rpoc300i I0CT1 LOCAL AND STATE NEWS Chamberlin wants your hogs. A 20 acre Hood River valley fruit tract sold for $20,000. A $200 nugget was found in northern Josephine county re cently. Large areas are being planted to apples on Dutch flat, Wasco county. Take your hogs to Chamberlin. A Minnesota man has bought 12 acres of orchard land near Ashland for $9000. Get Westfall to do your paper hanging. Nice cottage and seven lots, nearly 2 acres, for $850. Polk County Reality Co. A man near Milton sold $4000 worth of strawberries this year from five acres of ground. Highest market price paid for fat hogs at Chamberlins Market, The Alfalfa Meal company of Echo has rented of one man 135 acres of Alfalfa land at $15 per acre. Tillamook county wants chees inspector or a county dairy and food commissioner, says the Tillamook Herald. Bring us your produce we pay top pricts. T. A. Riggs. Zook, tKt peptr hanger will do jovf juwutirvg. Tkt school coe6 of Eugene shows 2300 of school age, which gives an estimated population of 11,500. Large numbers of agates, some very fine ones, have lately been captured o Agate beach in Curry county. If you hare any clothing to press, clean, or repair, get it done at the Dallas Cleaning and Press ing Parlors. D. M. Hampton, Agent. . 13-4t Many hg hnie died around Junction City, as was supposed from cholera, but a veterinarian says it is measles. The La Grande beet sugar fac tory will propably be removed to Ogden, Utah, as the company's soil will not produce sufficiently without irrigation. ' J. H. Albert, of Salem, said in the dairy convention that he came to Oregon 20 years ago from his own choice; that he ex pects to stay here 40 yesrs long' er. and then, if he likes the country as well as he does now, he will settle down and become a permanent citizen. Gas enough to light Ontario and several other towns is the es timated amount of the big find of the oil well within the past week, savs the Optimist The series of big blowouts demon strated that the supply of gas in this vicinity is immense. Nice cottage of five rooms and pantry with good woodshed. We on porch. Prunes, apples, pears and small fruits together wit' 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 aid office. The Booth-Kelly company's big mill at Wendling will resume op erations immediately after the first of January and will continue to operate steadily thereafter, The plant has been completely overhauled during the past few months and is now in excellent shape. There is a general belie that the Southern Pacific mills a Marcola will open up again in the early spring. If they do, it wi mean that financial conditions in this country will be better than now, says the Eugene Register. Some Plain Talk. Court has met and the Grand Jury has done its work though but little of it is known to the public and perhaps will not be before the spring term of court t is to be hoped that those who have been violating the law will decide that they had better ibey it through fear of the penalty, though they may not respect the aw itself. The local option and the gamb- ing law have been openly violat ed here and the authorities have winked at it all the time. Some of the violaters were openly defy ing the law while others may be able to make a semblance of a plea of ignorance. The law is very plain on the gambling question and anyone who would take the time to go to the office of our just ice or attorney can read it in a few minutes, and every one knows what the local option law is. Some will insist that the law is not just, others that it is killing the town, but this will not excuse anyone. .These laws are to be obey ed the same as any others, and the man who violates them is no better than "any other criminal and should be dealt with jut the same. Falls City New. Rabbits aad Hatto Out here in Oregon sheep rais ers are demanding a bounty on coyotes, but the owners of young orchards, gardens and alfalfa fields desire the coyote let alone, or that equally vigorous war be made upon the jackrabbit, which is food for the coyote but which destroys trees, grass and veget ables. But it is not alone on the prairies and in the mountains o eastern Oregon that the rabbit is a subject of interest. Among the many people who have ap peared before the ways and means committee of congress asking for protection are hatters who want a tariff on imported rabbit skins so that the domestic rabbit wil! not be crowded out of the mar ket. They insist on protection for the infant rabbit industry, This will please the coyotes, who like rabbits all but as well as mut ton, but "wouldn't it jar" the farmers to whom the rabbits are pests? The farmers should have learned long ere this, however, that they have no rights or inter ests that the beneficiariespf pro tection are bound to respect. The hatters may indeed convince them that their interests are identical for don't the hatters want the rabbits skins? And a skinned rabbit would be no menace to a voung orchard. But will the hat ters, if protected against the pau per rabbits of foreign countries, agree to come out to Oregon and catch and skin the protected rab bits? There's the rub. Journal Church Directory. Evangelical Church L. C. Hoover, Pastor Morning service at 11:00 o'clock Eveninsr 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 z:w p. m, Grandma Haraman, 85 years of age, and living near Spicer, by the recent birth of a baby daughter to Mrs. Bennett of A bany, has reached the dignity of being a great-great-grandmother an honor accorded to but few ATTEND The Big 10 Day Sale at . Lindsay & Co. Look for the Big Tickets and gather in some of the 5 11 800 o UNTIL CHRISTMAS Every Article in our house a Cut - Price Bargain Nickels do the work of Dimes If Spent Here LINDSAY & CO. Acorn Store Wtn. 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. 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 Suit3 and have them Cleaned and Pressed, at the Monmouth Electric Laundry For Sale. One of the nicest residences in Monmouth, 12 rooms, hot and cold water, bath and pantry. Furnace heat. Four lots, some fruit trees and shrubbery to gether with almost entire furnish ings for $2500. Terms can be given on a part of this. Enquire of the Polk County Realty Co., at the Herald office. This price is far below real value and will only stand for a short time. TWO DOLLARS' WORTH ' of up-to-date Kitchen Furnishing will plvt you much mora real comfort and satisfaction than twenty dollars spent in your parlor. THE SAVORY SEAMLESS fne raised Oral Bottom makes It positively elf -basting. Results always satisfactory. Easiest to clean. Family size, $1 , SHAKER SIFTER. Tha One-Hand Sifter. Coats 23c. ad Jive, mora aatlafactloa ban hall a don. cheap tea-cant all lata I Smalt Sum of Money Jpont Hmem Wilt Gloo rou an Up.to.Dat JtifcAaa Mqulmmomt. Get your Roasters for Christmas of R. M. Wade & Co. W. E. Craven, Mgr. Independence, Oregon Polk County Bank Established 1889 Monmouth, Oregon. Paid Capital Surplus and Undivided Profits $30,000 $7,000 Transacts 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. Monmouth Herald $1 per year persons.