
more effectual In its ourea of
lately suffered much from my kidne)» and bled-
der I had severe backaches aud my kidney action
was U m > frequent, causing me to lose much Rleee
at night, and in my bladder there was constant
pain. I took Foley Kidney Pills for some time, than Cbamberlaln’a Couflrh Remedy. In
•nd am now free or all trouble and again able to many bomee it I h relied upon an Im­
be up and around. Foley Kidney Pilis bare aif plicitly aa tbe family physician. It con*
highest recommendation.*'
tains no opium or other narcotic, and
may be jflven aa confidently to a baby
3 I CUOUGH,Tillamook Mio
an adult. Price 26c; large size 50
r
Comoartd With tha Horse a* a Farm
Motive Power.
wtalcb might Is right and the tyranny
of superstition is absolute minorities
la a a ■ « ■ * ■ ■ * ■■ • I
HEADQUARTERS FOR
The Most
Egyptian» Subjected Candidate»
by Fira, by Wa-
Order of A»»aa-
•Mta and Their Sham Paradi»».
The
*; ibi .« i . i
*
ir_
3
SEVERE TESTS OF COURAGE.
- '
Foley Kidney Pills fee « * n a:
*
The Earliest Ones Had Strenuous
Initiation Rites.
The
valued family te-
-
.......
i I cipes for cough
and cold
tonics and
■
cure,
liniments,
Tillamook Bakery, I other remedies have as
OPPOSITE THE ALLEN HOUSE.
4 careful attention here as
I
the most intricate prescrip-
Corner Stillwell Ave. and First
| tions.
St. West, and both Phones.
1
Our fresh, high grade
l ------
Ifdrugs will help to make
8PECIALTY IN ALL KIND OF CAKES I ¿these remedies more eflfec-
M tive than ever.
ALL KIND nr urial ».
Î fiE Right prices are also
g assured.
A Household Medicine
That stops coughs quickly and
cu ■ colds is Foley’s Honey and
T ir Compound. Mrs. Anna Pelzer,
2526 Jeffei son St., So. Omaha, Neb.,
says: “I . an recommend Foley’s
Honey and Tar Compound as a sure
cure for coughs and colds.
It
cured my daughter of a bad cold
and my neighbor, Mrs. Benson,
cured herself and her whole family TOMIC IN ACTION - QUICK IN RESULTS
with Foley's Honey and Tar Com
Ohrs prompt relief from BACKACHE,
pound. Everyone in our neighbor­
hood speaks highly of it”. CtlHB. I. KIDNEY and BLADDER TROUBLE,
Clough Co.
RHEUMATISM, CONGESTION of the
'I do not believe there is any KIDNEYS, INFLAMMATION of the
‘her medicine so good for whoop-
ig cough as Chamberlain's Cough BLADDER and all annoying URINARY
Remedy,” writes Mrs. Francis Tur­ IRREGULARITIES. A positive boon to
pin Junction City, Ore. This rein
c<l is alm unsurpassed for colds MIDDLE AGED and ELDERLY
ai- I croupe. For sale by Lamar’s PEOPLE and for WOMEN.
Dr ng Store.
Backache, Headache, Nervousness
anil rheumatism, both in men and
women, mean kidney trouble. Do
not allow it to progress beyond the
reach of medicine but stop it
promply with Foley Kidney Pills.
They regulate the action of the
urinary organs. Tonic in action.
<1 .lick in results. Chas. I. Clough
Co.
SECRET SOCIETIES
the VALUABLE MULL ’ii
Saureà.
•Tut Just crazy to play golf."
said
tbe <*ntbu«laatic sumaer girl.
"Most people ara.” muttered
the
etere man who bad ao ambition ____
partly to ail tbe pwetateatlal cbalr-
Cbicago Newa.
It Is charged that the mule Is
vicious, stubborn and slow, but
experience In handling mules on
the farm has tailed to sustain the
charge save In a tew Instances, and
In these cases they were brought
about by bad handling Mules are
truer pullers than horses and move
more quickly under the load. Their
hearing and vision are alse better,
says a Kentucky breeder: also they
are less liable to become frightened
and start suddenly, and it they do
start they usually stop before dam­
age Is done, while the horse seldom
stops until completely treed. The
heavy boned jack Dr. McChord II..
shown herewith. Is owned by W J.
Finley of Missouri.
The Indiana and Nebraska expert
ment stations have tested ensila»
as a pasture substitute, and at eaeh
Institution dairy cows taken off
pasture In the summer time and M
ensilage exclusively did not shrink
In milk yield, and beet cattle did
not decreaso In gains per day To
the surprise ot the experimenter!,
there was a slight Increase In milk
yield ot cows and flesh In beet cat­
tle while on corn ensilage as com­
pared with pasture. This seen«
proof enough that corn ensilage la
a genuine substitute tor summer
pasture. The twin silos pictured
are on the farm of Governor Mead
ot Vermont.
fully developed, will measure 15.3 to
10.1 hands high, and that makes them
good enough for any market.
In a general way mules are valued
higher than the horse.
In Iowa the
borse is valued at $54 a head, while
the mule has an average valuation of
$70. or $16 higher. In Illinois, another
great horse state, the horse is valued
at only $56 nnd the mule nt $65. or an
advance of $9 over the horse. In Kan­
sas the horse is valued at $48. the
mule nt $64. Taking the whole coun-
try over, the mule average is $11 more
Into the ration of any anima) to th
identical extent that pasture gria
does.
Ensilage is the most perfect sub­
stitute for good pasture, us will h
seen by the following analysis of pee
lure grass and corn ensilage:
Pasture grass, water, 80; nltropz
extract. 9.7; crude fiber, 4; ash, 2;
ether extract, 8; protein, 3.5; corn ee
silage. 79.1; ultrogen extract, 11; erode
liber. 6; ash, 2; ether extract, 8; pre-
tein, 1.7.
Tbe two are practically the ua
except lu protein content This cu
be adequately supplied by the use of
alfalfa hay.
In the ease of tbe milk
cow weighing ten to eleven hundred
pounds, if thirty-five to forty poundi
of ensilage are fed per day aad th
animal has opportunity to eat alfalfb
hay at liberty a ration equal to prsirts
grass will have been provided.
A cow eating thirty-five to forty
pounds of ensilage per day-or. for
thnt matter, any other animal eating
tills quantity—will not consume mon
than five to seven pounds of alfalfa
hay per day. The amount of alfalfa
consumed to make ensilage the equal
of pasture grass Is consequently small
The saving in alfalfa hay alone will oa
many farms more than pay for the alia
than the horse.
From repeated experiments that
have come under my observation In
the past twenty-five years I have
found that three mules fifteen hands
high, that were constantly worked,
consumed about as much forage as
two ordinary sized horses worked In
the same way. and the mules were fat
and the horses only in good working
order. Although a mule will live and
work on a very low fare, he also re­
sponds as quickly as any animal to
good feed and kind treatment.
A reliable man tells me that he once
saw a runaway of six teams In a corn­
field, five of them mules and the sixth
a horse. The mules ran and capered
until they came to the first batch of
green grass, and there they stopped to
regale themselves, while the horse ran
on. greatly frightened, until he struck
the plow in bis back. In less than ten
minutes tbe five mule teams were go­
ing without a bolt broken, while tbe
plow after tbe horse was a wreck and
the horse ruined for life.
the first year.
Th. Profitable Sheop.
In sections where Indian corn does
Sheep will eat many kinds of weeds
that borees. cows and hogs will not not grow well tbe silo can be third
touch, to say nothing of bushes nnd with Kaffir corn or sorghum, and tbs
briers of all kinds. A pasture that is silo will preserve this feed in #•
practically worthless, being overrun green succulent state. Indian corn b
with weeds, green briers and bushes, the king of ensilage crops, but Kafft
is cleared like magic in two years and or sorghum ns compared with Indira
grows better year by year. If sheep corn Is worth as much as the sam
did not yield a cent of profit It would feed in the ordinary way of curine
pay to keep them to clear and improve is worth compared with Indian corn.
the pasture. They do not damage a
pasture and are not objectionable to
Dairy Gossip.
The winter cow may give a little lea
other stock unless overstocked. Grain
milk
than
the
one upon pasture. W
crops may fall, but that doesn't con­
cern the sheepman, as his muttons are the difference in the price of butter ftt
fattening on many things that other more than makes up for this.
The milk vessels should be clean*«
stock will not eat. Yet the sheep un­
der tbe old law were clean and the just as soon as possible after beW
most wholesome of meats and are used.
It is always a good plan to be «
yet.
A combined mutton and wool
sheep is the most profitable.—Farm your guard when a man wants to
you the liest cow out of his herd.
and Ranch.
The winter dairyman is the comlw
man, but he caunot afford to niiik ***
Separator Milk For Calves.
cold, dirty stable or barn. I**8
better cow barns.
—J
The cow that loses flesb in Oct*»
or November will be an expensed
Tbe milk is ns healthful after passing
through the separator as it was before,
except that the removal of the butter
fat obviously makes it less suited to
the needs of the calf.
Bloat and
scours are more liable to be caused by
sktmmllk than by whole milk, as the
former does not quite so fully agree
with the digestive organs.
Separator
skimmilk from a creamery should be
pasteurized tiefore It is fed to either
calves or pigs, as the milk from the
herds of some of the patrons may
to winter.
i
.
For Lice on Hogs
For pigs that have lice tui *~‘
< the commercial dips* cither by yT
j Ing or dipping or with lirus^.„
' of kerosene poured over the »bo
' and backs will destroy the lie*-
are more or less troubled
j
hog wallow made of cement or
water tight, lu which some w«
disinfecting material like tbe
dips are placed, will be very *
permitting the hogs to do tb*1
disinfecting. It is likely rbst '
quarters are infected with Ik*.
ought to lie cleaned out and •r"
carry germa of tuberculosis.
Tbe
milk is no more dangerous in this
respect after passing through the sepa­
rator than before.
Ths Prolificacy of Duroc*.
Tbe Duroc sows owned by the
de-
j
partment of animal husbandry in tbe
Kausas State Agricultural college pro- >r whitewashed.
duced an average of 10.3 pigs
. „„
The
Berkshire® were second, with a rec­
Sheep Shearing*-__ ~
ord of 9.8.
Twenty-nine sows—all
Study tbe method* of
kind a—a veraged 8.8. Taken Individu­ »beepmen and Imitate them-
„
ally. tbe Rerkshires are making tbe
The rent value of a eb«*p
better record, as there are fifteen of «etermfned. particularly »* a
tbefr breed and only eight Duroc*
«util it is a year old.
The Fort Hays station reports twenty i A dairy farm of a dozen
-
Ove Durocs giving an average of eight maintain a flock of Of*'*“ w
•be»-p almost without ripen*
j
8h»«p Respond t* Car*.
Just because .beep will gnaw away
sod manage to Hrs on tbe aborted
Grub files worry tbe
went It. m -
Provide a dark.
er let them run in thick "°‘:egt
If a ewe keep* her lamb •4
pasturage about tbe farm fa no indi­ condition n-i to the time "
cation that they will do their best on be sot'., nite is 0 food Wvthrf
•ueb grazing.
r-
.