Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927, January 11, 1901, Image 1

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    DALLAS, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1901.
VOL. XXVII.
L. N. WOODS, M. D.
M 4 IFE
Physician and Surgeon.
Dallas, Oregon.
T T B EiMSiEE, M û
DALLAS,
- OREGON
Ollice over W ileoi.’» drug sture.
S IB L E Y
T h o K in d T e a lia v o Aiwa ,s 1 Sn~Jiit nud v. hi-. !i L ..j been
in uso fo r over 3 0 yen s, V.as borne* th© s'^ nain ro o f
_ /F
__
— and hu3 b e e n m a d e under L !j per»
,
Bona] t.rw rvislon since its Infancy.
'w i A e i ,
A llow no ."Mio to deceive yon in Cihu
A ll CounterfoitK, Im itations anti “
x l ” are but
E xperim ents th at tritie w ith anil endanger th e health o f
Infants and Children—E xperience against Experim ent.
<& h ' A K I N ,
A t lo n ie ,v s -;il-ljU W ,
Wo have lit , only not of o b stru a h o o k , in Folk
utility. Iteliatilu a t t r a c t s furuiblMul, ami m oney to
inn. Nu c i u n i sai *n charged on loan*. Kooma Î
'Iti 3 W ilson's bi.tok. Dallas
J. L. COLLINS.
What
Utocney and Counselor at Law,
Mwltel&or l a i 'l ia u r e r y .
H.
T ow nsend
J
tow nsen d
N . H * in
J c H A R T,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW .
Ollice t putairs ill Olid
block.
D A L L A H ,
-
¡3
CASTOR!A
Castorla in a harmless substitute fo r Castor Oil, P are­
g o ric, D roiis and Soothing Syrups. I t is Pleasant, i t
contains neither Opium , Blorphhie n or oilier N arcotic
substance. Its age is its g o rantee. It destroys W orm s
an d allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and W ind
Colic. I t relieves T eeth in g Troubles, cures Constipation
an d Flatulency. I t assimilates tile F ood , regulates the
Stom ach and B ow els, giving healthy and natural sleep.
T h e Children’ s Panacea—T lio li o t h c r ’s F riend.
lias b i n in practice of hid profession in ¿tiis place
•i about thirty years, and will attend to all busirt'B:-
ntruate.l to his are. Olfice, corner Main and Cour»
►s 0*llaj, 1 o.a Oo, Or
J.
Fellows' nee
G EN UIN E
O R K Q O N
CASYGRIA
ALW AYS
0 3 C A .il H A Y r ü a .
A .tto rn e y -a .t-i_ ja w .
OlHce up stairs in Campii 11’ a liu lii
ing.
DALLAS
-
The Kind You f e e Always Bought
OREGON.
N. L. UUl’ l.EU.
In Use For Over 3 0 Years.
Attorney-at-Law
TMC CENTAUR COM •»*»¥. TT M I'M U T • T R f t T . R r w * " R r »••TV.
D A L L A S , OREGON.
W ill practice in all coitala.
A .
-I.
J. PERRY CALDWELL
M A R T IN ,
3 J A I N T K R ,
— DEALER IN—
VEHICLES UNO AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS.
llon ae, aigu ami ornam ental, grain-
Ing, kalaoming and pai>er lu n gin g.
O
:D .A -I _ .r _ i.A .S ,
k kook
O P L E G rO IsT ^
MOTOR TIME TABLE.
L etvei Independence
for Monm outh and Virlie —
7 30 a in
3:30
in
l ^ v e i Indc,'fcudnce for
Alonnioutli and Dallas
11:10 a in
7l5pm
Don v s M onm outh f >r A ir is
7: A\ a n
S f.0 pm
Lea-. - Mon i noil til f >r IHI'-.r—
11: JO a in
7:3) p m
Leaves \ir:ie fo. M An oOUt i and ludei*e ide ic -—
y.oo .. in
& I' in
LKtvei Daliws for M »ii:ii <a <1 a.* I.Mi e»i I *:i *a—
l.oo pin
8
m .
R. C. CRAY -N
ic. K. » v i m i t
president.
uVLLAS
OF
< nahler.
LIT If
DALLA8,
BANK
OREGON,
T*in hhjip Ii* ft general Icinkiug misi
tj«*H8 in all itH Imuii'lie« ; buys ami selli»
eAClntiige on principal point« in ilie )
Un iloti State«; ninkcr eolleeiion« on all
(Hjiuts in the Pacific N o rtliw o t; loan«
money ami discount« paper at the be«t
rate«; allow inteie*t on time depoidta.
* v isit D R . J O R D A N ’ S o n ta T l1
'M USEUM OF AN&T 0 Ü Y '
Thurston Lumber Company
iwiiium>T.,ukmTcr.M.cit. I
T h « l^ r c * ’ « A n atom ica l M a u u ia tot th e ,
W o r ld ,
vt «..kn«.>«» n a n y c » tra c ta d <
d i i r t u p a a i l l r a t y r a r a d i y th e o ld e st
S p acialik t on ih « l o a «
Eat. 36 y at
II»
TMURSTOM B R O S., P R O P R E T 0 7 S . DALLAS, ORECON.
— DEALERS IN ALL KINDS »»F----
, OR. M R 0 M - 0 ;S » ja t f MEM •
• T P I H I . l t thoroughly j r n * r » t e < i
from -.yvlew .without «he u»« ol ■•»rwMtry
T r v w n lined by an Kapcft. ■ • J l*
M l r a r a tuf M a g ia r e , a qvtck and
radical cura for « l i r a . fM a a r a and
n a t a l » . I.y Dr. jotdaa'a apacihl paia-
|
’
. |
‘
.
j 1
j
S l u m b e r
ira a an d r tr lr tfy prW ata. T r a a tw a n t p e r
latta ?
A /W iM aa A a r i u r t r r y c u r
t i n t « f«*» B o k P M I I . a v a m r m
i ,
U L u .il F u n . (A valual ' booh < ’
C a ll o r »ri«»
kan.
at IA U K .
X *rt a t r a . )
9
or
km dan
a CO.. iMMSsHMSSt . ^ F . ^
Both rough and dressed material on hand and orders of
any size promptly tilled.
F. H. MUSCOTT,
U P P E R S A L T C H EEK SAW M ILL
TRU CK M AN .
D a lla s : O r e g o n
a fair »hare of patronage aolicited
■Dll alt o-dera
prom ptly filled.
Dallas Foundry!
j
M A R T IN BROS., PRO PR IETO RS.
A ll kinds of rough and dressed lumber on hands or cut
order.
2 0 0 ,0 0 0 F*?et in $toclj.
Slab wood for cook stoves or harvest engines at 50 cents
a load.
— ALL * H EM OF—
piece at the recent bnn ago i.ai>or day
celebration. One o f our most prom I-
nent politicians In his speech there al­
Repairing Promptly Done. lowed himself to play tbe reformer by
littering the following high sounding
generalization:
“ Let os strive to make the conditions
o f life sneb tbat aa nearly as possible
each mao shall receive tbe share he is
honestly entitled to and no more.” Yet
IT 18 THE WORLD'S WORST AFFLIC­ that man stands squarely by tbe very
Induatrial system, tooth and nail,
TION AT PRESENT.
which gives to about 10.000 famllien In
this nation, bis own Included, not less
n . 0 . 1 , W a r —? I m w I b s t . R u b
■ aa
H I.
U aaeat
Sh are
aff She than 300 times to each aa much aa we
B a r t h '.
W e a lth — W . r k l i s a n
allow tbe average working family to
get. The same system gives to about
300 famines out o f 10.000 tbe power to
[S p reta i C o rre
obtain from 2,000 to o -e r 10,000 times
Bom et hing rather significant
IRON WORK TO ORDER
ED. BIDDLE,
-
disasters. nim II we nave attained (lie
greatest Intensity >u tliut evil that so­
ciety and history can record then w .
are really In a liad flx.
The politician we have mentioned
was or the lookout for Tides from U m
workers when be used (Fit generaliza­
The father?
tion In bla specie to they about tbe
Gone for the
need o f honesty In wealth distribution
as tbe supreme ao< lal o b ' < w
The
Alone
one o f us as tbe basic ■
s e a ,'a s the fund unenter coDcept o f
suffer­
every social unit, of every man who
in g ch ild .
wants to be more than a Human mon­
Will the doc­
key shot up In the narrow, mean < age
tor never
of selfish personal desires, as most men
co m e ?
are, unfortunately. If It had not al­
When there
ways been so with the wise more than
is croup in
with tbe Ignorant us a whole, we would
the house
have long ago solved the problems that
y o u c a n ’t
today more thnn ever Imperiously de­
mand from us a rapid and substantial
get the doc­
solution.
tor quick enough. It’s
But why should the workers o f today
too dangerous to wait.
care for auy plutocratic politician or
D on’t make such a mis-
his funtastlc generalizations? Did that
< take again; it may cost *
politician of ours even hint at any
a life. Always keep on 1
process by which to carry out his gen­
hand a dollar bottle of
eralization? Of course not And he
knows the preoess too. They nil know
It And they all work against It with
all tlielr might. What u pity that In
tbat large assemblage o f workers some
voices did uot rise asking tbut politi­
cian, “ And what do you propose for
the realization of your grand political
ideal?" Even the devil can quote the
Bible. Even tbe worst and most per­
verse politician can proclaim tbe need
o f fair play and honesty and freedom
It cures the croup at
and all that In the adjustments o f the
once. Then when any
social organism. Talk is very cheap
one in the family comes
when limited to vague allusions on hu­
down with'a hard cold
man duty. When dealing with each
other on Important subjects, we all
or cough a few doses of
need to be pinned down to specific de­
the Pectoral wi l l cut
tails and conditions, wltli no vagaries
short the attack at once.
about them, with no double meaning
A 25 cent bottle will cure
words, but must go to the bottom facts
a miserable cold; the 50c.
of bumnn conduct, down Into the clear­
size is better for a cold
est precepts o f honesty and moral law,
that has been hanging on.
leaving no escape hito selfishness, per­
Act, a « dollar ilia oa hud.
sonal or colleotlv-., Individual or social,
“ A b ou t 25 year« ago I cam e near
private or public. All else is a mere
dyin g w ith consum ption, but was
cured w ith A y er’s C herry Pectoral,
play o f words ivltb which to cheat men
since w hich tim e I have kept A y er’s
Into Iniquity by wild rhapsodies on
m edicines in the house and recom ­
m end them to all my friends.”
righteousness, with no specific process
C. D. M a th k w s o n ,
for the suppression o f Iniquity, for the
Jan. 16,1899.
Bristol, Vt.
establishment o f righteousness and
Write the Doctor. If you hare any
complaint whatever ana desire tho
truth.
host modionl advice, write the doctor
froe'y. Address
If one worker may give advice to the
DfJtoiTo. AYKU, Lowell, Mass.
other workers o f this nation ami nil na­
tions. It would be: “ Please don't listen
<r-
to any professional politicians, ’ liey
will humbug yon In toe future n* they
have done In tbe past. Give them tbe
H O L D IN G BACK M ILK .
cold shoulder. Don't patronize tbelr
papers. Abandon tliein to their mas­ C o w a A r e N e r r o n a a n d M a s t B e C a r e -
ters. the aristocracies and plutocracies
f o l l y H a n d le d .
o f nations. Choose your own politico I
According to Professor Stewart, the
lenders and Instructors from nnong following is tlie explanation why cows
men with clean records, men who don't
sometimes hold up or keep back their
long for offices with high salaries, men
who don't get fat and keep fat tlrougb milk. The production o f milk Is due
the barbarisms o f our Industrial Infer­ to a nervous action o f which the glan­
no. men who give yon specific remedies dular substance o f tbe udder is broken
for our social disease, men who know down Into milk whenever the cow is
how to reverse effects by relenting Influenced by sufficient excitement of
muses, and never men who ding to tbe u,e right kind. It depends upon the
past and present causes with which ktructure and function o f tbe udder
past and present iniquities have grown just a« much us the sections o f other
ind flourished.”
glands do, which we know are wholly
Yes. honesty in wealth distribution Is
(he grund object to strive for, blit it subject to a set of nerves controlling
should be done through basic, simple, this distinct function. The udder Is
scientific principles, with no bumbug not a mere vessel for holding milk
, that Is supposed to be secreted continu­
iliout them.
J osf . (J nos.
ally and gathers In the udder, as one
S im p le i ' u o i r l t l n r .
may suppose a constant dripping of
The work being done at the Wiseon
any fluid would fill any other recep­
lin Exj>eriment Htatiou In pasteurizing tacle. On the contrary. It is a gland,
nllk and cream for public n*e and made up o f cellular substance, which
lending the name to patrons ns far grows by separation (from the blood)
iway as Chicago suggests a nevr nud jo f the matter required. When it has
irofltnble occupation for women as it attained maturity, or when the neces­
s by no means a difficult pioects, says sary nervous action occurs, It breaks
Mary Wager-Fisher In The American down Into a special product—milk.
Agriculturist. It can be done by Inde­ | Several experiments have been made
pendent householders, providing the with the udders o f cows In milking
emperature la maintained at the right condition that have been slaughtered,
point and ice can be had for rapid and an examination is recorded o f the
■oollng. The process consists of heat- udder o f a cow accidentally killed on
ng tlie milk In closed flanks or fruit the railroad when going home to be
ars to a temperature o f 160 degrees F„ milked, when she would have given
Holding It there fot 20 mlustes. end the usual ten quarts. The microscope
luickly cooling. The milk should be showed the minute lobules o f the tissue
css than 12 hoars old: the fresher tbe swollen and distended, but the udder
letter presumably. Every hbusekeep- contained practically no milk, except
tr knows bow to cook the contents In a very small quantity that drained
dosed glass Jars— bj standing them on from the divided tissue when cut
l board In the fcot! ni o f s vessel part­ arpiss. Let us consider wbat happens
ly filled With water and closely eorer- when we sit down to milk a cow. The
j ng the sa ne. This method Is claimed milker gently rubs the udder and
to kill at I sat DU per cent of the bac­
ntly handles the teats, and this ex­
teria. Being done In close! vessels, cites the maternal Instinct. There Is
•here Is no marked escape o f gases.
what Is called an erectile action o f the
Milk that la separated, and tbe cream muscles o f the milk organs. The pre­
it well, la purer than when set to rise viously toft and loose condition o f the
die cream in the old time way. because teats change to rigidity, and In a very
the centrifugal force of the separator short time tbe milk flows and con­
Irlves Impurities. Including microbes, tinues until the glandular tissue Is ex­
to the walls o f the separator, where hausted, when the udder, previously
they adhere. As the sterilisation o f bard and tense, becomes soft and loose.
milk is found to be so unsatisfactory
We perceive that this function o f the
tor contint’ rd use. fids method o f pas­ cow Is wholly nervous In Its action, as
teurization is very iinoortant.
Indeed every other function o f the ani­
mal Is, and If the due nervous excite­
!
ment Is absent there Is no functional
action. It Is wholly due to tbe right In­
fluence on the nerves that the milk
Is produced and flows from every
ultimate lohnle o f the udder down
Why You Should Insist on Hmrinj
through all the darts, small and great,
to the teat. Then, If all goes well, and
tbe cow Is In her natural, easily e x­
Unéqiialca nr any other.
cited nervous condition, as soon as the
cniters hard leather «oft.
milker begins to touch the teats the
specially prepared.
cow lets down the milk—that la, she
IC< ” ps out water.
does not exert herself to oppose the
À heavy bodied oil.
action o f the nerves o f the mammary
glands. But let the milker be rough or
arness
A n excellent preservative.
111 use the cow. or let the cow from any
Reduces cost of you- ’ mruem.
cause be stupid and willful, and this
tfever bums the leathet ; it*
necessary motherly Influence on tbe
Efficiency is increased.
nerves tie prevented In any way, and
Secures f»est service.
there Is no milk. Tbe udder may re­
Stitches kept from breukinf.
main as tense and full apparently aa
usual, but not a drop o f milk can be
il
|s sold in *11
drawn until the current o f tbe cow 's
Localities
v.n.ffc-nM W
mind Is turned successfully to mater­
ntmmdmrd CHI Vmmpmmr.
nal desire.
PROF.
SO C IA L D ISH O N ESTY.
j
as moch as honest "anor receives m a
general average for the whole nation.
And we know positively by tbe beat
historical data at band that at no pre­
vious historical period coaid the per­
versity o f men attain such an Intense
degree o f dishonesty In wealth distri­
bution. And can anybody point to us
any evil dee|>er and more fatal than
that dishonesty?
There Is not a tingle charge against
which moat men protest In each dire
Indignation as at tbat o f personal dis­
honesty. They all seem to feel tbat to
be tbe worst evil for men to be guilty
of, the one that will make any Individ­
ual most repulsive to tbe community
at large. Social dishonesty most then
represent tlie darkest social evil, tbe
one which shall evolve greater social
fM n r r a
P e c to ra l
Some Reasons
EUREKA HARNESS O I L
g
H
O
N C 4.
IM secretary or tue treasury t«3 pay tn goto or
diver, at the option of the creditor, all kinds of
Indebtedness of the United States now payable in
cola may be sufficient.
And If there should be another flaw in the pres­
ent law dangerous to the gold standard in any
other way, you, Mr. Secretary, able financier as
you are, will surely detect It and find a legisla­
tive remedy and have it ready In the shape of a
well matured bill to be submitted to congress at
the opening of tbe eethion. In short, the Repub­
licans, controlling both the legislative «ad Uw
n n s llr t branches
the government. Will next
winter Tiave ample power and opportunity to do
what they ought to have done at the last aeeaion—
to put the currency law In such s shape that the
gold atandard cannot poaaibly be shaken by ex­
ecutive action, no matter who may occupy the
presidential chair—and thus remove, to that ex­
tent at least, the basis of our monetary system
from the changeable game of party politics.
Do you see any reason for doubting that con­
gress at its next session will do this? It ia quite
evident that, ’ f there is any substance at all in
your predictions of disaster, tbe Republicans in
congress cannot refuse to do it without proving
that the professed solicitude of the Republican
party for the maintenance of the gold atandard
b arrant hypocrisy. But if there be any warering
I am convinced public opinion will, in case of
necessity, compel them to lake tho necessary
»tepa.
You will thus have to admit, Mr. Secretary,
that when you sounded your note of alarm you
had overlooked the most important fact, that you
and your party friends—that is, the Republican
majority in congress, led by the administration of
which you form so influential a part—will be able
easily and promptly to remedy the defect! of the
law which you have described aa a source of ter-
lible danger, and therefore your note of alarm
••as, to say the least, a mistaken oue. It may
uiggrst itself to you as a matter worthy of grave
lonsideration whether you should not retract what
you have said in fairness to the business com­
munity, which should not be unnecessarily dis­
quieted, especially not by those in authority. I
am sure many of your fellow citizens are anxious
lo know what you kgve to say on this aspect of
;he situation. Very respectfully yours,
0. 8c HU ax.
Bolton Landing, Lake George, N. Y., Sept L
CARL SCHURZ TO GAGE.
Secretary Charged W ith Spread­
ing False Alarms.
U S HOOTS I0SBLT PMJTIOAS.
f i l e r C lo a k o f P r o t e e t l a g C r e d i t o r s
He
M I i h i m
H I s
H lfh
Office— M r.
S c h a r s P o in t s O a t T h a t t h e R c p a b -
llc a a
P a rty
Can
R em edy
D e fe c ts
In P r e s e n t M o n e t a r y L a w s .
| Carl Schurs has issued an open let-
I ter to Lyman J. Gage, secretary o f the
I treasury, in which he takes the latter
to question In regard to his reported
interview o f Aug. 2«. In this inter­
view, Mr. Gage sought to alarm busi­
ness Interests by suggesting that Wil­
liam J. Bryan, if elected, could direct
his secretary o f the treasury to pay off
In silver all government obligations
payable In “ coin." Mr. Schurz prac­
tically charges Mr. Secretary Gage
with having glren out Ills interview for
a political purpose under cloak o f pro­
tecting creditors o f the government.
Mr. Schurs’s letter Is as follows:
Dear Sir—The newspapers of Aug. 26 published
an interview with you in which you were quoted
aa saying that “ there la no doubt Mr. Bryan, if
elected president, could order W'» secretary of the
treasury to make payment in silver of all tho
public debt payable in coin and for all current dis­
bursements of the government aa well, which
amount to from $1,600,'XX) to $1,750,000 per day,
and that he would glva such an order, too, is very
certain. If he Is in the same mind that he was in
1896.” You went dh to say that, although Mr.
Bryan “ would have great difficulty In doing that
at once,” owing to the amall ailver resources of
the government, yet he might accomplish it in
time, as the mere announcement of such a pur­
pose “ would step the inflow of gold and corre­
spondingly increase payments Into the treasury
of silver and ailver certificates;” that this would
practically put the government on a ailver basis,
ruin its credit and bring incalculable disaster up­
on the business interests of the country.
Having for a great many years taken a deep and
somewhat active interest in the establishment of a
sound monetary system in the United States, 1
may without impropriety address to you a few
remark* in reply to your public statement. 1 cm-
phatically deny, Mr. Secretary, that the danger
set forth by you in your interview really exists
and that any president will be able to do what
you aay might be done unless the Republican
party in control of the government in both its
legislative and executive branches proves Itself
utterly dishonest in its professed purpose to main­
tain the gold standard.
This denial is not based upon tbs reasoning of
those of your critics who seek to Bhow by figures
that a president desiring ever so much to put the
country upon a silver basis would lack the means
for doing so. On the contrary, for argument’ s
suke, I will accept all you say on that point, but
you omit to mention a fact of decisive impor*
. tance.
If the executive, as you say, professes the dis­
cretion of "paying silver in settlement of ail In­
terest on tlie public debt not specifically payable
in gold and of making its daily disbursements to
(is creditors in silver," it is owing to a flaw in
the currency law patwed at the lant session of con­
gress. a law which, as tlie spokesman of the Re­
publican party promised, was to put the gold
standard upon an impregnable basis. It was sug­
gested at the lime by some of its critics that this
law was purposely so manipulated by Republican
politicians in the senate as to lesve the |>ossibil-
Ity of the subversion of tin- gold standard by ex­
ecutive action open In order to enable the Re­
publicans In the prrm-nt (»residential campaign to
say that the election of a Republican president
was absolutely necessary to save the gold standard
and to prevent dreadlul economic disaster.
Whet liar any such scheme entered into that leg­
islation I do not assume to determine. Certain it
Is, howeter, that this feature of the low is now
so used, and that you. Mr. Secretary, actually tio
oo use it for the evident purpose oi alarming the
business community and the possessing clasaea
generally.
1 hardly need to say to you that the spreading
of false alarms of this Lind is a very questionable
and responsible thing for anybody, and especially
for a secretary of the treasury. And 1 call your
prediction o ' the possibilities specified by you
and of the diausi-rs sure to follow a false alarm
for s very simple reason. Whoever may be elect­
ed president )n Nov. »(. there will be another ses­
sion of congress before he will take office on
March 4, 1901. Tlie Republicans will have strong
majorities in both houses of that congress. The
executive, too, will be in their hands. They will,
therefore, be able to make such laws as they
please. They will then have full power and am­
ide opportunity to pass any legislation required
to make it utterly Impossible to any president to
break down the gold standard in the way you,
Mr. Secretary, describe in your Interview.
A simple enactment in two or three lines sub-
staaU*lIv -providIn.v that it shall be the dulr of
Consumption
| Is a disease o f civilization. When the
l Indian was a stranger to the white man
I he had no name in his vocabulary for
I this dreaded malady.
Without arguing as to the curability
| of consumption, it may be stated posi­
tively t h a t Doctor
j Pierce’s Golden Med-
; ical Discovery cures
: weak lungs, hetnor-
! rhages, bronchitis,
| d e e p - s e a t e d and
stublxjrn cough, and
| other diseases which
j if neglected or un-
] skillfully treated find
a fatal termination
in c o n s u m p t i o n ,
i There is no alcohol
in the " Discovery,"
and it is entirely free
1 from opium, cocaine,
and all other nar-
1 cotics.
I
Persons suffering
f r o m chronic d i s-
| case are invited to
consult Dr. Pi tree,
; by letter, free. All
[co rre s p o n d e n ce is
^ c o n d u c t e d under
the seal of sacred
t crecy. A d d r e s s
Dr. K V. Pierce. Buffalo, N. Y.
In a little over thirty years. Dr. Pierce,
riasisted by his medical staff of nearly a
score of physicians, ha* treated and
cored thousand* of men and women who
had been given up as incurable by local
physicians.
* Your miHlicine U the h^«t I hrxve ever
taken • write» Mr». Jennie Dtngmnn, o f Rapid
City KstkM ka Co.. Mk-h «L a st «r*rtn : I hsd
a had rough . got «o b:»d I hud to he in bed nil
the time
My hu«l»*nd thought I had con-
Mimptinn He wanted me to get a dtictor. but
thought we wouM try Dr Fierce » Golden Med
ica! Discovery and be fore I bed taken one buttle
the rough «topped and I have «inee had no sign
o f it* returning ’
Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pellet* cut*
, c o n s t ip a t io n .
T h e R e p u b l ic a n s s a y w e w a n t a
SO c e n t d o l l a r i t b e y h a v e fglveu n*
• u 8 5 p e r c e n t e lt is e n l u P o r t o R ic o .
- W . J. B ryan .
T e d d y ** U n r u ly
M em ber.
Teddy's tliroat la naturally a matter
At soi lous eoucoru lo iliu Republicans,
For Teddy's tongue Is a tiling which
I not even Dr. Hanna himself can con­
1 trol when It once gets to wagging. Ted­
j dy Is a fine man for a spectacle in a
■
rough riding campaign, but when It
|
| ronies to talking In public he Is ns dan­
1 gerous as dynamite.—Richmond Time«.
|
I
W a t e r F o r Milk C o w a .
Tho Geneva experiment station claims
to have ascertained that cow s In full
milk need four and three-fifth pounds
of water for each pound o f milk they
j ield. As records have been made by
ftolxteln cows, or one at least, o f over
100 pounds per day, does this mean
! that she took about 00 gallons o f water
a day? We can scarcely credit It. al­
though we know that green grass or
ensilage contains a large amount o f
water, hut we tblDk not enough to
bring her dally allowance up to CO gal­
lons a day. even though she was fed
on the most succulent food. If our
memory serves us rightly, when we
bnd a dairy herd the cows which gave
the most milk were not the ones that
drank most heartily at the trough.
When the water was very cold, or
when there was Ice tn tlie trough, the
ones that drank the most freely were
the ones that shrank In their milk and
Hie dry cows, hut those which gave
milk continuously were not hearty
drinkers in fall or winter. Will they
not see If they cannot revise those
figures a little, or acknowledge excep­
tions to the rule?
T k . “ t f li.ln a
I ,ln k .*'
An Important scientific expedition to
Java uml the Celebes will very shortly
be undertaken by Professor Ilaeckel of
Jena university, the eminent Siennan
biologist. Very grent zoological Inter­
est attaches to the venture, as the chief
object which Professor Haeckel has in
view is the discovery o f further re­
mains o f the Pithecanthropus erectus,
or “ missing link.” It may lie remem­
bered that about six years ago Dr. Du­
bois, a surgeon In the Dutch army,
startled the zoological world by finding
a skull and other hones which be as­
serted were those of a creature higher
than the anthropoid apes, hut o f small­
er brain power than tbe lowest type o f
man. This view found a great many
supporters, prominent utnong theln be­
ing Professor Haeckel, who lias uever
ceased to advocate the Importance o f
making further excavations In the dis­
trict o f Java where Dr. Duliols found
the remains. He has now arranged to
go out himself In the hope o f bringing
to light some more evidence o f the past
existence o f the so called "missing
link.*’
H e w t o M a k . F r e a e k B lo e a lt.
One cup o f butter, one sup o f sugar,
the stiffly beaten white o f one egg, one-
fourth o f thick eour milk, half a tea­
spoonful o f soda dissolved In a very
little hot water, flour to roll. Sprinkle
with sugar. Cut In large circlet and
hake about 20 minutes.
H o w t o B a r S h o e «.
Before having a pair o f shoes fitted
always take a walk. Exercise brings
the blood to tbe feet ta d the muxclee
are expanded. Conaequently when a
shoe la tried oo after a walk and feels
comfortable It will tie easy at all times.
When a shoe Is at first tried on have
It completely buttoned or laced. In fact,
have both »hoes so treated—It will
often be found that one foot la larger
than the other—and then walk np and
down the length of the store before
concluding to bny the shoes.
R n a la r i, T o m orrow .
When tbe Spartans seized upon
Thelies, they placed Archlas over tbe
garrison. IYlopIdaa, with 11 otoera,
handed together to put Archlas to the
•word. X letter containing full details
i t the plot was given to the Spartnn
polemarch at the banquet table, hot
Archlas throat the letter under his
cushion, saying. “ Business tomorrow.”
Bnt long ere that snn arose ke wan
numbered with tbe dead.
I