Image provided by: Dallas Public Library; Dallas, OR
About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 14, 1903)
r y c 3 L. N. WOODS, \1 D. OiUlrtH, Oregon. DR. £ . J . H O W A RD Physician and Surgeon D A L L A S . OI? S C O N Office ill Ugiow bu ilding. J K. S imi . kt , tion. be it railroad or trust, bus a legal department, and most of tlx* political work is accomplished and the ex penses charged up to It. Nearly all the annual passes und the trip passes are issued by orders of this department, An Era of Corruption In Amer and when it is necessary to buy elec tions or legislatures the money expend ican Politics. ed is charged up as legal expenses. What may be called the legitimate out OOBPOEATIOIiS THE CHIEF8INIIEBS lays of the legal department of ail the great railroads includes an attorney at all the principal towns through which R a i l ra n d P o l i t i c a l M a c h in e In itia te « » the railroad runs, and these usually M o a t o f t h e D e v i l t r y —T r u s t « a n d cover all the county seats. These at P r o t e c t e d I m l n a t r l e * A dd to C o r torneys. the most competent in the county, are under the control of the ru p tio n P a u ii-D u ty o f D e m o c ra t« great legal light at the headquarters of to F o r c e R e fo rm . the corporations. There is often an Where the Republicans gain complete > other official known as the general control in county, stale or nation they agent who “fixes” legislatures and city set up u boss or I mjsscs aiul tamely sub councils to pass laws in the interest of mit to bis or their discrimination. If the railroads or to defeat those which one glances around the United States, would make them pay their fair share this condition of affairs Is at once seen of taxation. When these corjtoruUon to prevail. It will also be developed if officials are combined with the political examination is made of the political machine that is in power, the people conditions under the control of the have no chance of holding their own. Republicans that an alliance exists be In some states rival railroad com tween the boss and the corporations. bines struggle for supremacy. This U In most cases the railroad corporations the case in Iowa and Nebraska, but it are the dominating factor and supply matters not which one succeeds in the necessary “aid” to keep the boss or foisting its selections qd the liepub- ring In. ¿lower. IS very large corpora BRIBERY IS HÄM PANT. P h y s i c i a n and S u r g e o n . H l\ EaAIN. S l L J L B Y (S: b T A K l N , A tlo n ie y M -n I - 1 ¿u w . vVd liave tU e o u ly *e t of * b * t r i- t b o o ks in P'»lh .»uni v. K eliablo u U tra o ta fu rn ish ed , and m oney to >an. No cniniuisalon charged on loa.»*. Hoome 2 id 3 W ilson’s b lo ck . I »alias J. L. COLLINS, turney and Counselor at Law, S o lic it o r in C lu u M ry . heeii n p ra ctice o f his p rofessio n in th is place a b o u t th irty y e a rs, and will a tte n d to all business »trusted to h is - a r e . Office, co rn e r Main and C ourt » D allas, Polk C o , O r J . N. H A R T C arpenters OSCAR H A ÏT Ü R . V. - OREGON. L. BUT1.BB E F. COAD B U T L E R & COAO Atto r n ey s - a t - L a w DA LLA S, OKEOON. Will practice in all collii». Office, over bank. - J . H. TOWNSEND A tto rn e y -a t-La w DALLAS - OREGON Room 2 O.-tield building. MOTOR TIME T A B L E . Leave« Independence for Monmouth anil \irlie — .:80 a m 3:80 p in Leaves Independnce for Monmouth and D allas- 11 : 10 a iu 6 15pm Leave« Monmouth for Airlie - .50 a in 3 60 p m Leave« Monmouth for Dallas— 1 1 :4 0 a m 7 :3 0 p ra Leaves \irlie for Monmoutn ami Independence— ♦ :00 » in 5pm Leaves Dallas for Monmouin an ' In.ie endsnee— 1:00 pm 7 30 pm. R. C . G R A V E N K. K. w il l ia m s . C’n a h le r . P i-e a t'le u t. W. C. V A S S A L L , assistant C ashier DALLAS OP CITA DALLAS, liAiNk OREGON, Transacts a general banking ouai- uc*»8 in all it« branches; buys and »ell* exchange on principal points in the United S tates; makes collections on all points in the Pacific Northwest; loans money and discounts paper at the best rates ; allow interest on time deposits. DR. J O R D A N ' S V IS IT E f f U E I N O F ANATOMY INI flitK T ST.. I l l PIlICUCI, C1L. T h e L «fc;e»t A natom ical Mucffum 1« »Jie W o c l4 _ . W u k M f e * * of a n y conn ract«»l Dy th e o ld A t M a l t t l i V V R f l y j r u a r . i l t.jr S p ecialist on th e C o t a i b a t 36 yeara. I rm d \ OR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN ■ T r a i l L i a th oro ug h ly e ra d ica te d ftoa i t y t i m vitb u tit th « u > t a i ■ • r e a r y T r a a a a i fitted b y an K a p a rt. R a i l - • • I o r a (Off n ■ f l a r * . A quick and Mdicni cu re fo r P i l o t . F l « » u r a an d « s t o l a » . I.y Dv. Jo rd a n '» apeeirft pain- _ l««a m eth od * C uBM ltatiofi ( « • and a trlrtly p r i n t . T - a t m o M por p fe ife o r b y Ie tta r A /feat'«*» O rra in e v e ry caaa h L i d w , Vnta for B-.ok m i L O V U P I Y of | à M h U « l . m a i l e d P l th B . valuab'-t boo b a n . ) c a l l o r write t wages . W 1 | ' . 1 , | 1 S A L E M ’S BEST S TO R E % £ H O N EST GOODS t H O N E S T P R IC E S f H O N E S T S E R V IC E t ?t BICYCLES REPAIRINC AND SUNDRIES 5;50 p m 2;1S pm 1 (2 0 p m train* of , 80. BIDDLE. A. J . M - in g , k»l«oming »nd p * i* r hanging. • % * J J PAINTER, • b O i n o i No Cu r c t>° o < n ° r » t s ... L IV E R P IL L S . v T ii T H E GREAT IfoMilYMEDlCINi » Thoilfortl’s Black-Draught has saved doctors’ bids for more than ' sixty years. For the common fam ily ailments, such as constipation, indigestion, hard colds, bowel com plaints, chills and fever, bilious ness, headaches and other like complaints no other medicine is necessary. It invigorates and reg ulates the liver, assists digestion, stimulates action of the kidneys, purifies the blood, and purges tlio Dowels of foul accumulations. It f cures liver complaint, indigestion, sour stomach, dizziness, chills, rheumatic pains, sideache, back ache, kidnevtroubles, constipation, diarrhcea, biliousness, piles, hara colds and headache. Every drug gist has Thedford’s Black-Draught in 25 cent packages and in mam moth size for $1.00. Never accept a substitute. Insist on having the original made by the Chattanooga Med icine Company. I believe Thedford's Black-Draught is the best medicine on earth. It is good for any and everything. 1 have a family of twelve children, and for four years I have kept them on foot and healthy with no doctor but Black- Draught. A. J . GREEN, illewara, La. 4 aid In inserting it in the wooden roost. The longer end is not bent to its final position until after the screw is in serted tn the wood, when the loose end is twisted into the location shown be low the roost. It is an easy matter to attach a small rag or a piece of sponge to the depending end with any liquid vermicide, and the vaporizing of tills liquid» will serve not only to keep the vermin from crawling over the roosts, but drive the lice from the bodies of the fowls, as the odor will permeate the feathers when the birds are on the roosts at night. The inventor of this device is John II. F. Everesz of YVallu- walla. Wash. O a t s , C o rn REAL E S T A T E D EALER S FARM S AND C IT Y L O TS £ ii ii P u r c h a s in g a g e n t fo r W C . M e t'lu r e , o f S a g in a w , J M ich ig a n , and o th e r e a ste rn tim b e r d ealers. Room ^ 1, u p s ta ir « , W i ls o n b u i l d i n g . jj 5 DALLAS . ORECON i SWA and G re e n B one. Give me hulled oats, cracked corn and green bone and I will, without any other means of feeding, build up a ' “TESTS WITH TURKEYS. ' strain of birds with frames so large that they will more than reach the E f f e c t o f C o n f in e m e n t U p on t h e F e r different weights required in the Stand tility o f E s s * . ard and not be spoiled for breeding by One of the drawbacks to raising tur an excess of fat, says Rev. C. E. Peter keys is the loss of eggs during the lay son In American Poultry Journal. Of ing season due to the turkeys going a course, we take for granted that sum distance from home to make their mer chicks have all the green food nests. Some nests are not found, and they want. If not, it must be sup orten they are broken up by dogs, and plied. When green bone is not hnmly, the hen after she has commenced to sit ; bone meal mixed In the soft fowl Is fan not be so easily looked after as If j excellent. Wherever it is used there she were near at hand. If the turkeys | will bo no complaint of leg weakness. could be confined during the laying 1 use it continuously, aud if its valua- season, without an injurious effect up-I f . uav properties lt .. . . . . . - ‘ hie were fully understood on the production and fertility of the .. , , form .. . . . articles .. . „ , 1 ... | it would one of „ the stable Ipggs, a great saving of time and loss | In chicken diet, especially where the would result. With this In view uti ex chicks must be kept in confinement. periment was conducted to show the effect of confinement upon the produc Im p o r ta n c e o f n G ood M a rk e t. tion and^fertility of eggs. In this ex To all those who contemplate raising periment two breeds were used, lirofize poultry and eggs for market let us say aud White Holland. that a good market Is of first impor Two hens of each variety, nil of tance. You should know what market which were two years old, were used. you are to supply and what that mar The Bronze tom was one year oii. ket demands before you spend a dollar while the White Holland was three or take the first step toward going into years old. Each lot was confined in a the busiuess. What you will want to run 80 by 100 feet. They were given n do Is to get Into a position to furnish variety of food. In the morning they exactly what your market demands, were fed n mash composed of equal what it prizes most highly and will pay parts of wheat bran and corn meal. On a premium on. Desirable goods alwajra alternate nights they were fed whole sell the easiest, and you will want to corn and wheat. Oyster shell was be Jolu with your marketmen in catering fore them all the time, and they were | to this invariable rule.—Success With fed ground bone and meat scrap twice I Poultry. a week. Two nests thirty-six inches ; square were made in each run. They were covered over the top to keep out ! Frederick . j . uongdon, crown prose the rain, and some brush was thrown ' cutor in Dawson, lias been appointed in front of eacli nest to make them pri commissioner of the Yukon to succeed J. II. Boss, who was elected to repre vate. The following table shows the num- | sent the Yukon in the Dominion par her of eggs produced. The eggs were j liament. gathered each day. and none was lost: 1 Mrs. Lucinda Wit hey, eighty-eight ( ’em - E g g s ; years old, and Joshua Cline, aged nine menoed Stopped pro- ( ty-two, two of the oldest residents of la y in g . la y in g , duced. Lapeer county, Mich., were married a B r o n z e .................. M a r c h 26 A p ril 22 42 j few days ago. The bride has had four W h it e H o lla n d ..M a r c h 24 M a y 4 3H The following table shows the effect husbands before Mr. Cline, and he was married that day for the fourth time. of confinement on fertility of eggs: Isaac Townsend Smith of New York F ■>#!!• Eggs egga Tu rke y s lias the distinction of being the oldest s e t. t e n th d a y . h a tc h e d . consul in the world. He Is also the B r o n z e ................... 42 38 27 oldest member of the Union League W h i t * H o lla n d .. 36 27 16 During incubation four eggs wore club, having Joined that club in 1864. broken by the Bronze hens and six He was a presidential elector in 1864, were broken by the White Holland, nil when Abraham Lincoln was re-elected. of which were fertile. The egg« that For fifty years lie has been Siam's did not hatch were those laid during financial agent and consul general for the first two weeks.—Reliable Poultry the United States. Journal. SHORT STORIES. The ill ustnit ion shows a novelty Itself to tlie reason«—first, who it is?” because It will prevent the fowls from V ' The moth I crowding each other on the roosts, and, er knows I second, because of the provision it The 5 cent pa-kave in enough for usual occasion*. the touch The family bottle, 60 cent», contains a *upply for a of the soft y cur. Ail uruic^ist« »ml tueu». hands too well to need to guess, and for the moment she enters into the playful spirit of the child and for gets her toil and weariness. Then a m uêêê Ê H ■ I sudden movement sends a thrill of pain through her and she realizes that though love may lighten labor it cannot lighten pain. Thousands of women who have suf fered frotn backache, headache, and other consequences of womanly disease, have been made well women by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip tion. It establishes regularity, dries unhealthy drains, heals inflammation fastf . nh to PBitcii. and ulceration and cures female makes for bringing n vermin destroyer weakness. within close proximity to the fowl " I cannot *ay enough in p raise o f Dr. P lrrc e ’a while roosting without the latter touch- Favorite Prescription a* It fia« done me »» much x i." w rite* Mr*. H cnrv H arrell, o f Tarboro. ! ing It. Those devices can be brought C . B o* 109 " I wo3 *w ollen »0 I could hardly into use in connection with the most- w alk when I began ta k iii? th e ’ Favorite Pre T H IS SIO XA TTJB9 scription ' I also had uterine trouble and co«ld Ing ¡Kilos already in position In the neither eat nor *!eep only a* I took m orphine. Tried four different doctor* and they all failed | henhouse, and consequently there Is to do me anv good. *0 one o f my friend * recotn- no exfiense for changing tlie roosts. m tnded vour Favorite Prescrip tion ' to roe and Tlie Invention Is a simple one. consist- I took only th ree bottle» and am now well and hearty. Can do alm ost an y k in d of w ork.* I ing of a single piece of wire which is m t*T A m \t. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are the j formed into a loop near one end. with most desirable laxative for delicate j the ahprtcr ejid formed into a.screw to ON EVERY BOX OF TME GENUVflL women R -I -P A -N -S T a b u le s D o c t o r s find A good p re scrip tio n F o r m a n k i n id. d * • n f T ;T A Bangor (Me.) man. who Is snkl to be otherwise sane, has an American flag tattooed on his cheek. The proposition Is now under consid eration to take a census of cities every five years which have u population of 30,000 or over. A Danbury man has made a com pressed air engine which is half an inch high and no larger than a dime, but It runs as long as the air Is applied. Southern California produces 22.000.- 000 pounds of lima beans annually, three-quarters of the world’s total pro duction. One ranch In the bean ec un- try covers 1,500 acres. The committee appointed in Milwau kee to raise a fund for the families of James Foley, the fire chief, and other firemen killed In the recent great fire has reported that the total sum raised is $1 ¿>,020.74. While cleaning a goose for a custom- or |n „ New York poultry shop George Kennedy discovered a diamond ring in |tll RiIzard. The bird came from Bal- timore. and the ring was estimated by a jeweler to be worth $150. i^ord Dundonnld, speaking at the an* nuaI me* ting of the Canada Dominion XrtlIU,ry association, said that guns of fhat were only fit for scrap |roQ ftnd the department was corro- apondingly weak In every way. ^ . width will recommend 1 GUESS I I poultry kivper for two CURES A COLD IN ONE DAY CURES GRIP IN TWO OAYS PROP. * Hotue, »<gn »ml ornam ental, fcr»in D u u i, / I t ï s E D F O R I î ’ S N o C r o w d i n g m i d No V e r m i n . % Van Orsdel, Hayes & Co.,£ A R T I N , TASTELESS CHILL IONIC BLA CK ROOT YAMHILL u l »ISION: Pas«**n^er depot foot J . fferson «treet MH-.IK F R E lO fIT -T K I W EEKLY Leave 7:40 a m Portlan.l............Arrive 3:S2pm l,e»' c 3:50 p m ..........Dallas........... Arrive 8:40 a m Arrive 6 0 6 p m ......... Airiie ............ Leave 7 :0 0 a m D one. RECENT Enclosed with every buttle is a 10 cen t package of Urove’s G e t y o u r old b icy cle en a m eled an d c le a n e d up— E n a m e l b "k e d on b ik e a t facto ry . DALLAS PAKHK.VOKR—DAILY, BX SfN D A Y :0 0 p m Lv..................Portland................... ArlO 30 a m :t 0 p n i Ar.................. I H a I’ m .....................Lv R ep a irin g P ro m p tly BY T H E Q TROVE’S - Lee Smith’s Cyclery - IRON WORK TO ORDER- All .nutlets. DONE ...5 0 TIME TABLE — A LL KI1VD8 O F — SI.M ■ M ile . I f your d ru g g ist cannot supply you, gena us one dollar and we w ill e x p re ss you a Lottie, lie s u re and give th e nam e o f your n earest e x p ress office. A d d ress, J . C. A Y E K CO., Low ell, M ass. $ S p a u l d i n g ’s A t h l e t ic C o o d s Dallas Foundry! One thing is certain,— Ayer’s Hair Vigortuakes | the hair grow. This is because it is a hair food. It feeds the hair and tha hair grows, that’s all there is to it. It stops falling of the hair, too, and al ways restores color to gray hair. t b * - % % ♦ ♦ % % * ♦ % % « ► * ■ % % ♦ ♦ /% % ♦ « JORDAN A CO.. 10S1 Market S t. ti. F. CORVALLIS MAIL— DAILY 7 SO * m L v ...................Portlaml.................... Ar 10.46 » id L v ....................Derry....................... Lv 11:45 p in A r.......... Curvhllii.. Lv At Alhtaiiy and Corvallis citnnect with Oregon Central and Eastern railruad. I m and soon will be printed for Vide dls trlbutlon. i “The paper on ‘Aloohoh and Art’ by Professor Horens, director of the Ger man School of Art at Düsseldorf, wat a classic. He said that alcohol by dull ing the spiritual aspiration« essential to tlio greatest work was an enemy of the highest attainment In art. “A paper on ‘Scientific Temperance Education In the Public Schools In the United States’ by an American repre sentative led to a discussion In which twenty speukrrs took part, and nearly | every one of them commended the ex tension of the American method for the prevention of intemperance.’' One of the most interesting papers was prepared by Mrs. Hunt herself, the theme being the significance of temperance Instruction in the public schools. In the course of her address Mrs. Hunt said: “The thraldom of alcoholism can be i overthrown only by making the masses Intelligent in regard to the true nature of alcohol and its consequent effects upon the human system. This require«, | first, thorough scientific Investigation | of the alcohol problem and, second, the widest diffusion of truths thus learned. “The people of the United States, be lieving that such diffusion could best | be effected through public school in struction, secured between the years 1882-1002 the passage of state and na tional laws by which the study of physiology and hygiene, including spe cial instruction as to the nature and effects of alcoholic drinks and other narcotics, became mandatory for all pupils In all schools of the republic. “Temperance physiology has thus been very generally taught for ten or fifteen years, and it Is significant that during this time the rate of increase In the per capita consumption of alcoholic liquors has diminished materially; also that there has been a gain of four and one-tenth years in the average of life. Thorough investigation in the most populous state, New York, shows that the study is restraining children from forming alcohol and other narcotic habits and lnlluenclng tbeir parents ugalnst alcohol and tobacco. “The teachings that have secured those gratifying results are: “First.—The nature of alcohol and its effects upon the human economy. “Second.—The physiological reasons for obeying all laws of health, since unhygienic lmblts often cause craving for narcotics. “■Careful grading shows that the sub ject can be adequately covered by a minimum of three oral lessons per week for ten weeks in each primary year and four textbook lessons per week for ten weeks in each of the five grammar years and the first year of the high school. Thus, with 330 lew sons a progressive development is at tained without crowding other branch es during years in which the formation of habits is especially active. “The textbook used by pupils of all grades above the primary are super vised by a commitee of physicians and educators. At the headquarters of the department of scientific temperance in struction in Boston are kept on tile records of all scientific investigation of the question free of access to au thors and others interested.” 9 Mail Orders Will Receive Prompt Attention SOUTHERN PACIFIC *. l r NO. 33. Mrs. Maiy n . Hunt of Boston, repre- «eutlng the Women's Christian Tem perance union at the International an- tialcoliol congress at Bremen, has Is sued the following synopsis of the work accomplished at the convention: “The international alcohol congress that meets biennially on the continent has just closed its ninth session. It has been In the matter of attendance and well known persons present the most remarkable of any session of the congress. This body of 1,400 delegates, notable In science and In the service of humanity as university professors or for their hereditary rank, came to Bremen from fifteen different nations on two hemispheres. ''Questions of roljgton and politics were wisely ruled out of such a varied assemblage. The subjects discussed were the teachings of science concern ing a moderate use of alcohol and the effect of Its use on e y e c phase of hu Wright: “My dear man, your real wages are 80 per cent liigber now than | man progress. Two schools of thought they were in 1860. You were never so prosperous before.” were represented—the moderates, who Carpenter: “Well, I’ll N? darned! Won’t this be n surprise for my w ife?’ call themselves the ‘temperate school,’ and the total abstainers, who are called the ‘abstinence school.' By com mon consent the congress passed no resolutions, hut the applause for the testimony of science and experience on behalf of total abstinence showed the moderates to he in the minority. “The statement of Dr. August Korol, one of the foremost authorities In the “ 40# A O L D 7 / M IT B a world on brain and nerve diseases, that f t neither science nor experience fur nishes evidence to Justify calling alco Is known as the place where tlio best goods are sold for the leai-t hoi a food, called out prolonged nccla money. Up to dale simp keeping is our aim. Slapdu-b, happy motions. The papers read by notable go lucky, win or lore in* thuds do not go here. There is too much P e e r s W l» o K e e p S n lo o n n . members of the congress during those at stake. We are building hiiMin-a* out of material that will last, It is interesting in view of the pros six devs will ill two or throe volumes pect of licensing legislation in England to remember that between 300 and 4<K) ft public houses are owned by members of the house of lords. Lord Derby is by far the largest owner, with seventy- two licensed houses. No other peer has V S a t i s f a c t i o n i l l every itiHuncc < r innvev refunded. S ;ti-factioe more than fifty, the next largest owner i« . f i l in g ..bat you want. We tell the truth about our goods o; f t wi'l n fund your moiTey. If your purchase at Sabui.’s best ftore Has stood the test of’25 years. An being the Duke o? Bedford, who has exactly half u hundred houses. One does not prove entirt ly sat irfmtoi y , a chrnee to make it rklit i- nual sale over 1,500,000 bottles. merflbcr of the cabinet, tlie Duke or carueMlv n ques'ed Nothing is any bother to us if it results ii Dues this record of mer Devonshire, has forty-seven, so that SA I lSKAU I ION. it appeal to you? between them these three have 160 li censed houses, more than half the total number held by peers. * (A M ■ ---------------- r r ^ T n l l l t i K S e n t li n e n t I n F a v o r o t T o t n l A b . t l n e n c e — I m p o r t a n t A tl- d r r . i b y U rn . H u n t o f D n a to n o n S o ir n tlflc T e iu p e r a n c e ln .t r u c it o n . ft « » cat I 1 >■ A N T I A L C O H O L IC C O N G R E S S . 18 6 0 - 1 1 2 - 00 p w WEEK 1 8 9 6 -Ü 1 8 ” .. .. A ,t t o r n e v * a > t * I _ a w . DALLAS i w h i hi 1f* 3 “ I had a very «avere fcicfcness that took off ail mv hr::-. I pur Ì Avar’s Hair chased s Vigor * n j it brought ttli r. y hair back again.” V . D. Quinn, M arttMts, 111. W H A T WAS Room 1, Oslicld building. o « .K o o is r A _3, Office up stairs in Campt» 11’ s build ing. 1 My RESULTS A T BREMEN WRIGHT’S WRONG STATISTICS. A T T O R N E Y - A T - L A W. ♦ l ^ DALLAS OREGON AUGUST 14, 1903 VOL. XXIX. C, & • C l * d) r I