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About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (May 8, 1903)
- L. A "iTicu su.mach is a weak stomach ’ is a golden rule to remember. Yet how often one hears people say: “ I ’ ve been ¿ olden II u low F o r t l i e R e l i e f a n d rushing about all day and am tired to C u r e o f Inciitfeattoa. death. 1 must have a big meal to mike up for it.” You may put the big A ll w ho sutler froiu poor digestion should wear a ten Inch width of flan meal into the stomach, hut you cannot nel bandage next the skin, pinned fa ir make the stomach digest It. A belief lives stroi g in tlie hearts and ly tight round the hotly over the stoni a oh. No liver or digestive pills or pep- minds o f tiie majority o f mankind, in- luding persons o f weak digestions, jin preparations help the stomach a ■wentieth part as much as this flannel .hat a quick, brisk walk taken before i meal gets up an appetite and helps prescript ion. A poor circulation in the he stomach to digest the food. Now. • iomach, causing that chilly, “ miser his is exactly what Is doesn’t do. Ex- / hie“ feeling, is at the root o f half the •rcise spreads the blood throughout Liidlg’ stion that mortals tire heir to. Is* body. For the proper digestion o f That is why hot water drinking gives • iiel’. It helps the circulation. A flan food the blood is needed in the stom nel bandage worn day and night all ach. Few realize this Important fact. he year r und cures the faulty blood A fte r a long, exhausting walk, bl- •iivn.iation o f the stomach; cousequent- •ycle spin or any severe physical or uental strain take a good h alf hour’s 'y it cures dyspepsia. Five hours' interval between meals. •eat in a com fortable armchair or lying : voicing fried foods, made dishes and on a sofu before you cat a substantial Mixtures and observing three or four meal. Lenten meals” in every week are H o w t o C le n n w e S t r u w M a t t ln p r . .olden rules for good digestion. Straw matting should never be wash- ' A good dinner tit night is necessary for those whose pleasure or work keeps ed with soap. A large coarse cloth I (Mil up very late. Hut for ordinary should be dipped in salt and then rub folk who dine at 7 and go to bed about bed the way o f the straw. The mat 10:30 only a light, wholesome repast should then be thoroughly dried and if -lioukl be taken at the end o f the day, treated iu this fashion will not turn Papier macbe articles, too. .. hen tin* muscles and nerves are more vellpw. or les ; e x ’ o* •! -* i vVUODH, >i. D. H . Physician HOW Surgeon. and Dullas, Oregon. I J. 3 £*«££, Wl U D ALLAS, - O it E G O L O ffice over I.in k . J K. SlBLKV, H. C, EAKIB. S I B L E Y .X E A K 1 N , A U o i ' i i o y K - n t - 1 a »» \ v . We hnve the only <«et o f alwtr u t booki in f*1, * m n 'v Reliable ai.etraetn tiirnialied. ami ........ t. •. eii . N j com niLiiori ohirgutJ oil loan«. R ouiub id :( W 'I hoii ’ h block. Dalian J. L. COLLINS, ttorney and Counselor at Law s o lic ito r iu C k M o e e r jr . lie.-u it practice o f bid profeenioii in fchia place i vli oit thirty y ear*, and w ill attend to all busii enb „.runted to hie . are. Oiflce, corner .Main and Court >• '»vd.in. Polk Co, Or J N. H A ItT A T T O R N E Y -A T -L A W . R'tom 1 ,0 s tic Id building. D A .L L A .S , - - TO A V O ID D Y S P E P S IA Olhce up stairs in Caniph. IV s build OREGON. K F o r c ë BLACK OKEUON Never Tire* of It. “ I am considerably advanced towards eighty years of age. I have of late been almost rejuvenated by the use of your very excellent preparation, which you have rightly designated as ‘ Force.’ Never tire of it. “ E. C a t t e k m o l s . ” MOTOR TIME TABLE. Leaves Independence for Monmouth and A irlie - 7:30 a tn 3:30 p in Le tves Inde|>endnee for Monmouth and Dallas— 11:10 a m 0 15pm Leave« Monmouth for Airlie - .50 a in 8:50 p m Leaves Monmouth for Dallas— It 20 a m 7:30 p m Leaves Airlie for Monmouth and Independence— j :00 a in 6pm Leaves Dallas for M.mmoui h an • In.ie »endenoe— COOpm 7 30 p m . OF D A LLA S , ^ A rr O liA M k om eat ( T h e I . » r e n t Anatomical Museum (n the J W orld. \Veakt)*«se* or any c.nttractfcfl " diM -a«« M w i t l V i e l j c a r . 11>jr the o ld «*t ip a c ia lK t on the CeaaL E » ( jfi years. ------- ------------- . JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN« I V M I U * th oroughly eradicated A from iy »te m without th e use o f B . r e w r y V rndical cure for P l l o a . l d r w e ---- W h it e c o i f f r a wAii.au raba. ( A valúa»-’ ' C all e r - r i t e L I O R D A N f t C O . 1081 M a r k e t S t . . * THIS SIGNATUR» SW A ON EVERY BOX OF THE GENUINE I f y * -T a r « n ot satisfied, you c m get vour m on ey— ple.»>anlly too T i n t i » i be way we do business. A b solu te price honesty guar aiiteed. f J k T p Mail Orders W ill Receive Prompt Attention * ¿ á must hot be treated to soap. They ¡ should be lightly sponged with cold water, then dredged with fine flour and finally polished with a soft flannel. f •# » I F . I f f v !<> < 1 f r f f v V v f x f v v V f V r f 'r V T IM E T A B L E ' . V V V ■JT ’ r >W V V KEPAIRINC AND SUNDRIES S p a u l d i n g ’s Athletic Coods. H ow Get your old bievde enameled a id cleaned up— Enamel baked on bike at factory. D A LLA S PA88KNOF.R— D A IL Y , F.X S I’ N D A Y :00 p m L v ................Portland................. Arl0 2 0am T:20p m A r ................ 1 »alias ............ Lv 7:(«o H ow W.J. STOW. A TRUCKMAN. A f* ir share o f patronage solicited snd *11 o-ders p ro m p tly tilled Dallas Foundry! — A LL KIND S O F— IRON WORK TO ORDER Repairing Promptly- Done. ED. BIDDLE, - PROP.; * I Man Orsde!, Hayes & Co», n i REAL ESTA TE DEALERS F A R M S A N D C IT Y LO TS Purchasing agent for W C. McClure, of Saginaw, Michigan, and other eastern timlier dealers. Room 1, up stairs, Wilson building. ; DALLAS n G ood S k in I f we have been so fortunate ns to have many more lambs than ewes and some are not supplied with milk, we aid the ewe by feeding the Iambs cow ’s milk, good Jersey milk, so as to push them right along and get them on the market as early as possible. 1 have used for the past few years what I call a lamb feeder, says R. E. Roberts o f Wisconsin. It is a tin pail with a tight fitting cover that w ill hold one gallon o f milk. On one side are three spouts soldered on near tlie bot tom o f the pail and extending outward as high as the top o f the pail, made so that the rubber nipples can be put on. By feeding lambs a few times from a bottle, which is more convenient to teach them nt tlrst, they quickly learn to be on hand for their milk when they see you coming with the pail. Give them all they will take o f this Jersey milk every morning and evening. By feeding in this way they get no set back. but grow equal to the best ones. H «y For Y o u iik S to ck . The grains are deficient in lime and mineral water, while clover Is rich Iu those materials. Corn contains 10 per cent o f water and elover hay 15 per cent. O f the dry matter eorn has but \% per cent o f ash (lime, magnesia, potash, soda, etc.), while clover has 0 per cent. Clover hay contains over 12 per cent o f protein and eorn lOVk- Corn is rich in starch and fat, however, con taining twice as much as clover. Clo ver hay has more crude fiber than the Food. to C le a r th e to M n k e F re n c h i ?i * OREGON \ L ittle O n e ’* Id e a m m M S H E E P F E E D IN G . B u ccew a I n C o l o r a d o H a a A r o u s e d t h e F arm ers of K an sas. H oney. o f C r im e . A little one had seen that terrible sight the chain gang working In the street end asked for an explanation >f the striped clothes ami the Iron fetters. She was told that the men had been naughty «m l wore being punished. The next time she was taken out the child escaped from tier nurse and running up to a hulking negro convict looked up into his brutal face ami asked pite- oualy. “ Did oo steal oo's mamma s sugar f Alas for those faroff days when stealing mamma's sugar was the most heinous crime known to our souls!— Washington Star. LACKM tWlPATlOf* Constination is nothing ig more j t than lian a clogging of the bowels * r and nothing less than vital stag- nation or death if not relieved. If every constipated Rutferer could realize that he is allowing populous filth to remain in his system, he would soon get relief. Constipation invites all kind of contagion. Headaches, bilious- ness, colds and many ail- n V other i mf nients disappear when consti- veis are relieved. ' ' “ Thed- ‘ lated “ bowels Pa ford’s Black-Diaught thoroughly cleans out the bowels in an easy and nnhiral manner without the purging of calomel or other vio lent cathartics. Be sure that you get the origi nal Thedford’s Black-Draught, made by The Chattanooga Medi cine Co. Sold bv all druggists in 25 cent and $1.00 packages. Morgan, Ark., M ht 2.'», 1901. I onnnot rfcoaaead Thrnford’H Rla< k- Dr.uulit too M k I i I v . 1 kf«’p It In my I ioum * trn jrciim. 1 ni*ver gnre nir rh iltln n an j other lx x a tlT e . I think 1 m uid never he aide to work without It on a«Tount of belngr troubled with • onKtlpnlion. fo u r medicine I n | ail that keep* me up. c. b . m c k a r l a n d . i grain; benre Is I i - hr valuable In mat <li reetlon. W lille many farmers have ul ways mode clover bay u specialty in j feeding adults, yet It Is more valuable \ for you UK stock tlinu may be supposed j —Home and Harm. V o lo e . Bent h alf cup o f butter and twi*- third* o f a cup o f powdered sugar to n cream, then add one unltenten egg and beat ngnin until light. Place In a dou ble holler and stir over boiling water until It thickens. Rem ove from the fire, and add tlie grated rind and juice >f one lemon. When well mixed, tunj out to rool. if* * * D a lia n : O r e g o n W ilk e T o clear the voice, to n teaspr>onfiil each o f glycerin and lemon juice add a half cu;> o f hot water, stir well and drink. The dose. If necessary, may be repeated several times fluring the (lay. - Lee Smith's Cyclery 5;.>0 p m 2.1« p in 1 :2 0 p m trains of Y A M H IL L D IV ISIO N : Passenirer «h’|»ot foot uf .It (Tcr-on str« et A IR L IE K R E IU IIT - T U I W E E K LY Leave 7:4'o a m ....... Portland A n i ’ e 3:32 p m Lea c 3:50 p m ............. Dallas A rrive 8:20 a m A rrive 6:06 p ro ....... Airlie ----- l/ * v e 7 0 0 a m rrV W to ÉÉ ü Lanolin, tw o ounces; almond oil. six ounces; white wax. three-quarters o f an ounce; spermaceti, one and one-half ounces; glycerin or liquid ablene. ono- lia lf ounce; tincture o f l>enz in, thirty drops. Melt white wax ami almond oil and spermaceti. Take off o f tire and add lanolin, benzoin and glycerin, stir ring and beating all the time. Four iu jars. ---------------------------------------- B I C B Y I C C L Y E C S L E S I H ow m C lo v e r M I NT A P P E A R £&1oney Back! SOUTHERN PACIFIC C O R V A L L IS M A I L - D A I L Y 7 30 a m L v ................ Portland..................Ar 10:40 a nt L v ................. D erry.................... Lv 11:45 p m A r ........ Corvallis . Lv A t Albany and C«'rvallis connect with Oregon Central anti Eastern railroad. From THE FEEPER. CENTER l>y Dr Jordan'» special pain- M ially strong in children a~d misses lines. m iTS FOR ♦#% % F l w n r . and Çemrattatien free and atriO ly private. T re e 'm e n t per , | WÜalty nr h r letter. A r c n O r * Cure in e ve ry ca,e derÚJten. V r t t e for B -ok P n i l B H I P H Ï S t t t h U O D , Espec F IL L S . ORKIION, IN I IIUST IT., HI Fine not, CIL Ihr mem.) L IV E R S H O P P IN G < »Hitler. tKHSEUfl OF ANATGMY* I HOOT S A L E M ’S WILLIAMS. DR. JO R D AN ’S of shoes that was ever seen in Dallas. Middlesex Manufacturing company, Boston. is a 10 CURES A COLD \H OHE DAY CURES GRIP IN TWO DAYS T h e N e w S e a s o n find* S.-ilem's Be-t. Store b e tt°r 'ban Transacts a general hanking ousi- i f sb in all its branches; buys and sells -.ca u se the im yin g baa been I igger and LroAiIer, and because « M e « » in gn w ii.g and wt are belter fortified to fit your wants. SAchange on prin cipal points in the „Ijw take a whole page and mu *h of your valuable lim e, ¡f wr attem pted a^«. United States; makes collection s on all ^ points in the Pacific N o rth w es t; loans ^ d e f*e rip tio n o f tin preparations mad»' for you in this season’s stock m oney ami discounts paper at the best rales ; allow interest on tim e deposits. v is it W e have now in stock the most satisfactory line Ççrrts... The 5 cent pa kage i« on« u ;h for tirual occasions. The fatiiil.Y buttle, 6“ cents, contains a supply for a year All druggists sell them. W —1 W . C. V A S S A L L , a s s is t a n t C a s h ie r C IT Y Shoes: K-I-l'A-N-S Tabules Doctors find A good prescription For mankind. R oom 2 OstieUI building. »ALLAS D ALLAS qR O V E ’s Enclosed with every bottle nut. package of (.¡rove’s j a better builder than a vacation. A tt o r n e y -a t -L a w E. BROWN 6 t ELLIS Ask your doctor what he thinks o f A y e r’s Sarsaparilla. He knows all nbouttlil« grand old fam ily medicine. Follow his advice and w e w ill be satisfied. J. C. A t k r C o ., Low ell, Mass. Office, J. H. T O W N S E N D K. - direet to our counters. o<]fyîo Paÿ T h e Rcady-to-Serve Cereal president. These goods are all from the manufacturers' ? ...5 0 D A LLA S , OREGON. W ill practice in all com is. over bank. R. C. C R A V E N that it will be your pleasure to see this year. Tired when you go to bed, tired when you get up, tired all the time. W hy? Your blood is-im- ure, that’s the reason. ou are living on the border line of nerve ex haustion. Take Ayer’s S a r s a p a r i l l a and be a bottle. quickly cured. si.00 All druggist«. K COAD B U T L E R & COAD • N o w the most complete line of spring goods fio Çure[>o A tto r n e y s -a t-L a w D ALLAS We a re O pening “ I was very poorly and could hardly get about tne house. I was tired out all the time. Then I tried Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and it only took two bottles to maae me feel perfectly well.” — Mrs. N. S. Swin- ney, Princeton, Mo. T1STELESS CHILI TONIC ing. \ . L . B17TI.BR 7/^> Has Flood the tent of*25 years. An nual sali» over 1.500,000 hi ttles. Doe*« tilia recortl of m er it appeal to you? Jim D u m p s w a s a m o s t u n frie n d ly m an W h o lived h is life on a h e rm it p lan. H e ’d n e v e r sto p fo r a fr ie n d ly s m ile , B u t tru d g e d a lo n g In h is m o o d y s ty le T ill “ F o rc e ’’ o n e d a y w a s s e rv e d to h im — S in c e th e n th e y c a ll h im “ S u n n y J im .” A tto rn e y a t- L a w . - Tired Out O R W O O N OSCAR H A T T E R . D ALLAS N o J 9. D A L L A S DREGON M A Y 8, 1903 VOL. XXIX. Ilr lc l £ MADE ,'RACTICALUT J Ä IN L E 5 5 BY THE USE O F ^ )* P I£ R C Ö FA V O R ITE TŒ5CRIPT10 I T CU R E S ¿HAUSER 111..o il For S ie rra . Dried blood was used in a feeding ex j pertinent wltb steera In Iowa last year, commencing wltb one-tenth o f a isnind per bead |>er day and gradually Increns j Ing until the steers were each reeeiv- j Ing a full pound per day in connection wltb fifteen pounds o f corn gradually Increased to tw enty five pounds o f cornmeal per day. There would seem ! to tie no reason why this dried blood might not prove a very acceptable ad dition to our list o f dairy feeds and perhaps could be fed by commencing very moderately op to half a pound a day. F rrS In s IJ rs f« H o rses. A large ft horse In Idleness may hnve tweu... ponnda o f good bay and when working needs but tw elve to fourteen pounds when oats are fed In abundance to furnish the required nl trogenous matters to repair waste o f tissue. W e also find In such eases that tie* feeding o f dried blood meal la won derfully effective. Colorado farm ers are not to enjoy a monopoly in the business o f fattening sheep for the market. T h e industry has spread to Knnsus, where the farm ers nre bettering the instruction devel oped in the Cache la Poudre valley and ut the State Agricultural college In Fort Collins. “ The fall o f 1003,” says one authori ty in the D rover’s Telegram , a Kansas City publication, “ w ill see Kansas fan n ers and stock feeders handling more sheep than for mauy a year.” For tw o years sheep men have been favored with sensational prices for mut.ons. Last year the drought and consequent small supply o f sheep on feed oft used high prices, hut this year the remarka ble demand for mutton is cauFing the good values. “ I should not be sur prised,” says the Telegram writer, “ If the bulk o f sheep fed In Kansas in the winter net their handlers 100 per cent profit on the investment. W hen It Is considered that the sheep are out only four mouths ut the longest, this figures at the rate o f 400 per cent per annum. Why, If we could keep sheep in the lots all the year around, wo Kansas farmers who are handling woolskins would soon be classed among the mil lionaires o f the land.” It Is anticipated that next fall will witness an exceptionally heavy demand for feeding sheep all over Kansas. The big operators who handle 10,000 to 20,- 000 head w ill be out for supplies as well as smaller farmers. A poor corn crop might result In this prediction be ing unfulfilled, b it with a moderate yield o f corn we w ill see Kansas fo rg ing to the front as a sheep feeding state. A t the rate muttons are selling at present there is fur more money iu feeding sheep than in handling hogs, counting the loss by cholera oftentimes occasioned in the latter. From present indications there w ill be about tw ice as many sheep fed In Kansas next fall as were put in the lots the past season. This Is an Item o f lmimrtance to Arl- *ona. Texas. New Mexico and southern Colorado, the pastures which furnish the hulk o f the sheep fo r feeding. The better demand for mutton is based on two factors. The first is the high price o f beef, and the second Is the better quality o f mutton as the result o f farm feeding upon a lfa lfa and gralfls.—Den ver New s.«t IV r m N iu n t P iu tn r ^ F o r S h r rp . The value o f a permanent pasture foi sheep, says American Agriculturist, has frequently been overestimated. W hile It Is undoubtedly true that a pasture o f this kind w ill support more sheep thi*Q a temporary field o f grass. It s also true that sheep should be utilized largely In cleaning up stubble fields, eating rope sown In oats in the spring and running In cornfields after the husking. By this means fertility ia much more evenly and profitably dia- trlbuted than If the sheep were kept in one field all the time. m e baby born in iH03 has three times a better chance o f living through Eight usher* are wanted In the Ital Its first year and five times a better Ian chandler o f deputies, and over 14,- chance o f living to be five year* old W»i applications have liecn received for than It would have bad a doaen year« the posts, to which salaries o f about ftfo. ID shillings a week nre attached Irish Is today the living tongue o f al T h e prefect o f the Seine having pla most as many people as speak Welsh. carded Paris wltb posters describing Greek. Servian. Bulgarian Norwegian the terrible effects o f alcohol anil ab or Danish. In Galway alone are 17.- sinth drinking, the cafe proprietor* j 838 persons who cau speak nothing each filed a damage salt against him. hit» I «^*il