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About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1900)
O y ír / L t ié s C '-£ ~ * *# & £ & & . L. N . W O O D S , M. I). Physician and Surgeon, Dallan, Oregon. T. V-'B em ske , M D DALLAS, - OREGON * I GEVURTZ, THE HOME FURNISHER, Furniture, Carpets, Stoves GREAT CARPET SALE. Oìli.*« over W ilaoi*'« drug «tore. J K. SlbLKY, II- c . E a KIN. S I B L E Y <* l i A K I N , A t l o r i i o . v H * « I - I -»> w . M'« lu v i t in >>iily net of ubi»t«'in.t book* ¡0 I'.'lk ounty. ttelKhi* *i»struct* furuinliwJ, ami money io -ail. No «MinuilMion crmryeti on Ioann. K> h » iiui 2 •id 3 >Vili**.u'h bulla* J . L. COLLIxNS. attorney and Counselor at Law, » • H e i t o r in t 'lia iie e r y . M; m been In prsotUw of his profession in *hio pla.:e o< about tliiity yeara, and w ill a*tend to all busin se uttusLei t* hi* care, Otflcs, corner Main and Oouri to D.dUu, P o » k Co, Or J. H . ToWNbKND J N. liAUT T O W M S K X I ) A II VKT. A T T O R N E Y S -A T -L A W . o ffic e i p s la ir s in O d d F e llo w s ’ u ew block. D A L L A S , - * O R B O O N . 03CA.lt H A Y X flit. A ttoimeya-t'-LiM w . OtKei- up fllair, in Cmiipli 11’ . lui'lil* in g. DALLAS - O llK tjO N . N. L. llUn.KK. Attorney-at-Law D A L L A S , O K F.U O N. W il l practice in »ill consta. A . -la M A l i r ilN , lr* A I N T in U , O ur buyers have just returned from the easl, having pur chased the largest and prettiest stock of carpets and lino- ileum ever brought to this coast. The colorings and pat j terns are the prettiest ever shown. These prices are for carpets cut, sewed, and lined with best padded paper. Save | money and send us your order. Send us a deposit and we I w ill ship you the goods subject to examination, and if sat isfactory you can accept and pay for same. Union ingrains, extra heavy, 25 cents. W o>l ingrain, cotton chain, 40 cents. A ll wool ingrai i carpet, 50 cents. Best grade all wool extra heavy ingrain, 05 ecu's. Tapestry Brussels, 50c; Smi! h’s Brussels, 00c. H igg in ’s Brussels. 7-r>c; H iggiirs Best Brussels, Hoc. Saxony Axminster, $1; Smi Ifs Royal velvet, #1. Floor oil cloth, 20 cents' W indow shades, 3x7, ail col -rs, 35 cents. Lace curtains, beautiful p a-terns, 35c, 75. $1,;*2, $3 a pair. / E Grade linoleum, 0 feet wide, 40 cents./ D G ia d e linoleum, 12 feet wide, OOceiJ, Inlaid linoleum, $145. I. G F V U R P-'/ The H»m a F nisher, 173, 175 First, vfc 2t9, 221,-GS Yu* ■ I • Home, sign anil oriiaim'lit-L grain ing, kalaoiiiing anil |>H|*'r li-ti ,i'ig. D.I.I.AS. • O hkoi . n J. PERRY CALDWELL MOTOR TIME TABLE. T.cive* Independence for Monmouth an.l -Virile 7 3«) a ill 3:30 p in . Leave» Inde|)enduee for Monni«»utn anu DalM* 11:10 a m .7:15 p m Leav. m Monmouth for A irlle - 7:50 a in 3 50 p m Leaves Monmouth for Dallas— 11:20 a m 7:30 p m Leaves \irlie for Monmouta and l ide;»e.ide:ic*î— 9:00 a 111 f> P »» L-Jive< Dallas for Monni ui:h an ' tnuo .en l jo :e - 1:00 p m 3 30 •» in. h . M. KM.IS. K. K. W H .I.m iS , 4 H e h le r. P resu le ut. DALLAS OF C IT Y D A LLA S , NO. 43. D A L L A S , O R E G O N , F R I D A Y , O C T O B E R ò , 1900. V O L . X X V I. HANK OREGON, — D EALER IN — IEKICLES MO iGRIGULTURiL I81FLEHEKTS. Buggies, wagons, binders, mowers, rakes, garden cultivators, disc and spring harrows. O R E G O N ** ‘I suppose you may thluk It strauge that I should be here a ll alone fo r weeks In a sheep camp, when I should be out In the world taking niv Pike« among men. l ue simple trutu »* that 1 uin safer her«! “ T might as well make a clean breast o f It. 1 cannot let liquor alone when i am In a town. I was bom that w ay!' H e paused a moment, * wallow- * Lard, l i t « » resumed. ‘ I am tom* p.rart e lj happy here. I am saving my wages, for I shall never go home again. I am trying to accumulate a fund sufficient to support me In my old age. If ! should live to be old. but It Is hard work to save, even here, for I go to towu once a year aud blow a whole lot In! L ife Is monotonous here, but I have books and—1 am safe! ** *My people sent me to college, and I read law awhile. But I hud Inherited this accursed appetite for liquor, and, my parents being wealthy aud having n large connection ami acquaintance among society people, 1 was constantly throwu In tin* midst o f temptations. 1 strove to resist them. 1 made—(iod knows—how many resolutions, but 1 had no help, no sympathy from my friends. A t last even my own people were ashamed o f my weakness and fo l ly. 1 was born strong, both physically and meutully, save for this one weak spot!' He gave a short aud bitter laugh. “ *1 am still a strong bridge, with only one flow, and. like that. I may end In a sudden smash. Oh. if parents could only see and know what they are doing when they foster such Inborn. In herited weakness! “ *lf mine had only trained me right ly. 1 am no fanatic. Alcohol has its uses, like other poisous. Like them It should be placed under restrictions strong enough to protect the weak and young. True civilization demands it. It w ill be done, but 1 will not live to see it. “ ‘ In my case and that of thousands o f oth er) It is poison! If my parents mid given me the safeguard o f right principles and kept* me from ever tast ing the damnable stuff. 1 might perhaps have outgrown the fatal tendency, but they alw ays laughed at such an Idea. They alw ays had wine on the table. It seems to me now as if all the food was redolent o f alcohol In some form, i t V * * i J mu were us’ .»re or less tfp^y nearly ah the time. U I could have been trained rightly! Oh. if 1 could have bad* help before it was too late!’ “ H e hid his face in his hands and re mained silent a long time. At last he got up, kicked the brands o f Are a lit tle, then asked If we had plenty of bedding, adding, ‘Better bring It in the tent.' “ W e thanked him. preferring to sleep in the open nlr. “ As my guest rose I said, ‘There are thousands o f such mothers and sons.’ “ ‘Yes, indeed,’ he answered.’’ S u I o o d n In C h t e n p o . Thurston Lumber Company T H U R S T O N B R O S ., There are 7 id ralpous in the F lr word o f Chicago. a:i 1 In one sect!» there are 20 In one block. P R O P R E T 0 3 3 . D ALLAS, O R E C O n T — D E A I.K K K IN A L L K IN D S III-'— Transacts a general banking uusi ucss in all its branches; buys ami sells eACliange on principal iwiints i n i be United S ta te «; tuakea collection « on all p oin t« in the Pacific N o rth w est; loan« money ami discounts paper at llie best ra te «; allow interest on lim e deposits. A WHOLESOME DRINK. B u t t e r m ilk Cur«*<l a Toper of t lic W h U k r H(ibit. I f you are n victim o f the whisky habit, try buttermilk. The Philadel phia Record u*Us o f n party o f men seated tiround n table In n Chestnut street cafe, one o f whom had been a hard drinker and who thus told the Both rough and dressed material on hand and .orders of story o f his cure: “ T w o years n g o 'I found tlini my stomach was going back f v is it D R . J O R D A N ' S o r ia t I 1 any size promptly tilled. on me. I f I took three or four drink« o f an evening, I would get up the next Nil SlUETiT.,«im uci.se«,CH. I morning with an Intense loathing for The Lar'ert AnutnmicRl Masewi« In the food. The very thought o f a breakfast World. Wc..kne»-e-. <f *.iy c. ntrncterl , di»ease | w « l l l « . l r r n r . l i.jr the oldest would make me shudder. 1 explained Special!»* if.i the Const fc»t j* yMrs. my condition to a friend o f mine, and OR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN # M A R T I N BR O S., P R O P R IE T O R S . | R V r H I I . M thoroovfhly r'ldlrated , f he told me that If I would drink n | from »jratem with-nit tlieu-eot H a r r a r y. ' glass o f buttermilk every night Just be T r . i o M htip.l by an F.t|wft | A ll kinds of rough and dressed lumber on hands or cut M l M » S (or II U|.(nrr. a qtuck and fore going to bed and another the first radical cure for ■•Hen. « « • * • . and i r u i n l i r . I y Li. Jordan's »penal pain- j ’ ■ to order. thing In the morning I would no longer _ lest method». im 'ration tree and rtrirtUprirate. Treatment per I k * troubled with nausea. A t that time r MMi V .«r by letter A /•osiWse t V « i« «very ca.e 2 0 0 , 0 0 0 in S to c b - I thought buttermilk was a horrible | undertaken. Write for B ok f ■ i a n i A O R . MAILUU PkeU. fA valual- book dose, but I tried it and «tuck to It. . far men ) Call or write Slab wood for cook stoves or harvest engines at 50 eon s tintd*i*n; 1 lost my desire for whisky, oa JORMH a C0.. t o il ■ » * . ! U.. J. f. and i'or ly a year I haven’t touched a load. u d» p. The buttermilk seems to have i ted as an antidote. Now I feel like finished when the herder i.rrlved wit. a fighting cock all the time.” RUM H IS W E A K N E S S . his sheep, which he drove Into the cot L u iiu iu iih is wholesome and is TRUCKM AN. ml. agreeable to those who have acquired “ A§ he citme tor-nrd u* ami sainted ; a taste for It. Moreover, It Is neither I SAD STORY OF A YOUNG MAN’S hr with a curt uod we « a w n tall, well i a brain rgtiddler nor a leg tanglor. It WRECKED LIFE. formed man o f perhaps 30 or 35. He w ill not tnnko a man whip hi« w ife or A fair «hare o f patronage noli cited carried himself well, a « If he had been fall Into the gutter or losJ his Job or »n*i all o-d er« p rom ptly filled. B o r a W i t h t h r A l c o h o l T a i n t In I L i used to city streets nnd parlors. But | otherwise Impair bis usefulness. A w ay V r l n n . H r W n a M n d n n U n a k n r t In the wonder was not so much to see n i with whisky! Ila ll buttermilk or any H ia I n l h r r ’ a H o u r « — F o r c e d t o B e dlstlncmlsbod looking person ns a sheep j other beverage that will reform the c o m e n S h ee p K in d e r . herder—for the occupation need dr- : dipsomaniac nnd convert him Into a re "T h e sun was shining hot,” said my grade no one—ns that he was so dirty spectable and self respecting member h u ía guest o f a night. “ W e were crossing and unkempt. I never snw herder or j Montana on our way to Oregon tw o cowboy look so badly. — t l.l. g ü fP fl OF— “ Tils clothing was not only soiled years ago, and wo were only too glad but rairire^. H e looked neglected am to see as we crossed the ‘divide' the IRON WORK TO ORDER white gleam o f a sheep herder's tent well ns discouraged, and yet under the tnn nud dirt there were regular f i- ay off in the distance. But It was Repairing Promptly Done. aw tures nnd a look o f keen Intelligence, al farther o ff than It (,eined to be. and I though greatly marred by the unmis began to think «**< w e would never takable signs o f dissipation. ED. BIDDLE. - FREE. got there.” says a w riter In Union Sig “ W h a t however, most attracted me nal. " W e did. however. W e found the was his great command o f language, tent beside a large corral, but both with unusual felicity o f expression, ns were untenanted. well n« the extent o f his Information, "W e unbooked our team, gave them l ie had evidently l»ecn well educated w ater from a hole near by and. secur ' and had n a J much, and be had »U o di ing them with picket ropes, le ft them gested his rending. Here wss a flue to graze while w e threw ourselves on R *3 d T rip li Silver Sil» er the soft ctislilon o f buffalo grass Iu nature in ruins: a good citizen lost to Metal lin fe his country and the race through some VwniTS« per **t (S) w «rwl h^ndlc* ..a ?s • fi* tlie shade o f the tent, for we were very ooe’ s fault. F »rV* per «et. « <rm *0 htndl«'« ....... h* 4(* tired. l>n iv«« per »et « ntrral tMUAÌiti . . re K. “ A fte r supper ns we sat around the " I t was very hot. with no breeze stir 75 F Tir* per «et (1 metal haitcl-s T»I>V per »• t S, ss 06 ring. and the shade tvaa only a degree campfire enjoyin g the cool evening T —» « inmnmi fw r «et « ........................ ___ ff » breeze, w hile the quiet stars shone in better than she snusblne, but toward Pattar kmv a « s -' ìi na 1 « the clear sky above us. be tieenme more S«*mr Sliell*. e v l i .......................... 06 HI sunset It I«-».¡H e a t . l f e cooler, when CATT.tMf * K .......... cornmun!< ative. and after some refer (S S*pVitt r i » i per «et • , ................... û 36 w e row- and pn.cee.icd to replenish the ence to the vnfi<Mi.v ini*hap« nnd mo ^ t t Rioni 1 o s t 0 1 SS i smpllre. so that w e might boll our Ull »n4ra.Ru tives wblcU sent men out on the range coffee aud fr v our bacon. W o had oat he said: MUSEUM GF ANATOMY; UPPER SALT CREEK SAW MILL F. H.MUSCOTT, D a lla s : O r e g o n Plating Give Your Horse Chancet C . A . A O ttE A T S . a big run on the Standard Rotary 1 am having C O N S U M P T I O Do not think for a s i ng l e moment t hat consumption will ever strike you ■ sudden blow. It does not come that way. It creeps its way along. Fi -irst y ou think it it is a little c o l d nothing but a little hacking cough; then a little loss in weight: then a harder cough; then the fever and the night sweats. Better stop the disease while it is yet creeping. Better cure your cough bij today. fi You can do it with N highway between a decadent town and the nearest wide awiflte towu. and i there w ill be no need to send a social settlement resident to aud fr o over , It In any kind o f vehicle. The people w ill go to nud fro aud regenerate tliern- j selves. That road w ill be eburcb aud ! school and lyceurn and soclul emanci pator for them. Aud then, as commu nication Increases, the electric road w ill occupy one side o f the highway, and the steam railroad w ill find It e x pedient to bulk] a compering branch Into the hills, and so the Isolated com munity w ill be waked up and saved. That Is the logic o f the situation as some o f us see It. D iv id e th e D a rd e n . j because we claim for it. It sews one-thi fnster, holds twice as much thread, runs eas ier and with less noise than any machine you sewing machine it doe.« all that will find. It sews both lock and chain stitch too. A great injustice has been done the farmers in expecting them alone to ( shoulder the responsibility and the ex- :i07 Com m on..al alroot. ! jK-nse o f building country roads, while j the construction o f canals has been | heavily subsidized, while rivers have , DRINK IN MANILA. been made navigable by the govern- j ruent and while untold millions have A , y fu l K S o r t . on I h . H e a lth o f i u i been showered upon railroads by cities, th e A in e r lc u u S o ld ie r .. | villages, counties, states and the nation A fte r n few months’ scrvfoe In Ma j In stock ami bond subscriptions, cash 1 donations aud grants o f boundless nila tho o vil effects o f drink began to tracts o f public lands. It Is time to manifest themselves on the Am erican do aw ay with the cruel Injustice which soldiers, writes E. II. W h erry In The places upon farmers nnd upon the N ew Vole«“. The |)erlod o f enforced ab A y v r : small fraction o f property In the state stinence w hile on shipboard and while which they own the entire burden o f the siege was in progress had put the men In Hue physical condition, but they building highways. were worn I»y the severe duty among the swamps and tu the Intense heat. T h e Ho.Mil P r o b l e m . When they entered the city, they The Improvement o f country roads is were quartered lu all parts, many being chiefly an economical question, relat obliged to sleep In damp, gloom y build ing principally to the waste o f effort ings where the air was laden with fe The pressure on the In hauling over had roads, the saving chest is lifted, that feel j in money, time and energy iu hauling ver germs ami where every stitch o f clothing would become musty In a ing of suffocation is re over good ones, the initial coat o f Im- night's time. Then when so many be moved, and you are cur | proving roads and the difference in the gan drinking heavily jhe sick Ust be i cost o f maintaining good and bad ones. ed. You ccn stop that : It is not necessary to enlarge on this gan to grow longer. little cold with a 25 cent StuprCcd by the hot, moisture laden | subject In order to convince the aver bottle; h a rd e r coughs atmosphere, men drank liquor fo r a age reader that good roads reduce the will need a 50 cent size; i? j stimulant. Tho vitality being at n low I resistance to trallic, aud consequently if it’s on the lungs the ebb, there was not the resistance to ! the cost o f transportation o f products (he evil effects o f the liquor that there one dollar size will be ! and tjoods to and from farms and mar* is lu a coolor climate. Those who w ere most economical. . Uets is reduced to n minimum. at llrst able by mere physical strength “ I confldontly recommend A y e r’s Cherry Foe to nil to all my patrons. to overcome the relaxing tendency jt* I am using it now in my own family. TH E BOER. found that the appetite for drink In Forty years ago I fcelliure it saved my life .” A . H. E idbon , M. I}., creased. It became almost Insatiable. Û I The Boer soldiers have lost everything Moiietwt f nruiKprs snou /Orttad Jan. 4,1898. F ort Madison, Iowa. —1”*( j la s t h jin u VmT That they have retiTTueu W rite the Doctor « t am* t n « « . jui - itvess, !>n. j . c . a n ett, Low ell, Mess. by us gallant and skillful a tight us has tl.»»lr nppetltes demanded grout quanti j ever been made by a free people.—I ’hila- ties. The appetite appeared to grow much more rapidly under the condi I deiphia Ledger. ! The Boer Idea of independence is dead tions e::latlng lu the tropic, than lu the in South Africa. The hopes cherished north. by the followers of Kruger are blasted As the appetite Increased the power forever. They must accept the fate o f to resist disease decreased. Malaria WANT BETTER HIGHWAYS. the vanquished or again trek afar into became prevalent. Men lay around the desert, where foes in new guise or B f lc liig a n F r u i t B o lt F e e l s t h e N e e d old will finally overtake and engulf them. quarters, feelin g too stupid to even o f O o o «l lt o n d s . drill. One by one they wore sent to —Flinadelphia Times. Indians nnd Michigan towns are rap A siege of Pretoria could have had the hospital, whore quinine soon over idly follow in g each other In a move but one result. T w o hundred thousand came the malaria as a rule. Restraint ment to improve country roads. The trained men who have smelled powdei from the use o f drink while In the hos town o f Michigan City recently engug- and shown their valor are rather tod pital generally worked more wonders ed in obtaining the signatures of free much for the comparative handful of pa in the wny o f cures than anything else. holders to a petition in which the ques triots no matter how straight they can It was noticeable that the men who tion o f submitting the improvements shoot, and Uvistincss in the sacrifice of were not addicted to using liquor were life is not a necessary adjunct to bravery. o f roads in five townships o f the coun com paratively strong and vigorous and ty to the voting population is propos —Brooklyn Times. experienced fe w difficulties In keeping ed. T h e merchants o f the town have lu good health. They were alw ays ANIMAL ODDITIES. found it necessary to take some action ready for duty and seldom had any se in order to save or foster its coun Among the animals of Australia is a rious nllmenta. They were not ouly try trade. The town o f Laporte spent species of hog uot much larger than a more relluble when on duty, but they a large amount o f money in making rat. were more careful aud discreet about country trade easily accessible, and In Bumblebees, butterflies and beetles are taking chances on Impairing the health. consequence u large area was made habitual drunkards. Not only did the drink habit work In some of tlu* tributary to the towu. southern state« these insect« alight on against the power to resist fev er., both It is proposed to bond the townships certain plants, drink heartily from th« malnrlal and typhoid, but It put the In order to raise the money for the blossoms and full to the ground stupefied. blood In bad condition. Many o f tlie Itats have exterminated n colony of 48 drinking men soon found that they Improvement. There Is a movement also to give the different roads a name prairie dogs in Lincoln park, Chicago. At could not drink the northern liquors leust their disappearance is thus explain nnd beverages without having Impure by which they will become fam iliar to everybody In the county. There is now ed by the keepers, who found 48 cleanly blood. Eruptions occurred on the skin. picked skeletons, mute evidence of the an active movement going on in Ber tragedy. The natural bent o f the body could not rien county to connect tlie towns of be augmented by the unnatural bent The sea horse alone, with one other ex Benton H arbor aud St. Joseph with isting fish, the gar pike of our western engendered liy drink -without Injury to Sister Lakes, which is one o f the best rivers, possesses the power which was the circulatory fluid, one o f the prov known summer places in this section of common to many o f the older fishes, that inces o f which Is to regulate the body’s the state. For this purpose more than of turning its head independently of its heat. Bolls and tumors resulted, and $800 has been donated outright. This body. The sen horse can also turn it« men were put In the hospital while came In targe share from Benton H ar eyes in almost any direction. their duly was being performed by the bor. men who eared for themselves and ab stained from drink. On men whose In past years Bister Lake:* lias been blood was made Impure by drluk mos reached mostly from I>owngiac, which quito bites turned to running sores. induced con« Idem hie travel through that town. Howaglnc is «aid to have had the best roads and got the busl- S o b r i e t y o f I h e A m e r ic a n . ncss, and now the other place Is seek It will «Ill-prise most people to hear ing to meet &. Hint o f the Inhabitants o f the four In both cases the roads are sandy, countries. England, l-'ranee, Germany and it w ill be necessary to gravel them and the United States, the Americans in order to make good highways all the arc an easy first a s regards abstemious year through. ness. T lie surprise thus excited w ill Good roads are especially desirable in uot lie diminished w hen It Is milled that Berrien county because o f the rise of we are a very creditable second. From the “ schooner” In gathering fruit from Ihe parliamentary papers on "alcoholic the country districts. Much o f the beverages” It would appear that I lie enormous quantity o f fruit shipped annual consumption o f wine Is the from fit. Joseph and Benton Harbor to greatest In l-'rame, with 21.23 gallons Chicago Is hauled to the docks in per head, America bnt JL W c are fa ir “ schooners.” A “ schooner” is a long ly close with .4. Turning to brer, we D r a S n R i f i coupled wagon with a canvas cover, simply tomp In with .flt.fl gallons per The popular idea expressed in tlie some o f which make a circuit o f 20 head. Germany follow in g well with phrase, "th e art of self-defense," shows miles or more dally. On a good road a 2tt.ll, Am erica with but J2.fl aud France ihe opinio« that the chief enemies a man team o f horses will easily haul a sur has to defend himself from are visible with r>..X Coming to spirits, France prisingly heavy load, the loading o f the and external. But the resl danger o f leads t/ie van with 1.04. Germany at different shaped packages having been ttverv man U from minute and often in her heels with 1.80, ourselves with 1.08 reduced to a system. visible foes. In the air wc breathe and and Am erica last with .3d.-Isiinlon the water we drink are countless minute CHifii« organisms leagued against the health of SALVATION IN ROADS. the body. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. The one defense agxinst these enemies T h e y A r e t h e G r e a t I ' n l v e r a s l M l« is to keep tils blood pure. Dr. Pierce’s Leather hoot« and shoes may be sof • ¡ u i i i t r l r « o f It .- k v i i e r n t I o n . Golden Kledical Discovery thoroughly tened and kept from cracking by well These far fetched notions o f the **ru * | purifies the blood, removing poisonous nibbing them with castor oil. They when tlie sbotild not be worn for about 12 hours rtil social settlement” and the iustitu i substances and accretions, .«r mere blood is mire there is no harborage for afterward. tions I rural church, etc., are moou.liiiM' T I..J are a lt « «. ther loo }•>« •H^a.r wl.icli 6ml a l<xlK; Dried eggshells broken floe and put in ; , * , , __ . iim only v.-h«n the blood i. impure and to a bulb vase will, with a little tepid rl.fonary Biotic r y and extraiieou» and forced, i * water, remove the coat of sediment which «ays Z!ou*» IlcrukJ. Tbejr could never I « i your1 Got s K M io t l r*l«*cf*very’ clouds their transparency, fibake vigor* I mj made to work in actual practice be-*^ one of the medic * on the lace o f the oualy after aoakiug awhile. lr Wm rioeter, o f Redosk. cause so foreign iu spirit hu <I method. ! esrlfi Iowa. ” While In the nouth- Chamois skin i» valuable for keeping f.tso, I got pofconcd with pol . three ye* The salvation of tlie back woods, like linen goods and fine lingerie which is l i l e poison nettled in mv blood and the salvation o f China, lies in openlug rirroM l »ttffer^V cnniiot l»e told in word*, . luid aside for some time from taming nirht ! Would ffo crsry. I tried different up the eouuiry. Bonds, roads, roads— yellow. W ell wrapped around the goods o f r**i1icine. tried different doctor*, but to be preserved it keeps out the air. these are the great universal mission r relief thev rout I jrirr war to rm ke ?ny i-bont tighter, t then be!*nn t «hint; I>r. To take out fresh paint stains use tur aries; roads o f all kinds- railroads, |__ [r*R Gt.idrn Medical Lsac »very. Took font pentine. I f the stain is old and dry, electric roads, macadamized highway«, bottini witi'Oii* re lief Kept tftkiiifr it. ! took «crape the surface with a knife and apply bicycle paths anything that Invites in all ten I* .trie* a n i got entirely cured. ” f»r Lieicc 6 i’icasfenl Telici« cure c o i n little vaseline to soften it; then apply wheels. the turpentine. The latter will remove sti patton. Build a broad, hard, well graded both the paint and the vaseline. F. A. WIGGINS, Salem. TÉC AN 03 Sdì- B23CBSC.