THE POLK COUNTY OBSERVER, FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1915. h Judge Collins Prominent I in Polk County's History .J" r " JUDGE JAMES LAYTON COLLINS. Photo by Stone. The eighty-second anniversary of the birth of Judge James Layton Col llnB, the earliest surviving resident of Polk county, wag celebrated on Sun day in a quiet, unpretentious manner, only the home-folk being present to tender congratulations upon the at tainment of a ripe old age by this pio neer settler of Oregon and to wish for him many more returns of the day. He was a member of the first party of emigrants to enter the Wil lamette valley by way of Klamath Falls, and across the Siskiyou, Ump qua and Calapooia mountains. This was at the age of thirteen years. But a history of the eventful career of this honored citizen is best told by the Portrait and Biographical Record, which contains the following brief sketch of his life. Prominent among the representa tive men of Polk county is Hon. James L. Collins, known not alone as one whose name was among the first to be iotntified vith the American settle ments in Cregon, but rather for his intimate relations with the permanent history of our commonwealth. Begin ning in pioneer days, in the midst of undeveloped resources and a rude civ ilization, he gave himself wholly to the western cause, faithful in the pur suit of duty, whether in camp or field, as a soldier In defense of the settlers or a citizen in the material upbuilding of the country; through the changes of time and progression he has ad vanced his own interests and those of his adopted state by lifting himself to a position of exceptional prominence among the many who are entitled to the esteem and admiration of the pres ent generation. The Interest which (j (ftaches to the pioneers of Oregon is not inspired by curiosity, but rather by that affection which centers about the lives and deeds of those who blaz ed the trail for the westward march of progress. Before torching upon the life of Judge Collins we will give a brief outline of the ancestry to which he owes those characteristics which have enabled him to become a power among many hampering con dltions. His maternal grandfather was a descendant of Thomas Wyatt, a man well known In the history of England through his opposition to the marriage of Queen Mary to Philip of Spain, and who was beheaded by her orders for his participation in the re bellion which- occurred about 1654 Sir Henry Dyatt, the father of Thomas Wyatt, was a member, of the privy council of Henry the Eighth. His ma ternal grandmother, Elizabeth Sea, was descended from the Duke of Ar gyll, while his father's mother was Jane Eddings, the representative of an old Virginia family. Smith Collins, the father of Judge Collins, was born In Orange county, Va., in 1804, the son of George, and the grandson of William, both of whom were natives of the same location. The latter was an Intimate friend of George Washing ton and served under him in the Rev. olutionary war. In 1846 Mr. Smith Collins outfitted for the trip across the plains, having decided to become a pioneer of the northwest. Besides ten yoke of oxen he brought with him valuable loose cattle and horses upon a trip made memorable by innumerable hardships and dangers. They crossed the Kan sas river, thence followed the Republi can fork, and the Platte river, by Ft. Laramie, and on to the Black hills. They were not molested by the In dians until they reached the Humboldt valley, In Nevada, but from there on they encountered considerable difficul ties. One week was consumed In passing through the Umpqua canon, a distance of twelve miles, as they were compelled to bridge over the rocks, follow the streams, etc. Upon their arrival at the present site of Eugene City, they found but one house, that having been built by Eu gene Skinner, but with no occupants. Here the subject of this sketch re mained with the wagons and exhaust ed stock during the winter, while the rest of the family proceeded on pack- horses, to the settlements on the Luckiamute river, about sixty miles further north. In the spring of 1147 Mr. Collins took up a donation claim located be tween the Luckiamute and Soap creek, in Polk county, and entered at once upon the work of reclaiming the land front Its wilderness state. The Mock which he had brought with him to Oregon he turned upon the open range. By energy, perseverance and management, he acquired a large amount of property, in later years trading stock for land in the southern part of Polk county, which he retain ed until the time of his death in 1872 Judge James Layton Collins was born in Warren county, Mo., May 9, 1833, and shortly before his thirteenth birthday he was enroute for Oregon, a member of the first company that ever came by way of the Klamath lakes, and across the Siskiyou, Umpqua and Calapooia mountains into the Willam ette valley. He was often detailed to drive the foremost team that broke down the thick sage brush upon the trackless waste and was thus in the van of danger and difficulty through out the greater part of the trip. On October 10, the party arrived in the Willamette velley at the present site of Eugene City. There a great many of the hardships and perils of pioneer life fell upon the shoulders of Judge Collins, then a mere lad, the neces sity of providing game in sufficient quantity for the support of himself and two sick companions, enforcing him to shoulder his gun, and with Its breech breaking the ice in the sloughs and streams, wade through them in order to reach good hunting grounds on the other shore. In the spring of the following year he set tled with his parents in Polk county, where he helped to erect and Improve their pioneer home. For several years he remained at home, assisting in the general work of the farm. During this period he followed out his nat ural inclinations and began to de vote every spare moment to study; not being able to procure lights, he pursued his studies by the glow of the pitchwood fire In the rude fire place, the foundation for knowledge having been laid In the subscription schools of his native state. After a (ew years, when the family could manage to get along without his as sistance, he became a student in the Id Oregon Institution at Salem, then conducted by Professor Hoyt. and hlch has since become Willamette University. Being under the neces sity of working for his maintenance while attending school, he was first employed by Father Waller. Profes sor Hoyt soon recognized the intel lectual qualities of the ambitious lad, and employed him to cut wood and to work in the campus garden, for these services paying him twenty-five cents per hour. He occupied a room In the upper story of the college building, and for two years put In many hours of hard labor daily, and soon became proficient in Greek and other branches. In 1853 Judge Collins went to the mines of northern California, where he remained until the fall of 1855, when he returned to Oregon. The leg islature being in session, he secured position as reporter for the Demo crat-Standard, and continued as such until the close of the session, during which the capital was removed from Corvallis to Salem. A few days be fore the adjournment of the legisla ture Capt. B. F. Burch organized Company B of the recruiting battalion of the first regiment of the Oregon Mounted Volunteers, for service in the Yakima Indian war. Judge Collins at once enlisted, and after the ad journment of the assembly he joined the troops in the field on the Columbia river and participated In the hard ships and perils which followed. He was with Coloned Thomas R. Corne lius throughout his famous "horse meat campaign," when the volunteers pursued the Indians for two months. being often reduced to the necessity of subsisting upon the horses cap tured from or abandoned by the In dians in their flight. He also took an active and honorable Dart in the battle of the Simcoe, which won for him the respect of his officers and the confidence and esteem of all his comrades in arms. After the close of hostilities Judge Collins returned to Polk county and engaged In teaching school, at the same time continuing his studies. He ad previously studied law under Hon. B. F, Harding and Hon. L. F. Orow- er while a resident of Salem, and in 185 he made application for admis sion to the bar. Judge Wilson, then district attorney, wrote the motion for his admission, a committee was ap pointed, consisting of Judges J. O. Wilson, George H. Williams and Ben Hayden, to examine him, and he was admitted November It, of the same ear. During the session of 1864 and the special session of 186S he was chief clerk of the house of represen tatives. In 1869 he was appointed by Gov. Geo. L. Woods county judge of Polk county, and the same year was appointed by Judge Deady to the of fice of the United States commission er, which he held up to the present time. He has served as deputy pros ecuting attorney for several years and has been attorney for the state in managing the school fund for Polk county for the past fifteen years. In politics the Judge is a republican, though he had been a democrat until the breaking out of the Civil war. At that time he abandoned that party and as a member of the state conven tion at Eugene City aided in organis ing the republican party for Its first effective campaign In Oregon. He has also served as chairman of the coun ty central committee, and was a mem ber of the stato central committee and has nerved aa a member of the Dallas city council. As county superinten dent of schools for two years he was active m the promotion of education-1 al matters, being instrumental in the organization of Dallas college, and takes great interest in all movements pertaining to the general welfare of the community. He is a member of the Methodist Episcopal church and served as trustee. The marriage of Judge Collins oc curred in Polk county in 1861, Miss Mary Whiteaker becoming his wife. She was born in De Kalb county, 111., in 1846, the daughter of John White aker, who was one of the pioneers of Polk county in 1847, and a relative of John Whiteaker, the first governor of Oregon. Mrs. Collins died in 1864, leaving one daughter, Nellie, who is a graduate of La Creole Academy, the State Normal school at Monmouth, and the New York State Normal col lege at Oswego, N. Y. She is now critic in the State Normal school at Madison, S. D., which position she has occupied for the past ten years. On January 1, 1867, Judge Collins mar ried for his second wife, Miss Mary E. Kimes, a native of De Kalb coun ty, Mo., and a daughter of Lewis Ray Kimes, who started with his familv for Oregon In 1852 and was drowned while attempting to cross the Mis souri river. His widow continued her journey to Oregon, locating in Yam hill county, where was born her son, Lewis Ray Kimes, now a prominent farmer of Polk county. To Judge and Mrs. Collins were born ten chll dren, namely: Ray Smith, deceased Edgar Layton of Kalama, Wash. Mary, wife of Prof. E. E. Watts, of Washington county, Oregon; Ednelle, of Dallas; Ben David, deceased; Ora; Frank Wyatt, a mechanical engineer in the Union Iron works of San Fran cisco; Louise; James Dean; and Mar garet, deceased. In 1859 Judge Collins opened an of fice in Independence, but since 1860 has been continuously engaged in the practice of law in Dallas. By his con temporaries he is regarded as an able lawyer, a safe counselor, a -strong pleader, well grounded in the prin ciples of his chosen profession, and equipped with unexcelled ability to apply them correctly to the case in hand. A young attorney once cast reflections upon the integrity of Judge Collins. Governor Glbbs replied: "He is a man who may safely be trusted with uncounted gold." An attempt was once made to throw out of court a case in which Judge Collins was the attorney, i Judge Boise, who pre sided, said: "Judge Collins has prac ticed before me, and uniformly ap peared with the best papers ever pre sented in my court." The motion was overruled. This brief outline of the life record of Judge Collins Illustrates what care ful and thorough preparation, deter mination and perseverance, supple mented by a righteous ambition to at tain a position of responsibility and honor, win accomplish. Many a young man of the. present generation, or of generations yet to come, doubtless will find in the story of his life much that will prove an incentive to earnest and conscientious effort, and without these qualifications no man may hope to make a success of his elected vocation, regardless of the extent of his mental r CONSOLATION FOR THE LOVE LORN utvv40 1 GOT AS FAR AS FIGURING OUT HOW MUCH THE FURNJ TURE WOULD COST WHEN SHE CHANGED HER MIND. INSTEAD OF GETTING MAn iwr. iochimo WITH HER, SAT. DOWN AND SMOKED AN Ml U KSmssSt T -t-W-W I, A j. MM & J ssr sTTT iiiMMjj ' .sfW m -J IUT ammr yy 0101E WHAT IT attainments. A REAL HOT BISCUIT FIEND. Professor Horner Accuses Van Orsdel of Being Champion of Benton. Ex-Mayor Van Orsdel has a reputa tion In Corvallis for being the champ ion hot-biscut eater of Benton coun ty. If this statement Is not true then Professor Hornet has grossly misrep resented the facts. While the latter was in Dallas on Tuesday he related an Instance or two wherein "Van had distinguished himself along this particular line, asserting without fear of successful contradiction that the elongated individual to whom he re ferred had eaten blank biscuits at single sitting. The number is left blank not because The Observer's represen tative failed to catch the professor's words but because of the humiliation that Its publication might heap upon the subject of this sketch. Mr. Van Orsdel, who stood hard by while the professor was relating his Interesting experiences with the Dal las man, acknowledged the corn, but shifted the blame for his abnormal appetite upon Mrs. Horner, whom he declared could "beat the world making biscuits." And Horner accepted the compliment as though it were his very own. Booze Peddlers Arrested. Coming over from Independence last night a couple of young men were spotted by Night Officer Dick Rogers, as they were conveying a lot of packages into a house on First street, and their stock of goods was taken charge of. It consisted of for ty-four quarts of beer. One of the young men was arrested, and this morning was taken before Recorder Van Tassel and fined tlO under the ordinance prohibiting the carrying of intoxicating liquors, pleading guilty. The other escaped and fled from the city, and has not yet been apprehend ed. Albany Democrat. Monday evening. May 14. will be open meeting night of the Knights of Pythias lodge, and the entertainment committee Is busy preparing a pro gram for the occasion. This lodge Is constantly Increasing in membership. AND WHAT irnn DOES Ozone or O S is the three valued form of Oxygen or O a, in other words it Is active Oxygen. It la so active that when It comes In contact with substances containing Carbon Its third atom Immediately attacks the carbon and forms carbonic acid with it, thus destroying disease germs the solids of which consist to t0 of carbon. ozone is found in the air after thunderstorms where the lightning has transformed the natural Oxygen of the air In a small part Into Ozone. Ozone Is found In tile air of forests on high mountains and In the air at the sea shore, and health resorts are for that reason located In such localities so as to give patients the benefit of the small amount of Ozone In the air they breathe. But the amount thus naturally found In the air of certain localities Is very small and In serious cases of disease Is far too small to effect a cure. Ozone to be of value In diseases has to be Inhaled in a concentrated form, and to make this possible It has to- be passed through certain ethereal oils to be deprived of Us Irritating qualities. some ten years ago when practicing In DR. CHICAGO being also an electrical engineer, was consulting engineer for Chicago firms that were building Ozonators. Wishing to give the people of this section the benent at Ozone treatment, he decided to make use of Ills experience in designing them, and last week went to Portland to build one for use In his office. He has now returned with the finished machine and Is ready to treat patients that need this form of treatment at his office. The composition of the oils has always been kept a profound secret by the manufacturers of Osne machines; but Dr. TeH, designing the machines for them of course knows the composition of the oils. Hop and Prune Stores. We are selling our new model stoves at a reduced price this year; 1-foot stove $14; f-foot stove SIS. Dallas Iron Works. 11-tf. We have some men's and young men's suits, strictly all wool and hand tailored, at tt.M. tll.lt to Ut.tt. that you will And are the best values ia town. The Bee Hive store. II OZONE TREATMENT Is of the greatest value In all diseases that depend upon Infection by DISEASE GERMS After half an hour of Inhalation of the purified Osone the smell can be detected In the urine 24 hours later yet. This shows that the Osone pervades tlie entire body wherever the bloodvessels ran carry K. It Is absorbed by the blood In the lungs and destroys disease germs that may be In the blood and In addition Increases the number of the red blood corpuscles. In other words It improves and purines the blood. Pure blood and disease are strangers. IT HAS BEEN USED SUCCESSFULLY IN LA GRIPPE. BRONCHITIS, TI IIKRCXLOM8, PNEUMONIA, TYPHOID FEVER, BIXX)D POISONING OF DIP FERENT FORMS, CATARRH, INTESTINAL DISEASES, DIFFERENT FORMS OF SKIN DISEASES. NERVOUS DISEASES. INDIGESTION, INSOMNIA, ANAEMIA, CONSTIPATION, IN FACT IN DISEASES THAT DEPEND UP ON GERM INFECTION OR POOR BLOOD. CONSULTATION ON OZONE FREE It Washington Street, one half block east of 8. P. R. R, Depot DALLAS, POLK COUNTT, OREGON.