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About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1893)
♦ « «The Question# Experiments have Seen m ats In Franc* • • in the forcing o f plant growth by e lto tricity. An apparatus ia used consisting i o f a high pole aet in the middle o f the i field, at the top o f which is a sort o f cop per broom with fine branchea. This ia connected by a tteel w ire with a network fa o f steel wires buried at a sufficient depth below the surface. A t a trial in 1801 the crop upon a field o f potatoes was nearly I doubled, or was about 180 pounds on the wired plat to about 74 pound* on the plats without wires. In 1002 it was test ed upon spinach and other crops with similar results. W hether it is likely to I become of practical use or only a scien tific tov remain* to be seen. :-JJ1 • * * • * * * # * * cornino« s e n * . # GOTTOLENE A MOTHERS! MOTHERS!! To know that a single applica tion of the Cuticura Remedies will afford instant relief, permit rest and sleep, an d point to a speedy and economical cure of torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning and scaly humors, and not to use them without a moment’s delay ia to fail in your duty. Cures made in childhood are speedy, economical and permanent. Bold throughout the world. P otter D rug and C h e r . < ! o r p ., »ole proprietor«, Bouton, gfgr “ All About the Blood ,Hkiu,dculp and Hair,"mailed free. 49* Facial niemt»he», falling hair and simple baby raahe« prevented by Cuticura hoaii. I f tired, aching, nervous moth. ¡| era knew tbe comfort, strength, and ' Vitality In Cuticura Plasters, they would never be without them. In every way the purest, sweetest and best of plasters. Som e nam>'ii are already being sug gested for boih county and state offices at th e n ext June election. Both ob servation and experience have shown that those who dahble in politics least are happiest and best off. Deafness Cannot be Cured bv Iocs! Application* a* they cannot reach the diseased portion o f the ear. T h e re is o n ly one way to cure ealneas, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflam ed con dition o f the mucous lin in g o f the Eus tachian Tube. W hen this tube is in flam ed you have a rum bling sound or im perfect hearing, and when it is en tirely closed, deafness is the result, and unless the inflam m ation can he taken ou t and this tube restored to its nor m al condition, hearing w ill be destroy ed forever ; nine cases out o f ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing b u t an inflam ed condition o f the m uc ous sur aces. W e w ill g ive One Hundred Dollars for any case o f deafness (caused by ca ta rrh ) th at cannot be cured by H a ll’s C atarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F . J. C h k n k y A C o ., Toledo, O. J j W Sold by Druggists, 76c. I t always pays best to ly to your own business. attend strict R o m Caterpillar«. The worms that cut rose leaven and ruii .1 the appearance o f the foliage there by may be deetroyed, says Vick, by crushing them between the thumb aud finger, or they can be In a great measure destroyed by dredging the leave« with white hellebore or m ixing it with water and sprinkling it on, or b solution of whale oil soap w ill be almost sure to rid the plants o f them. Kerosene emul sion ia also effectual. Points A b o u t Fruit. Melon vines must be well watched and protected from bugs. Netting or wire screens are preferred by some gurdeners to any application of insecticides. Cse bordeanx mixture for blight on to matoes. Spraying the fru it trees with bordeaux- paris green mixture la the remedy for scab, insects, etc. The cranberry form * a symmetrical little tree nnder culture, and with its bright red fruit is a pleasing ornament on the lawn or in the shrubbery. Partial shade is the best condition for preventing mildew on the gooseberry, which Is the greatest enemy to its suc cessful cultivation. the hotel drug store next to the Cafe aud have them send half a dozen boxe» o f K rau se’s Headache Capsules. I bought some while I was in Pittsburgh and found it wonderfully effectual. I d o not know how much they will coat, an would ask to have them sent 0 . O. D. care of the Colonade hotel, Phila delphia. H o p in g that I will have an early opportunity to return the favor, I rem ain, V ery truly, B a il e y A v e r y , ■•McCaull." F o r sale by J. D. Belt, sole agent. EE « /Ms J W EE faf fa ## W fa Afc £ I W ^ Jjjp fa f Rk y S rude only by i S . K . FA IR B A N K & C O .,X S T . L O U IS an d CHICAGO, NEW YORK« W BOSTON. W h en we recollect that the stomach is the grand laboratory in which food is transformed in to the secretions which furnii-h vigor to the system after enter ing and enriching the I i I isk I; that it is, in short, the fountain head of strength, it u essential to keep this im portant supplying machine in order, and to re store it to activity when it becomes in active- This Hoatetter’a Stomach Bit ters does most effectually, seasonably, regulating and reinforcing digestion, prom oting due action of the liver and isiwels. Strength and quietude o f the nerves depend in great measure upon thorough digestion. There is no ner vine tonic more h igh ly esteemed by the medical fraternity than the Bitters. Physicians also stron gly com m end it for chills and fever, rheumatism, kidney and bladder trouble, aick headache, and want of appetite and sleep, T a k e a W'ncglassful three tim es a day. t* MM* Yoi fc’H w i fe and H e r M o th er. “ It is a pleasure to sell Cham berlain’s Cough R em edy,” says Stickney A Dent ler, druggists, Republic, Ohio. “ Be cause a customer alter once using it, is alm ost certain to call for it when again in need o f such a m edicine. W e sell more of it than o f any other cough m edicine we handle, and it always gives satisfaction.” For coughs, cold» and croup, it is without an equal. For sale by druggists. Wl fRINCESS MAY AND THE DfCHF.SS OF TUCK, ton May 28, 1867. Much o f her girlhood was sj»mt abroad, but lier mother, the Duchess o f Teck, granddaughter of George [II and cousin o f Victoria, is said to huve been careful to keep lier as much as possible within a circle o f English in fluences. As all readers know, she was to have married the older brother of her husband, but be died. A u o t lie r A fr ic a n E x p lo re r . E. J. Glave, after making tw o African expeditions with Stanley, came to Am er ica. got interested m Alaska and made tw o expeditions into its remotest wilds. In one o f these he taugiit his horses to walk on snowslioes, and thus took them over the mountains. He then located in Pu rely vegetable— Hood's Pills— 25c. ----------- ----------------- T h e daily edition o f A. N o ltn e r’s Portland paper, the Dispatch, is to be soon discontinued because it does nut pay since losing the city printing. D on ’t com m it suicide on account of your "in cu ra ble” blood disease. T h e sensible th in g for you to do is to take A y e r’s Sarsaparilla- If that fails, why, then— keep on tryin g, and it w ill not fail. T h e trouble is, people get discour aged too soon. " T r y , try, try again.” It. J. OLAVR. N ew Y o rk city, bnt soon got restless anil went o ff to A fric a again, this time with the special object o f investigating the slave trade. He knows more than most white men about the Congo country and its people, and i f some o f Tippu Tib's people do not exterminate hitn w ill prob ably add a great deal to the world’s knowledge o f the dark continent. A n A fr ic a n K in g . Bile Beans! — — ■- — ♦ on the wheelman as a curiosity, escaped from the same museum as the rowing man, the tennis player or any other hn- man being who labors with 1 * body and calls it fun. None o f these three is likely to think of the wheelman as one who exerts an in fluence fo r good iu matters o f interest to them. Y e t, if they would consider that of the 10,000 or more bicycle riders who assembled in Trenton there was not one who is not an ardent advocate o f good roads, they would doubtless perceive that in these muscular men they themselves possess invaluable allies. It is not nec essary to point out tne desirability of good roads to the pedestrian, the horse back rider or the driver. A good road way is literally the foundation o f their pleasure. But possibly it may not occur to every one that the farm er’s interest in good roads is the most serious of all. W ith him it is not a m atter o f pleasure, but o f business. A large part o f the farm er’s work con sists o f hauling. His produce must be taken in wagons to tho railw ay station or steamboat landing for shipment to tho great city markets, aud his empty bar rels, boxes and crates must be pulled back over the same road. In the state o f N ew Jersey, moreover, there is a great deal o f hauling o f fertilizers. The earth Itself contains a remarkably fine natural manure in the shape of marl. The beds in which this marl is found are private property and are w idely scattered. The farmers purchase it by the load and haul it to their land. It is heavy, and the hauling o f it soon cuts deep and almost impassable ruts in poor roaus. N ow , a good road means a large and pecuniarily valuable saving to the farm er in tim e and expenditure o f power. It means that he can haul more loads of produce or o f fertilizer in a day with less wear and tear of wagon and har ness and lesa exhaustion o f his horses. It means a valuable saving of time, which can be applied to the local labor on the laud itself. And it may mean an hour m ore o f rest to the farmer, who has quite as much labor as a man can bear. These are considerations which users of roads ought to take into account. The wheelmen are a body o f men whose in fluence is o f large importance, and who ought to be encouraged and supported in their combined movements for their own interests, because one o f the great est o f those interests is also that o f three other large and valuable classes. STYLE. The Jersey Road. It w as years ago. Two armies lay Encamped at night near the “ king’» highway” Leading from Princeton to Trenton down. When W h igs fought fiercely the British Crown. T w a s a winter thaw—it was raw and damp To the Yankee council in Trenton camp. Washington’s veterans shook their hea<ds; ‘‘W e are trapped, it seems, by the cursed ‘rods:’ W e must fight—there’s no other way to do!” But the general calmly around him drew The groat, gray cloak that they so well knew. And lntoAho outer darkness strode Till he reached the fence by the Jersey road. That Jersey road! ’Twas a sight to see! The mire was up to a horso’a knee. A h the British know, when on yonder steep In their tents they sank into peaceful sleep And dreamed of victory won with ease On the morrow with raw recruits like these. In front—the enemy, fixed aud fast; Around—deep roads that could not be passed: Behind—the Delaware, wild aud black. Like an angered snake, was In his track. The patriot army could not go back! W as W ashington crushed by the awful load? Nay. He knelt and prayed by the Jersey road. History tells what happened then; How right in the view of bis snxious men The sleet storm ceased and the «tars came forth. W ith a sharp wind out of the icebound north: How almost before the prayer was done The answer came and escupe was won! How out of reach of the frowning hosts The handful of patriots moved like ghosts. Leaving their fire» to burn till day. The British thinking the rebels lay In the jaw s of battle, an easy prey. Nor dreamed the truth that the morning showed How heaven had hardened the Jersey road! m I ul I ts ta , •■£ - ,'ad «S S »VU u ir DortleTt taxon in time. SJold by Druggist« on a guar- ! anteo. io r p Lumq ikuk or Ch**st, use S H IL O H « B E L L A D O N N A P L A S T E R ^ S c . I [ILOH’S/ XATARRH ^REM EDY, l a w you ( ararrh ? This remedy la *unron> t«Md wo cute you. PricoeûJctA. Injecter ûvn. KARt-’S *G iù «r K o o t / ,U *"r , *8 E S Tl P A T IO N Q ir V N C S * T jr c ' w n OM P L t. k iÛ N Aa kmeaM* TsrSrtr» «rut 5 ritT T T n -fta SoM Sy Pntirtrtn,or sect hy tvsil. #r.,90o^ *od |i.ooper peeks«*. Samp*« free. KO A Medical Firs Sites A n y Cash. J. F. Smith * Co. o f No. 258 Oreen- wich St., New York, the manufactur er, o f that favorite cathartic known aa Smith’a Bile Beans, have adopted a novel plan. They ask the Individual buyer* o f Bile Beans to send their full name and address, with an outside wrapper from a bottle o f Bile P ea t» (either size) to their office, anti they give $5 for the first wrapper received in each morning’s mail, and $1 for the- 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th and 8th. Every day |10 In cash is thus sent to their co# iw pendents. Ask for S M A L L size. T h e c ity of Dunkirk, France intends celebrating next year the century o f the siegt of that city by the Duke o f Y o rk . A statue o f V ictory, by Lo rim er, w ill he nnveiled during the feta which is to laat tiro days. 1 branches: Buys’afld sells exchange on principal point United States ; Makes collections on all points In the Pacific North west; Loan money and discounts paper at the usua rates; Allow interest on time deposits. Are Safe and Reliable. Iar perVfllv Marmiti „ Pu re'y Vepe- ^ table I N ver WILLIAMS & ENGLAND B A N K I N G CO„ Fail*! SALEM , Do . . . . SOUTHERN PACIFIC CO. to Albany enclusive, aim» Tangent, SheCd, flalsej iUurisiiurK, Junction City, Irvins and Eugsns a«d all stations from Kuseburg to Ashland enelusivs. Koseburg Mail Dailv. LEAVE: AKU1VE: Portland . 8:80 A M I Roseburg. . . S:fc6 P Koseburg ..... 7:00 A M | PortInini............1:30 P D I N I N G C A R S O N O G D K N U O U T fl PU LLM AN BUFFETSLEEPERS. —AND— 8KCOND CLASS SL E E PIN G CARS fdBBAttaulied to all Through Trala«. |WKST SI IU*: D IV IS IO N J , Between Portland and Corvallis. MAIL TRAIN DAILY. EXCEPT SUNDAY. 7:80 A M I.v. Portland Ar. o:85 P 11:08 A M Lv. berry Lv. 2:001’ M 11:15 P M Ar. Corvallis Lv. i:B0P M At Albany and Corvalis connect with train« ef Ore gon Pacific railroa«!. Express Daily, ’Excent 8nrday. 4:40 p M Lv. 7:85 P M Ar. j ' , j DR. JORDAN & CO.’S GREAT IDSEUI OF ANATOIY PasseDKer depot, foot of Jefferson «tree!. D IR E C T O R S ; P r iv a t e O ffice—Name B u ild in g 1 1061 m ark et Street— Diseases of rneix stricture, loss of manhood, disease« of the skin and kidneys quickly cured without the use of mcr- cur^^Trsstment personally or by letter. Send AXLE AIKL1E M AIL-TKI-W EKKLY. Leave 9:40 a. m. P««rtland Arrive 3:6f p. m Arrive 8:27 a. « Leave 4:38 p. ra. Dalian Leave 7:10». m Arrive 6:05 p. m. Ai.iie Through Tic^e-ts I Foundry! (Between 6th and 7th Sts.) » Go and learn how wonderfully you are made and how to avoid eickneee ‘and disease. Museum enlarged with thousands of new objects. Admis sion 25 eta. To nil* Point* in the Eastern Spates Canada a to 'Europe can be Obtained at Lowest R ;tes from I. N, Woo s, aceot Dallas. — A L L KINDS OF- K. KOKHI.EH, IRON WORK TO ORDER. Tho agitation begun some tim e ago for the construction o f country roads that w ill be passable at all seasons o f the year is not to be allowed to die out without having produced any practical results. It is now bearing fruit in some sections o f the country where the need o f good roads has been most severely felt. The legislature o f Texas, which has recently adjourned, passed an act for the begin ning o f the work o f road construction in the state which, i f it should prove effec tual in its working, w ill doubtless lie given wider scope at subsequent sessions of the lawmaking asoembly until its pro visions are wide enough to embrace ev ery portion o f the-state and furnish good roads in all directions. A s yet the la.vv applies only to counties that contain cities or towns o f consider able importance, probably because the imposition o f a tax sufficient to meet the expense of the construction would be more than the sparse population in other counties could stand. By the act passed tbe county commissioners o f certain counties are authorized to issue bonds for road construction. The amount of these bonds is to be governed by the as sessed valuation o f the property in the county issuing the paper. N o larger amount may be issued than a tax o f 15 mills on the assessed valuation. The bonds may not be redeemable in less than 10 or run more than 40 years, and they may not be sold at less than their par value. Care is taken in the law to provide safeguards for the proper expenditure of the money. Money thus raised may not be expended for an 3 T other purpose than the construction o f roads and bridges. These must be built under the supervi sion of a competent engineer and after a proper survey has been made for them. They are to be built in a substantial and permanent w ay so that they w ill be pass able at all seasons o f the year and in such a way that they w ill be easily kept in proper repair. Should the act be ad ministered in the spirit in which it has been passed, it is probable that Texas w ill soon be ahead of most o f the other western states in- regard to good country roads.— Chicago Record. The F a rm e r’» L)i»advautage. Roails belong to that unappreciated class o f bles»i«igs o f which the value and importance are uot fu lly felt. Bad road* make it difficult for the fanner to mar ket hi* grain, except during a fractional part of the year, the consequence of which i* the crow ding down o f prices by the plethora o f supply. The farm er hav ing no choice of times for disposing of his produce must force it npon the m ar ket while price« are lowest.— St. Joseph Herald. j that wee woman quietly rose, gently but tirmly laid her hands npon the winged | shoulders o f her obtrusive neighbor and (tressed her green and ret! ruffles as far j down as they won Id go. People who saw the operation gasped at the trans formation The victim w isely accepted the situation and remained in subjuga tion until the "P ro d iga l Daughter" ig nominious!)- returned to the fatted calf I —N ew York itecurder. H ow Some G ir l« W a lk . Some girls walk gracefully. They make “ foo d time” over tbe pavement, bnt their movements are not abrupt uor | awkward. There is no apparent effort , in their loo »mot ion. Some girls are now 1 affecting a m an'« stride. The imitation ! is a lndicrons failnre. Other girls are tryin g an odd kind o f tnrn o f the shoul- l <^er* that gives to their appearance a top wobble and a lower swing.—Exchange. Getting Even. Artist— Miss Brownie-Brown-Brown, who is to marry a pnnee, won't let ns have her photograph for publication. E d itor-S h e won’t, eh! T ell the fort- man to nee one o f those ents labeled ‘Before Taking.’*— New York W eekly Asst. Gen. K. ot 1’. A ft. Portland Oregon Repairing Promptly Done. PROP. !D. BIDDLE, THE WILLAMMETTE. G REÂ SE G ood Country lib a d s F o r Texas. F. P. KtoP.KS Manager. — SALEM , BEST 3JT T H E W O R LD . Its wearing qualities are unsurpassed, actually outlasting two boxes o f any other brand. Nor effected by heat, g a r G E T T i l E G E M T I M E , FOR SALE LVDEALER8 GENERALLY. J fS * Ar. 1:26 A U Lv. A M Oregonian Railway Division, Portland anil Yamhill Railway. G E O .W IL L IA M S , WM ENG LAN H. P .iM C N A R Y , J A BAKER J . A . R IC H A R D S O N . i 1061 Market St., San Francisco Portland McMinnville OREGON a general ban kin g business and allow interest on tim e deposits. Des Moines, Iowa* F o r sale by J. D. Belt, sole agent. Oue W o m a n ’» Courage. Thus (rod with his children in peril deals. Their forty oanuon with muffled wheels A atory is goin g the rounds o f a little Over the hard ground safely rolled. woman who wits st ated behind a gor And never a sound their passing told! geously dressed beauty at a thcrvter in the When the light of that bitter morning broke. Amazed Cornwallis from sleep awoke metropolis whose balloon sleeve« com To find the ‘‘foxes'* had made their flight pletely hid the stage from the victim in Like phantoms borne on the wings of night. the rear. She sat on first one foot, then While the distant guns on the frosty air the other, bnt in vain : no glimpse o f the Bade him for rescue at once prepare. For all his forces were needed there! play could she get. A fte r a whispered I And they plied their horses with whip and | conversation with her husband came the goad ’ tragedy. W ithout a word o f warning ; (n their headlong hast« o'er the Jersey road! I Side by side in the dust they lie, For W h ig and Tory and W a r must die! The heroes of old would oft declare 1 That opened way was an answered prayer. Do not you see in the episode T n ti G-iXAT C o u g h jn 3 prom;;>tlyieu The favor of God for the perfect road? TYiiore* ali others f UL Cough«, Croup, ^orc ill Others Thront, Hoarseneoa, W h oopi tie Cough and —Good Roads. F or Coi.surrp .»oo K baa can t o rival: Asthma. . T o t ConsumpAoo rlvah C A cured thcra-nand*, and Will CUKE TCU lr I IRUKII l L xlil TlfcH . “ T- Yin de Cinchona Co., W H A T WE GET FOR OUR MONET. [From Good R oad».] V\ or. Manstrusiwon And a PREVENTIVE for ¿¿.MIL! -j PRICE $1.00. I f tho man’s h*a<l w w ? thus kept in a perpendicular position, he could not so readily see where to stop aud would be more apt to stumble: so also with the ox or horse. N o one in the saddle would thus tie up the head o f his horse, and no one would expect a horse thus tied up to win a race, nor w ould any one think it an ad vantage to p’ tt- chcckreins on oxen. The “ London Horse Book’’ says: “ The checkrein is, in ns.irly every case, painful to the animal a id us dess to the driver, be cause it fastens the head in an unnatu ral posture, and as the horse's shoulder and’ head fall to ^e her cannot be o f any real support iu case o f .tum bling. “ W hen from some defect in the ani mal or other cau.ie the checkrein is used, it must be slackened, because in addition to the easier position o f the neck a greater portion o f w eight can be thrown into the collar, especially going up hill, thus saving a great and unnec essary expenditure o f muscular power. “ There is an important difference be tween a tight checkrein und a tightened rein, although not generally understood. The first is injurious and cannot help the horse, while the latter is often use ful, because the latter is a steady sup port to the animal’s head from a distant and intelligent source— tho driver.” Mr. Fleming, veterinary surgeon of the royal engineers, London, says: “ I think nothing can bo more absurd than checkreins. They are against rea son altogether. They place the animal in a false position. The horse stands with a checkrein exactly as a man would stand with a stick under his arms, be hind his back, when told to write. It is extremely cruel also. I have no doubt if the public could only realize the fact that it throws nwny a large portion of tho horse’» ■ <\. cr altogether and is very cruel besides this rein would be discon tinued. It is not only the heu 1 that suf fers, but from his head to his tail, from his shoulder to his hoof and over his whole body he suffers more or less.” T o sum up in a word: The checkrein lessens the horse’s strength, brings on disease, keeps him in p iin , freta and in jures his mouth an l spoils his temper. lea n only conclude that the custom of tying up hordes’ heads with checkreins, like the custom o f bleeding calves before they are killed, is a relic of barbarism, contrary alike to common sense and scientific opinion, and which has been permitted to exist si» long because it has been nobody’s business to call public at tention to it.—G. T. Angels in Good Roads. m » P A IN F U L Sent postpaid on receipt of price. Money refunded if not as v QC * ri - * ^ ihnstruciion T h f L a d ie s ’ C RUELTY OF THE CHECKREIN. î tei Suppressed Cross Tansy Pills !r Uganda is now "u nder British influ ence," as tiiey say in A frica , and its king, M wanga, ia nnder serious obliga tions not to hinder civilization or British interest*. H e is o f a line o f monarch* The plum curculio must l>e ba filed by which began in the tim e o f Queen Eliza beth and tie a man o f much more ability i jarring or rebelled by smudging. I have fed at different times carloads of Shropshire lambs and never failed to get the very top price in (Chicago. They always went to eastern cities ns fancy mutton hunt*. The best results 1 ever got were from feeding a mixture of bran, shorts and oilmeai, equal part*. , together with an amonnt o f ground ear KINO JfWANOA. I corn equal to these three combined, mixed well together and fed three time» than his portrait Indicate*. He resisted a day all they would eat up clean and British influences for many years, t o t no more, with plenty o f good clover hay, had to yield because o f the fierce reli , a tank o f pure water in yard with a gious animosities am- ng h it people, the good tank heater to keep the water at an Catholic anil Protestant. Mohammedan even tem’ierature, with good ham and and heathen factions being ready to fight lot adjoining to run In. also plenty of each other at any time. The Uganda iple are partially civilized, and Eng- tock salt in the bam. i capitalist, look for a Uganda boom. 1 keep them tn this inclosure nntil finished and am very careful in bringing The devtberry ia not much cultivated, them to fall feed, commencing slowly. The laat month increase the oilmaal. but It fill* the season nicely between Dip yo o r sheep befbre fe e d in g .-W . R. straw berrie. and raspberries, and the mode o f cultnre ia .oiuewhat like that o f W ea rer la Breeder e Gaeerte. the .traw berry. S R ed W h y »ull'er from dyspepsia ami head ache when S im m on's L iv er R egu lator w ill cure you. ♦- ------ T h e other day 1(X) bales of hops were taken from L in co ln to Salem by boat and the n ext day h steamboat carried 200 bales from t D ove’» landing to the same place. — ♦- I f von are all run down, fagged out, take Sim m on ’s L iver R egulator and be spry. COMFORT. K a l.lt!« L a m b . lit lllltioU . W H Y ? Because he tollowi these nies: “ Keep the head cool, the feet warm, and the bowels open ” You ~ can have a clear head and live to be nsely If yon do the same tMa*. When Use bowels fail tn move rtur- tmg the ’day taka on retiring two Smith’s Sm ttt Bile Beans. Their , 1 » — |a se wild that you are not awar* of M. An day yoor mind will ba alaar and cool. “Not a gripe In a b a n d of them " Ask fcr smalt «se. Tabs sa sabstitu te to r SMITH’S It never failed to «’lire dyspepsia and liver com pluint. T ak e S im m on ’* L iver Regulator. —— ^ m » ------ Corvallis P ré» by tori ana elected : P ré» idem J. M. Bloss, elder; John Simp- *on, trust* e ; W . E. Yates, superin ten- d en t of Sunday school: Professor J. B. II ruer, assistant sti|>erintendent; M r». F. M . .Johnson, organist. I' : IP M E R C U R IA L RHEUMATISM The lady who is now the w ife of Prince I t Is P a in fu l to th e B n r ie , U seless to th e George Frederick Ernest Albert, oldest D r iv e r and a R o h e o f U a rb a rism . surviving »<>u o f the Prince of Wales I f a inaa i»:is a lu' .vy load to push or and who w ill be queen o f Great Britain draw, ho lowers his head by bending for- and Ireland if said prince outlives his I ward and tlu'ows the w eight o f his body grandmother, is affectionately known aa against, or to propel, tlie load; so does Prinoeea M ay and was born at Kensing- the ox or horse under similar circum stances i f permitted. If the man’s head were lied to a belt around his to d y so that he could not bend forw ard, he would lose the advantage o f his weight r e , *nd could only pull or push w ith his muscles: so also with the horse or ox. A stage leaves Salem at 6 every mor ning for McCoy and l ’errydalc, return ing in the afternoon. M ail stages go from Dallas and Independence to Sa lem every m orning and return after dinuer. W e desire regular correspondence Oysters to the exten t o f 123,0U0 sacks from every neighborhood in the coun are t . be *hip|wd front W 'illips hay, ty n o t ulready represented in these W ashington, to the m idw inter fair in oolurona, and will furnish paper, en S ju Francisco. velopes anil stamps. W h o will volun teer to tend in the neighborhood news. I f you wish to secure a certain and ------- .----« « » ------------- speedy result, when using A yer's Sarss- S h iloh ’s Cure, the great c nigh and parilla, he careful in observing the eroup cure, is for sale by all druggists. rules of health, or the benefit m ay be P o c k et size contains twenty-five doses, retarded. A fair and persisteat trial ol o n ly 26 cents. Children love it. this medicine never fails, when the tli rections are followed. I f you do n ot want to he a bore, be Lrii-f and pointed in all you say and A notice |sisted on the door of a sus do Dong winded or poke easy people pended easlern hank read: "‘ This • r e alw ays an n oyin g to others. hank lias not busted, It owes the peo pie |3fi,000 aud the people owe it »52,- S h iloh 's V ita lize r is what you need 000. It is the people who are busted. for dyspepsia, torpid liver, yellow akin W hen they pay us we w ill pay them .” o r kidney trouble. It is guaranteed to g iv e you satisfaction. Price, 76 cents. I was troubled with catarrh for seven years previous tn com m en cin g the use T h e heavy rains of late have greatly of E ly’s Cream Balm . I t has done for dialurhed the arrangements anil calcu me what other so called cures have fail latio n s o f m any farmers. ed to do— cured me. T h e eflt et o f thi B.dm seemed magical. Clarence L A fte r try in g many remedies for ca Hurt’, Biddeford, Me. tarrh d u rin g past twelve years, I tried E ly ’s Cream Balm with com plete sue T h e auccessful ones of earth are in resa. I t is over one year since I stop variably active and atten tive to their ped using it and have hail no return of business, no m atter what it may lie. '- • ’nrrh. I recomm end it to all mv T ake Simmon s L iver Regulator frien d «.-—M ilton T. Palm, Reading, I a. Y in can eat as nm cliand whatever you In 1860 the Am erican papers print please without injury. ed 928,000,000 copies. ■ Gladstone has A clear Head —- N early always the best way is to go qu ietly along attending to your own | business in your way, re g a rd *** o f the 1 criticism s th at com e from m ost *our- Prejudice and ignorance have given ! ces. way to Sim m on’s L iver R guiator. I t has stood the test. ----------------------- -—. T h e Sheridan Sun says some people have an idea that they cun get to hea ven without lu p p o riin g their local pa per. bui i hat alter the last day all such I w ill find themselves in purgatory if not in the hotter region beyond. GOTTOLENE Send three cents In stamps to N . K. Fairbenk & Co., Chicago, for ha: idsome Cottolene Cook Book, containing six hundred recipes, prepared by nine eminent autho- rities on cooking. Cottoleac is *o!d by all grocer». Rciuse «11 substitutes, — 1 — ♦ • ♦ ■ t V A n y peruon receiving « sample copy o P low up the old bed that has Oorne his ;>»*per will please consider it so lav itstioo tw o crop», as it w ill usually not |*ay to n become a regular subscriber. keep it, advise« American Gardening Bet the ground to late cabbage or some j other crop. The young bed that hi..» E A S T and S O U 7 H 1 borne the first crop should have a chor j - -VIA— ough cultivation :ud the plow run close I T H E M i A M A K O I TK to the rows to narrow them to the re-1 -OK THE qnired width. Pull up or hoe out all | wecids ami keep the ground clean t h e ; rest o f the neuron. This applies with t equal force to the newly set bed. A bed Express Trains leave Purtlsud Daily 1 can be set late in July from young run- ' LEAVE: AKK1VE: Fort land tt:l* P M I Son Krsnclsce 10:11 A ners. Pinch off the end after the first ». A) A M joint aud allow it to root on a sod or in San Francis«». .7:00 P JJ | Portland...... The abo« e trains stop at sll stations from Portland j a small pot set level with the surface. Mr. J. C. Jones, o f Fulton, A rk ,, says o f “ A b o u t ten years ago I con tracted a severe case o f blood poison. Lead in g physicians prescribed men, w ill commend itself to all who fa- j mooioiue a fte r medicine, which I took vor road reform: without any relief. I also tried m ercu The convention o f the N ew Jersey ria l and potash remedies, with unsuo- mem b e n o f the League of American Wheelmen at Trenton had an importance beyond that o f »port. The person who is impelled by inclination or compelled o e«sfu l results, but which brought on an by aL*:rdlnebe o f meant to exercise his attack o f inerouri 1 r eumatism that lower limbs in the manner invented by made m y life one o f agony. A fte r suf- Adam is prone to regard the bicycle rider erin g fou r years I gave up a ll remedies is a hybrid, compounded o f pedestrian and commenced using S. S. S. A fte r sad horseback rider. H e who takes the takin g several bottles, I we a e n tirely air behind a horse, whether it be one n ir*’ I and able to r»*»ume work. is th e greatest m edicine fo r ! M. M. KI I IS, C. G. CO A D . with a pedigree and a record or one w ith ! Cttshler. President. b lood poisoning to-day on the more prosaic attributes o f a service- j th e market.” able hack, is likely to fa ll into the error | CITY R A N K, of despising the bicycler for his humble | Treatise on Blood and Skin Disease* mailed D A L L A S B w ir r S i-tc m o Co.. Atlanta, Ga. method o f progress or o f disliking him . free. OF DALLAS, OREGON, for having any rights in a public high- ; way. The farmer undoubtedly looks up- j I Transact* a general banking business in «11 -------- . ♦ — ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ — Thff Fountain Henri o f Ntrsnfth. I was very severly taken with dysen tery ; I took a dose of Cham berlain’s Colic. C holera and Diarrhoea Remedy afte r each operationoft.be bowels, more than natural, for atou t th irty six hours and checked the com plaint. It took about all of a small bottle to cure me. w h ile two or three doses m ight cure an ordinary case. I found it would give M any who have tine tom ato vines m e im m ediate refief from all pain in th e bowels. T . M. B la c k w o o d , Frien d and an abundance o f fruit on them ship, G rant Par., Da. F o r sale by com plain that they do not rip< n. druggists. W h at do Yon T a b . Schools frequently visited by parents M edicine for? Because yon are sick and directors are apt to give better re and want to get well, or hecouse you wish to prevent illness. Then rem em sults than without those visits. Y o u r ber that H oim I’ s Sarsaparilla cures all presence is the best possitds proof of diseases caused by im pure blood and y o u r interest in the school. debility of the system. It is not what its proprietors say but what H o o d ’» Syracuse, N. Y., Feb. 23,1891, M v D k a r M u . F it h a m . Pittsburgh Pa Sarsaparilla docs, th at tells the story I w ant to ack a great favor of you. I ef its m erit. Be sure and get H ood's w an t you to please send a boy down to aed on ly Hood's. î ;: aa —the new scientifically prepared shortening — is made from pore beef suet, end highly refined vegeta- ble oil. Lard is made, in the majority o f cases, in the packinghouse, and not as of old, from the pure leaf of the hog. Which ia likely to be the most healthful ? Decide for yourself, It must be ■ . F or O ver Fifty V esri. An oh 1 ami well tried remedy.—M»s. Winslow’s WHEELMEN AND GOOO ROADS. •Soothing Hyrup lias toon used tor over »ifry year» by million# of mot bent for their ddldron while teBtiiimf. with öAis. it It «cotiiaa soothe# tho «tien perfect penetri sii su -, eòa. the child, cima, «often« rht> sliouKl ilo Supported Iu T h e ir tiu- I the gain», «U m »j# a JI pain, cures wind * ii.d colic, «ml ami U tin the dvAVurs Tor Uetter lligh w u ys. mua u I , ___ l»»l ranisav r,-u..-.tj rnr lor man Diari,,,ta. I. nUi.unt pU aw il r.. ti„ cut«, OOld r»y driiKRiits in every jmrt of the Wwrld Tweu aold The fullowing editorial utterance of t.v flv* cents a bottle, lu v«Juc 1» U sor L- r I r L i «. rtt the N ew Y o rk Times, in allusion to the j sure au«i usk tor x n recent convention o f N ew Jersey wheel 1 take 2 uu other ^ kind ^ O TH O W ILLIA M S , Merchant^ Tailor. FINE WORK AND GOOD FTS A TH E ir im * € U B 8 In all its Appointments. ■A_ X- W S P E C IA L T Y . D A L L A S , O R E G O N .— The Best Hotel between Portand and Saa Francisco.| iia iT E E 3 P ro s 5 r i# ta r O R E G O N - P E R F E C T S ^ KIMBALL PIANO. TONE PERFECT TOUCH SCALE DESIGN T H E B R iL L IA K T ^ h HÂLLETT & DAVIS PIANO. f TONE BRILLIANT I RECORr’ { SUCCESS t h e old reliable - KIMBALL ORGANS. EA SY TERMS, REASONABLE PRICES. HIGH GRADE INSTRUMENTS. Every Instrument Warranted for Five Years. "V . 305 W A S H IN G T O N S T R E E T , F I R M O O H E , PO RTLAN D , OREGON P A R K ! The new addition to Dallas, lies four blocks southwest of the court house, commanding a view of the whole town and surrounding country. Shade trees are set out along all th« streets, which are graded and 80 feet wide. Size of lots— 80x144, with allleys through the blocxs. PRICE $65 AND $95 PER LOT. These lots are sold on the installment plan—$10 cash, balance on three, six, nine and twelve months’ time without interest. This is by long odds the prettiest and best addi tion to Dallas. Wm. P. WRIGHT, Agent. DALLAS LUMBER YARD. J* 13. N u n n , IP ro u rie to r. Full stock of best quality seasoned lumber and all kinds of dimension timliors. Doors, windows, braeet« mouldings, laths, shingles, cedar posts, ornamental fencing and stair material. Prices of doors, 2Jxt»4xl4, $1 75- 2ix tq x l}. $3; iq x tq x l*. $2: 2 lx 6 fx lL $2.25; shingles. $2.50; common windows, $1.25 to $2.50. Door and window frames carried in stoex. Terms cash, or bankable note in 30 davs. 1 Word to the Wise is Suflicient/* Theretore, when we assure advertisers that this paper en ters at least nine-tenths of the homes in Polk county, and that its contents aie carefully read by all the inmates, what l*etter nieduumjcan business men want in which to push the sale of their goods. They should bear in mind that, accor ding to the experience of the largest and most succMgful ad vertisers, dull times does not warrant a suspension of their advertisements. î x= r±