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About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1908)
OUR ASSOCIATE EDITORS. AH the County News Graphically Writ ten up by Our Brainy Rustlers. +♦ ♦ ♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ R. L. CHAPMAN.... FUNERAL DIRECTOR and EMBALMER O FFICE: Cuapel am i Parlors, N. Main st. D A L L A S , OREGON: Bell Phone 103. • M utual Phone 1806. Calls P ro m p tly A n a wared Day or N ight McCOY. V. Macken was a McMinnville visitor Saturday. S. B Hill and A. V. Ellis mad«* a trip to Dallas Monday. Mrs. Devoe is visiting lier father, V, Macken, this week. C. T. Hall w< int to Dallas on business the first of the week Miss Bean in Ott, «jf F rest Drove, was the guest of Miss Dora »ears Sunday. \V. A. Keyt and wife were pa-? ngers to Corvallis Saturday returning M ndav. Mr. J. A. Butterick purchased a new clover huller to replace the one destroy ed by fire last week. the Portland man who i* k * into the fancy chh’ ken hiwineHH. lie says he has chicken» to sell at $100 a pair. He had U*tter keep away from Salem at those prices a.- hops are low. He hail better start a duck ranch there. BUTLER Several cases of smallpox reported the neighborhood. Mrs II. Z. Tharp is visiting her par- Marion Moore lias moved in Stotler’ s ents at McMinnville. ! house on 2nd Avenue, James Shepard, of White Bluff, Wash.* Mr. Moyer and family are running a is here visiting relatives. restaurant at Livesley’s yard. Mrs. Peas, of Willamina, visited at Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Hunt will piek the home of J N. Huelett last week. hops at the Simontoii yard. Chat*. Gregory and wife, of Dallas, Mrs. N. S. Smith’s moved to Rickre- were Sunday visitors at the home of all to pick hops for Mr. Burch. | Joseph Tharp. The Murphy yard started picking hops Hop picking commenced in the Cock- Monday hut had to quit at noon on ac- j erliam yards Tuesday ami in the Hall I count of raiu. and Hartman yards Thursday. N. G. Bales and fa uiily returned from Mian Ada Grazer lias returned to the ! Slab Creek Satu-Jay and report a Hue ; home of J. <\ Cockerham after a few time and good roads. weeks visit with relatives in Dallas. Geo. Gower and family are picking Work has commenced on the new Imps at Livislev, formerly the Holmes church a d will he pushed as rapidly as yard south of Salem. possible so as to have it completed he Mr. Bachelor and family have moved ft.re the annual conference. into Mrs. Hunt's new house formerly occupied by Mr. Fred Wood. CONCORD. COMMON SENSE i mo»t Indulgent to dm only • uf V jw n compuiltiG i. TUe.-e- . >r. PlorcH'a medicines. the ,1 » print every Ingredient enlering'Hao ) em upon the Lottie wrap per* and altV-t . tacorrectness oi.deroath, are dally gr»v.ng in favor. The eom- poaltion of L)V Pterce'i medicines la open to evervbodvVl)r. Pierce being desirn-n of having the senn i, Iiuht of (nv e .l’g f tinn turned fui: .• upon hD formula», being connJ«nt that the peti« r the compositi m o’ t F ifScTmedi ijms is known mo**" vn the t ’- i^ r greet ..-rTCT^ r m r 7T7T iH V iM ni/ed^ Being wholly made of the active medicinal principles extracted from na tive forest roots, by exact processes original with I)r. Bierce, and without the use of a drop of alcohol, triple-refined and chemically pur© glycerine being used In stead in extracting and preserving the curative virtues residing in the roots employed, these medicines are entirely free from the objection of doing harm by creating an appetite for either al coholic beverages or habit - forming drugs. Examine the formula on tin ir bottle wrappers—the sumo as sworn to by Dr. Bierce, and you will find that his "Golden Medical Discovery," the great, blood-purifier, stomach tonic and bowel regulator—the medicine which, w hile not recommended to cure consumption in its advanced stages (no medicine will do that) yet ib*H cure all those catarrhal condi tions of head and throat, weak stomach, torpid liver anil bronchial troubles, weak lun rs and hang-on-coughs, which, if nog- lect-d or badly treated lead up to and finally terminate in consumption. Take thft "Golden Medical Discovery* In lime and it is not likely todisanpo.nt you if only you give it a thori/ugh anl fair trial. Don’ t expect miracles. It won’ t do supernatural things. You mi?*t. exercise your patience and persevere in in use for a reasonable length of time to get its full beneiits. The ingredients of which Dr. Bierce’s medicines are composed have the unqualified endorsement of scores of medical leaders—better than any amount of lay, or non-professional, testimonials. They are not given a wav to bo ex* i- mented with but are sold by all dealuia in medicines at reasonable prices. ___ Chris. Spitzbart took his family to pick hop* for Mr. Burch and reports Mr. ('. Bocknmiin sold hi« place to tli.* yard the finest In* has seen in the Mr. Hagev from Borland. country. By ran Zumant and Anton Khoulson M - J no. Simmons ami daughter, visited with the Keen boy» Sunday. .\ a \ returned from the east and say Mr. and Mrs. (¿. Richmond visited they had a fine time during their three months stay but are glad to get back to with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lynn Sunday. Oregon again. Mrs. J. Barker and Mrs. C. Rees vis Marion Moore’s sons and brother, ited with Mrs. C. Bookman one day this Jim, has returned from Southern Ore ! week. Miss Jessie Musgrave, who has been gon, Lake county, where they went to Mr. and Mrs. Stnrgas, of Brook, visit- visiting her sister, Mrs. A. V. Ellis, re take up land. Imt there was nothing do* ed with their daughter, Mrs. J. Byerlie, turned to her hoine at Corvallis Wed- I ing as the lam! «lid not suit them. I Sunday. nesday. Mr. and Mrs J. Barker and son, Ed, 1 GeoG<«sser and party returned from Southern Oregon. They were gone a 1 visited with Mr. and Mrs. Rees ami WEST SALEM j month and killed five deer and two heir. family Sunday. ( ieerge says the deer are thick and In* Mr. a.i«l Mrs. Dykstra visited with SUNNYSL0PE. could have killed, 50 but bad no way «»f Mr. K. Branuan sold all his peaches i bringing them out. He had a line horn i Mr. and Mrs. D. Rees and family Tues day, they being ou to . their honey moon. at $1.50 a bushel. to show for what he said. They will he at home to begin house Mr. Bozley was a Monmouth visitor Fred Woods and family have moved keeping September 9th. We wish them Moudav. Mr. D. Park« *r, has solfi his tl a long and happy married life. into their new home. acre tract next U Mr. Heist for $2250 In Wm. Herren has sold some hogs to Mr. Church. Beautiful Hom e A IS IN MY HANDS FOR SALE PEkRYDA LE. #* staying in Bortland at the home of her iincL* for H o m e time, returned home | Monday. 1 George Hodge, of Rickreall, came over > and took the families of Ewing Jen nings and Breston Lung tr> the Yoakum hop yard near Rickreall Saturday. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * **-* » # -.Y- # * -A- A1 * *-**•**- ■&*■*** * % t We Some Have and are Been Interesting Prices , | Still on Making Furniture See Our Show Windows For Special Values 95c Purest and Sw eetest of Em ollients. Cuticura Ointment is one of the most successful curatives for torturing, dis figuring humors of tic* skin and scalp, including loss of hair, e/e r compounded, in proof of which a single anointing with it, preceded by a hot bath with Cuticura Soap, and followed by mild doses of Cuticura Pills, is often suffi cient to afford immediate relief in the most distressing forms of itching, burn ing, and scaly humors, eczemas, irrita tions, and inflammations, permit rest and sleep, and point to a speedy cure when all else fails. Hold throughout the world. Potter Drug and Cbein. Corp.. Sole Props . Boston. Mss.«. KJTPoet Free. How to Cure Skin Humors. Many Sites Offered. Mr. Clarence Ireland, of Bortland, . visited at the home of J. S. C o o p e r the Some ten of our business men met : ! last of tin* week. with the Catholic fathers Monday for Mr. and Mrs Clarence Clodfelter. of th<‘ l m '»f seeing what could he Jefferson, are visit ing the latter’ s sister j regarding a hospital. I he talk h«*re, Mrs. C. McBeth. was all in its favor ami it considered a I certainty that if the decision is made to Mi88 Pearl Percival has departed for j build, the necessary financial support Hood[River, where she has accepted a , will he easily forthcoming. As we position in a millinery store. j mentioned last week, the only great Mr. and Mrs. Land were and son. Earl, ! drawback to the piopeaition is the left for the East Saturday, where they I Pro,,abU' inability to secure Sisters for will make their future home. , the uork, their services being eontm- Miss Helen Cooper returned the first of the week from Albany, where she visited her father, Mr. Bud Cooper. Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Gilmore, of Los I | Aneeles, are visiting friends in this city, i Mr. Gilmore was formerly owner of the j water works here. Paul Belt returned Thursday from ! ’ * Willamina, vhere hi* has been visiting his father. John Belt, who is engaged in the drug business at that place. FALLS CITY A minstrel show in town n g • drew ft good crowd. Monday W. B. MeKowan returned last week ** from a business visit t«> Portland News is fearce this week, everyone having gone hop picking that can get away. Guy Bros. & Dalton Hardware and Furniture * Miss Marguerite Flower has returned * to her school in Salem, which l*«*gins \ next Monday. \\ Mr. Willits, a ftoninlaw of Mrs. Wolf, \ died in a Salem hospital last week ami < was buried ill the cemetery h«*re last * Sunday. Justice Hubbard was engaged last Wednesday in the trial of his first jury case. The judge made h good record,; and the jury brought in a verdict for plaintiff. John R. Fouch returned last week from an extended visit in the eastern states. He savs this coast shows up well be«kies conditions in the east, and that we aie In-tter off than most pln.-es Mill men say lumber has gone up ami orders are coming in rapidly. This looks good to us. Men are in g«x*l de mand here, it being impossible at the in time to get full crews in manv { present in i of work. T h e K in d T o u H a v e A lw a y s B o u g h t , a n d w h ich haa been In u se fo r o v e r 3 0 y ears, h as b o r n e th e sig n a tu re o f a n d has b e e n m a d e u n d e r h is p e r son a l su p ervision sin ce its in fan cy . A llo w n o o n e t o d eceiv e you in th is. A ll C o u n te rfe its , Im ita tion s a n d “ J n s t -a s -g o o d ” a r e b u t E x p e r im e n ts th a t tr ifle w ith a n d e n d a n g e r the h ealth o f In fa n ts a n d C h ild ren —E x p e rie n ce ag a in st E x p e rim e n t. Land Sold for Taxes. i Satmday afternoon at 1 o ’clock in ¡front of the court house door in Polk j County, Oregon, Sheriff Grant disposed ¡of at Sheriff’s sale four parcels of land ! on which the taxes became delinquent in 1903 and to pay which they were sold in 1905. Thev were bid in by the county, and now the three years allow ed by law having elapsed and no settle ment made, the court again offered them for sale, due notice to that effect having been given through the Itemizer. Jus tice B. Wilson, of Independence, bought lots 7 an»l 3 in block 27 in Tharp’ s a«l«ii- tion to Indepentlence for $15.78. Min nie M. Massey, of McCoy* purchased for *21.75 lots 7 in block 28, lot 8 in block 26, in Independence, and lots 2, 3 and 4 in block 2 in Buena Vista. Both par- tie.- received a sheriff’s deed to the prop erty bought, and now the original own ers can only recover by bringing suit to set such deed aside. W h a t is C A S T O R I A C a storla is a h arm less su b stitu te f o r C astor OH, P a r e g o r ic , D ro p s a n d S o o th in g Syrups. I t is P leusnut. I t con ta in s n e ith e r O p iu m , M o rp h in e n o r o th e r N a rc o tic su b sta n ce. I t s a g e is its g u a ra n tee. I t d estroys W o r m s a n d allay s F ev erish n ess. I t c u r e s D iu rrlim a a n d W in d C olic. I t reliev es T e e th in g T rou b les, cu re s Constii»ation a n d F la tu len cy . I t a ssim ila tes th e F o o d , regu la tes th o S tom a ch a n d B o w e ls , g iv in g h ealth y a n d n atu ral sleep. T h e C h ild re n ’ s P a n a c e a —T h e M o th e r’ s E'riend. C A S T O R IA G E N U IN E Bears the Signature of Large Cement Cellar for the Riley Business Block Mr. N. Anderson commenced work with a force of men Monday morning! excavating under the back end of the Riley block for the putting in of a large cement cellar. It will be put in under | what is now the agricultural warehouse of Adams ilfc Brobst Co., ami will I k * 25 feet feet w ide and <0 feet long. It w ill have a heighth < -f 7 feet and he almost entire ly underground The walls will he of brick, with a cement floor. Some 200 yards of excavating will have to he done to get out the necessary dirt to begin the other operations. It will have con nection with the new Washington street sewer, and thus avoid the troubles that underground cellars have experienced here in the past. It w ill be used bv Adams & Brobst Do. as an addition t«> their warehouse room, and will prove a great convenience in many ways. The Evils of Constipation The Kind Yon Have Always Bought In Use For Over 3 0 Years. ' TH C CCNTAUR COM PAN V, TT MURRAY S T R IC T , NEW TO R N CITY. MARKET REPORT. City Express & Transfer Co. MU SCOTT A STARR, PROPRIETORS REPORTED W E E K L Y BY U. 8 . LOU G H ARY . All kinds of hauling at reasonable rates. Phone orders promptly at tended to. Headquarters at Web ster's confectionery. Phones: Beil 264, Mntu I 254 Ba n Phone Mutual 245 Wheat, a bushel, 85c. Bran, a ton, $25 U0. Shorts, it to il, $30. Oats, a bushel, 35 cents. Flour, a barrel, $4.75. Flour, a sack, $1 25. Dorn meal, $2 50 a cwt. Potatoes, a bushel, 60. Butter, a pound, 25 cents. Lard, a pound, 15 cents. Bacon, sides, a pound. 16 cents. Hams, a pound, 15 to 20 cents. Shoulders, a pound, 12L» cents. Eggs, a dozen, 25 cents. Chickens, a dozen, $3 (d $5. Dried fruits, a pound, 6 @ 15 cents. Beets, a pound, 2 cents. Turnips, a pound, 2 cents, Cabbage, a pound. cents. Onions, a pound, 3 cents. Beans, a pound, 5 l,2 @ 8 cents. Corn meal, a pound, 3 cents Hay, a ton, $8 (cb $12. Phones : Mutual 327 Bell 191 • Glover’s Meat Market are many: in fact almost every serious illness bite its origin in constipation, and D ALLAS, OREGON some medicines, instead of preventing constipation, add to it. This is true «>f All kinds of meats. most cathartics, which, when first used, Pure lard. have a beneficial effect, but the dose Fi ■« md poultry Fridays and has to he continually increased, and be fore long the remedy ceases to have the Saturdays. slightest effect. There is one prepara Highest market price tion, h )wevei> that can be relied upon to produce the same results with the paid for fat stock. same «lose', even after fifty years’ daily us«*, and this is Brandeth’s Pills, G. W. Cone and family will spend which has a record of over 100 years the winter in Portlaml. as the standard remedy tor constipa Mrs. Inez Diggers, of Portland, is vis tion and all troubles arising from an Dallas, Oregon. inpure state of the blood. Brandeth’ s iting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. V. R .C . CRAVEN - - Presiden Lynch. Pills are the same fine laxative tonic W. G. VASSALL - - Cashier pill your grandparents used and can he d ir e c t o r s : found in every drug store and medicine X. L. Butler, R. C. Craven, I). L. Keyt store, either plain or sugar coated. M. M. Ellis, W. G. Vassal!. Rain stopped work at the crusher and This bank is pleased to place at the TEA on the streets Monday. On Tuesday disposal of its customers the facilities the crusher force was laid off to <lo some gained during many years of continuous The way to buy tea is in rebitting and most of the men brought (service and growth. down to work on the streets. The way p ack a ges; som ebody is they made the gravel Hv was a caution. Main street now begins to present quite responsible for it. a respectable appearance, and cement walks will soon lie in on its entire Your grocer returns • our money if you don’t “ Lent We Foxget. ” length. like Schilling's Best; we pay him. DALLAS CilY BANK ONUMENT Marble— Willamette University. W EBF00T Founded in 1844. ROOFING -Granitei TIIR BEST ROOFINU New $50,000 building this year. The j ON THE MARKET College of l iberal Arts has strong, brain Made by the Northwest Roofing developing courses. .Other courses in company, Portland. Does not buc Oratory, Music, Theology, Education, ^ kle, Guaranteed for 10 years. J years Medicine. I^iw, and in the Acadamy Ko ty-five Professors. High quality L . C. K O S E R Agent for T’olk County. ■ instruction. State Libraries afford su • perior advantages. For catalogue ad e ^ m ^ wJ dress • I V P R E S . F. H O M A N , Salem, Oregon. With our 10 years exper ience in repairing bicy cles with tne most up- to-date tools and meth ods we are better pre dared to do your wheel work than any one else, and guarantee satisfac tion and right prices. C. L. H A W K I N S Railroad street, I «allas. * J. v 1- * M l T T ,« ^ 'p A * * V -p ® t T v S A * ¡DALLAS ICE CO. Jr si. "AA SALT CREEK LUMBER CO. TRUCK AND DRAY CO. W ILL HUBBARD Caldwel Bros, (Everything upto-dale ) IHE OREGON EIRE RELIEF MoMinnvill-, Oregon. CHAS. GREGORY, Agent DALLAS. OREGON Phone and stand at Cherring- ton’s drugstore. r MISS M. O UVE SMITH Î V S T R r tT O R Oîf PIANO AND ORGAN. n ^ A A A A ATVS * * * * * * * * * * * ¿ * * í & * 4 & * ¿ * : í -1 POOL AND BILLIARD HALL Nr» IraN w II« Ktrslakt Buildm? | Price of Ice Will be as Follows: Cash must accompany all out- of-town orders and add 15c for each sack. LOW »RICES APPEAL TO YOU is decidedly the place at which to and have every-j this buy your groceries. The little you have here f<»r good things to eat will a pleasant surprise to you. thing to satisfy j to he pay ODR REFUTATION FOR GROCERY your wants QUALITY BABY CARRIAGE TIRES ^ % On and After This Date the 50 lbs. and under, 1 ^c per lb. # 100 lbs. . . . $1.25* per 100 1 200 lbs. . . . 1.00 per 100 IF This is the place to get your V A ^ * rT T j | to the Local Trade Full Line of Bike Supplies LIE SMITH’S CYCLERY ALW AYS MORE IMPROVEMENT. Bicycle i! Repairing We Cater Prof. Kantner, wife and little son de- the last of the week for their | >arted mine in Seattle after an extended visit with Mrs. Kantner’ s parents, Mr. an«l Mis. B. F. Whiteaker. Our lines o f Charter Oak and Universal Heaters have arrived and are now being set up. The biggest line of Heaters at tne BEST PRICES it the town CUTICURA OINTMENT The W o rld 's Greatest Skin Cure and Mr. W. W. Allinglmm, a popular! traveling man, was in town Tuesday. Mr. Allingham was formerly principal of the Independence school. SPECIAL “ I just can't say enough for the Cuti- Remedies, I can't find words high enough to express my thanks to God for hearing of the wonderful remedies. My baby had a running sore on his neck and nothing that 1 did for it took effect until 1 used Cuticura. My face was nearly full of tetter or seme similar skin disease. It would itch and, after scratching, it burned so that I could hardly stand it. Two cakes of Cuti cura Soap and a box of Cuticura Oint ment cured me. Two years after it broke out on my hands and wrist. I cured it for a while, hut it came again in the summer. Sometimes I would go nearly crazy for it itched so badly. I used ten dollars’ worth of so-called blood medicines which did no good at all, then 1 went back to my old stand-by, that had never failed me. One set of Cuticura Snap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Resolvent did the work. One set also cured my uncle’s baby whose head was a cake of seres, and I know of an< ther woman’s baby who was in the same fix and nothing else did any good. I speak a word of praise for Cuticura whenever I see a case that needs it. Mrs. Lillie Wilcher, 770 Eleventh St., Chattanooga, Tenn., Feb. 16, 1907.” Charley Shepard and Mr. Sites were Mrs. Frank Gibson Dead. at Win. Herren’ s Saturday looking for The sad news of the death of Mrs. dairy cows. They arc going to start a Frank Gibson was phoned to Dallas dairy. Sunday morning, causing great sorrow to her many friends in this section. INDEPENDENCE. Her demise occurred at the home of her father. Mr. James Simonton, in West Mrs. Lynn Davidson was a Salem vis Salem that morning. She had been ill for several years with lung trouble and itor Saturday. death came as a welcome relief from a Miss Bessie Butler has returned from life of suffering. The funeral was held a trip to Newport. ! at Salem Monday under the auspices of >'«»‘ ern Star o fl'a lla s, of wl,i<h alie Mr, A1 Bentley was a passenger to 1 | was an honored n.ember. About 20 Portland Saturday. members went over from here to assist Mrs. Carl Harkins has arrived from i in the last sad rites Mrs. Gibson was Winlock to pick hops. | born in Pennsylvania, November 18, 1873, coming to Oregon with her par Mr. C. Long, of Utica, N. Y. is a guest | ents, in 1888. She graduated from the of Mr. Thos. Fitchard. Monmouth normal in 1891. and was a Rov McFadden is visiting his mother, successful school teacher until married I to Mr. Gibs m in 1895, She was soon Mrs. Sherman Hayes, of this citv. Ted Cooper has departed for Eugene, attacked by that dread disease which j caused her death and tried by change where he will enter the university. ! ot climate to ward it «>ff, Ini; such proved Mrs. Claud Cox. of Salem, is visiting I unavailing. Herself and husband were her parents, Mr, and Mrs. 8. Mulleman. ' well known residents of Rickreall until Min. I,„ria C an.pM I, of Eugene, U “. -Vl'ttr T « I»*'. Ihev moved to visiting at the horn!' of Miaa Ceoile Wii- k‘ J!'»-'l.11" ' - !'>-r death is a sad blow (#ox to her many friends and relatives, as she j was a lady of most estimable character. Mr. and Mrs. Rnfe Simpson, of Leb- I She leavej-Jto mourn her loss her husband, anon, is here to spend the hop-picking I father, Janies Simonton; four sisters, season. I Mrs. H. W. Thielson and Misses Kath- vt; .. „ ; t r *, ... ! erine, Edna and Della Simonton; and Miss Georgia Irvine, of McMinnville, six brothers, Willis Simonton of ’ this visited her aunt, Mrs. S. B. Irvine, i | city, Chi rles. >f Crestline, Ohio. Ellis, Saturday. j of Bellingham, James, of Independence, Mr. Carl Harkins, of Winlock. Wash, and John and Prescott, who are in East arrived Friday to spend a few weeks vis ern ( *regon. iting relatives. Mrs. Hattie Wells has returned to j her home in San Francisco, after a visit ! with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. Jlug- j gett. A GOOD RAZOR AND STROP FOR j j | Mrs. A. B. Stroug was a Dallas visit Wm. Herren and family are running or Saturday. a hoarding house at the McLaughlin K. G. Keyt and wife were Salem vis hop yard. itors Saturday. This neighborhood is almost depopu Mrs, Lulu Edwards visited friends in late«!. everybody having gone to the hop yards. ! Dallas Saturday. Fay Morrison is working in the Horst INDEPENDENCE, OREGON. CUTICURA A STAND-BY THAT NEVER FAILS HER Lee ( ’ lark, who has been poorly, is now some better. One of the best, gilt-edge pieces o f property in ir Inde- hop yard at Independence. Lynn was quite sick a few days pendence in the way of a residence. The nouse is recent- last Fiank week, blit is now able to he out ly built, the additions having- been made within the last again. year. There are ten rooms in the house, and calculating Grandma Wise is staying with the Van Nortliw ick children during the ab- as most carpenters do at $175 a room the house would i sence of their parents. cost $1750 to build. There is a barn 16x32 feet on the Owing to the extremely low price of property, and it is new. Besides these improvements hops Howard Jones has decided not to there is a chicken house 10x12 and meat house 8x10. pick his yard this year. Dick Duignan returned to Portland There are 16 fruit trees just coming into bearing. There Saturday. He is now traveling for the is a hedge fence in front and part of one side. Of the two llecd Shoe factory, of Bortland. Mrs. Corrigan and children, of Mc- lots which go with the property one corner lot is fenced Mfnnviile, have been visiting at the with 5-foot woven wire chicken fence. All this property home of her sister, Mrs. Wm, Keyt. can be bought within ten days for # 1,500. Half price Miss Edith Duignan, who has been Chas. E. hicks, Real Estate Broker Southern Woman Suffered With Itching, Burning Rash — Drove Her Nearly Crazy— Her Baby Had Sore on Neck, and Two Other Babies Had Skin Troubles— Calls ually in great demand and not enough 1 to supply the calls for them. As they give their w< rk without money and without price, the securing of them is a great factor in th -ucce<-sful working «>ut of the f on*, fit1 , .f * ueh an in* , stitution. ! s * • : hat a few «lay» will dole« ¡nine ti».• r *t.iltof Father i MeDevitt’s conference with the bishop. Many eligible sites have been offere«! for such a building, among them being I the nomes of F. J. Coad, Ed. Biddle A. j.I, Barham. Rev. Marrs. James Howe, I Dan Stonffer, and the tracts of E. ( ’ . Kirkpatrick and George Conkey. All are desirable places, but the matter is as yet in an embryo state, and not yet I decided upon. may have led you to infer that our pri ces are as high as the character of our merchandise. A visit here will remove that impression immediately. You will find the cost of our groceries not a bit more than you generally have to pay ftir articles whose cheap prices are their only merit. j We Make I Our Own % * f * I 1 EOE fiTAK Com e in and try a dish. All we ask is a com pari son ami wo will have you as a regular customer. Our parlor» are cool, pleasant am! inviting. • ••3t t h e I % * Corner Grocery Caterers for balls, pic nics, private parties,etc. Delivery free of charge. The BEST MEATS Everything in confection ery and tropical fruits A L L KIN n s * l E. B O Y D & S O N O F t % Johnson Bros. North Main Street BARNHART & GRANT DALLAS ***#**#***##***#*****•••«• Next to Postoffice A T