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About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (April 26, 1901)
DALLAS, OREGON, APRIL 26, 1901. VOL. XXVII. L. N. WOODS, M. D. N O J 9. RAISING T U R K E Y S . ALCOHOL’S RAVAGES. ll a n t r e la t h e I m p o r t a n t C o n s i d e r a tio n I f Y o n W a n t G o o d B ir d «. Physician and Surgeon, IT8 EFFECTS UPON STOMACH, LIVER AND KIDNEYS. Dalian, Oregon. f. V- B- EM3REE, M D 8 4 1 D A LLA S, - For Infants and Children. O R EG O N OiHoe over Wilsot.'s drug «tore. j K. S i b l e y , H Sk S IB L E Y The Kind You Hava Always Bought L\ E a k i n . E A K IN , A t l o n i e . y s - j i l -1 j U\ v . We have the only set of abatr.i't books In Polk ountv. Kolinblvj ahstracte furuislied, and money to ■jan. No commissi >n charged on loans. Rooms '/ 'id i Wilaoii’a block, Dallas ANl’geteWePrcpar.v.iunn.'r As similating BicFoodnndli-’gula- imtf the Stomachs aiti Dowels of n ■‘» i m s Ñ i '& T -1 J. L. COLLINS, attorney and Counselor at Law, S o l i c i t o r i u C lm u c r r j. Han been ir. practice of his profession in ttiie place or about thirty years, and will attend to all businee» ntrustod to hia ' arc. OtHce, corner Main ami Court ts Dallas, Polk Co, Or J. H. T ownsend J N. H art T O W N S E N D <fc HAUT, O H ÏO O N . OSCAR HAYTER. N. h. N a r c o t ic . t o f OU J lr.W ii Z£ nrc/icff aw- Mx Senna * fí>*h »tu Satie - abuse Sen! * Aperteci Remedy l'or Constipo Ron. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness ami L o s s o f S l e e p . I « G L y itfZ z i Z Â T OiHee up .Lair« in Campili 11’ « build ing. - o t Fac Sonile Signature of ^ A . t t o r n e v 'O 't 'L a 'w . DALLAS 1 N e of A m Promotes Digeslkm.Cheerful- ncss and Rest .Contains neither Opium .Morphine nor Mineral. JM thê Semel - ATTO R N E Y S-AT-LAW . Office tpstairs in Otiti Fellow»’ new block. - Bears the Signature / NEW YORK. In Use For Over Thirty Years OREGON. HUT LEK. Atto rney-at-Law TH E CE NTAU R CO M PA N Y. NEW Y O R K CIT Y. D A L LA S, OREGON. W ill practice in all couala. A . .J . J. PE R R Y M A ltT lN , P A L N T I l II, Hoiue, sign and ornament il, grain ing, Iftlaoming and paper hanging. D a u . as . - - CALDWELL -DEA LER IN — VEHICLES AND AGRICULTURAL IRSPLEM INTS. o ì f u e o - o z s t . O keook MOTOR TIME TABLE. Leaves Independence for Monmouth and Airlie— 7:30 am 3:80 pm Leaves Independnee for Monmouth and Dallas 11:10 a in 7:15 pm Leaves Monmouth for Airiie - 7:60 a in 3;50 |) in Leaves Monmouth for Dallas— 11:20 a m 7:30 pm Leaves Airlie for Monmouth and Independence— U:00 a m •• p m Leaves Dallas for Monmout h an * Inoe endon:e — 1<00 p in 8.30 p m. R. C. C R A V EN w. ». l'ie s M l.iit . K. W IL L IA M S , t'H sh ler. C . V A S S A L L , a s s is ta n t C a s h ie r uALLAS OP CITY DALLAS, HANK OREGON, Transacts ft general hanking Diisi- uc88 in all its branches; buys ami sells exchange on principal points in I lie United States; makes collections on all points in the Pacific Northwest; loans money and discounts paper at the best rates ; allow interest on time deposits. ' visit DR. J O R D A N ’S oriat I 1 MUSEUM OF ANATOMY1' U P P E R H i! I iU E T a T .,* im iIC IS C I,C A L 1 T h e Large«» Anatomteal Mu«eu»e In the ( | W orld. W e ek n e *'*» * r Airy contracted ’ , diMAte f « « U I * T l f i - n r e J r»jr the o ldtit i Specialist on the C o tit R«t- 36 year«. { OR. JORDAN— 0 ISEA 8 CS OF NUN I S Y P H I L I S thoroughly fradireted ] from »y»tem wiihinit the «RC T r a i M i fined by U F ip rrt. IK« 4 1 * M l « a s « for A « ] » $ • * • » . A quick end f radical cure for P i l e « , F l i e n r a and r i i t a l a r . by Dr Jordan'» special pain lee« methaSa. , Ceeeultatlon free and » «r M ly private Treatment pee- ' m u H . at by letter. A / W fle e C u r» in every case i Mdaraakcn. W rite far Reok r S I L O « « r i T e* V M 4 R I I I A 6 E . if a i l e d P A S S . ( A vatuaW i book be men ) Call or write 1 S A LT C R EEK SAW M IL L M A R T I N BROS., P R O P R IE T O R S . A ll kinds of rough and dressed lum ber on hands or cut to order. 2 0 0 ,0 0 0 Fge-t in 5toclj. Slab wood for cook stoves or harvest engines at 50 cents a load. Dlt JORDAN « CO . I0S1 Marital « . . » F. I m p a i r s D I * « « t l o n a n d la t h e Moat P o t e n t C u tis e o f C t r r h o a la o f t h e L i v e r , n n I n c u r a b l e M a la d y —«Iu - d n c e a B r l f f h t ’e D lae n ae. E ver have them? Then we can’t tell you any thing about them. You know how dark Turkeys raised on a large range are best to use as breeders, as they develop on nature’s plan—bone, muscle and frame—and that Is what we want in stead of heavy weights and small frames. Some people think weight Is the criterion of excellence in turkeys. I wish I could take them out with me lu my morning rambles and show them the points of excellence my birds are developing by roving around and pick ing up the food that nature contributes bo lavishly for their benefit. The large, long legs and well proportioned bodies, with the morning sun glancing from their briilluut plumage, make a sight worth seeing. Exercise and the right kind of diet go a long way toward mak ing a perfect turkey. The bronze turkey does not develop until 4 years old, and it stands to rea son that a bird which develops slowly and healthily will make a better breed er and produce healthier and larger stock than those which are pushed to maturity and which attain great weights simply by overfeeding and lack of exercise. First secure good health and a large frame, then let na ture put on weight at maturity. I f this course were followed, we would not hear so much about diseases and non- success in raising turkeys. They were created for a special purpose and in tended to be healthy, and when we un dertake to run against nature there is war at once, and we have to pay the penalty. Letters asking advice are coming in as winter approaches. One correspond ent living In Denver hatched a bird that had crooked toes on both feet, but It got along all right. I think perhaps the crooked toe« were caused by in breeding. although a cripple may be hatched, more especially among chick ens. without any apparent cause. The turkeys of tills correspondent grew well until about one week ago, when they commenced to be troubled with weak legs. The cause was supposed to be rheumatism. The turkeys squat around all day and eat ns well as ever, but will not walk, and even when placed upon their feet They drop right down again as soon as support is re moved. The climate is dry In Denver, and these turkeys are cooped upon a city lot. They are fed table scraps, corn meal, oats and wheat. Your turkeys, my friend, are losing the use of their legs from want of ex ercise and probably overfeeding. If you can find some farmer who will take them on his farm and let them have range, with only a little food, sim ply what they can pick up. they may get over It, but 1 would not care to breed from them, as their vitality has been impaired. Turkeys cannot be prof itably raised except on n good range. I feed my turkeys only until they are fl weeks or 2 months old, then they are turned out to find their oWn'Tlving until the ground freezes.- Mrs. Charles Jones In Poultry Keeper. TRUCKMAN. D allas: O regon A fair share of patronage eolicited »■d all o-dere promptly tilled. las Foundry! SA M PLES F R E E ^t O ur Immense Stock of W a ll paper is all in. It is by far the finest line we have ever offered to the public. t-'etid for samples of paper from 5 cents to (50 cents a double roll. W e pay the freight on $10 orders. — ALL KINDS OF— IRON WORK TO ORDER- Repairing Prom ptly Done. ED. BIDDLE, - PROP. A Washington man complained bit terly to the District commissioners of the past In j of advert Islng In Dels on loaves of bread and warned them to Stop the practice. Put the commission era assured »dm that the official chetn- tst’s opinion was that the use of these labels on bread is in no way detrimen tal fo health. Other Recent Arrivals CENTER TABLES PARLOR F URN ITI EXTENSION TABU OAK BEDROOM SE SIDEBOARDS LACE CURTAINS PORTIERES, CARP ETS BABY CARRIAGES LINOLEUM BUREN & HAMILTON - Low Price Furniture House ‘ T H E V-ASY R U N N IN G NO ISE LE SS W H E E L Roail.tera, ¡$35 ami $40. Light roadeiera anil nicer« $30. Chain- leas ¡TOO and $75. Tribune ciuli- ■on frames $50 and upward. Tri bune roaater brake modt-U $5 ex tra. I am having the beat Tri bune trade I have ever known, due to the fact that the wheela have proven tht imodvcs to be all that trim claimed for them. Conte and ace the line. Upon the stomach the continued prac tice of drinking, whether In large or everything l o o k s small quantities, Invariably produces and how you are about an inflammation and a catarrh, writes ready to give up. Some John G. Coyle, M. D., in Father Math how, you can’t throw off ew Herald. Soon the drinker cannot eat In the morning and at that time the terrible depression. feels a disgust for food. These are the Are things really so first symptoms of alcoholic catarrh of blue? Isn’t it yournerves, F. A. W IG G IN S , the stomach. To acquire the necessary after all? That’s where appetite the drinker has recourse to Opposite postoffice, Salem t h e trouble Is. Y o u r the poison Itself and takes a drink or nerves are beingpolsoned two In the morning before breakfast, thus gaining apparent relief, but In re from the impurities in ality only adding fuel to the flame al your blood. W O M EN AND A L C O H O L . ready burning. No sooner does the stomach begin to P h y « i c l n n n S a y C o m b i n a t i o n I s In - rebel against the poison thrust luto it o r e u M in g : la A m e r ic a . than the liver exhibits the commence A number of Chicago physicians ment of disease which yearly causes were interviewed by the Chicago Even thousands of deaths. Under the irrita ing Post on the growth of the drug evil tion of the alcohol the liver begins to among women. Several of them de enlarge slowly and gradually to grow clared that the lmbit of drinking la harder. Eventually it will contract rapidly Increasing among society wo again and become much smaller than r men aud especially among the mem p u rifie s th e b lo o d and in natural health. This condition is w bers of the younger “ smart set.’’ Not called cirrhosis. So hard and rough g i v e s p o w e r a n d s t a b i l i t y A content with this disclosure, a number -1 ► does tlie liver become that one of the to th e n e r v e s . It m a k es •f the physicians said cases of alcohol names applied to this disease is “ hob A ism are not unusual. It was a notable h ea lth a n d stren gth , activ- M 11 if lied liver.” Cirrhosis of the liver, fact that those physicians who de Ity an d c h e e rfu ln es s. K once established. Is Incurable, and the clared t'.int sobriety was the character < announcement of its presence in an in T h i s is w h a t “ A y e r ’ s ” \ istic of American women made the ► dividual is the pronouncement of the w i l l d o f o r y o u . I t ’ s t h e ► 4 statement half hcartedly, while those sentence of death. 4 ► o ld e s t S a r s a p a r illa in th e wlg> asserted that drunkenness was in So. too. the kidneys, undergoing re creasing said so with considerable em l a n d , t h e k i n d t h a t w a s r< > peated irritation from the alcoholic va phasis. o ld b e fo re o th e r Sarsa- \ pors in the blood; yield to the insidious A It Is said British women are drifting poison and become chronically inflam p a r i l i a s . w e r e k n o w n . < toward general drunkenness and that ► ed. like the liver, but in this case the T h is also ac c ou n ts f o r h ◄ Inebriety and excesses are on the In disease is known as nephritis, or > crease. Though conditions are not so th e s a y in g , “ O n e b ottle M Bright*« disease of the kidneys, so deplorable In this country. It Is predict o f A y e r ’ s is w o r t h t h r e e named from Bright, the man who first A ed that if the habit of drinking In b ottles o f th e o r d i n a r y K <1< scribed It. The fearful picture of creases during the next teu years as It this disease is well known to you all— y 4 k i n d . ” has during the last Inebriety will be i ►i the limbs and body swollen from the $1.00 ■ bottle. AU druggifit». come more rabid here than In Great dropsy, the distorted features, the fear WHfm th o D o c t o r . >< Britain. I f yon have any complaint whatever ful convulsions which terrify the “ During the last teu years drinking and desire the best medical advice you household are matters of everyday A can possibly receive, write the doctor among American women has been freely. You will receive a prompt re * knowledge. Bright’ s disease is occa ply, without cost. Address, steadily Increasing,” declared Dr. Sa Du. J C. AYER, Lowell, Maas. sionally produced by other causes than rah Ilackett Stevenson. “ Fownerly h alcohol, but for one such case there are American women were uot given to 50 the direct result of the practice of wine drinking. Now uot a dinner Is drinking. served without rt, and at every recep The entire nervous system from brain unless there be those who buy. But by tion there Is the punch bowl. These to finger tips suffers from the alcoholic education In the direful consequences customs develop the taste. There are poison. It Is the acute saturation, or of drinking, by the daily lesson that It cases of extreme drinking among socie overwhelming of tlie brain and nerves, Is a curst.» whose maledictions have no ty women as well as among the men. that we qommonly describe as drunk end, by the cultivation of the will to re- The Increase has been greater among | slst the temptation to drink, by the enness. But, ns in the ease of the stom the wealthy classes and the younger ach. liver and kidneys, drunkenness is avoidance of the scenes of drinking social sets than among the lower strata and the company of those who proffer never necessary to produce the worst of society. I am not prepared to say effects o f the alcoholic habit. It Is the the temptation—by these means, and conditions of actual drunkenness pre by these alone, may the evil of drunk steady drinking, the daily habit of a vail among the women, but I have had enness bq lessened, its danger to the fe>v drinks, which produces the worst several rases of alcoholism. Drinking race averted and Its menace to the effects. It Is often the individual who has the stamp of fashion, and anything was never drunk in his life, but drank peace of the sou! avoided. that gets the stamp of fashion goes. May tlie cause of temperance, under a little every day. who dies directly as This Is true even of cigarette smoking, a result of such practice. The more or the guidance of earnest bodies of men, which habit undoubtedly Is Increasing. like temperance guilds, grow and in- I less constnut saturation of the brain At the golf clubs the women indulge crease, and with faith erect and firm j nml nerve cells in the alcoholic fumes W p A r e !Sot t h e L o w e » « . freely, and It is countenanced because changes their structure, makes the per hearts let us unite to destroy the one !□ so drciKl a crime BKnlnsi luiinnnl it Is fashionable. This condition Is a son more Irritable, more easily depress habit most inimical to our strength as ty as the drink trntlic It Is hardly lair natural result of great wealth and lux men and to our hopes of eternal peace. ed. less responsible and less fitted for to extract relief from the dark picture ury aud Is a greater menace to our labor and the duties of life. by compailson with one’s neighbors, country than any political troubles, for E n g l a n d * » B l a c k S po t« . Therefore when a human being with but we eau at least lie thankful that vice undermines the character o f the Late English criminal statistics show out necessity or for purposes of mere we have uot reached the worst depths. people.” gratification Introduces into his body that Glamorgan. after Monmouth. Is Belgium uses IDS quarts of alcoholic the drug known ns alcohol, whether In the blackest county In the Island for beverages per cnpltn. Kngland 141, C U R S E T O H U M A N IT Y . the shape of the mild or strong liquors, the number of Its crimes in proportion Fruucu 137, the Uulted States 70. I n t e m p e r a n c e t h e M o i^ P r o l i f i c o f he voluntarily places within his system to the population. The drunkards’ map A H B t II P ro d u ce rs. a poison which weakens and enervates shows Glamorgan In a bad light also. C n r i e o f the. A r m y . For Just about 30 years I have been a every tissue In his body, which cor Northumberland Is much the worse Lord Wolseley, addressing the hoys rupts his manhood, which puts to waste county for drunkenness. London and of the Duke of York’s school, advised total abstainer from alcoholic liquor In the fruits of Ills labor, which renders Lancashire have hardly half the pro those who Joined the army to adhere to every form, arid I do not find that this lilm less fit for life, which degrades his portion of eases of inebriety found In temperance principles. Personally he abstinence has contributed In any way either to lessen my ability for work or family, which is nn Incentive to crime, Northumberland. would prefer that they became teeto to make me gloomy or depressed. IlrlKlitCMt W o m a n , which threatens him with the loss of talers. for the curse of the English ar How many users of alcohol can say The brightest woman would be my and race was drink. reason, which entails misery and mis that they have never felt any ill ef-. fortune upon those dependent upon thoughtful in personal conduct and feets from Its use? Even the moderate him. which leads him away from his dress. She would be a woman who drinker must admit that tlie benefit, Creator to the pntli of destruction and would not live for dress alone. The real or fancied, which he derives from brings upon him and his unborn gen 1 brightest woman is the one whose In* the use of alcoholic stimulants is more erations the wrath of the Almighty. j tcllect is luminous with the glory of than counterbalanced by the evils Against this array of consequences, | God and who can see the inestimable which may be traced to drink. which follow as surely ns the night the j value of redemption through Christ.— It Is true there are other things worso day. what can he offered in extenua 1 Iiev. II. Fruncis Ferry. Baptist, Engle- than drunkenness. There are other % tion? Against this endless inarch of i wood. Ills. sins, no doubt, which are blacker than woe there stands but the fleeting pleas Se e d o f C h r ln t i n n I t y . this, but there Is uo sin which In its ure of a brief enjoyment; against an I Chinn will be regenerated and will consequences produces so much evil, so eternity of punishment there is but a ! open her doors to the world in the uear much uuhappiuess, and, I might go on moment of forgetfulness. i future. This great change will be to say, so much disease, so much pov Ob, you. the daily witnesses of the brought about not by fire and sword, erty. so much Insanity, as this one ter awful consequences of the habit of hut through planting the seed of Chris rible self Indulgence. drunkenness, lift up your hearts and tianity. Present troubles will furnish It is a curse so farreaching In Its ef stand against this evil! To the specter the opportunity for future work In the fects that to fight against It seems at whose -shadow threatens the peace of east. A policy of force should be dep times to l)e almost hopeless. home and the welfare of the body ar recated.—Itev. I)r. Van Dyke, Presby- But we must not give up. I f we will ray a solid front of faith and courage. ; terian, Montclair. N. J. but persevere, we must win In the end. Not by striving to pass restrictive laws Clirfiit nn a P rlent. We cannot do much until public opin may good be accomplished, for legisla ! Christ was not a priest In his divine ion Is on our side. But there can be no tion does not alter the human passions; nature. It was only when he assumed doubt that It Is more and more coming not by cpndcmnlng tlie traffic can the the vesture of our human nature that around to our point of view. evil be cured, for there Is none to sell lie could worship God. At the sain / The dial of the punch I f we contrast the habits which pre itig machine won’ time all his acts of worship, of adorn vailed In society when 1 was a boy j lion, received supernatural merit from answer that question with those which are to be found now, his divinity. Tlie end Intended by our Strength depends or we will see that there has been a mark Creator f r us Is supernatural and only nutrition. When tht stomach and other organs of digestion ed Improvement. obtained by supernalnral menus.—Rev. and nutrition are diseased, the body fails I remember how In the University of F. Harvey. Catholic. San Francisco. to receive its full supply of nourishment Oxford It was only through the influ P o o r A u n ln n t t lie R ic h . and hence grows weak. That is why no ence of a really great man—one of the Since the Increase of property means man is stronger than his stomach. greatest nun that England lias pro Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery the increase of happiness for all class duced—that excessive drinking was cures diseases o f \hc stomach and the es. men who love their country and suppressed. Gladstone was the man their kind will view with apprehension allied organs of digestion and nutrition. who brought about this reform when The foon eaten is then perfectly digested and profound alarm the attempt to ar and assimilated and the body is made he was a member of the university.— ray the poor against the rich, tlie fqrfn- strong in the only possible way—by nu Archbishop of Canterbury. erR against tin* banker*, the clashes trition. against the mas-eo. Every age and " I was troubled with indiff« "ttofi for aljotit two T o tal A hatalaer«. nation has been earned by the dema years ." writes Wm. B ovk« r. ksq., o f JiiUaettn. Whoever laughs tit a total abstainer Latah Co.. Idaho. " I tried d iff rent doctor» and gogue who prnqflee« ns a Dne art the remedies but to no avail, until I wrote to you shows himself lacking Itt a clear mind stirring up c t class hatred. Now. the and you told me wlint to do. I suffered^witn a as well as a good heart, for to take on in In my stomach and left side and thought class hatred that prevails In those that it would kill me Now I am glad to write such a precaution on one’s account as eountr! ** where the hereditary classes this and iet you ku on that I am «11 right. 1 can a matter of prudence Is surely con do my work now without pniu and ! don't have rule has no excuse In this free land. that tired feeling that I used to have. Five but formable to reason, and to take U In Here there Is no position so high that tles o f Dr. Fierce'» Golden Medical Discovery order to make It easier for others to do and tv » vials of his ’ Flessant Pellets' cured the 1 k > j at the forge cannot aspire to It. me." the same Is conformable to the golden —Rev. Dr. Hill Is, Congregationalism Dr. Pierce • Pleasant Pellet! stimulate rule and the highest dictates o f broth Now York. *T \NI»\K|I the liver. erhood.—Frances E. Willard. A y e rs sarsaparilla HOW F. H. MUSCOTT, T ribune B icy cle s^ Strong Are Yon? 1 ■ !