Additional Local. , Get Westfall to do your paper hanging. M. 'Winegar, of McMinnville, was here last week visiting with his son J. E Winegar. Bring us your produce w pay top prices. T. A. Riggs. Mrs. Henry Jones, of Amity, tas visiting here the latter part of last week, with her brother J. F Winerar. of the hardware stdre. Dr. R. E. Duganne, -dentist Office over Independence National Bank, Independence. Mr. and Mrs. B. Handley, of McMinnville, were visiting with Mrs. Handley's brother, Paul Cone and family Saturday and Sunday. We have a buyer for a sheep ranch of from 150 to 200 acres. Must be good land, but can have considerable brush on it. Polk County Realty Co. E. A. Cone and wife, of Phil omath, were visiting here the latter part of last week, with his brother Paul Cone, of the Wir. egar & Co. of hardware store. Four lots inside the city limits of Monmouth, 63 and one-half by 165, or nearly an acre, all in young orchard. Priee $200. We have other good buys. Polk County Realty Co., office at Her ald office. Mrs. M. E. Hendric and daughter, of McMinnville, spent Thanksgiving with Mrs. U. G. Heffley and family, east of town. Nice cottage of five rooms and pantry with good woodshed. Well on porch. Prunes, apples, pears and small fruits together with one and eighty-seven one-hund-redths acres of good land in Mon mouth -.for $1000. For sale by Polk County Realty Co., at Her ald office.' The neighbors and friends of Mrs. Frank Byers, gave her a pleasant surprise Tuesday after noon December 1st in honor of her 54th birthday. If you have any clothing to press, clean, or repair, get it done at the Dallas Cleaning and Press ing Parlors. D. M. Hampton, Agent 13-4t C. A. Davis and family have moved down from the Luckiamute sawmill and have rented the cot tage on Broad street next door to the Herald office. H. E. Smith, of Elkins, was a pleasant caller at this offics Mon day. He brought in a bushel of wheat to pay for a years sub scriDtion to the Herald. We would like to get about ten bush' els more on the same terms. The weather we have had the fore part of this week was pretty cold, but there was no frost to amount to anything. Clouds and sunshine have been the order of the day for some time and any one who would complain of our climate this winter should go back to the eastern states 'where zero weather is the rule at this season of the year. - A , Decision S ...Of Fate. ; Ten and twenty acre tracts, fine land and very desirable loca tion, for sale by Polk County Realty Co. T.-A. Porter and wife, of Ore town, passed through here Tues day enroute home from an ex tended visit with their daughter npai Junction City. Brother and Sistpr Porter are enthusiastic workers in the Oretown Grange, which stands in the front rank for attendance, programs and al, work that goes to make an up- to-date Grange. - Original. "It,ta les for you to preti m, Kenneth; 1 cannot be your wife." "Why notj" "Mother. I cannot leave her alone. Old age Is coming upen her; she would uf$er if told misery." "She caa live with us." "Keaaath, do yoa know what would be In stoae for us for you under such circumstance T" What?" . "You don't know women. Mother hat been head of her house all her life. She would regulate ours." "I don't mind who keeps bouse." "I do that Is, If 1 have one of my own. I prefer to keep It myself. But there are other considerations. Moth er requires a very high temperature. You, I know, like a cool house. When you came home to a hot one you would throw open all the doors and windows. Mother would retire to her room and stay there all the evening. She would wish to have me with her. 1 would remain with yea. She would call me. I would say: 'No. mother; you have had me with yoa all day. My husband needs me now.' To which she would reply: 'I shall not live the night through. Goodby. I die of cruelty.' Then you would say: 'Go to her. To morrow we shall be free.' I would go, but we would not be free tomorrow or the next day or the next." "You mean that In time she would be free; we would do the dying." No; we would drag out a miserable existence." "The picture Interests me. Go on." "Then occasionally we would have a little misunderstanding." Never." Yes. we would. All married people do. Mother would be aware of It. She would take my part and would treat you like a criminal. That would make you furious, and we would be forever making up. Then she would be con tinuously discovering that you had no respect for the hardships I was endur ing. She would consider you a model of selfishness and treat as such." "Any more of It?" "Yes; you would soon lose your equa nimity and treat her harshly. That would stab me to the quick and would only Irritate her the more against you." "Go on." "Occasionally we would wish to go out to a theater or to visit our friends. Mother would make such a fuss about being left alone that we would have to give up such pleasures. Then you might wish to go on a journey and take me with you. I couldn't leave mother. Then you would begin to curse and to swear and wish her at the bottom of a bottomless pit or In the hottest of a fiery furnace. It would be terrible." There was a long pause. Presently he said, but with a faint heart: "I love you so well, sweetheart, that I would rather stand all this than give you up." She wavered and at last said: "Let fate decide for us. Do you see those two volumes in the library in red morocco? Well, tomorrow morn ing when you come downstairs there will be a 'Yes' In one volume and a 'No' in the other. Choose one. We will abide by the result of your choice." For the rest of the day he thought hard. That night when all were in bed he slipped downstairs In his stock ing feet and went to the library. He opened volume one and found a "Yes," then volume two and found also a "Yes." Rubbing out both, he wrote a "No" for each, put them In and stole upstairs to bed. The next morning when he heard her leave her room be left his, and they went downstairs together. He went to the library, hesitated long between the two volumes, lifted bis eyes as If in silent prayer, then took out volume two, opened it, read the word "No" and sank limp in a chair. Then, with a moan, he rushed from the house. There were complications for a few days. Then he wrote "Mother" on a slip of paper and "Kenneth" on another, placing one In each of the red moroc co volumes. The next morning she was to draw as be had drawn. He did not slip downstairs that night to make both "Kenneth." Indeed, he feared that If "Kenneth" were drawn it would mean both "Kenneth" and "Mother," a combination be especially wished to avoid. But as the clock struck the midnight hour there was a silken tread on the stairs. . A white figure de scended and, going to the library, took out the slip on which "Mother" was written and wrote "Kenneth" in its stead. "Fate has decided in your favor, Kenneth," she said after drawing, and he held her in his arms. "But if all does not turn out as well as you ex pect you mustn't blame me." There was an interval of ten years. "Will the old fiend live forever?" "Now. Kenneth, I will not hear you call poor mother an old fiend. I told you when you persisted Just what yoa had to expect You were willing to leave It to fate." "But I wanted to steal a march on "Not on fata on me." "Bat I didn't in th end." "No. When a man practices toco miserable devices on a woman he usu ally gets the worst of It" "Just so. I had tha game in my own hands, but I was too stupid to play It" "Howr "I should have made both slips to reaI 'Mother.' " "It wouldn't have done any good. Susan had instructions to see in tha aiornlng tbat they were both 'Kea wth. " F. A. MITCHEL. wanted io borrow xsuu on approved security, for one year. 8 per cent interest Address A, care Herald, Mo.imouth Ore. 13-2 Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Robertson returned the first of the week from an extended visit with rel atives in the western part of the county. They spent Thanksgiv ing with their daughter, Mrs, Etta Flower, at Falls City and ripe strawberries fresh- from the vines for dinner. The berries were large and of excellent fla vor. This is quite a contrast with those parts of the country where the snow is from two to twenty inches deep and the thermometer below zero. THE PARROT TALKED. Polls County Realty Company Transacts a general Real Estate business and attends to collecting rent for out of town owners. We have buyers If you have any land for sale list with us. it Monmouth Oregon TWO DOLLUTS' WORTH ' of up-to-date Kitchen Furnishing "TO It1 yoa much mora ml comfort ud latlafacuua than twwty dollars spent in your parlor. THE SAVORY SEAMLESS And the Girl Learned Somathmg Mew About Herself. "If I wished to change my voca tion," 6aid the tall girl, "I could go riffht downtown now and get the queerest position imaginable. It seems that I have a peculiar talent. 1 just discovered it yesterday. It came to light while I was waiting for an elevated train. "At the station at the same time was a boy carrying an unusually large birdcage in which swung an unusually large parrot. Many per sons gathered around the cage to admire the bird and to ask ques tions. I asked n few mvself. "'Does he talk?' said I. "The boy answered very patient ly. 'Not any more,' he said. 'lie hasn't talked for two years. lie is a South American bird, We brought him here from Guayaquil two years "11 1 i 11 1 ago, ana lie nas never laiKeu since. I euess he must be homesick.' "Several men and boys hovered over the cage, one after the other, and attempted to engage Tolly in conversation, but he blinked at them all in contemptuous silence. By and bv I spoke to him. " 'Hello. Tolly,' said I. 'How do you feel today ? " 'Hello yourself said Tolly. "The boy nearly fainted. 'Why, miss,' he said, 'whatever did you do to him?' "I assured the lad I had done nothing that I was awafe of and that I was as much surprised as any body at my success in eliciting a reply. " '"Try him again,' said the boy. 'See if he will say anything more. "I did try again, and every time I spoke the bird talked back. The unexpected loquacity on the part of the parrot inspired numerous witticisms among the men. It's a case of like curing like,' murmur ed one rude wretch on the outskirts of the crowd. 'It's a wise bird that recognizes a kindred tongue,' said somebody else. But there was one man present who descended to no such levity. He approached me in a serious manner and handed out a business card. "'I am the manager of this place,' he said. The address was that of a large bird store. 'Any parrot,' he went on, 'that has stop ped talking or that is just learning to talk will talk better for a wom an than for a man. But even among women there are a certain few that exercise a peculiar influ ence over the birds. I can't ex- flain why. Nobody can explain it. t simply is so. I have in my store now he continued in direct con versation with me, 'several parrot3 that so far cannot bo induced to talk. One is a beautiful Mexican parrot. He belongs to a doctor, who would pay a good round sum to anybody who would teach the bird to talk. Would you mind trying your peculiar powers on him?' "Of course I declined the offer. I didn't feel particularly proud of certain mysterious qualities that appealed exclusively to the minds of poll parroU. Still, it is consoling to know that if I ever need a new position I am competent to fill one in which there will .be but little rivalry." Chicago Record-Herald. 4 ' fne railed Oral Bottom make it poaltlTaly elf-baiting. ReeulM always satisfactory. Easiest to dam. Family size, $4 . SHAKER SIFTER. "H. OafBiad Slita. Coats 25c. ud tflvaa mora aattaiactloa haa half a doien cheap lea-cat aiitara Jt 3-mali Sum of JIon. Spmnt Harm UfiH Civ. r.u an Vp-to-Datu JtMcA.at SaulpmmmU Get your Roasters for Thanksgiving of R. M. Wade & Co. W. E. Crav.en, Mgr. Independence, Oregon Polk County Bank Established 1889 Monmouth, Oregon. Paid Capital Surplus and Undivided Profits $30,000 $7,000 Transucts a General Banking Business OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS J. H. Hawley, President J. B. V. Butler, Vice President, Ira C. Powell, Cashier F. S. Powell, J. B. Stump, J. B. V. Butler, I. M. Simpson. Church Directory. Evangelical Church L. C. Hoover, Pastor Morning service at 11:00 o'clock Evening service at 7:00 o'clock Sunday School at 10:00 a. m. Y. P. A. Meeting at 6.30 p. m. Prayer Meeting Wednesday evening. CHRISTIAN CHURCH. W. A. Wood, Pastor. Morning Service at 11. a. m. Evening Service at .7:00 p. m. Sunday School 9:45 a. m. Y. P. S. C. E. 6:30 p. m. Prayer Meeting Wednesday 7:30 p. m. Baptist Church. Sunday School 10 a. m. Preaching 2:30 p. m. For Sale Farm Lands, Houses and Lots Five, Ten and Twenty acre Traces J. H. Moran Monmouth and Independence 50 horse cards 14x21 for $2.50. 250 letterheads or envelopes, $1. Other printing in proportion at the Herald office. Monmouth Laundry We want to make our good reputation better still by giving universal satisfaction to our pa trons. If dissatisfied, tell us why. Bring in your Suits and have them Cleaned and Pressed, at the Monmouth Electric Laundry Acorn Store Wm. Evans, Prop. Books, Periodicals, Ice Cream, Soda and Soft Drinks. J. W. HOWELL Contractor and Builder Carpenter shop and General . Repair Work. Moulding and Finishing Material Cor. Knox and Jackson Sts.