DALLAS, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 189-3. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. M- I KEENE, D. D. Dental ..Ifi.-o ill Urt-ynmi b u ild in g , corm -r of m ercial direct«, S. 8 a l e in , Hroiher’» C ou rt - - and C o m ­ SALEM. • • & Í3 A 1 5 E R S T ^ N < Î, - - O re « -o n , — DEAL IN— I oreq o n . - DYSPEPSIA Stoves, Tinware, and House Furnishing: Goods, -A N D A K E N O W — I H. B. STAN LEY, IM. D. Je llin g PHYSICIAN ANO 'URGE9V, D allas , . . . O T O ukoon . - O u -f - R I T I ’Î E ai ■ Ç o s 't ' FROYI - S ~, la that misery experienced when suddenly made aware that you possess a diabolical arrangement called stomach. No two dyspep­ tics have the same predominant symptoms, but whatever form dyspepsia takes The u n d erlyin g ra it He in in the L I V E R , and one thing is certain no one w ill remain a dyspeptic who will ■ I.. N. W O O D S , VI. D. PH Y SIC IA N AND SCISI! It F >N, I R P A R K ! M 'C A L L O N . M. surrounding country. streets, which are graded and 80 feet wide. Size o f lots— 80x144, with allleys through the bloCKS. F IO . J. K. S miley , DALY, SIBLEY & EAKIN, These lots are sold on the installm ent plan— $ 1 0 cash, A t U i r n e . y s - n t - l sa w . balance on three, six , nine and twelve m onths’ tim e without We hsvo the only set o f abstract hooks In Polk This is by long odds the prettiest and best addi­ county Reliable abstracts furnished, and m oney to interest. No com m ission charged on and J W ilson’s block . Dallas. loans. R oom s 2 Wm. P. W RIGHT, Agent. C o u n se lo r a t L a w , S olicitor in Clianrery. Hu been In practice o f his profession In this place ____ i»ot. thirty years, and will attend to all busiress •lit rusted to his - are. (Office, corn er Main and Court to, Dallas, Polk C o. Or N .L . D u t i . k u J. H. , T ow n sk n d .sÇfleæccf&àjgft, f t * zs ; , ra ... r \ ; -.1 FA T O r * I BUTLER & TOWNSEND, S4> .Jr ,-su HE A T T O R N E Y S -A T -L A W . P O S IT IV E CURE. r B R O TH E R S. G3 V, arron Bt., New York. Price dO ctaldL. Officr upstairs in Odd Fellow»’ nee- block. jX iA -S , - - O K K G -O isr- A. OLINO ER. ICOUNTY SURVEYOR- All kinks of work in the line of sur­ veying promptly done. Address. Dal­ its. __________ _______________________ ■ Progressive. W. T. RIODON. O U N Q ER T. L. B U TLER, Probipt, & R IQ D O fJ, T E SALEM UNDERTAKERS — S uccessors to J. A. R ota n — Popular. W e carry a full line from the cheapest to the finest lo tta s i Tin n i Mirili C O U R T S T R E E T . C P P O S IT • T H E O P E R A H O U S E . IN S U R A N C E C O . H ea d CLOSING OUT SALE! ” O ffic e : . * ) WASHINUTDN «THKET, PORTLAND, OK The Leading Home Company. /' j •< MAKE A 8 r ECIALTT OF .N.UMMC, ON Ohirhes and Parsonages, Dwellings and Household GotH.-, Schools and other Public Buildings, Farm Buildings and Farm Property. F u ll L I rvc o i g r o c e r i e s , S h o e s , L a n p ; , ^ r o c h c r ^ , Q uer hanging. g O IL S O N regon & C O ., ggists I k t h a r k toim cc... e tc ., e t c . ,c’i n »l p ort--re* on ly .tions com p ou n d ed FOR 30 DAYS! $<£$£$ FOR 30 DAYS! For the month o f December \\\- will make sweeping reduc­ tions in our large and well selected stock o f fine m illin ery. D a lla s :O r e g o n , k a le * lining - Grand iiilinery Sale! M c D o n a l d , , .J , M c D A N I K L , H. M. GRANT. Seoretaiy and Manager President. Pnre l.-iu nr, for P h v .ic m n . d a y o r night. court hnu«e, D»U»’ , D r. $1.50 WORLD BEATERS! $1.50. A pretty line o f ladies and misses new and stylish med felt hats, all in late designs o f this season. $ 1 . 50 ! $ 1 . 50 ! trim ­ $ 150 ! Senrl in your order for one o f these hats and ward it to you. we will for­ Do not Delay—First Order—First Choice. M R S - S- C- R E E D , 205 Commercial street, Salem, Oregon. CLOSING OUT! — To retire from business.— FO R M E D IC IN E S ! __GO TO TH E— Clothing, Boots and Shoes, % A n d a large stock o f general merchandise McCoy Drug Store, ^ A s s is t D ig e s t io n McCOY, OREGUN, At - Cost for - Cash! “PT ’P a r t e i . ------ ! The crowds that throng the store every day prove that it • „ 1 ... is a genuine bargain sale. Com e at once while the stock is Dsalsr in drus* , oil*, paints, giam, «par, lancy good«, etc P. FO R S TS E R tRsemrTiON» carefully filled . t im e Start the L iv e r w ork in g ana all b od ily ailm ent a w i ll (l i saj>2>ea r • See that y o u yet the G en u in e , with red on frost o f wrapper. PREPARED ONLY BY J . H . Z E I L I N & C O .. P h il a d e lp h ia , Pa tion t o Dallas. J. L. COLLINS, Attorney and The illustration, reproduced from The Breeder's Gazette, shows a fine specimen of a family of horses that promises to contest with the hackney for general popularity. The picture shows a German coaching stallion 4 years old. These horses are of a build to fill the demand for the 'and at tlxo sumo " F o r m ore than three years I suffered with Dyspepsia in its worst form. I trie«! several doctors, hut they afforded no relief. At last I tried Simmons Liver Regulator, which cured me in a short time. It is a good medicine. I would not be without it ." —J am b s A . R o ane , Philad'a, Pa. PRICE $65 AND ( $95 PER LOT. H. C, K a rin . OMl. That W ill Be Represented at the W o rld ’» Fair. A l b y Irrita tio n , Shade trees are set out along all the OHicc over Blow n A Son’s store. HO. J. D aly , Breed S tom ach , the court house, com m anding a view o f the whole town and D . Physician and Surgeon, P A L L A S , GERMAN COACHER. A E x p e l f o i ; I ¿j is o « , The new addition to Dallas, lies four blocks southwest ol H. correct & C O ., 297 Cunt mereiai »(reel, «aleni, Oregon. M r. H untington’ » Two House». The recent purchase by Mr. C. P. Huntington of Mrs. Colton’s costly man­ sion on Nob hill, in Ban Francisco, has given rise to minors that Mr. Hunting- ton and his family intended to make the Paying Funeral Expenite» In Advance. JTS. T h ey A p p ea r to W aste a U oj *I o f la b o r an«l Get Very Little to Fat. A c i d i t y o f t li o Dallas, Oregon. ’V B w ill HOW MICE e , G ERM AN COACHING STALLIO N, large, imposing carriage horse that is now the fashion. The animal looks as if he might well be descended, as he un­ doubtedly is, from the famous horses that figured in the tournaments of the Middle Ages. Strength of bone and endurance are characteristic of the German coach horse. Germany is taking great pains with the breeding o f these animals. The German coacher will lie amply exploited at the Columbian fair. In front of me as 1 write 1 have a tray full of shells that have iieeu rilled by the nut crackers of the avenue. Those with the large, irregular rent and some with the whole side ripped oft’ with jagged edges are the squirrel’s work, these with the round, oval holes, always near the big end of the shell, have been plundered by mice. But it is curious to note how ofteu the Hanie shell has another hole, much smaller and perfectly round, on the other side ami near er the small end. Why was this? Did the mouse get ail it could reach out through the hig hole at the big end and then—like Isaac Newton with the large door for the cat and little one for the kit­ ten -ta k e the trouble to nibble a little hole in the very hard« st part of the nutshell to get at the rest #of the nut? The squirrel would have turned the uut upside down ami let the kernel drop out. I wonder the mice have not given up eating nuts long ago. The labor they expend is enormous. But they do not care for trouble apparently. Note these walnuts. Each has two little round holes, one on each shell, nearest the sharp point eud of the uut, and it is easy to see what happened. The mouse nibbled one hole, ate what it could reach—very lit tie indeed—and then found that, for some reason or another, the walnut was fastened inside to the shell. So then it tried the other side with ex­ actly the same result, and then it left the nut iu disgust. But this did not prevent it attacking the next walnut in precisely the same way, with precisely the same barren results, and the next, and the next, and the next. The partitions inside the nut pre­ vented the mouse gettiugat the kernel, but it did not desist from trying. On the other hand, absolutely useless work is never, so far as 1 know, done by the mice. I never found an empty uut or a bad one that they had attempted. The squirrel, on the othei hand, does not care how “ high” his nuts are. But when we think that the squirrel relishes young Hr cones, with turpentine oozing out at every pore, we can appreciate tlie dura ilia with which nature has blessed the merry little forester.—Contemporary R e v i e w . _______________ GONE AWAY. Workmen put up a telephone some weeks ago in an office in a building near There are stones on the turf where but 1 the Brooklyn navy yard, and later on we passed other workmen carried in a number of Bri still—pales and pales, like a lading maid­ of geography or ethnology alone can Danes, Swedes, etc., who have of late o f ‘sand in his craw’ (crop) which, applied en dying with unrequited love or con­ rationally be considered 1o repay the years freely imported large numbers of j to fowls or birds, indicated that they di sumption. moderate outlay o f these two expedi­ pigs from the best herds of Large White not hesitate to take what comes, being It is an artistic rose, and has made » tions, a cost considerably below that Yorkshires, are pressing the Irish bacon | satisfied they can manage with plenty ol jreat hit. It has taken two silver cups so closely as to render it probable that | sand to help their gizzards, and hence havi which in modern t imes is sometimes paid —one at the New York show just closed, the premier position held by the latter I no apprehensions as to the future. Tin for a painting. Other explanation is the historical one yol tt got a silver medal at the Boston show, for so many years on the English mar- I It is interesting to place here by way have all heard of, uo doubt, which is sail and it takes the medal in the show here. o f comparison the cost of previous ex. kets will inevitably be lost unless the to have occurred at the siege of Toulon So of course it must be a beauty. Half Irish breeders of pigs take a leaf out of plorations. One o f the earliest—that of W hile constructing a battery Napoleoi a dozen firms of florists have offered to Willoughby—conducted 800 years ago, the books of the enterprising foreigners. wanted some one to write a letter for him. take all the flowers Mr. Burton has at Even in Holland a considerable amount required for its expenditure £6,000; that and young .Junot offered his services. Jus1 his own prices. As yet he has made no of Moor, in 1746, £10,000; the second of money has been expended to my knowl­ as the letter was finished a cannon ball cuttings for the market, so that he has a edge by a firm of bacon curers whose struck near, covering the writer and his monopoly of the flower.—Philadelphia German nortli pole expedition was cov­ ered by an appropiation of 120,000 thalers, factory is situated at Assen. Berksliires, letter with earth and dust. ’Quite for Times. or £11,000, while the Franklin expedi­ Tam worths and improved Large Whites tunate,' said he, *we have plenty of sand,' referring to the common practice of drying Oplnl«»n» o f a I)eae-Democrat money by a «¡»ecies of gambling, didn’t A G ha W e ll R p yom l C o n tr o l. he?” A German barber’s ccr.m«eu> was. What is undoubtedly the strongest 1 Dutch pigs. Am erican Crowd» A re Good Natured. ‘ Veil, he hadt to leaf bis millions ba- natural gas well ever found in the In- I Im p r o v e d H o r se S ta ll. Some one has said that the best nature« nindt him!” A naval officer wis glad of diana belt is a roaring monster north of | The following is the description of an body in the world is an American crowd. the end. A young business man hoped Muncie, Ind., which cannot lie gotten improved horse stall, the merit o f which Those who have any doubtsalHiut thetrutl. that tho country would never again see under control. A few days since Wal o f this statement should make one of th- such a career. consists in its simplicity: In the center of An elevated railway ley & Spellacy, contractors, drilled in a crowd that gathers in Newspaper row any well on the Bpilker farm. Next day it the stall—a large box stall—a pit was election night. Packed solidly from School guard said: “ He’s dead, and I’m sorry was discovered that the pressure had dug eighteen inches in diameter and three and Milk streets to Court and state streets, for it. Mebbe he done them as tried to raised to an enormous degree, and it has 1 feet deep. Into this was put cobble stones, it is as independent a Ixsly of humanity a> do him, but he wanted the company to since increased until it has become im­ the size of a horse’s foot, until they one can anywhere find. The Darwinian give us two suits o’ clothes a year or possible to anchor the well or do any­ reached the top. Three large flat stones principle o f “ the survival of the fittest’ ’ raise our pay.” —New York I «otter. thing with it. It is impossible to force were added, which just filled the top of prevails as literally as one could wish Urging a Canal for Kurop«. a sledge hammer, crowbar or anything the pit. A wagon load of ground lime­ Every one is for himself, and he pushes, jostles and talks to maintain his standhi; The president of the Vienna com ex­ into the hole, and the gas roars until a stone was spread around the outer edge place or to get a lietterone. Yet despite all man’s voice cannot be heard within sev­ of the stall and raked toward the cen­ this every’ one is in the l**st o f humor, laughs change in a recent speech said that grain eral hundred yards of the well. The , ter, giving it a gentle slope in this direc­ h s heartily at his own discomfiture as at growing in Europe has ceased to be re­ earth trembles in a frightful manner, i tion. Over this was spread two inches of that o f the fellow at his elbow, and forgives munerative, owing to the development the man who treads on his toes. Tho«« of new agricultural regions and to the A great deal of fright is entertained as yellow clay well tamped. The stall when thus completed has who have ever had anything to do with h lowering o f railroad rates. The only to what the result will be. The well is the appearance o f an oval dish and car­ French or German crowd will recognize tin chance he could see for the European estimated at over 10,000,000 feet, and the apparatus used to anchor the mon- i ries all the urine to the center of tho difference between those transatlanti« fanner was in the constniction of a net­ gatherings and the American one.—Boston | work o f canals in central Europe. Cheap stall and into the pit. where it gradually ster Jumbo well at Fairmount is t w W c Journal. water transportation would help the Eu­ Great caution is being used to prevent soaks away into the ground. There is ropean farmer against tlie competition M onte CTirlsto Outdone. the gas from becoming ignited.—Cor. no opening in the bottom of the pit, and therefore no bad odor conies back into Alexander Graham Bell and the tele of the United State». India and Aus­ Chicago Inter Ocean. the stable, as often occurs where a drain­ phone have been synonymous terms for h tralia. __________________ dozen years or more. Bell’s career presents pipe is used to carry off the urine. An­ A Slngnlar Acrldent. rnlnm hna on tlie Stage. Arthur C. Moreland, who played -he other advantage in this stall is the shape, one of the mo»t remarkable Monte Christo The English actor, diaries Warner, is romances in this country of rapid fortune which more nearly fits the horse while role of Colonel Risener, the tricky Indi­ making. Bell was a penniless hoy In Edin among the players who intend to make a ana politician, in the play of “ Bine lying down and requires less straw fur burgh thirty yiMr* ago. He came to this tour of the United States this year, and bedding.—Exchange. Jean«.” last season was on Friday ni^ht country in 1H72 and finally became a teacher he will bring with him a four act drama the victim o f an accident that may end in a deaf and dum b school in Boston. From written for him by Henry Hamilton, of M in o r r » * » m l L e g h o r n ». boyhood the idea of speech transmission his stair» career. When on the road which Columbus is the hero. The famous Minorca«, both white and black, lay hod licet) an undercurrent of thought with Moreland has a companion, Perry, a hy­ explorer, who of course will be imper­ larger eggs than the Leghorns, are him. and he has frequently said that long brid dog which appeara in the play. sonated by Mr. Warner, appears as the After the third act of -B ine Jean«" at equally prolific, but our experience before 1870 we would one day speak by hero of a love story, and conduct* him­ telegraph. The telephone was the result would not lead us to think that they ex­ the National theater in VVa*hington, of years of patient labor and investigation. self with very little respect for history.— Moreland picked np and fondled the cel the latter breed. The;, are nonsittefB. —New York Herald. Detroit Free Press. mongrel. Perry’» face wae side by «ide They were boomed largely a few years J n»t mm W ell Left ( malri. with the actor'«. The sawdust need in ago, but they never have obtained the lx»veil If 1« Grandm a. the mill « o n e was being «wept np at tli* popularity of the Leghorns and are not A society youth whose presence in the Grandma — And so yon were real time. It caused the dog to sneeze, and so well suited for a fanner’s fowl, espe­ fashionable world can hardly be regarded as anxious to come and visit grandma? hi* teeth came in contact with More­ cially in cold climates, on account of a success in wondering why every one is That’s lovely. land'* left eye. destroying the sight. V ca­ theftr enormous coni la» and wattles, laughing over a speech which Du Manlier Little Johnnie—YsiTn. I cried till ter day morning the eye had swollen to which become f r a lld easily. The breed would put down In the category f»f "Thing» mamma let me come. one would rather have left unsaid.” It was twice ita normal size, and Actor More­ is a good one with which to breed up after some especially unhappy experience of Grandma—W hy didn’t yon wait ttU land i* now confined in a darkened room, common stock. Unless they are allowed social freezing out that the youth ex­ C’hristmas? with the prospect of losing the aight of to run at large «me need* a 10-foot fencs claimed, “ The more I go out the more I am LB tie Johnnie— I was ’fraid the mince to keep them within bounds.—Rural convinced that home la the beat place.” — the other eye.—New York Letter. meat would be all gone.—Good News. New Yorker. Kate Field’» Washington._____________ r place no one has a word to say. It is of genuine service, not only to the advertisers, but to every class o f the community. But when we visit remote Welsh mountains and valleys, or walk along the seashore, or stroll in pretty country lanes, we do not want to be confronted by great staring an­ nouncements to the effect that some one is prepared to supply us at a moderate price with the best quality of soap or mustard or tea. Nor is it pleasant to see in the streets of cities vast hoardings covered with jarring masses of detestable colors, consisting of the puffs o f rival tradesmen and the boiasts of persons who have provided some kind of public entertainment. Still less do we like when we are traveling to be so confused by advertisements that we can with difficulty make out the name of the station at which we may wish to alight. In these things there ought to be order and measure, so that people may learn how their various wants are to he supplied without being at the Mime time irritated by the display of all that is most vulgar and repulsive in the commercial spirit.—Loudon Graphic. Econom ical Celery Soup. Many families o f small means look npon celery as a luxury. The greenish half blanched stalks o f the cheap bunch really are not very good eating, and the fine, white large crisp bunch costs too much for the workingman’» everyday dinner. But there is an economical way of treating the lurge bunch o f best celery which makes it cheap. Use the finer portions of the crisp .'«talks as a relish. All the tough portion» and the root carefully cleaned are to be cut fine, covered with cold water ahd cooked slowly till nearly the whole can be rubbed througii a strainer. Half an hour before dinner heat this liquid celery v. 3 an equal quantity of any kind of meat broth you happen to have in the house, and then add one pint of hot milk thickened like a white sauce, with two tahlespoonfuls each of but- ier and flour cooked together. Season with salt. If you have no broth after your soup is in the tureen stir into it slowly and smoothly the well beaten yolk of an egg, and you will not miss at all the richness of the meat.—New York Press. T im e Th at Men Waste. “ Talking of dudes,” said Richard Gray­ son at the Lindell, “ did you ever consider how much time a man expends to keep himself presentable? A man with any beard at all must shave at least three times a week. That means a waste of ten hours a month or twelve good working days in the year. Fifteen minutes a day at tfa» bootblack stand will knock nearly teu more working days out of the year. Now figure up tiie time spent tying liis cravat, fishing collar buttons from under the dresser and in .various other ways pertaining to the gi neral ‘get up’ o f a man, not of fashion, bi.t of affairs, and you will find that he sacrifices at least one working month in tlie year to his personal appearance. But it pays. Only the man who has his reputa* tii n or his ‘pile’ made can afford to neglect these little tributes of respect to the opinion of his fellow men—and women.” —St. Louie G lobe-1 )emoc rat. W onderful Thing» In Heredity. It is a fact well established by students of heredity that children are apt to inherit not only the physical, mental and moral traits <_>f their parents, but to be influenced by their age as well. Children born of very young fathers and mothers never attain so vigorous a growth of mind or body as those o f older men and women, while chil dren of old people are born old. One of the most surprising cases in medi­ cal history is that o f Marguerite CrilMOWiia, who died in 1763, aged 108 years. When ninety-four she was married to a man aged 105. Three children came of this unioii, but they had gray hair, no teeth, were stooi»ed. yellow and wriukled, decrepit in movement and cm . tId eat only bread and vegetables. —New York Sun. W h y G r a ss G r o w » H o llo w . Tlie stems of grass and oats are usually hollow, ami the knots or nodes which occur at intervals and which have a peculiar d » gree of firmness, derived from the interlac­ ing of fillers, give them a firmness and strength which they would otbam hv lack. If the material o f wheat straw were in a ■olid form it would make but a thin wiry ■tern, which would snap with great ease, but in the hollow form, with th» interven­ ing knots, the necessary support 1» afforded. —Brooklyn Eagle. Nineveh was fourteen miles long and eight miles wide, the whole city sartouttded by a wall 100 feet high, so thick os to fur­ nish ample room for three chariots to b» driven abreast around the top. Fifteen minutes should be spent in reading or conversation be fore severe tal lalior is begun. A light cigar imi ately after lunch aids digestion. li is true that the close c«>tnpanioo friend o f the great ant hois acquires what might almost be called especial c esy toward books. Coins are classed, according to their of preservation, os "proof,” "uncirculg "fine,” "good ,” "fair” and ‘poor.1* The King Chan (Court Chinese official journal, has I wen p» in Pexing for many centuries»^