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About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1900)
!¡r -***& ¡g p m T I* N. WOOIMJ, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. Palla», Oregon. T. V B EM3!J££, M 0 DALLAS, - OREGON t if f in g o v e r W ilaoj/a «1 riij^ n to r u . J K. SlHLKY, !*• V . E kU lH . 'S I B L E Y <* E A K I N , .V 1 U i n i o ^ v H - n l - I j i i \ v . We have t-ho only set oi ubstra. t book* in l'"lk ounty. lleliahl ; ubetrai-tH mrnihhed, au«i »noiiey t*» oaii. No c.'iUniiHéioii chargoil on Ioana, itooma Iti 3 W ila< i p ’ ll Mock. Lallus J. L. C O L L IN S , attorney and Counselor at Law, S o l i c l l o r an I'liH iarrrjr. Il.ia been in practice olili* profession in chi» piaci o< about thirty year», ami will alterni to all Impresi- mruaieJ lo I iìh care, ottica, corner Main ami C oup t>. tnllui. Pot* Co, o r J. H. T uwnhknu J N. II akt TOW NHE.'U) A IIAK T. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW . Ollice ipslttii» ill Oilil Fellow»’ ue» t il i k * k . D A L 3 .A 8 , - - O B B O O N . T h e K in d .Y o u H a v e A lw a y s B o u g h t , n n d w h ich haa b e e n iu u se f o r o v e r 3 0 y e a rs, h as b o r n e th e sig n a tu re o f — am i h as b e e n m a d e u n d e r Ills p e r - f —«"A. son al su p erv ision sin c e its in fa n cy . A llo w n o o n e to d e c e iv e y ou in th is. A ll C ou n terfeit*. Im ita tio n s a n d S u b stitu tes « r e b u t E x p erim en ts th a t trlHo w ith an d e n d a n g e r tile h ealth o f lu fu n ts a n d C h ild ren —E x p e r ie n c e a g a in st E x p erim en t. W h a t is C A S T O R IA C a s to r !« is a su b stitu te fo r C a stor O il, P a r e g o r ic , D ro p s a n d S o o th in g S yrups. I t is H arm less an d P lea sa n t. I t c o n ta in s n e ith e r O p iu m , M i.rp iiln e n o r o th e r N a rcotic su b sta n ce. Its a g o is its g u a ra n te e . It d estroy s W o rm s a n d allays F ev erish n ess, ( t c u r e s D iarrh oea a n d W in d C o lic. I t reliev es T e e th in g T ro u b le s, cu res Const ¡tuition a n d F la tu le n cy . I t a ssim ila tes th e F o o d , regu la tes th e S tom a ch a n d B o w e ls , g iv in g h ealth y an d iiu lu rul sleep. T h e C h ild re n ’ s P a n a c e a —T h e M o th e r ’ s F rien d . G EN U IN E C A S T O R iA 1 Bears the Signature of Years. PALLAS, OKKUON. Will practico in «ili cousis. M A H TLN , J. PERRY C A L D W E L L IJA IJ S iT K li, — DBALKK IN — Itoli»«, sigli unii ninmm iH 'l, grain VEHICLES HD HGRICL'LTDRiL SHfEITS. in g, kulmiiiiing »nil |i»|i«r litnging. O rkoon MOTOR TIME TABLE. Buggies, wngons, binders, mowers, rakes, garden cultivators, disc anti spring harrows. O R E G O N . j L^ive^ Inde|>en(icncc for Moiimouth an i Ktrlie — Trial a ni SrSOpm i.euve* litdependnue ior Moiinioutli and l)all.u— 11:10 a ut 7:15 pui Lea vi s Moiintoulh for Airlie - 7:50 a tu I.W p m Lea» <•* Monuiuuth for I»alli»— 11:*» * ui 7:80 pm beavo* tirilo for Monmoutit aad Inde.»e mence tfcoo.. Ili *r» I» U» boa ve « Dilla» for M-mmoulh an • Tn.ie lendm ie - 1:00 i» tu 8 Ao |» in. M. H . K L L 1 S . llALLAS Or Lum ber Com pany PR O P R E TO R3. DALLAS, OREGON. — D K A l.K B s IN A b f* K f N I » * » i K — DALLAS, BANK ORKOON. 'i'nnncicts a generai liankiug olisi tinw ili all ita liranclie«; liuys and selle eAcJi.uiv:e «»il prim ipal poi ili* in <Le United Siate«; inake« cnlleetioiiH mi all |K»iiitn in lite Faciliti Northwest; lotti»* money and tliHCouiilH paiier al thè bevi rute»*; *11«»w iulerflut on lim e ilepo*!!.* 9^> I ^ visit D R . J O R D A N ’ S o s is t I MUSEUM OF ANATOMY; i 1 i ^ OR. J3R3AN-DISEASdOF MINI » • lor n » g « » r r . a q u ic« i cure for • * « « » * . f l e o a r e and ¡ in 5-Locb* Slab wood for cook stoves or harvest engine* at 50 cents a load. r n i M l » . Dy Or. Jordan'* *p c.i»l paiu- AILMD f HUB. ( A . H IG H W A Y R E P A IR S. lor w tm ) Cal« or ML JORDAN » CO.. 10*1 N w M *L. ». F. . F. H. MUSCOTT, TRU CK M AN . D a lla s : Ç3T 7 - - = ^ >* MARTIN BROS., PROPRIETORS. lev« airîL^il». a . i r e aa d H r»-t«y private. T r e a iw e a t p er b y letter. A /V a .f'e e f a r « im every CMC 1 V n tafrw *-«* r * I L « v « l , R V w t t N t R M M fiK . P i g e o n B r e e d e r * ’ M is t a k e * . UPPER SALT CREEK SAW MILL 2 0 0 ,0 0 0 F^e-fc O ro p -o n MAINTENANCE a s im p o r t a n t CONSTRUCTION. as M a t e r ia l S k o a l * B e P l a c e * A l o a * t k e K o ^ a a i l Hole** F i l l e d aa S o on aa D t a e o v e r e S -4 * r « p e r M e ih o d a o f I I « - p a i r i a * a n d (lie ( oat. , I* t :¡ I’ ll l \ . . V O l . I» ! llw l . . .1 «•»•.*•1*1*. I ».oper marner. This N dir«*it!y «L.c ! ro the ohi luxurious and most imsatis- »¿»«•tory manner o f having the ruad tax ; worked out by «lay’w l.tîwir. Any one i f«imillar with this system knows just ! w! at It means and how |»oos*ly îîi«* lit tie done Is accomplished. Spring reines. The highway commissioner fnrr.s to I Ids books to see how many days each i otic Is «town for to cover ids rônd tax. Work is reckoticd st nlKiut $1 a day for .• man and from VL50 to .y*. a day for :t team. “ Wi ll, when those men congregate to I <lo the work It is like a meeting :it the crossroads grocery, and lots more tnlk- I lng is doue tlinai work. In addition what ' is done is done as each separate Individ j ual thinks lx»st. There is no system, and F K L C H S ( H A TC H I NO 811K D B O U S E . o f the poultry during the daytime. A cloth curtain may be put at the front of the scratching shed to be let dowu at night whenever the weather is stormy for the purpose of ke«‘ping out the snow and rain. While Mr. Fetch's bouse w'as designed many years ago, a number o f poultrymen are returning to this plan as being the most con venient, economical and practical that has ever been devised. B o y e r 's Hem W i s d o m . Experiences differ with locations. Think o f that before you Judge a man’s reported experience. j Think o f tha drinking vessels per fectly dry and you enjoying a cooling drink. There’s not much humanity in that act. The man who will neglect his poul try on the first day of tbe week because It Is Sarnlay hasn’t got any Christian ity to spare. The man who will overcrowd bis hen roost summer nights should be put in a sweat box himself. A poultry crank Isn’t the worst man In this world. _________ .. — As the ol«l world lias had its clvlllr.i A fair «Imre of patronage solicit**«! t on longer, s«> has it developed to a • nd *11 o-ders prom ptly titled Uglier degree than have we In t!»«* newer western world the wteuce of ¡toad building. With tbe art of proper I ronstruetlou has grown the knowledge ! of proper maintenance. In America many stab* aud niuniclpelitiefl have learned how to build their streets and highways well, but there has so far — AI.I. KIN PH OF— U m ’ ii a snd and general lack of prop«‘r i od systematic maintenance, says the Brooklyn Eagle. The agitation In favor Repairing Promptly Done. 1 of good roads which has beeu prc*a«‘d so vigorously in receut years, ow ing in Why You Should Insist on Having | a great measure to the development of ED. BIDDLE. - PROF. the bicycle and its universal use. has EUREKA HARNESS OIL led to splendid rvsults. But tbe work Oneonalea bv any *»ther. is as yet but half accomplish«*«), for R e n d e r s h a r d lea tlter soft. • while thousands o f mll«»s o f improved Especially prepared. highways hnve luf-en buMt throughout R e e pn o u t writer. f a h e a v y lio d ie d o il. the Fulled States their maintenance has uot been properly provided for. Royal TH*I- arness H. B. Fullerton o f Braoklyu. w ho has Sllrer SIKer A " excellent preservative. 14a »e long taken a d*s»|i Interest in the sub educes cost of your harness. RnW«« per h—dh* ..A » t O ject o f good roads and who was recent F *rk* per met. #1 «(«ml htfi B-a ever burns the leather ; its . 90 tP Knivv* per met f. mef.il hai .«Ile* . io to ly elected national chairman o f the Efficiency is increased. F-»rk« permet» metal iiamlle« AS 7:. highway imnprovement committee of IMPROVED niORW AT. I &ecur£* i*«*t service, T ib’* qptsMWi per f,. M to s* ;ti hes kept from breaking. T'-$ *!•»«» per met *....... ß tr tbe League of American Wheelmen, the result Is disastrous In the extreme. lUiYte-r kniv- » f » h 0» ID had some In ten din g things to say upon It is tlie same virtually with our sul>- Hh*t|s, e*rh . .. 05 1* il nrtmn macadam r«»»«ls. W bat Is n**cd- Corrine met M the subje* i o f road tr ..otenaace. I* sold in all Napkin rin • per »et A ............ . . 55 “ In New Jersey. New York. Coonec- ed Is a country roadma*t«*r v .th thor Cartoni ......... L o d iti* . 1 * 1» 1 B ( all and yet our pnces am *oM a*Kl »*iv«r piati*« ; ticut. M•««•*< bus*Us and on Long Is- ough scientific knowledge o f proper H «n «(a r 4 (Ml ( orapn n r. WS SUI* street. Salmo l land there are some good roads, which road building and the expert*uce **» ‘ Dallas Foundry! IRON W O R K TO ORDER. Some Reasons P la t in g H S O Ç . A. S O m E S T S . ¡GOOD BEADING FOR M’KINLEY. Wisdom From the Scriptures and Washington's Fare well Address. A number o f women who find fault with President McKinley’s “ good Lord, good d«vll." course on the temperance question bare been sending out an end less chain o f prayer for his defeat at the polls In November, aavs the New York News. We. respectfully suggest that, without neglecting tbe prayer chain, they ought to urge McKinley to read tbe Rtble and especially the fol lowing verses In Proverbs: “ He that paaaeth by and meddleth with strife belonging uot to him Is llko one that taketb a dog by tbe ears. “ It Is an honor for a man to cease from strife, but every fool will be med dling. “ Strive not with a mnn without cause If he hath done thee no harm. “ Envy thou not the oppressor and choose not o f Ilia ways.” This course In Scripture rending might be followed by a careful study o f Washington’s farewell audress and especially the following part o f It: “ A g a l n a t t h e f tu a ld lo u a w i l e s o f f o r e i g n I n flu e n c e (I c o n ju r e y o n to b e lie v e m e, fe llo w c lt ls e n a ) th e J e a lo u a y o f a f r e e p e o p l e o u g h t t o b e c o n a tn n tly a w o k e , a ln c e h la to r y n n d e x p e r ie n c e p r o v e th a t fo r e ig n I n f l u e n c e la o n e o f t h e m o a t b a n e fu l fo e * o f lle p n b llc n n « o v e r n m e n t .” Washington could not have written more to the point if he had foreseen McKinley’s British alliance and his plot to assist Great Britain In destroy ing the Boer republics. “ T h e g r e a t r u le o f c o n d u c t f o r aa In r e K 'a r il t o f o r e i g n n a t i« » n a ,’ ’ c o n tin u e d th e F a t h e r o f O u r C o u n try , “ I n I n e x t e n d i n g o n r c o m m e r c i a l r e la t io n * , t o h a v e w it h t h e m aa l it t l e p o l i t i c a l c o n n e c t i o n a a p o M a lb le . S o f a r n.<* w e h a v e u l r c u d y f o r m e d e n g a g e m e n t* . J e t th e m b e fu lfille d w it h p e r f e c t g o o d fa it h . H e re le t ua a t o p . ' ’ W h y q u it o n r o w n t o a ta n d u p on fo r e ig n g r o n n d f W hy, by In ter w e a v in g o n r d e a tln y w it h th a t o f a n y p a rt o f E u ro p e , e n ta n g le ou r p e a c e a n d p r o a p e r it y In t h e t o il * o f E r r o p e n n a m b it io n , r lv a la h lp , in te rcu t, h n m o r o r c a p r l e e f ” I am having a big run on the Standard Rotary sewing machine because it does all that wo claim for it. It sews one-third faster, holds twice as much thread, runs eas ier and with loss noise than any machine l’oti will find. It sows both lock and chain stitch too. F. A. WIGGINS, Salem. :«J7 Commercial aireet. A N E W T R A IL IN G ROSE. g iv v eth em rt, t H y b r i d B e t w e e n W l - I 'l r u r .l a o . e n d U r l d e . n a l d . Fast becoming a perfect wlsnrd mnong roses la Mr. M. U. Walsh, a gardener on a large o»tato In Massa chusetts. He Is hybridising nnd seed- lug perpetually. Oue o f his principal now roses Is “ Sweetheart,” a hybrid be tween Ilona Wlchnralaua and Ilrides- mald. Illustrating this, American Hardening says: This makes a pretty bud, with an ex- pnudod flower which Is quite doublo and 2V4 Inches In diameter. The color Is white with > pink base—that Is to say, the hack o f the petal Is a bright pluk, so that the point o f the opening Is McKinley greater than Washing ton that he dares to incur risks from which Washington shrank and against which he warned Americans, or Is Mc Kinley’s British alliance another Illus tration of the saying that “ fools rush in where angels fear to tread?” 4‘ I * r o H p « » r l(y “ P o in te r * . Wages o f mill operatives nnd factory hands nil over the country arc being cut down or the mills are being shut down by reason of overproduction, which the Republican campaign mana gers have been pointing to as n speci men of “ McKinley prosperity.” The "full dinner pall” argument of the Republicans is no longer u power ful one to conjure with. “ A full din n e r pail” means an empty pocketbook, for the workingman Is fortunate if he fins anything left after he has filled his dinner pall to provide the high price necessities o f life for his family. R o i l fln a o n n . Both rough ami tlreased material on hand and orders of m y size promptly tilled. A ll kinds of rough and dressed lumber on hands or out i use to order. iiu^T»T.,i»r»nci<N ,ia. T h e l.ar'«** Anatomie»! M u * « b la the Wund. W e-kiie»»«» or aujr tH u r w i» l d iM M p « » l l l « » l r »• '« ■ « • g the old«*» fcpcc ialiti mi the C o m i fc*t j6jr«»*a. istlica i THURSTON BRO S.. C**hler. CITY imi Thurston « . K. W I L L I A M * . pnaideut. so g o o d fo r a cough as A y e r ’s THC OINTAUNOOMMNV, TT MURRAY RTRtET, NtW YORK CITY. • There’s nothing The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 3 0 N. L. UUTI.KR. A tt o m e y - a t - L a w • as coughing. Cherry Pectoral. Ollice up »luir» in Cumple 11’ » budd ing- PALLAS - OREGON. D i i.l.i». so bad for a cough ALWAYS 03CÄ.R H A r r ß R . .!• that knowledge into prad k a l use. As It Is every highway commissioner works ou his owu Individual Hues and theories. Out* lM‘lieupp In a high crown ou his roads, another a flat one and so on.” In discussing specific examples Mr. Fullerton mentioned the famous Mer rick road on Long Island, with which he is thoroughly familiar. hat U oue o f the oldest inaitMiam K g h .a y s In this section,” he t*?od. * the heaviest wear o f any uni In country without a q» b!on. to it forms the only means w -J£h the farm ers of the islaud have had for reaching the market. Over 1,500 market wag ons have been counted going over that road In one day, and many of them car ried as much as six tons of freight. The road has been repaired In various ways, but without proper system. Va rióos portions have been looked after by different roadmasters. Out* would cut dowu weeds along tbe sides, anoth er would go along in the spring and lili up holes, generally using the refuse that liad worked off at the sides, a ma terial worse than dust, for it had worn round and would roll under wagon tires and start boring boles at once. Sharp broken material must always be used, as it packs aud becomes adhe sive. For that very reasou wash gravel is little better than useless. Then some other repairer would try to till up ruts aud holes with loam which wash ed off at the first shower. “ But l remember one section of that road, about five miles long, which was kept in perfect repair because by prop er and scientific methods, aud it cost less than any other portion ou which work was done. Piles o f proper repair material were kept along the road at »fated intervals, aud every hole was filled as soou as discovered and the filling stamped down solid. These holes and gullies were not merely tilled in haphazard, but they were cut out with clean edges clear through the top The 35 cent tize is just right layer of macadam and then built in for an ordinary, everyday cold. aud stamped. This work was done at nil seasons of the year whenever The 50 cent sire is bitter for the the lióles appeared. cough of bronchitis, croup, grip, “ it costs at most $50 a year to main and hoarseness. Tne «foliar size tain n mile o f macadam road, provided it be done iu a proper manuer. That ¡3 the best for chronic coughs, figure is what Massac has« cs is paid, as in consumption, chronic bron but it was due In a rams id e t a land chitis. asthma, etc. slide which increased the « mw * and in additioc cover-d s< b e >r’ W i ^Hiding. Their ei.gineor Informed with scientifi * methods nm< .u tim highways could be maintained mi p e r f e c t order b ^| for from $15 to If you ate losing interest aud love In P 4 mile per an your work, chpnge your occupation. num.” Don’t seek the shade to cool off while your fowls are exposed to the burning A n I n s r e n lo n s S c r a tc h in g : S h e d H o u s e sun. Farm Poultry has an Illustration of j l Anybody can “ keep” chickens, but a scratching shed house made many not anybody can have the chickens years ago by that veteran poultry man, keep him.—A Few Hens. I. K. Felch o f Natick, Mass. The par tition between the roosting pen and F o r D u * t I ln th a . the scratching house Is closed at night The best way to make a dust bath at ns shown in the cut. In the morning, this t*-. tson is to spade up a space one when pushed open. It fits exactly Into or t * o yards square and a foot deep, the front of the scratching shed, thus sifting the dirt so that all gravel may making one very large house for the be «m oved . The sun will dry It aud the hens will use it for ridding them selves o f lice. Such a bath should be spaded after each rain, however, the l.Mbor of doiug so bring but a few min utes.— Poultry Keeper. There’s nothing A ttorney-at* JL iìtw . A . NO. 44. DALLAS, O k EGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1900. VOL. X X V I. Rome breeders o f pigeons are In a desperate hurry and commence putting their birds together earlier than is de sirable, with the result that the birds are not forward enough. They will mate, of course, but If not ripe the re sult will be in a majority of instances a full crop of Infertile eggs and conse quently considerable disappointment. But the evil does not end there. The hen lays her sccoud round of eggs and In ever so many instances, especially if the weather has been severe, results similar to the first. This, as a matter of course, has a tendency to weaken the constitution of the females. Early mating of high class stock in this country Is a decided mistake. The changeable weather we experience in spring, unless where lofts are heated artificially and the pigeon keeper Is in a position to regulate the temperature, is Iu nearly every In stance the cause of much disappoint ment and oftentimes serious loss. Another fertile cause of failure In many lofts is overcrowding, and the majority of Janders start the season with far too many birds for their ac commodation, ami when July and Au gust arrive nnd tin* young they have succeeded In raising are added to the stock of breeders any one can easily imagine the congested state of things nnd the difficulty of keeping the flock strong and healthy.—Feather. If yon enn In on « ndmlnfMriifioTt rm ltlp lr ro a r ntnndlnK nrnt? I»y l*»«»r nnd mnk« It 100,000 lnat«*n«f o f L.X.OOO. »rill It *ot he easier for the nest admlnlatrntlon to m nltlpl? It liy fonr and innke It 400,000 Instead of l*MMWM»f—U . J. Bryan. t nplenaantly Surprised. The British alliance McKinley Re publicans are almost as much sttrpris- e*d at the Democratic gains In the Green Mountain Htate as the British ?otiiumnder at Tlconderogn was when Kthnn Allen snd his Green Mountain boys demanded his surren«l«*r “ In the name of the great Jehovah aud the Coot 1 Dental cougre**” McKinley and Silver, The present ratio I* 10 to 1. and at that ratio Mr. McKinley I, coining «11- rer at the rite o f over $ 1 . 000,000 per month. Daring the four year* of hi» mlmlnlutrntlon he ha» coined about |.VMWQi000. but then W llll.iu alw ay, did belle»« In allrer If on« m i ; place iny trust In what b« said. THE NEW BOSE, SWEETHEART. | Coming Into bloom nt the same time with the rhododendron, the Rosa hud tokos on this color; hence tbe spra; ! lugosn puts in a claim for the prize of 'of bloom makes a perfect symphony o f beauty. It would be hard to decide, pink and white. The plant In habit Is | for a bush fl or 8 feet high Is an lin- fully as free as Its seed parent (the j press! ve sight. The rhododendron may Chinese species) nnd It Is perfectly plead Its evergreen leaves as adding hardy. Plenty of growths o f this sea ; to Its flowering claims—-on the other son measure from six to nine feet In band the bright red haws, which in length. The wood Is slightly stronger the fall the Ritgosn rose displays, may than that o f Wlchurnlnna and tho be a fair set off tft the plea of the foliage a trifle larger, but I» otherwise very much like It. A hank o f Sweet beautiful evergreen.—Mechun’s. heart In bloom covers a spare o f about 40 by 7 feet In an exposed position, where It lias stood for three years, making a perfect mass o f bloom, anil Is s gorgeous sight. Another excellent trailer, slightly d o e s n ’ t c o m e b y accid en t. A deeper In color, lins l>cen made by fertile soil and ca re fu l c u ltiv a crossing Haronees Rothschild and tion are necem m ry to p r o d u c e the to w e rin g sterna an d heavy Wlcburalana. The bud of this Is very ears. handsome. It Is named Debutante. Y e t the farm er w h o trader- Another promising cross has been stand* t mh t he c a n ’ t have a h ea lth y corn c r o n w ith ou t made with Crimson Raiqhlcr (as tbe fc ¿ d in g am i w eed in g , seem s seed parent) and Margaret Dixon. This to th in k that lie can have a makes a white flower fully as double as h e a lth y b o d y w ith ou t eith er and slightly larger than that o f the care o r cu ltu re. But the b o d y is b u ilt u p ju s t as the c o r n U, seed parent, with the back o f the petal b y the a*atinflation o f the resembling I.s France In color. The several ch e m ic a l e lem en ts on plant Is very vigorous. w h ic h vita lity d e p en d ». And w hat wr« d u are to the corn, Speaking of Mrs. R. O. ShnrtnaD disea se* o f the ntom ach i.nd Crawford, It Is tbe opinion of this n u tritive *y*tcm * arc to the rosarían that It Is now by far the beat b o d y ; th ey d iv e rt th e n e ce s pink rose for outdoor purposes that sary food s u p p ly fro m the proper c h a n n e '» , and the can be procured, surpassing Mme. Ga b o d y I n c o m e * lean , n ick ly briel Lnlzet to such a degree as to en and ill-n ou rish ed . tirely supersede It. T h e p rop er d ig e s t io n and naHimilatiou o f fo o d i« a p r i The Fay rose seems to be destined m ary essen tia l o f health . By to be a giant among the reds. It Is nn h ea lin g dise stotn wit 11 ach and organ * o f d ig e s tio n and excellent grower, produces abundantly, and the rolor stands the sun admira n u trition , Dr. P ie r c e ’ * G old en M 'd ic a l j)i* c o v e r y increa«e3 bly. In fact, while other dark roses the d ig e s tiv e and a*«iniilative were blackened, the Fsy stood out p o w e r », stim ulate* the action bright and red, showing no traces o f o f the b lo o d m a k in g glam a and »en d * to ev e ry organ o f ; V- Inconvenience from the Intense heat. b o d y the rich red -corp u a cled It haa one slight defect, a weak flower b lo o d on w h ich p h v iic a l vig or stem, which Is apt to make It a poor and vitality d ep en d . rose for cutting to ship to a distance. M took two bottle* o f Dm tor TALL CORN 4 Pierre « (.olden Medical Idwov- ery. for stoma. !i trouble,’* write* Cl* re ore Came*, E"<t o f Tnvlor»- tow Q, I/>ud v*u Co.. V*. " f t did m e *o much good that I d id* t take any more. I can eat mort anythin* now I am <*o well p lan ed with it I hardly know how to thank you for your kind Itifor- m atio*. i tri d ’ a who!* lot of thing* before I wrote to you. There win» n gentleman told me your medicine, how it had cured oi* wife I thought I mould try a tiottle o f it. Am how glad that I did, for I d o n ’t know wnat i would hnve done if It h«d not been for !>r Pierce * ('.olden Med ical Thao*very ” Dr. P ie r c e ’a Pleasant P ellet* regulate the b o w e l* am i cu re co n «tip * tio n . A P h e a n m e n a l P r a c h Crop, The condition o f peaches ou July 1 was such as to give promise o f a phe nomenally large crop. In several of the great peach growing states o f the south the condition was more than doable the ten year average, while In many o f the nerth Atlantic and cen tral states It exceeded the ten year average by from 25 to TS per cent. Of tbe 1$ principal peach states Califor nia, with a condition »poin ts below Its ten year average, formed tbe only ex ception to an otherwiae unbroken te clea o f extraordinary favorable reports. J