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About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (May 24, 1901)
11 - DALLAS, OR YO L. XXVII. BLUEi Physician and Surgeon, Dal lax, Oregon. t a s For Infants and Children. Office over YVilaoi.’H drug «tore. K. 8 1ULKY, J The Kind You Have Always Bought Ur L’, K akim . S I B L E Y <4 E A K I N , .A t t o r n e y w - n t - 1 w. We have the only act of abut net book* in l*olk «uiily. Reliable abstracts furnished, and money t«» •an. No coiuntiMioii charged on loan»*, Rooms 2 ?*d 3 WII hoii ’ b block. Dallas * ^Vegetable Pre a ti iforAs- ¡I similatini* Ihcfoodi.’iöücguta- 1] i ling the S lomada arilBowcls oi' i i . L. C O LLIN S, « Attorney and Counselor at Law, * S o l i c i t o r in C lm u w r y . Han been in practice of hie profession in t h i s placi oi ab )'it thirty years, ami will attend to all bummst« ntrusted to ltis care. Office, corner Main and Court t.* Dallas, Polk Co, Or J . H. T ownsend Promotes Digealion.Ctv'crriit- ness and liest .Contains neitiui- ¡ Opiam.Morphine nor Mineral. 1 N o t í í A i i c o t i c . /k yx tff¡U l*S.V'.C ELH TC J!in ¡\fKfJiut S a il • Àlx.Smnit * K~k.iu SJtf - J N. H akt AiiU* S**d * TOW NSEND A HAKT, ii-fxpennini - JiiCariMfudeSadm * HSrtftSemd- ¿¿miÁéd.iiMt HSehrwww riai-ar. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Office ipstairs in Odd Fellows’ new block. - T .A - B , - O E B O O N . OSCAR H A Y T E R . Aperfecl Remedy forConstipa- Vton.Soiir Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .('onvulsions .Feverish ness and L o s s o f S l e e k Facsimile Signnlurc of A t t o r n e y a t 'L a w . tâ L x tff& iô i 5 T N EW * Y O R K . Office up slaira in Cumpla IV s builil- Bears the Signature v In Use For Over Thirty Years ing. DALLAS - OREGON. N. I. BUTLER E V. COM) B U T L E R & COAD Atto r n ey s-a t- La w .1 . --Y*! ■ DALLAS, OREGON. W ill practice in all colina. Office, over bank. A . EXACT COPY O r WRAPPER. m~ S- ç S th * Ml PNW • • V*' S T A T E NORMAL SC H C O L-M O N M O U TH , OR. M A I t ' l l in , DEMAND F O li G R A D U A TES: The (h nnmd for gruduaies of the nor* iral school during the past year bus been much beyond the supply. Posi tions worth from $40 10 $75 a month. STA TE C E R T IF IC A T E AND DIPLO MAS* Students me prrjwred for the P A IN T E R , House, sign and ornam ent il, grain in g , kalsoming and paper hanging. O regon P ll,U » . State examinations and readily take state papers on jfi.id nation. «■itronir academic and proiessio/ittl course. Well t ipiiprecl training denartnient. Expenses latijfe fr in $V20 t<> SB 7". ¡1 year. Fnii term opens Septemlier I7ih For catalogue containing full nunouucemeiits 11 l.ir s I’. L. CAMPIic LI., President t .1, B. V. Butler secretary. • MOTOR TIME TABLE. Loaves »Independence for Monmouth ami Airlie — 7:30 a m 3:30 pm Leaves Independnce for Monmouth and Dallas - 1:10 am 7:15 pm Leaven Monmouth for Airlie - SO a m 3: 60 p m Leaves Monmouth for Dallas— 1:20 a in 7:30 pm Leaves Virile for Monmouth and Independence— •J:0o a in 5 p in Leaves Dallas for Monmouth an » In.ie .enden ;e - liOO p til 8.30 pm. R . C. CRAVEN » . K. WILLIAMS. ................. 1 »abler. W. C. VASSALL, a s s is t a n t C a s h ie r DALLAS OF CITY DALLAS, DANK OREGON, Transacts ft general hanking onsi- tie«« in all it« hranche«; buys and «ells exchange on principal points in I lie Uniteti States; makes collections on all points in the Pacific Northwest; loans money and discounts paper at the best rates ; allow interest on time deposits. E C I N T A U R C O W P A N Y , NCVJ Y O R K O IT Ÿ LUCAS &: DCDD, Proprietors. L U C K I A M U T E M IL L C O M P A N Y Manufacturers of«* FALLS C ITY . OREGON. Lum ber, Shingles, L ath , Pickets, E tc ., Dealers in** Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots, Shoes, Hardware, Fresh and Salt Meats at Lowest Prices. We buy everything tin- turn er 1 a . to .ell at big best market price. M ill, loomed 3^ mile, from Falls Ciiy on Rock creek road. 8-ore ai Fall. City, Oregon. Telephone con need in with mill. Q jb I ear price* before baying ebewhere. We will surprise von. Your, for Falls City business.' LUCKIA M UTE M IL L CO. Bring in your babies under one year old and we will give them iree a Isne gold ring, warranted for five years. ut D R . J O R D A N 'S great IlSEUM OF ANATOMY io;i l i u t i st ., «ni mici«*, ut . T h e I-a rg w rt A n a to m ic a l M u s e u m In th e W o r ld . W e a k n e s se s or a n y c o n tr a c ts « ! d is e a se p o n i t i v r l y . » r e d i>y th e o ld e s t S p e c ia lis t o a the C o ast. H a t. 36 ye a rs . 1 I ’ . | OR. JORDAN —DISEASES OF MEM < K T r i l l l . l K th o r o u g h ly e r a d ic a te d from syste m w ith o ut t h e u - e o f M . r e e r y T r . K M fitted h y an E x p e r t , ■ • d l - e o i « t a r o (or i t o p t o r o . a cpnclc s u d r a d ic a l c u re fo r H H ^ n # U n n e r e a n d p i a t a l e , tip D r . J o r d a n 's s p e c ia l p a in - •a Ice* m e th od s. limitation fre e a n d s t r ic t ly p r lr a t e . T r e a tm e n t per- lv o r b y le tte r. A Po,itivi, C nrv in c » t r y a » « Z k i W r ite fe r B .*»k P « l l « « » M « » • * I t n i A Q E . m a i l e d F R E E . f A v * lu s » ° b o o k m l ) C a l l o r w rite j 1 ^ I ' ’ . \ L JORDAN * CO.. 1 0 5 ! Market St . d W. F. H. MUSCOTT, TRUCKMAN. IY a lla .s: O r e g o n A fair share of patronage solicited •nd »11 n-ders promptly filled. Dallas Foundry! — ALL KINDS OF— IRON WORK TO ORDER Repairing Promptly Done. ED. BIDDLE. - PR3P. A Washington man complained bit terly to the District commissioners of the pasting of advertising lal»els on loaves of bread and wanted them to »top the practice, but tliv commission ers assured Mm that tbe official chein- fct’s opinion was that tbe use of these 111 »els on bread is In no way detrimen tal to health. Upper Salt Creek Lumbering Co MARTIN BROS., PROPRIETORS. All kinds of roiijjli and dressed lumber on hands or out to order. We can fill any order for lumber of any length promptly. Slab wood for cook stoves or harvest engines at 50 cents a load. SAMPLES FREE.,* Our Immense Stock of W all paper is all in. It is by far the finest line we have ever offered to the public. 8eiul for samples of paper from 5 cents to GO cents a double roll. We pay the freight on $10 orders. CENTER TABLES PARLOR FU RN ITURE EXTENSION TABLES Other OAK BEDROOM SETS Recent < FIDE BOARDS Arrivals I-ACE CURTAINS 1 OKTIERES. CARPETS BABY CARRIAGES 53T BUREN & HAMILTON '-Low Price Furniture House JA P A N E S E PLUM S. In NO 23. MAY 24, 1901. L. N. WOODS, M. D. T T T EMBSEE, M D D A LLA S, - O REG O N ¿L A G r e a t F a v o r E v e v v w h e r e —V a r l - rtU -R F o r M a r k e t a n d S o m e L a e . Ever have them? Then we can’t tell you any thing about th e m . You know how dark everything lo o k s and how you are about ready to give up. Some how, you can’t throw off the terrible depression. Are things really so blue? Isn’t it your nerves, after all? That’s where th e trouble is. Y o u r nerves are being poisoned from the impurities in your blood. ab o u t brood m ares H OW T H E Y SH O U LD BE TR E A TE D W H E N IN FOAL. M o d e r a t e W o r k !■ B e n e f ic ia l—F e e d O a ts a n d C lo v e r H a y I n P le n t y a n d 1 b a t L i t t l e C o rn — P o in t s o n H e a r i n g < tb e Y o u n g s te r s . T r ib u n e Bícyclestát “T H E E A SY RUNNING N O ISE L E SS W H E E L Roadsters, $36 and $40. Light roadsters and racers $50. Chain- less $60 and $75. Tribune cush ion frames $50 and upward. T ri bune cosster brake models $5 ex tra. 1 ant having the beat Tri bune trade I have ever known, due to the fact that the wheels have proven themselves to be all that was claimed for them. Come and see the line. The dam should have good care at »11 times, but especially for two or three ! months before foaling and at foaling | time, say» C. L. Hardman in Prairie Farmer. The brood mare should have j but little corn the last two or three | months she carries the foal, but be fed | plenty of oats and clover hay. The | foal will then be thin in flesh but , strong lu bone and will All up and | F. A. WIGGINS, grow rapidly from the start if the dam ! Opposite postoffice, Salem is fed and cared for rightly. The dam is all the better for being worked mod- I erately right up to within a few days rirenly flrai uay to make sure they »re of foaJing. If you have more brood j all right. • mares than you can work, be sure to i give them proper exercise by turning ! FEED IN G YOUNG BULLS. them into the field or lot during pleas- \ ant days, but alw*ays stable at night if B r e e d e r s C a n t l o n .d A g s l s i t G l r l s s the weather Is at all cool or wet. I T o o M u ch C o r a . like a box stall not less than 14 feet 1 have for a number of seasons fed square in which to turn the dam loose. young bulls, both Shorthorns and Here rYou can tell at least several hour» ford». nithougli I never liefrre weighed beforehand wdien the dam Is going to their dally rations until in the present foal. When the milk Is plentiful in the instance of three young Shorthorns bag and begins to drop out, you may which I bought last December in Illi purifies the blood and 4 expect the foal soon. I have kept close nois and Kansas, says a Colorado • gives power and stability > - W’nteh over my brood mares for several grower In The Ilreeder’s Gazette. Their ► years, and they have invariably foaled to the nerves. It makes ages follow: Clarence, calved Dec. 30, ► between 2 o’clock and 0 o’clock p. m. J 1899; San Juan, calved Feb. 11, 1900; health and strength, activ- ■ or 2 o’clock and 0 o’clock a. m., and I Bartlett, calved Feb. 0, 1900. ABUNDANCE PLUM. ity and cheerfulness. always aim to be on hand, so as to brandies, the fruit buds setting in clus The three bulls weighed when I com This is what “ Ayer’s ” \ render assistance if uecessary. I have menced to feed them XJec. 27. 1900, * ters instead of singly or in pairs, as ► with the European plum. ◄ will do for you. It’s the ► raised a good many colts and have nev 2.180 pounds. On Jan. 10, 1901, they ► oldest Sarsaparilla in the < er lost one a; foaling time. The daiu weighed 2,240 pounds; Jan. 23, 2,330 These plums are nearly allied to our native plums, and we may the more I ► land, the kind that was "• will be ravenously hungry and should 1 pounds, and Jnn. 31. 2.375 pounds. I have a pftll of water and a wisp of fed them from the beginning 8 pounds reasonably expect them to do well on | 4 old before other Sarsa- bright hay Immediately after foaling. of wheat bran, 0 ponds of oats and 40 that account on the theory that similar- j i parillas were known. Ity of environment has produced simi J She will eat as though starving. pounds of alfalfa hay per day for the * She should not have any corn for first 14 days. The rest of the time This also accounts for » larity of attributes. i The propensity to overbear must be > the saying, “ One bottle M several days and hut little oats the first from Jnn. 10 to 31 they got 8 pounds of two or three days. The oats can be in continually guarded against, as the ! of Ayer’s is worth three r< creased gradually until the dam is on wheat bran. 4 pounds of corn chop and quality of the plums on an overladen | S 40 pounds of alfalfa hay each day. bottles of the ordinary \ her regular feed. Watch the bowels of Prices of foods are: Alfalfa hay per tree is very Inferior, and. having nei kind.” ther quality nor size, they will be dif > i both (lam and foal. The danger from ton. $8; wheaJ bran per ton. $16; corn this source is much greater than most | chop per ton. $10; Colorado oats per $1.00 a bottle. All druggists. ficult to dispose of and of very little ! ► men think, for many foals die when 2 ; ton, $20. WrMm thm D o cto r. value. If two-thirds of the bearing A I f you have any complaint w hatever or 3 days old if their bowels do not \ I find that oats and bran produce wood is trimmed off the tree and the j and desire the best medical advice you : move all right. They w ill refuse t o , plenty of muscle nnd bone. A little corn can possibly receive, write the doctor plums which set on the remainder are ' You will receive a prompt re I suck and dwindle along a day or two ! chop added makes the cattle flesh < freely. thinned to about four inches apart, we j ► ply, vfithout cost. Address, Du. J C. A YER , Lowell, M ass . I till they die. When you notice the first! up in good shape. I think If breeders shall have on a mature tree from one >< | symptoms of trouble, give an injection ■ would adopt thla way of feeding they to two bushels of plums frojp éÈk j of one or two quarts of warm soapsuds. ) would not burn their young stock up Attractive ns j Inches in diameter and a.^htl I use tar soap, which I have always I Inside ns la tbe case with so much corn. they are large. The rot is the most troublesome ene e m ‘ Italy as laborers on fruit farms. found satisfactory. If this does not j Everywhere I went It was either shell my of the Japan plum unless it be its Politeness and attention, smiles, music, give immediate relief, give as a drench ed corn with blue grass pasture or corn tendency to overbear. Eternal vigi a willingness to work and an enduring one-half pint of raw linseed oil. I have In the ear with sugar cane or Kaffir lance Is the price of plums, picking off | ability to work hard are leading char- never known these remedies to fail if corn. Some feeders in Kansas feed corn nnd burning the rot whenever it ap r.cterlstlcs. Many of them are expert used In time. and cob meal nnd sugar cane or Kaffir In tree pruning, fruit thinning, picking If the foal does not come until after corn, which I think is better thnn pears. and packing. we have grass, turn the dam on grass, The yellows of the poach is also able straight corn. nnd the danger from bowel trouble will to thrive on the Japan plum and should V e s ta l V ir a in a . be greatly lessened. But I much pre Soosri la Calve,. be guarded against. Ovid tell» us that the first temple of For scours In calves give two or three The black knot nnd curcullo are not Vesta at Home was constructed of wat fer my colts to come by the first half of April than later. I do not work a lablespoonfula two or three times a day serious enemies of the Japan plum, the tled walls and roofed with thatch, like knot only occasionally attacking the the primitive huts of the inhabitants. mare for ten days after foaling. When of powder-d chnrcoal until a cure la ef the foal is 10 days old. the mare should fected. wldch will not he long. If they tree and the eggs of the curcullo sel It was little other than a circular cov be bred again, or if the tenth day li«i>- do not lick It readily from the hand, dom hatching. ered fireplace and was tended by the peus on Sunday I breed on the ninth put it in their months, and they will For market and amateur planting the unmarried girls of the infant commu day. I do not think it advisable to soon take It freely.—Farm and Home. Abundance, Burbank. Chabot, Wick- nity. It served as the public hearth sooner than that. If you find it will son, lied June and Satsuma seem best of Koine, nnd on it glowed, unextln- suited. Lutts, líale and Normnnds gulshed throughout the year, the sa throw your colts too early to breed tbe might also find a place in large collec cred fire which was supposed to have mare the tenth day, you will doubtless P la in Proof. find her lu season some time between tions. been brouglrt from Troy and the con the twenty-eighth and the thirty-sixth A fastidious young man com Abundance is perhaps the best known tinuance of which was thought to be day. plained that a pie a baker sold him and most widely planted of the Japa linked with the fortunes of the city. Do not work the mare until dark and nese plums. The name Vesta is believed to be de then run b«r off to town and breed her was not up to sample. This irritat rived from the same root as the San when the horse also has probably had ed the baker, and he said severely, Rouen F o r A ll Sum m er. Culture is all in all with hybrid per skrit was, which means “to dwell, to all he ought to do during the day. I)o “Young man, I made pies before petuáis. A hybrid which in common inhabit,” and Hbows that she was the not run her four or five miles back you were born.” garden soil Is left to shift for itself goddess of home, and home liad the home after breeding her and put her “Yes, I can believe that,” replied may perhaps never yield more than its hearth as Its focus. A town, a state, Into the harness next morning, with the fellow, who was a wag, “for here June crop of flowers, but keep the soil is but a large family, and what the do but little or no rest, nnd then wonder is the evidence.”— Exchange. well enriched—it cannot be too ric h - mestic hearth was to the house that, why she does not get with foal. In keep it stirred and mellow ami do not the temple of the perpetual fire, be- such cases 1 drive the inare slowly and S a tisfa cto rily E x p la ln td . allow the plant to «top growing and came to the city, Every town lmd its work her moderately or give her a day’s The Head Clerk— Did you go for note tin* result. This is the oqjy way vesta, or common hearth, and the col rest, and I seldom have to breed her a to bring out the good points, for the onies derived their fire from the moth second time. I aim to take my mare» that dog’s meat, John? The Office Hoy— Yes, sir. flowers are formed in the new wood. er hearth. to the horse from the eighteenth to the “ What did the butcher say?” Should a vestnl maiden allow the sa Given a well drained bed, from 18 inches “He wanted to know if it was for to 2 feet deep, under above treatment, ! cred fire to become extinguished she and the plants of this class of roses | was beaten by the grand pontiff till you or the dog.” will make a surprising growth of wood her blood flowed, and the new fire was “The puppy I” ___1 yield - J . 1.1 . the 1 ........ same ......... ....................* ! --- n of n |,L. iml proportion noble solemnly rekindled by rubbing togeth “But 1 told him it was for the flowers. Added to this, the branches er of dry wood or by focusing of sun’s dog.”— Boston Transcript. must be kept well cut back. Remove rays. The circular form and domed nil wood tlwit does not show strong, roof of the temple of Vesta were sur T h a W orst. healthy buds. It is sometime» neces vivals of the prehistoric huts of tlie “Don’t you know that smoking sary to cut back to two or three eyes aborigines, which were Invariably gives a man catarrh, bronchitis, ton before a bmi is reached from which round.—Cornhlll Magazine. silitis and weakens his nervous sys we may expect a new growth. When tem to a degTee that may bring on branches are developed from such I m p o a .l h l r a t 111. P r i w . bud», they will almost always bear cerebro spinal meningitis?” A rrrtnln |*rvpnu of (treat wofilth roses, but not witli the freedom during lias linopliiR in ills drawing room n “Yes,” answered Mr. Meekton late summer that they displayed in iarjte and iiideou. daub In oils which gloomily, “and that isn’t the worst June and July.—Vick. 1 some denier In 1’nrl* induced him to of it. It spoils the lace curtains.”— I buy. lie I k very fond of taking a cnll- Washington Star. DeKnnlnN Ont of Doors. [ c r by the arm, leading him before tbe The past year or so much use *ias ) oanvasi and saying: O bso rvan t been made of the many species and va I ‘‘Great picture that. Ry Maenronl dl Little Harold Oxford— I wish I rieties of begonias as bedding plants | Vermicelli, you know. Paid 12.D00 for had $50,000, like my Uncle Ueze- In open ab* gardening. Under the shade It In Paris »ml got a great bargain. kiah. of a wall oi* fence or where the soil is P." (naming an eminent artist) “says It There will be another car. But the man rather moist they do admirably, ac Is worth £10.000." His Sister— Why so? can't wait. 1.* chases the car and swings cording to Meehan's. The species bru- A few days since this gentleman was Little Harold Oxford — ’Causo M O M He nntii is dwarf and remarkably fiorlfer- lunching at .he Artists’ club when ..... ““ .«m t then I could say “there ain’t no” oufl. Kempt rflorens doe» well In par cat came out of the hag. Some one , way, ' h(t ,„,,rhra that ra», wav. he lunches way. He He contin- contin- | and “busted” without having ma tial shade nnd keeps up a supply of sald: lies this until his stomach " breaks down” nnd pa correcting me all the time.— flowers all summer. •‘F., old Centperccnt say* that you and nature compel» him to "go slow.” Brooklyn Eagle. Business men who have impaired their have appraised that frightful night Ilortlcnlttirnl Brevities. | digestion by hasty eating will find in mare of Ills at £10.900. Is It true?" Reparta* In the A lleyw ay. I Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery FTardy hydrangea stands drought The artist answered smilingly: First Boy (contemptuously)— well. ”1 will tell yon bow that happened, a cure for dyspepsia and oilier diseases A special exhibition of sweet peas at n e asked me to dinner one day and aft I of the stomach and organa of digestion nuh! Your mother takes in wash- llae Pan-American Is announced for er we left the table took mo to see the and nutrition. It dot-» not give mere in 1 temporary relief, but it effects a radical July 23 to Aug. 2. picture and told the usual story. Then, j cure. It strengthens the stomach, nour Second Boy — Of course. You One of the taking little novelties of turning abruptly, he asked: ishes the nerves and purifies the blood. didn’t suppose she’d leave it hangin the spring trade have been small pots “ ‘How much Is that painting worth?1 ! - g o , r is long y e a r, I suffered w ith m r lieer. out at night unlcsa your father was and with Indlgeetlon. w hich baffled of four leaved clover. ‘“ Why, Mr. Centperccnt’ said I. T kidneys, the heal doctors In our cou ntry." write« B L. in prison, did you ?— Stray Stories. Leading fruit growers have claimed really would not like to place a value K snsell, Kw| . of Wnoteey. Prince W illism Co., t Va. " I suffered With m y «loniach and hack for that where lime and sulphur are used upon I t ’ M istaken Grief. I a long tim e, and after ta k in g a ' cart-ltmd ' o f as a wash for trees there will be no •“ Well. I'll put It differently,’ said m edicine from three doctors, 1 grew so hod t Suitor— I’rav, don’t cry! I as i could hardly do a d ay 's work. Would have pear blight. he. 'How moch would you charge for ' death-like tw ins in the side, and blind sp e lls sure you I will love, cherish and pro Fashion rules in flowers as well as such a picture?" and thought life was hardly w orth Meins. I began ta k in g t>r. Pierce's Golden Medlcnl D is tect your daughter, sir. dress. It Is said that English leaders " 'I don’t mind saying.’ I answered, 1 covery and ' Pleasant Pellets,' as advised. Be Prospective Father-in-law — Oh, In floral matters have decreed the ‘that 1 would not |>alnt such a picture fore 1 had tak en h a lf o f the second hottle I to feel relieved, f got sis bottles and downfall of Incurved chrysanthemums. for £10,000.’ I had to lie civil, you began rats! It ian’t thatl I am support used them , and am happv to any I owe my life I to Dr Pierce and hla m edicines " J . U. Hale »peaks a good word In Ru know.”—London Answers. ing two aons-in-law now I — Ohio ral New Y.orker for Italian» from north- Dr. Pierce’s Pellets cure bilious State JournaL For the past decade interest in the lapan plum has ste»< ly Increased, ■nil, although many of the varieties are Inferior In quality to some European varieties, their great beauty, freedom from disease, ability to resist the at tack of the curcullo and heavy crop ping qualities have brought them into favor with growers. Some are proving of fair to good eating quality and are luperb for canning or preserving. Nearly all the Japan plums are vig- 3i ous growers, with long, forked AYOT 3 sanaramia in Two Minutes