C H U R C H D IR E C TO R V . Preaching hours at 11 and 7 :30. M. K . C H U R C H , Preaching Sunday morning and ev ening. Sunday school al9;4.r>. Ep- u ague at ti :3» Prayer meet iug 1'hursday evening.— Jaa. Moore pastor, B A P T I8 1 C H U R C H . d U S COUNTRY Paine’s Celery- roads HOW THEY HAVE BEEN IMPROVED IN te least Compound VARIOUS SPATES. W « > n a n t i M e .« mm A d o p t e d t o S i - r a r e .B e t te r lliu ltw u p — ( « » « r i o t l.tU u r l u t h e S o u t h —h o m e I ' o l a f a o u l l o a d B u i l d iutf. of Success in I W h e a t Growing Permanently Cures Sick and Nervous Headaches that if a complete fertilizer containing 6 \ actual As a result of bad roads American Preaching Sunday morning and ev- Hake Life Miserable. farm life often becomes Isolated and ailing. Sunday school at 10. B. Y barren of many social benefits and P. U. at 6:30. Prayer meeting W ed Sick ami nervous headaches are amongst nesday evening.— J. R. U. ltussell, pleasures, a.id our country ¡Mople In the worst ills of life. The man or woman who some communities suffer great disad is subject to headache at irregular intervals, pastor. P R E S B Y T E R IA N C H U R C H . Prsacuing Sunday morning ami ev ening. Sunday school at 10. Chris tian Endeavor at 6:30. Prayer meet ing Thursday evening.— W . T. War- die, pastor. C H R IS T IA N C H U R C H . Preaching Sunday morning and ev ening. Bible school at 10. Senior Christian Endeavor at 6:30. Bible class and prayer meeting Thursday evening.— L. Green, pastor. E V A N U E I- IC A L C H U R C H . Preaching Sunday morning and ev ening at the Dallas college chapel. Sunday school at 10. Christian En oeavor at 6:30. Prayer meeting Thurs day evening.— A. A. Winter, pastor, vantages, ambition b rin g checked, edu goes through life liearing a load of misery and wretchedness that is terrible to think of. Headaches as a rule, result from a dis ordered condition of the nervous system. Mental excitement, loss of sleep, bodily latiKuc, and disordered digestion are «citing j causes. \\ hen the brain becomes tired and one another as well us with commercial debilitated, the whole nervous system is weak- centers, to enhance the value of farm s cried, and headaches result. If the liver is by increasing the pro.ltH derived there- ! sluggish, the kidneys inactive, and digestion, from, to promote moral and religious deranged, headaches invariably follow. To development, »octal Intercourse and a cure *n<* Prevent head at e, the nervous sys- more n v u lu r attendance upon the pub- ' * . ‘ »"'fdhened « d vitalised. ,, . , . . „ .. , the most persistent cawsof headache, nervous lie sehools „ml to pave he w ay for the (cebkoe, ^ d s|cep|essness, ^„.„nenCy telephone, the automobile and the rural curc(j by Paine’s Celery Compound; it is the free delivery of mails. T lie building of ^reat reconstructant of the nervous system, good roads will do all these things and , Mrs. Henry Westrick, St. Clair, Mich., tells many more. of her release from suffering as follows:— The majority of our country road* “ 1 have been troubled with dyspepsia and nre too flat to shed water, says M. O. I sick headache for a number of years. About Elil’. Ulge, assl».a at director of public «very week I would have « bad spell of rick , , . ...... , . headache, but since I began using Paine s roaila Inquiries. W t'hout w ater th e re ; Ce, Colnpoundi my dys"cl,sia is ‘ onc> , nd •::n be no frost or mud, and without j <j 0 not j,avc more headaches. I feel frost or mud ii good roud Is enailj' better than I have for years. ’ ’ fxmlntnln',d ; consequently the chief e f fort of the roud builder should be to get No Need Soiling the Hands with rhl of the water. This is the whole story In a nutshell. W ith good, open soils and light truffle surface drainage Diamond Dye« are easy ai> J «leaaly to use. of the earth road Is usually adequate. Made for home economy, never disappoint. W ith close alluvial or clayey soils and Direction book and 45 dyed samples free. medium truffle subdrainage must be re DIAMOND DYKS, Burlington, Vt. sorted to, hut with heavy traifle and! narrow tires the surface of any dirt 1 road w ill be completely destroyed; j hence the necessity of a consolidated j mass or crust o f gravel or broken otice is h e r e b y o iv e n t h a t t h e u n - stone. dereigned has filed his Huai account as ad- W ithin the lust few year» several th. MUt. oi jon.th»n KmuS.r w ays and means have been udoptcxl In •i«‘eaiwd, mm Saturday, Nov. u , laoa. at 16 cation hinde red, energy weakcin*d and industry paralysed. Every possible e f fort should he made to develop a love for com iiiy life, to place the country people in closer communication with IV k A tT fiin rio n 'ii F a th e r K u e w A b o w Kuaperor P a u l'* A*«u*NliiM (lon. Shortly lifter the assaMslnatlon oi Em peror I*uul o f Russia Tennyson, the father of the poet, (lined with Lord St. Helens, the It rlt is h ambassador, In Moscow. Several Uussian officers of high rank whose names he did not know were also quests. D uring dinner a guarded reference w as mude to the emperor’s death. “ W h y do you s|>eak so gingerly ubout a matter so notori ous?” cried Tennyson impulsively, lean ing across his neighbor, a Uussian whose breast w as covered with orders. - - “ W e know' very well in England that the Emperor Paul w as murdered. Count Zoboff knocked hint down, and s o y now has atiout 1 ,000 miles o f road Bennlngscn and Count Palilen stran built under the state aid plan. The gled him.” There w as a strained si state pays one-third of the expense, the lence; then the amlmssmlor abruptly counties one-third and the towns and changed the subject. A s the guests abutting property ow ners the balance. filial out Into an adjoining room Lord Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Conn« ct- Bt. Helens drew Tennyson aside. leut and N ew York have now enacted " D o n ’t go Into the next room,” he similar laws, and state akl Is being fa whispered, “ but fly for your life. Ti e vorably considered by the legislatures uian next you, across whose breast of many other states. In N ew Jersey you leaned, w a s Count Pahlen, and and the other states Just mentioned Zolxiff w as also at the table.” H e gave a fewr hurried directions, and Tenny they have now done a w ay with the cruel injustice which places upon the son rushed off, threw his clothes into a farm ers and property which they own 1 1 * * portmanteau and lied behind fast tile entire burden of bllildltlg roticls for horses to Odessa, still In evening garb, the whole people. The difference be- though the cold w a s intense. lie lay tween the old w ay and the new w ay Is hidden for weeks and at last, in the forcibly Illustrated In N ew Jersey. disguise of a servant, w a s smuggled From 100 to 125 baskets of produce on board an English frigate. now make a fair load on Jersey stone roads. Tw enty-five baskets w ere a A K in d Action. W hen you rise in the morning form a good load on the old dirt roads. T w elve hales of cotton can he easily resolution to make the day a happy one to a fellow creature, says Sydney draw n over the stone roads In Meek Smith. It is easily done— a left off g ar lenburg county, N. C., w here formerly ment to the man w h o needs it, a kind two bales made a good load. One hun w ord to the sorrow ful, an encouraging dred miles of first class stone road expression to the striving. Trifles in have been built In this county by con themselves as light as air will do it, at victs. and from five to ten miles are least for tin* twenty-four hours, and added annually. Since the good roads if you are young depend upon It It have been built farm lands have a d w ill tell when you are old, and if you vanced In value from $12 and $l»r> per are old it will send you gently and (acro to $7.5 and $100. South Carolina also uses her convicts in building liupplly down the stream of time to roads. T he roads in South Caroliua eternity. My the most simple arith metical sum look at the result—you are built o f sand and clay. Clay Is used send one person, only one, happily to improve sand roads and sand Is used through the day; that Is 865 during the to Improve clay roads. U p tq a few years ago some o f the course of the year. And suppose you California convicts had been supixirted live only forty years after you com mence that kind of medicine you have in comparative Idleness ut the expense made 14,600 beings happy, at all events o f the taxpayers, while others had been fo r a time. Now, is not this simple? It m anufacturing articles that were sold Is too short for a sermon, too homely In competition with free labor. Under fo r ethics, too easily accomplished for a new law the convicts art* now turning out upw ard of 100,000 tons o f crushed you to H a y , “ I would if I could.’* rock annually. F o r O ver Sixty Y ears . All artificial road building depends An old and well tried remedy. iMrs. wholly for Its success upon making and W inslow’s Soothing Syrup has been maintaining a solid, dr}- foundation and used lor over sixty years by millions of covering this foundation w ith a dura mothers for their children while teeth ble waterproof crust or roof of broken ing, with perfect success. It soothes stone. The foundation must be solid the child, softens the gums, allays all and firm. If It Is otherwise the stone pain, cures wind colic and is the best or gravel crust is useless. In the prep remedy for diarrhoea. Is pleasant to aration of stone material n crushing the taste. Sold by druggists in every plant Is very desirable. The plant part of the world. 25 cents a bottle. should Iry »11 means Include an eleva Its value is incalculable, tie su^e and tor, a revolving screen and bins. The ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Sy serein should be perforated with holes ru p and take no other kind. of three different sixes, the first about ------------♦ • ♦ ------------- an Inch In diameter, the second two A N aln rul W n illiu r V m r , Inches and the third three Inches. Great It w a s an old belief that If the pre cam» should be exercised In selecting served body of a halcyon or kingfisher materials for stone roads. The practice w ere nuspeeded by a thread from the of using too soft, too brittle or rotten celling Its hill w ould alw a ys turn to material on roads cannot be too severe w a rd the quarter from whence the ly condemned. Rock for road building w ind w as blowing. should I k * both hard and tough and Thus tiara has In M arlow e’s “Jew of should by all meuns possess cementing M alta” says: qualities. “ B u t n o w h o w s ta n d s th e w in d ? A fte r the stones have been separated Into what quurtor poops my halcyon's Into three different sizes those of the bill? lnrg(»st size should be spread for the H a! To the east? Yes." Shakespeare also alludes to It In foundation, and this course should* be and repeatedly rolled, " K in g L e a r" when Kent In his reply to thoroughly enough stone dust anil sp aw ls being C oru w all rebukes those w h o - added to fill the voids. The second “Turn their halcyon's beaks With every gale and vary of their mas course should be of one and n half ters.'' Inch stone. This should be spread sprinkled and rolled, and upon It should In more modern days a stuffed king fisher has been seen hanging from the be placed Just enough screenings to fill beam of a cottage ceiling at tiotley, all voids and leave a smooth. Impervi near Southampton, and lti other placet ous and uniform surface. The rolling of that nelghl>orhood, where there Is a and sprinkling should I k * continued un til a Arm. smooth surface Is secured kindred belief that If a dead kingfisher Fine stone dust anil scri'enlngs an Is hung up by Its beak Its breast w ill used upon the surface. ¿They serve t turn with the e bb and flow of the tide. threefold purpose: (1) They act as » cushion to protect the road from hear* < RMlHN II. ( lay MM a F lu litrr. traffic. ( 2 ) they make a smooth an* G eneral Cassius M. C lay fought many duels In his day, usually with his long pleasant surface, and (3l the fine par tid es wash in and fill all the crevices bhuled knife, meeting pistol or rifle making a w ater tight crust or roo equally with that trusty weapon. Ills which protects the substructure. 11 physical strength w as gigantic. He was accustom *d to the use of weapons, foundation of a properly egostructe* and he was alw a ys cool and never lost •tone road Is as dry after a henv> his Judgment. For example, when an shower as It is after a long continue, dry spell. adversary shot him and 1 m » Niipf>oN««d he was done for he Inflate! his lungs to N n ta r n « 4 W o r k . the full, conscious that he would live “ You can’t ledge a man by de ’mom as long as be could ladd his breath; then he drew his knife and did his o f noise he makes." said U n d e Kb* bloody work. That w a s when he killed “ i V locomotive engeneer D doin’ In Turner. A fter all, speaking musingly, easles’ work when he’s ringin' de be) reviewing his life, he confesstsl to a re an* M ow in’ de whistle.** — Washington port r when lie w as h I mivc eighty-four St« r. that he w as opposwl on principle to the T o m m y '* C » n * r « t a l M t l « » n a . duel, thinking It a savage w ay to settle Reggie Tommy, do you know Fn a difficulty. “ But there are some cases going to marry your sister? for which it seems to be the only re me- Tom m y—Then I think I ’ll go and co* 4 j /’ be added. gratulate mother. Potash A deficiency o f Potash in fertilizers will result in small grains. j D IA M O N D DYES Final Settlement. N ii'iiliy « !, m m .m ill « la v persons interested in said matter are hereby .. titled to appear at said time and show cause, if any there be, why said account should not be approved and the account settled and closed. Dallas, Oregon, Oct. 12. 1003. DAN. P STOUFTER, Administrator o f the estate of Jonathan Stouffar, de ■ Uased. Executor’s Notice. In the estate of Aaron H. Denne' inney, deceased. J ^ O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IVE KN T H A T I, Thoe. H. ■yi ... lost will and testament of the above desedent, and that letters testamentary have been issued to ine. A ll persons indebted to the said estate will make im- mediate payment to me, and all those having cniins against the same, will present them, duly authenti- to me within six months from the date of this notice-, at my home n ar Bethel, Folk county. Dated ut Dalian, Oct. 20. 1003. THOMAS H. D E N N E Y, Executor of said eatate F o re s ts nnd Unman V ita lity . One luis but to look back through his tory to set* how closely related is the forest to human vitality. It w as In the forests of Thessaly that the early G reeks received their energy that later flowered Into genius. It w a s the forest dw ellers of Germ any that conquered decadent Rome and later gave to Bpuin the vigor that swept back the Moor and brought under her flag almost the whole known world. But today what is Greece, what Is Italy, w h at Is Spain? They have been stripped of their for ests. those nurseries o f vigor, and their decay has set In. Everyw here the law holds good. It is In the forest that the manhood is nourished which builds up great civilizations. But cities arise, trees are swept a w ay , and the Inevita ble decline sets In. Forests once de- «troyed cannorreturn, and over all the sites o f ancient civilization are blow ing the desert sands.—A rth u r G oodby In N ew York Times. Irrvn n ta In Io ta , “T w ic e a year, on April 23 and Oct. 26." writes a young Bulgarian woman living In Sofia, “our streets are full of servants, and people bargain with them for service. D urin g the w inter season they are very cheap, as the peasants send all their girls to the city to be h in d , they having no w ork for them at home. The price paid differs. One can get a girl fo r her board, or pay up to 20 lusor ($4) a month for one w ho cooks, washes and Irons. G irls are o f ten thankful to enter a good fam ily for their board. For the men there is very little work, and the papers are full of suicides on account, during the dull seasons o f starvation.” The C a n d le fls h of Paget Mo a n d . W r y qm*i»r 11 di are caught In the w a ters of Puget sound. One kind is called the candleflsh. It is dried and packed lu boxes like candles. W e are told the fishermen us«* th«»iu to light their homes nnd that at one time all the boats on the sound used them Instead of sperm *dl lamps. By putting the heads o f the fish dow n w ard in a candlestick and lighting the tall, which. In conjunction with the back lame, acts us a wick. It burns like a candle. They eat this fish, and when cooking it Is so fat It fries Itself. An A nelent W ork on A n g lin g . The greatest w ork of antiquity on angling Is said to Is* the “ H allcutlca” of Opplan, a Greek poet who flourished In the time of Severus, A. D. 198, from which w e learn that many artifices In fishing thought to be modern were known to ancients. W e also learn from Atheneus that several other w rit era hml written treatises or ;w u n s on fishing some centuries l»efore the Uhrlo- tlan eni. III r “ Tnraont.** Clerkley— Isn’t this earlier than you» Usual time for going home? B a rk le y - Yes, hut my w ife said if I tame out bv the 3:45 she’d meet tu< with the carriage. “I didn’t know you kept a horse arid rarriage.“ “ B r —er— lt*s a baby and carriage.** Kspllel«. T an Q u ilt —W here doe« young Chip- •ton work? Fits-Bile— In a wholesale grocery con eem. V an Qntss I know, but for whom ? Plts-B lle- Oh, for a gam bling —H ew Orlesua Times-Democrat* Ow book, o. W hM I ud .. I — ' Gnia Collar. vnJrM U firm er,. GERMAN K A L I W ORKS. «J M um . Strut. Now York. Mayer, Wilson A Co San Francis co, California, are »ole agent» for the Fac.fio coa*t. Summons. In the circuit court of the state of Oregon for Polk county.— Department No. 2. David Peters, plaintiff, 'j ve. Margaret A. McCarter | and Henry McCarter, | her husbanu, David J. | Riley, Thomas B. Love- | lady, Andrew J. Lovela- j dv and Mary Lovelady, | his wife, John T. Mc Carty and Mehala J. McCarty, his wife, Rose anni*M. Waters and M. L. Waters, her husband, William A. McCarty ami Rosa McCarty, his wife, Aliee G. 1* agan.and John T. Fagan, her husband, j Roma E. Gage, A man- | da J. tfimmous and Wil- | liam D. Simmons, her I husband, Elijah A. Me- | Carty, Sarah F. Grider | and Snadrach S. Grider, | her husband, Lavina | Lovelady, Octavia Bad- | ;er and Kphriam Badger n*r husband, Carrol Mat | ney and Mat- | ney, his wife, Sarah J. | Cochran and William | Cochran, her husband, j defendants. J To John T. McCarty, Mehala J. McCarty, Koseannie M. Waters, M. L. Waters, Car rol Matney a n d -------------- Matnev, his wife, Sarah J, Cochran and William Coch ran, of the above named defendants: IN T H E N A M E OF T H E S T A T E UV Oregon, you and each of you are hereby re quired to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit within six weeks from the date of the tirst pub lication of this summons, to-wit: On or be fore the 4th day of December, 1903, and if you fail so to appear and answer, for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for in his complaint, to- wit: (1) That plaintiff is the owner in fee simple of the following described real prernis es, to-wit: That part of the donation land claim of Thomas J. Lovelady aud Mary Love- lady, his wife, notification No. 1,%7, claim No. G3, described as follows: Beginning at the northwest corner of said donation land claim in township 7 south, range 5 west of the Willamette meridian, and running thence east 18.47 chains, thence south 39.42 chains, thence weHt 18.47 chains, thence north 39.42 chains to the place of beginning, containing 81 acres, more or less, Excepting therefrom the following described tract of land, to-wit: Beginning at a point 14.31 chains south of the southwest corner of the donation land claim of Asa Shreve and wife, Not. No. 2, 2&2, claim No, 62, in township 7 south, range 5 west of the Willamette meridian in Polk county, Oregon, and running thence west 5 chains, thence south 10 chains, thence east 5 chains, thence north 10 chains to the place of beginning, containing 5 acres, more or less: and that the defendants, or either of them, have no estate or interest whatever in or to the land or premises above described, and that the title of plaintiff thereto is good and valid; chat the defendants, and each of them, be forever barred and enjoined from assert ing or claiming any right, title or Interest in or to the said real premises, or any part there of; and for such other and further relief as to the court may seem just and equitable in the premises. This summons is published for a period of six weeks ky order of the Honorable J. E. Sibley, judge of the county court of Polk eountv, Oregon, made and entered the 21st day of October, 1903. The date of the first publication of this summons is October 23, 1903, and the last publication he»*eof Decern- 4, 1903. J. N . H A R T , Attorney for the plaintiff. f l l r r 01*1 Sw eetheart. A young man and a young wom an lean over the front gate. They are lovers. It is moonlight. He Is loath tc leave, as the parting Is the last. H e is about to go aw ay. She Is reluctant tc let him depart. They sw in g on the gate. “ I ’ll never forget you,” he says, “and If death should claim me my last thought w ill lx* of you.” “ I ’ll be true to you,“ she sobs. “ I ’ll never see anybody else or love them as long as I live.” They part. Six years later he returns. Ills sweetheart of form er years has married. They meet ut a party. She has chuuged greatly. Between the dunces the recognition takes place. “ Let me see.” she muses, with hei fnn beating a tattoo on her pretty hand “w a s It you or your brother w ho w as my old sweetheiyt ?*’ “ Really I don’t know ,” he suyi “Probably uiy father.”_____________ W ith the breaking up of large ranches and fast Increasing population the man with the hoe, the small farm er, D encroaching upon the big cuttle men. Big cotton farm s are being cui up Into sm aller ones. C h a n g** arc being wrought now that w ere nevei before thought of. N ew methods, new ideas, new Implements, better stock anil high priced lands huve caused n revolution with the farm er. Dlvcrsi ilea lion Is the cry. a n d to be successfu stock farm ing Is a necessary adjun i Good blood is essential.' T he best am; cheapest w ay to make a beginning 1 - to buy a registered bull. Study the qualities and characteristics of the dlf ferent breeds kind buy the one that suits your fancy best, says J. W eb b H o w ard of Bryan. Tex., in Farm anil Ranch. I f you w ant a bull whose get are red and uiulleys. buy a Red Poll. Ninety per cent of his calves are red. We have two crops o f half breed Red Polled calves nnd have to sec the tirst one with horns. Hornless cattle require less feed, less shelter and command higher prices in the leading markets than cattle with horns. • Red Polled cows are early maturing, easily handled nnd long breeders. They givejt good quantity of rich milk. Their dairy records w ill compare favor ably with the strictly dairy breeds. A s a fan n ers’ cow the breed stands pre eminently in the lead, as their record at the last international fair in this class clearly showed they were first. If a farm er w ants a cow that w ill give a good quantity of rich milk and raise a good Rod Polled calf besides, the Red Polled cow fills thl 3 requisite. I f the calves w ere selected with the same care from large ancestors, given the same attention* pushed and pampered as beef cattle are. their weights would be heavier, but the protits less. G n ern a ey j I | | i . T h e K in d T o n H a v e A lw a y s ((o u g h t, and w h ich has been z iu u u s o a v a r o v v i v e i r 3 w 0 J use fo years, has b o rn e th e sign atu re o f and has been m ade u n d er his per sonal supervision since its infancy. A llo w n o on e to d eceive you in this. • A l l C ou n terfeits, Im ita tio n s and “ J u st-a s-go o d ” a rc hut E xp erim en ts th a t tr ifle w ith and en d an ger th e health o f In fan ts and C h ildren—E xp erien ce against E xperim en t. What is CASTORIA C astoria is a harm less substitute fo r Castor O il, P a r e g o ric, D rops an d S ooth in g Syrups. I t is P leasan t. I t contains n eith er O pium , M orp h in e n o r oth er N arcotic substance. Its a g e is its gu aran tee. I t destroys W orm s and allays Feverishness. I t cures D iarrhoea and W in d Colic. I t relieves T e e th in g T rou bles, cures Constipation aud F latu len cy. I t assim ilates th e F o o d , regulates th e Stom ach and B o w els, g iv in g h ealth y aud natural sleep. T h e C h ild ren ’ s P a n a cea —T h e M o th er’s F rien d . G E N U IN E CASTORIA Bears the Signature of The Kind You Hare Always Bought In Us@ For Over C O U A I i E T T K ’H SON. dairym en of Calum et county, W ls. Messrs. Hill bought him back In March. 1902. H e w a s sired by Viscount, 2177. the sire of Countess Bishop, 490.9 pounds fut with second calf, and out of Coralette, 5722. with a record of 479.7 pounds fat in a year, commencing at three and one-half years old. She w as first prize cow at the W isconsin state fair In 1896.—H o ard ’s Dairyman. Tentinif C ow «. A n y single test o f a cow proves nothing. T he value of cream depends on the amount of butter fat and solids it contains. But these butter making essentials differ with different cows, nnd with the same cow at different times and under different conditions. It Is the average of a large num ber of tests at different seasons and under different conditions that tells w h at a cow is really worth as a butter pro ducer. M iikinx a H erd o f G rad e C o w «. A fte r stating that my grade cows produced butter at ubout 13 cents per pound I am asked by a num ber of In quirers to give more particulars as to how such a herd w a s procured, says L. W . Llghty In Stockman and F arm er. The story w'ould be rather long, but a partial outline is as follow s: I raised every one of them. There are three factors that helped me to make this herd do w h at It did—first, I regulurly used the scale and Babcock test; second. I procured the very best dairy sire I could pay for, and, third. I studied from every available source all I possibly could about breeding aud feeding of dairy anim als aud from w h at 1 learned by this effort I know full w ell that there is still lots of room DAVY C R O C K E T T . H ln K n o w l e d g e o f I 'o l l t t o a a n d D e M c r liit lo n o f H lm a e lf . Ilia A s an exam ple o f Crockett's early electioneering methods one m ight men tion his first canvass for the legisla ture. R egarding this, he says, " I didn’t know w h at the governm ent w as; I didn’t know but Gencrul Jackson w as the government.” Meeting Colonel Folk, later to be President Folk, the latter rem arked, " I think it possible w e may L ive some changes In the Judi ciary.” “ Very likely.” replied Davy. “very likely.” and discreetly w ithdrew . “W e ll,” he comments, “ if ever I know- . , . . . . . . . , T ed w h at he meant by judiciary I wis.i _ . , . T . , I may be shot. I never heard there w as such a thing In all nature.” Again. Crockett, in w h at is called his “autobiography,” a w ork which he no doubt In part dictated or at least au thorized. gives the follow in g account of one of his speeches to a stranger at Raleigh, while Crockett w a s en route to Washington to take his first seat In congress. “ Said he, “ W h o are youT Said I, 'I ’m that same D a v y Crockett, fresh from the backwoods, h alf man. h alf alligator, a little touched with sn rppin g turtle, can w ade the Missis sippi. h up the Ohio, ride a streak of lightning, slide down a honey locust and not get scratched. I can w h ip i *y weight in wildcats, hug a bear too close for comfort and eat any man op posed to Jackson!” —Em erson Hough in Outing. F rn lt POMM EL SLICKERS I | F o r all kinds o f work, W arranted Waterproof. Look for trade-mark. I f not at dealer*, write I . Saw yer a Has, Sole K ir * , t o r t < OMbridve. I z h . Regulator Line. P Q R T L A N D -T H E D A LLE S R O U TE . M ALAR !ñ An Invisible Enemy to Health fo r Improvement. I raised only the best calves, and In m aking the selection I would first see It wus a strong, well built calf. The em bryo udder w as examined to make sure that there w ere four good sized teats, w ell set apart. I next consider the dam. Is she a good eater? H as she a good digestion? H a s she a strong, well placed udder? Does her gen eral make up say she Is the true dairy type? And finally does her rcc- v»vd show her to-be a persistent profit a b le w orkin g dairy animal? If so the calf is worth givin g a trial. The calf is fed on food to make It grow , but no; to fatten it. bulky so as to develop th«* .. . . .. „ ..... digesting machinery. H ave the heifer . . . . . . . .... mm Into into profit j>i*o(it at eighteen eighteen or twenty come months old. Teach it early the w ay It should go and the chances are that It w ill go that w ay. Do not condemn too early, but weigh, test and watch care fu lly the amoUHt of food consumed. To H a n d le n F r a c tio n * C o x r. I f a cow is fractious a halter passed round her horns gives a man greater pow er over her than if It is passed round the neck, but there is nothing like patience L* she is to be humbled. The ow ner should stand at her head w h ile the man is milking nnd talk to her, giving iier a few pieces o f apple or beet and encouraging her in every pos sible w ay. I f she Is roughly used she w ill ouly become worse and probably overturn the pail or put her foot lute It more often. seed * nnd A m icn d icttlx . SAWYER’S M an o r saddle can not get wet. Years. M any very intelligent people are de- T r e a s u r e T r o v e L n n In E n x la o d . torr *»i from sw a llow in g the seed of her Iii England treasure trove belongs to ries. grapes and oilier fruits lest the the crown. According to the law , if lodgment o f these small bits o f indiges tlbleness may Induce that dreaded acci any one finds hidden treasure and con dent appendicitis. This fear Is utterly ceals it for his own use he Is liable to baseless. ¿luce the healthy appendix i- fine and imprisonment. It used to be a protected by a v a lv u la r arrangem ent hanging matter. H ow ever, it may Iw which prevents even the smallest seeds some encouragement to English treas ure seekers. If any such there be In from entering it. It Is only after in these enlightened days, to know that flnmmntion has already destroyed It: normal protection that any foreign sub the law s of treasure trove only apply stance can gain access to it. To ¡'eel to such as is discovered by accident T reasure discovered by systematic compelled to eschew all seedy beiale and fruits Is to seriously curtail one*: search would not come within this de scription; neither would finds discover dietary, and It Is entirely unnecessary ed by astrological or cabalistic sciences In fact, the free and constant use o or by the potent Influence o f tbe divin ripe berries and fruits of all kinds I ing rod.—A ll the Y’ear Round. one of the best preventives o f this dan gorous disease. Fruit eating prevent A n I m p a t i e n t Man. or helps to overcome constipation, an< In n restaurant near Park row a man constipation is the most prolific cans, of appendicitis. The physician sliouk who had just ordered luncheon cal I »Hi the waitress’ attention to the pepper thoroughly disahum* his patients o f till castor, from which he could get no pep mistaken notion. All the smooth seed EX C EL S IO R BR AN D EXCELSIOR BRUNO OILED CLOTHING 30 T M « OCNTAUM C O M PA N Y, FT M U R R A Y STR K KT, M IW VO R R CIT Y. B u ll. This Guernsey bull w as br*d by and Is ow ned by G eorge C. H ill & Bon. Rosomlale, W is. H e w a s sold as a calf to Rather Beyer, two bright young ALW AYS S team ers: Bailey Gatzert Regulator Dalles City Metlako Means bad air, and whether it Comes from the lo w lands and marshes of the country, or the filthy sewers and drain pipes of the cities and towns, its effect upon the human system is the same. These atmospheric poisons are breathed into the lungs and taken up by the blood, and the foundation of some long, debilitating illness ¡3 laid. C o n n e c t i n g at Lyle w i t h th e Chills and fever, chronic dyspepsia, torpid and enlarged liver, kidney troubles, jaundice and bilionsness are frequently due to that invisible foe, Mnlnria. Noxious gases and unhealthy matter collect in the system because R a i l w a y C o m p a n y tor the liver and kidneys fail to act. ami are poured into the blood current until W a h k aicus, Daly, it becomea so polluted and sluggish that the poisons’ literally break through the skin, and carbuncles, boils, abscesses, ulcers and various eruptions of an Centerville C o ld e n d a le and all other K lickitat valley point«. indolent character appear, depleting the system, and threatening life itself. The germs and poisons that so oppress and weaken the body and destroy steam er« leave Portland (iail> , except Sunday, at the life-giving properties of the blood, rendering it thin and watery, must 7 a .m ., connecting at Lyle with C. H. 4 N . train f<>r arriving at Golden be overcome »nd carried oat of the syitem before the patient can hope to 1 L * Lw iw train . .rrw. n i iMik» Columbia River and Northern per. "Oh, I ’ll make that all right, sir.” she said cheerfully, and. taking a hairpin from her hair: commenced to free the openings over I d s plate. Instantly h e seized his hat and stick and ruab'*d out, greatly to the amazement of the obliging waitress, who remarked to an other customer: “ Oh, Lord, isn’t he impatient! Why, I was clearing it as quick as I could.” — New York Press. Illu ck b lrd Days, Jan. 30 and 31 and Feb. 1 are famous at Constantinople, Brescia and along the D anube and the Rhine as the “ blackbird d a 3 *«.” A curious legend says that originally all species of grac* *kles (blackbirds) were white and that they became black because (Airing one year in the middle ages the three da>'s mentioned above were so cold that all the birds In Europe took refuge in tbe chimneys. As Brescia the three days are celebrated with a feast called “I glorni delta m erla.” or “the feast o f the transformation o f the bird.” Ilia lletn rn . M r». H anskoap—.Suppose I should give ynn :• nice dinner today, w h at re turn w ould you make? H u ngry H in ein »—W ell, ma’iun. If t liked yer cookin' I ’d return Jlat a » o f ten n» I could, m a’am.— Philadelphia Press. p. m. Steamer leave« The Dalle« daily, except Suu- get rid of Malaria and ita effect» at 7:30 a. m. C R X N. train leaving Uohleii- ’T la better to have lived one day !...1 n Y S. S. S. does this and quickly produces an entire day, daie at 0:10 a m connect« with this steamer (or Port change in the blood, reaching every organ and stimu land, arriving at Portlanc at 6 p ru. The pa- than to h are blinked and breathed a latia: steamer Bailey Gatxert leavee Portland 7 a m lating them to vigorous, healthy action. S. S. S. for The Dalles Tuesdays, Thursday* and Saturdays; century.—Antrim possesses not only purifying but tonic properties, returning arrives Pert lead Mondays, Wednesday« Friday* Kound trip ticket« to any point be T k * l n c ls ’s W i l l P e w v r. and the general health improves, and the appetite and tween Portland and The Dalles on th « steamer« “ W illie W aite’s uncle can m ake him increases almost from the first dose. There is no Mercury, Potash, Arsenic Dalles City and Bail) UaUert, only 50 cents. do anything he w ants him to do.” or other mineral in S. S. S. It is strictly and entirely a vegetable remedy. “ H is unci«» must be a man of great Write ns about your case, and our physicians w ill gladly help you by For detailed information of ticket*, w ll! power.** their advise to regain your health. Book on blood and skin diseases sent •-berth re»ervation»( eto., call or write “ Yes. Indeed. H e can w ill h alf a m'V boa ________ T H K Z W ir T Z P I C i r i C C O „ Atlanta, o » . to Alder »treet wharf, Portland, Or. llon dollars, at lea a t ’’— Philadelphia U. O, CAM PBELL, Manager. Press.