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About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (April 11, 1902)
« 1 DALLAS OREGON VOL. XXVIII. L. N . W O O D S , M. D. C H U R C H O IR E CTO R V. Physician and Surgeon, M E. CH URCH . î. V- 3- EMBUEE, NI D OBSTACLES OF MANY KINDS WHICH IMPEDE ITS PROGRESS. Salem’s Best Store lü A L L A S , - O R E G O N M. It. CH URCH , 8 »UTH. e r i « « over bank. S I B L E Y A i Send Os Your M ail Orders Preacbing Sunday m orning and e v ening. Sunday h «*1 i *»•»? at 10. Ep- wurlli league at 6:30. Prayer m eal in g Thursday even ing.— J*. C. Smith, t pastor. I U. U, * » ■ '« J S SlSCBV, <Sc E A K I N , t t n n i e y u 'i i t - I . n w , FA1TIH 1 CHURCH. W * haar# ; only «et o f abatra :t Look« Jn F<»ik ftrr,4iy.' Kaliabl* «hatradU iurnialiad, *ud in*'ii#y !'• M c. X * *«mu>t«aioii «M-irgaJ on lo*iia. Room# î •i ? WiUau’a Muait, Dalla« Preaching Snndar m orn m r and ev ening. Sunday school ¡»t 10. H Y. P U. at 6:30. Prayer lueeiim? W ed nesday evei in g.— J. 11. G. liussell, pastor. v J. L. C O L L IN S . Utorney and Counselor at Law, The spring stocks are nearly all iif. You will tind the correct things here in DRESS G O O D S * W A S H FA B R IC S .* S P R IN G S ILK S.* T A IL O R S U IT S * JAC KETS* W A L K IN G S K I R T S * S IL K W A I S T S * PK E FB Y TE R iAN CHURCH. P rta cn in g Sunday m orning and ev I x t kern In iiraetlaa of hia pro fatal on In Ihla plat» ening. Sunday school at 10. Chris >i aheiit thirty jaart, and will attend to all huaineM tian Endeavor at 6:30. Prayer rneei- i^cuaUd to hi» vara. OiMea, oornar Main and Court ii.g Thursday even in g.— VV. T . W ar tt ')*lla»t Polk Co, Or dlo, pastor. S o lic it o r in I'lin n e e r y . J. H. T e w x s B K » ( - ) Royal Worcester cor- sets have no equal. This is the only store in town where you can get them. J N. H akt C H R IS TIA N CHURCH. TO W N SEN D & HAUT, A T T O R N E Y S -A T -L A W . Olilo# ip sU iri iu Odd bleek. E. A I J . A S , - Fellows’ tie» Preaching Sunday m orning and ov- ening. Suudav school at 10. C hris tian Endeavorai 6:30. Prayer m eeting Thursday even ing.— W . T . M atlock, pastor. • • « < O B E S O H . E V A N G S U C A L CHURCH. OSCAR HAYTJ3B. A t t o r n e y a t - L a M T. Ofliee u p stairs in Campbell* i “ t- DALLAS - k build- Preaching Sunday m orning and e v ening. Sunday school at 10. Chris tian E ndeavor at 6:30. Prayer m eet ing Thursday even ing.— A. A. W in ter, pastor, Preaching hours at 11 and 7 :30. . — — ............. —i. -------------------- OREGON. ALL OVER THE HOUSE. E I . COAD » . L. B l'T L H R W ay* In Which Tissue Paper May Be Used In the Household. B U T L E R & COAD Attorneys-at-Law One would be surprised to know how many uses can be ninde of tis Office, sue paper, an article that abounds in most households, as the shops employ it extensively in packing delicate goods. Robert A. Miller, Probably few people have tested A T T O R N E Y -A T -L A W its merit ns a pencil mark eraser, vet it serves the purpose admirably Oregon City •>* Oregon and on paper of some textures often acts more satisfactorily than the R oom 3, W sin bard building rubber eraser. Opposite Courthouse. For cleaning and polishing glass of any description, from the fine Lan d titles and land often business lens of a pair of spectacles to the » specialty. common window glass, tissue paper B x -R *g i*le r Oregon C ity land efflee. is unexcelled. Bought fresh and new in pack ages of a hundred sheets of white A . .1 . M A K T I . N , and colored, it costs little, yet gives an added daintiness in many ways. P A I N T E R , It brightens bureau drawers, it House, sign and o rn am en ta l, grain makes a pretty wrapping for the small package that one often finds in g , kaU om iu g and paper h an gin g. it necessary to carry, it adds far D il i .* «. O kshok more to the effect of a present than ordinary paper and stuffed in waists and sleeves it prevents wrinkling and crushing when packed. Silk and lace that need pressing are pro *r»$Ia<#p»nd»naa far ll»nmouth an4 A lrlla - tected by tissue paper, and wrinkled a ta 8:10 \> m v«e Iniapandnt# far Monmouth and Dalla»— veils pressed under it emerge with am 7:15 pm renewed freshness. laraa Moumoalh far AlrMa — , D A LLA S , OREGON. W ill practice iu all courts. ever bank. 1 SFüD FOU $ « $ HOLVERSQN’Sll will clean the carpet without injur ing it. I f the broom is dampened frequently, it will not raise a cloud of dust. Or a better plan would be to sprinkle salt over the carpet be fore sweeping. It cleanses the car pet beautifully and brightens the colors. When the dust has settled, re move the covers from the furniture and dust the woodwork carefully. Use a soft feather duster for bric- a-brac and vases. A large square of cheesecloth is better for other ar ticles. When the dust has settled on the walls, wrap a cloth about the brush part of the broom and wipe it off. MOTOR TIME TABLE. r I i to p m « Mvomoath for D»1I m — la m 730 pm « f u Airli» for Monmouth and Iml»p»nd»n»o— L» a in 5 P *n Tiares Dallas for M»nmoa :h an ' In«ia,->andaa«a — - — S.S0 p m. Use the Broom Sometime*. Although the carpet sweeper is a labor saving device, the carpet will need a thorough sweeping with a broom occasionally. Remove uphol- R. O. G R A V E N » . B. W I L L I A M * . P r «.l«l»llt. C « * M «T . stered chairs and couches from the W . O. V A 8 S A L L , a s s is t a n t C a s h ie r room if convenient, hut if not cover U A LLA S U 1TÏ RAJS’K them while sweeping. There is nothing so destructive to their beau- OF D ALLA «, ORSOOJt, ty as to allow them to become cov T r * n »* c t* a genera! banking on»i- ered with dust every sweeping day. u . v in *11 its b ra n c h »*; buys and «ells Open the windows or doors and <ex*b*r.g* un prin cip al points in ihe sweeu with uuick, firm strokes that » n lte d S tate*: makes collection * on all How to Clean a Plaater Cast. A correspondent of a scientific journal says that a bust or statue can be most thoroughly cleaned pro vided it has not been painted, oiled or waxed by inverting it and filling it with water free from iron. The | water is then allowed to filter 1 through the plaster. A fter the fil tering has been kept up for a suffi cient time and the outside surface 1 occasionally washed with water and a soft brush the plaster is allowed lo dry. It is then found that all Ihe dust has been wiped out of the port's of the cast, which is thus re- point* in the Pacific N o rtb w c -t: loan* u isti.v ami discounts paper al the b e t rata* ; allow interest on tim e deposits. # . r| • vi« r d r . J o r d a n ' s . * We have a large stock of this very superior hog feed, also(|y »»««xf *5» Spetz, and all kinds of field seeds. 0 HSSEiiä I? ÄHäTSMY{ im : lit3ilTiT.,mnii<*Ct,«4i n t GARDEN ^GRASS SEED S r r.lf grnsH «»»**»! is the beu to be h»<l in tTc Willamette valley and we invite you to Cull and examine the name, 0 fj .-rssrje Twwiuiim Consul »»de« rr»* mm » *H i*y •*♦*#«* Tt •awro , .r bT lrtt«r A H."* i» n y i . « c**« ** " «• »«.î» f R M V W r « u . é 4 i * l » r » R k l M k l I U K . * ►>* n*« ) *«!l * l U ’ U ff P K H B. t K v**»V OA J0N0AN * CO., la s t M«r’ »♦ S I. 4 S. a 0 * DUNNE’S SOUP SPRAYS Iqu «r- A catalogue •n* for these spray-«. T h e y g iv e *;<r#»n* nt fjiti«fs« tion. S^r will he »put fr» c up >n ftj |»tic:»tb>n. A mi d mole traps sold in »bi* market £ I Seedsm en \W bave î tie best gopher A*k to see them when you call. jj^% . & r e id , £ - S a le m , O r. F. H. MUSC9TT. TRUCKM AN. JD alia.!«: O r e g o n A fair «hare of patrons.ee solicited • «4 all o-dtrs promptly filled Dallas Foundry! « g L U T H E R & CO*^ I REAL ESTATE s — A L L K fffD fl O T— IRON WORK TO ORDER- Repairing Promptly Done. BO. BIDDLE, - PROP. v N O 17. ME R E M EN. WHEEL ANI) ITS AY AY Preaching Sunday morning and ev- ening. Sunday sclmol at 9:45. Kp- wortli league at 6:30. P raver m eet in g 'l liursday even in g.— U. N. Hounds, pastor, Dalla», Oregon. APRIL JJ J902. * Lands a Specialty.** ^ We are prepared to locate you upon so n i«o fci the finest timber claims in Oregon, or if you?; want an improved ranch or fruit farm, w e e in g show you just what you are looking for. C a llff and see us. All correspondents prom ptlyst-K tended to. LUTHER & CO., Dallas, O'r. G o o d R o a d s a M ijxh ty F o r c e aa a C l v il is ln f r Agren t—C o st o f T r a n s p o r t a t i o n R e d u c e s P r o f it s o f P ro d u c e r . W o r k F o r t h e I lo a d m u k e r . % One of the most instructive papers of the food roads convention, in Buffalo In September was by Lewis JtX. ilaupt. Philadelphia, member of the isthmian canal commission. “ Every forward turn of a wheel,“ he said, “ Is a revolution and typifies prog ress. It is immaterial whether it be a w agon wheel or a car wheel, a tty- wheel or a w ater wheel, a turbine or a propeller, a pinion or a pulley, a bicycle or a mobile. It !s always fascinating to see the wheels go round. “ But behind the wheel to make it re volve there may be a crank; behind the crank there must be a motor; behind the motor an artisan; behind the arti san a capitalist; behind ti e capitalist an inventor; behind tli* Inventor there is the great Creator of mind und mat ter, the lncompreheysfide God, the mainspring o f all activities and possi bilities. “ Intu itively the mind Is carried back in the spirit o f the days o f old, when the prophet Ezekiel stood on tlie banks o f the river Chebar, In the land o f the Chaldeans, and, looking into the opened heavens, beheld the four living crea tures which had the likeness o f a man going upon wheels. “ ‘The appearance o f the wheels and their work was like unto the color of beryl, and they four had one likeness, and their appearance and their work was, as it were, a wheel in the middle o f a wheel. * * * The Rpirit o f the liv ing creature was in the wheels. And whithersoever the spirit was to go they wen*, thither w as their spirit to go.’ ‘•From that day to this the earth has trundled around her course in yearly laps, bearing to the children o f the present century the fruition o f this prophecy o f the spirit and the wheels. W ell may it be said today that every thing goes upon wheels, but there are wheels and wheels. Some turn more easily than others and do more work at less cost, and thus we are brought directly into contact with the surface 01 roadw ay which the wheel harnesses as a practical question in economics, mechanics and physics. “ In addition to the wheel and its w a y there are obstacles o f various kinds which impede Its progress. i built, and a new site nas aireauy uevu i chosen. Senator Frye of Maine and Senator | The average monthly salaries of meu Chandler of New Hampshire are both teachers In Illinois Is $01.09 and of wo total abstainers. men $53.51. Henry Asquith, M. P„ former horn« Tbe attorney general of Minnesota secretary, is making a handsome In come of £7,000 or £8,000 a year at hli has ruled that tbe use of the Lord’s Prayer In the public schools of that law practice. A. J. Parker of Leominster, Masa., state 1* unconstitutional. This ruling claims to be the first man who received Is based on the following: “Nor ahull rutlons from Clara Barton. This was any man be compelled to attend, erect In a southern hospital during the civil or support auy place of ivorsblp.- Tbe Rev. L. K. Holden, president of war. | the University of Wooster. O.. which Paderewski, the pianist, la a devote« was recently burned, announces that a of physical culture. It Is not that be well known millionaire bus promised wishes to be made stouter or thinner, to contribute $100.000 toward the re but has pure pleasure In tbe perform building o f tbe Institution provided ance of feats of strength. that $40,000 shall be raised In Wooster For the first time In fifty-three y ean and $100,000 from outside sources. Major Lucius Slade has Just failed to lend the grand march In the Boston Na T H E BLACK DRAGON. tional Lancers’ annual party for chil dren. Feeble health kept him away. No doubt ths emperor of China might Lord Roberts makes no secret of tbe have enjoyed that return to Peking fact that years ago bis great march very highly If be could only have lost from Kabal to Kandahar was foretold the empress dowager somewhere on to him by a fortune teller and that he the road.—Pittsburg Dispatch. was so Impressed nt the time that be Probably there never was before In had full fulth In the prophecy. t!>p history of the w orld so melancholy Sir Alfred L. Jones of Liverpool Is * “triumphal return" of a ruler to his the largest Individual shipowner In rnpttnl ns that w hich has Just been ex Great Britain, his firm’s tonnage now ecuted by bis majesty of China. 8o amounting to over 400.000. He Is a far as tbe empress dowager and her bachelor of fifty-five and began life at udvlsera are concerned, they are not the lowest rung of the ladder. proper objects for sympathy. — New Thomas A. Walker, - wealthy H ar York Times. din county (la.) stockman, landed In N ew lo r k city In 1838 with but 24 j CONGRESSIONAL CU T8. cents and still possesses tbe Identical 24 cents, which he will retain as a val- j A large flow of language will of uable heirloom for his children's chil course bare to subside before tbe w a dren. ter can be turned on In the Isthmian Stuart Robson, the actor, was once a canals-Washington Star. page In the United States senate, his If the country could get a better appointment having been due to the ef grade of senators and congressmen by forts of such distinguished southerners pnylng more for them. It would be true as John C. Calhoun, Jefferson Davis, economy to Increase the price.—Phila Henry Clay, Robert Toombs and Alex delphia Ledger. ander Stephens. The agitation has been renewed for Reginald Clnypole Vanderbilt, fourth the abolition of secret sessions of tbe and youngest son of the late Cornelius United States senate. When did the Vanderbilt, attained his majority re senate bold a secret session that stayed cently and under the provisions of bis secret?—Omaha Bee. father's will came Into absolute pos session of a sum approximating $7,- B R E W E R I E S ’ EARNINGS. C00.000. This legacy was independent Weak? “ I suffered terribly tnd was ex tremely weak (or 12 years. Tbe doctors said my blood was all turning to water. At last I tried Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and was soon feeling all right again.” Mr*. J. W . Fills, Hadlyme, Ct. N o matter how long you have been ill, nor how poorly you may be today, A y e r s Sarsaparilla is the best medicine you can take for purifying and en riching the blooa. Don’t doubt it, put your whole trust in it, throw away everything else. Sl.M a bottle. All dragflsts. Aak your doctor what he thinks o f Ayer*» Sarsaparilla. He knows all about this grand old family medicine. Follow his adviea and we will be satisfied. J. C. A r i a Co., Lowell, M om . developing systems of Improved trunk roads with laterals as feeders to their own system*. Numerous precedents for such a policy exist in foreign coun tries, where the results have proved its wisdom and economy.” In the 8ickroom. Absolute cleanliness and tidiness nro necessary in a sickroom. The furniture should be simple and ca pable of being easily cleansed. Avoid all kinds of woolen draperies and let the curtains be o f white washable material. I f possible, all medicines and the attendant para phernalia should be kept out of sight of the patient in an adjoining room. Glasses, spoons, etc., should be washed as soon us used and plac ed ready for the time when they will again be needed. of a trust fund of $20,000,000 I d which the young man has a quarter Interest for life. Dining Room Decoration. A recent idea is to form a border or semifrieze above a piate rail or bric-a-brac shelf in dining room or living room. Quite a pleasant effect was lately secured by an artistic dec orator in a library by hanging a line of old prints just above the plate shelf. Another quite novel effect was secured in a dining room by a line of blue, red and white Japanese plates against deep yellow paper above the plate rail. Some Idea of the quantity of malt lie-tors produced and sold In Great B ET W EE N H EA TS. Britain, to take no note whatever of the Imported beers sold and drank, T. I* Qulmby has succeeded Frank nmy be gained from the annnal re G. Hall os treasurer of the New Eng ports which have lately been published land Trotting Horse Breeders’ associa of the two great brewing companies, tion. Guinness and Alsopp, says the New Young King, brother of Bingen. York Commercial Advertiser. 2:CiiVi, owned by Charles Whlttemore, U u lrn r** paid as beer duty for the South Natick, Mnss., Is dead. He was yenr £804,000, approximately $4,320,- five years old. • 0O0. The Item of Income tax on the It is said that Creseeus, 2:021/i, de business amounted to £11,000 “extra.” spite his long and arduous season’s so the report reads. In addition flOO,- work, weighs twenty-five pounds more 000 has been placed to the reserve than be did last AugusL fund, £30.000 to the depredation fund, John A. McKerron nmy be campaign and a 0 per cent dividend, with a 4 ed ne::t season, but not until after he per cent bonus added, has been paid. tins made his endeavor to win the Bos The sum of £48,502 was carried over as ton cup for the third time. surplus. Tbe Alsopp report shows a deficiency Antba, 2:2.‘iy,. by Onward, will be raced on the snow at Toledo. O., this nnd a decrease In the original value of winter by John Casper. George U. the concern of nearly $10,000,000 on a Ketchain owns her and will breed her capital of about $22,000,000. This is attributed partly to bad Investments in to Creseeus. E. J. Tralnter of Buffalo and Trainer "public houses,” of which the company W. L. Snow of UornellsTlIle, N. Y„ had as many as thirty-one. Including both well known horsemen, are sojourn some large hotels, and to an attempt ing In California. It Is reported that to make lager beer, In which field the they arc looking f w racing material for company found powerful competition In the Importation of German beer. 1902. The trotter Austin, by Alctrotnra, Jr., From these figures an idea may be ob Is nald to have trotted a trial bnlf at tained of the vast capital Invested In Le Mars, la., in 1:05. H e will be cam beer and breweries In England, those paigned through the Great Western named being only two of the compa nies engaged In the business, although circuit next season by W . J. Conley, they are the largest. Jr., of Elk Point, 8. D. Oil the Machine. Many a sewing machine fails to do as good work as it ought and might because it is not properly oil ed and cleaned. When it gets gum med up— generally through the use of poor oil— a thorough oiling with kerosene, followed by careful wip ing and then with an_ oiling with IMPASSABLE FOR WHEELS. good sperm oil, will often greatly There may be a mountain I d the path mend its way of running. an or cataract In the stream, a chasm In the plain, or It may be that rain ha* To Restore Tarnished Silver. converted an earthen road Into a Tarnished silver may he restored slouah, that a cyclone has drifted sand across a ra ilw ay or a blizzard has fill to brightness by the application of ed a cut with snow. oil used for polishing hardwood “ Such arc a fe w o f the contingencies floors. The oil should be applied which obstruct the lilithways of com with a flannel cloth and the articles merce and which It is the work of the briskly rubbl’d afterward. Silver engineer and roadmaker to remove candlesticks and similar articles may where practicable. “ W h at better and more condensed [ he kept in good condition by occa instructions can be found for this than sionally rubbing them with flannel those which cam e from the prophet and a little floor oil. Isaiah as the voice o f him tliut crletli A C A U S E O F IN S A N IT Y . from the wilderness o f Asln, ‘Prepare >e the w a y make straight lu the des S o m e S t a r t l i n g S t s t l s f l o s T h a t F o r m nrt I n d i c t m e n t o f A l c o h o l . ert a highway fo r our God.’ That alcohol is a pow erful influence “ T oday Russia is literally carrying out these specifications In extending fo r evil cannot be (Usefulmod even by her area o f steel from the Rattle to the those who advocate most earnestly It« Japan sea that civilization inay ad legitim ate and intelligent em ploym ent vance by the peaceful revolutions f A part from the effects o f acute intoxi the wheel and uot by tho arbitrament cation, says The Journal o f the Am eri o f the sword. • • • Roms'), roads sub can Medical AsRociniJoa, the deleteri jugated and controlled the empire. ous influence o f lonpr continued indul Truly the wheel is mightier than the gence in alcohol 1« witnessed in chron ic visceral cbTugcg principally o f a de sword as a civilizin g agent.” F o llow in g this preamble Mr. flntipt generative character. In speaking o f the Increase In the showed the relation o f the rate o f transportation to the profit to the pro number o f cases admitted during the ducer and the Influence severally o f year 1000 to tho Royal Edinburgh asy- the highway, the railway ra d the ar lam the physician superintendent, Dr. tificial ni d nationtl w aterw ay* In lim Clous'con. in his annual report was tin- iting or extending the market mnge. able to avoid the conclusion that tills was due to a large extent to the ex- In conclusion lie Slid: “ Very little o f the SOO.OOO.OOO o f tons cesttlve use o f alcoholic stimulants o f freight carried annually on the rnII- during times o f prosperity, attended ronds o f the 1'nlteil States has its with brisk trade and high wages. The number o f alcoholic insane ad- origin on the line o f the road. Lot must first be moved from farm, mine mi tied to the asylum has Increased or forest over earth roads at an average from an average o f 16.5 per cent In the cost o f 25 cents p 'r ton mile. I f the period between 1874 and 1888 to 21.5 average distance bo but foo r m lbs per cent In the period between 188» the expense o f transportation before and 1906 and to 22.5 In 1800. O f 472 delivery to the railroad woithl be *>KXv new cases received during the year 000,000, while the charge for distri 1000 drink was assigned as either the bution may swell tbi* to over $1.000.- •ole or contributory cause in 115, or 000,000 annually, most o f which goes about one-quarter o f all. In the men alone eightj-one, or about one-half, to cover wear and tear. “ T h e cost of trous,)o.*tatlon on our w ere alcoholic patients. Besides, for common roads may 1 « greatly dimin every man in whom excessive drinking ished by reducing tbe resistance* and c a u s e * absolute Insanity there are Improving tbe grades, alignment, sur tw enty In whom it injures the brain, face and drainage. If reduced to even blunts the moral sense and lessens the ©ne-balf the effect would lie to double capacity for work in varying degree. Dr. Cl oust on makes an earnest plea tbe area o f the territory tributary to tbe railroads and so increase their ton for legislative or state means for the nage as well as tbe margin available diminution o f alcoholism. H e rlgb Jy contends that It Is an irrational appli for transportation. “A * It costa much less to Improve cation o f the doctrine o f liberty to roads than to opep branch railroads grant to every man the Inalienable as feeder*. It would lie good policy on right to render himself a burden to tbe part of railroad* to unite with others and a source o f degradation and counties. towasMna ard boroughs la danger to tbe community. O n e B r i t i s h C o u r r r n F a t « $4 * 310.000 D a ty l a a Y e a r. W E L L AN8W ERED. C O L L E G E AND SCH O O L. P r o h ib itio n P a p e r** R o p lv t o s L l$ - o o r T r a lllo J . o r n a i. The UoiversOv <~t Berlin is to tie re- 1 j I j I I i I ! | ' ; I 1 i i I : I , Ask a - healthy woman what she would F o X sell her health and die would tell >% you that the choicest \diamouds in the world 'could not buy it. What use for diamond rings to emphasize the shrunken fingers, or earrings to light up the cheeks hollowed by scase ? Health is the first requisite o womanly happiness. General 11-health in women lias its ori gin in local womanly diseases. Cure the diseases o f tne delic ate womanly organism and the gen eral health is perfectly restored. The remarkable ittnefils e x perienced from the vise of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription are due to this medicine’s per fect cures o f womanly diseases. It establishes regularity, dries weakening drains, heals inflam- tnatio’ i and ulceration and cures female weakness. " I t afTi-r !» me freat ple«i*ir* to he a!»le t< «ny a ifw w -r.1a in rtri -»r»l to the merit1 * o f Iir. H ercr'» frav*/rit« Prescription ai:d hi« * Golden Medical IriWivery, write* Mri. Flora Am. o f Dnlla*. Jnrkw.ti Co., Mo. " I w*a ter.iptM to try these medicine* after scein f the effect apon m v mother. At an enrlv *ta*e oi lu rr ie d life I waa frea tlv bothered with painful peri od». »Ian a troublesome drain which rendered me very weak and unfit for work o f any kind. I became »*> thin «here * n nothin* left o f me but »kin and bone. M r huaiiand became alnrmed and *ot me a bottle o f * Fa rcrite Freacrlptlon.’ After he »aw the wonderfh! eflVrta o f th-rt one he not me two more and after I uaed those u;» there waa no more pain, and I be* g*n to gain in fleah eery rapidly.” ’’ ririts Prescription ” makes weak women strong, rick women well. Acrcept no »«hetiute for which works won the medicine î ders for weak A paper published In the Interest of tbe liquor traffic Justifies tbe traffic on tbe ground that In this country alone It employ* 304.000 persons and 1,800,- 000 people derive their support as fam ilies of the former, directly from It. ! | This liquor organ wishes to know what Is to be dons with this great army of 2.000.000 people In case tbe traffic la : atiollshed. To which Inquiry a Prohi bition paper gives answer: ! We would set them to raising grain and meat to fill tbe hungry mouths of the wives and ths children of the pa | trons of the saloon. We would employ them In the pro duction of cotton, wool and hides and In making them Into clothing, hats and caps, boot* and shoes for those who on account of the saloon are never com fortably clad. W e would set them to felling trees and sawing them Into lumber and mak ing them Into homes for those who live In hovels because tbe husband and fa ther spends Ills wages for drink. If In deed his patronage of the saloon baa not put him “out of a Job.” W e would keep them busy making carpets, furniture, picture*, plaroa and [ organa, books and newspapers for tbs | millions by whom on account of the , drink most of tbe'c things are consider ed as luxuries Intended only for sa i loon keepers and other fortunate peo i ple. __________________ j ■ I | L e m o a .S e . The Jnloo of a lemon In hot water so awakening In tlm morning Is an exeel- i lent liver eorreetlve, nnd for stout wo men It la better than any antifat medi , cine ever luvonted. flarah Is t favorite name among the dukes of Mnrlborougn, Sarah Jennings being ths first Dncbssa of Marlbo rough.