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About The Santiam news. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1897-1917 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 25, 1910)
she 11 grow tired of poor Mr. Cobb and i JUWS IN THE LAP OF LUXURY I break his young heart." At the very time that the sisters Extraordinary Pains Taken by New ; were discussing Matilda's affairs over often a forerunner at prostrating die- York Authorities to Provide Babies i their sowing she was working with •as* With Pure Milk. her usual earnestness with tbs young ft Is serious and espr Ivlly so to curate. people that must keep up and doing or Tho milk which la furnished tn thw j "Do you know, Mias Grant," h» behindhand. j seven depots of the New York milk get The said, looking at h»r with an Intensity n «dlclns to taks for It ie ! committee to the babies of the tene B r JANE OSBORN the great constitutional remedy i of purpose that almost surprised Ma i monte to what all country milk could i tllda and made her feel for the first . and should be. says Hampton s Mags ' time ths real fores of the young man sine The cows on the farm supplying Wh'. h purifies and enrl he* the blood U.-v«t-«b'. !•*•• l*r As»»«la««4 Lr«a«a«r I'reaaJ "I want to ask you something I ’ the committee are taken care of as II and builds up the whole system. thought I d speak to ths bishop about Shu was not nt »11 pretty; tn fact, a cow were the rarest of animals and ( Get It today In usual liqu'.l t -m or some jx»r»ons ’bought Matilda »■» 1 II at first. but It seems as If you could j likely soon to join the dodo and disap ch« ;• d tablets «.a.ivd barsatab*. not even good-looking, but for all that ■ perhaps give ms the beet and wisest , pear entirely. there was sonx-’hing In h«-r frank | answer. Knowing me so well you They live In a St Regts sort o' jean best and naturally advise me g<x>d humor, ami a liveliness In her Sawn Ont* - barn, the « mm rote floors and Iron ant, little gray eyes that always began I Please don't consider the personal It's r « 1 'nr at n-e Ills glass walla of which are kept as clear by amusing and usually ended by cap side at all " lie paused nervously and that father " said A’lg’i’ ' :« Feeder!- k. as a parlor Twice daily the cow stall) tivating all tho.-c who came In her ; then came to tb» point "Du you - are sterilised with live steam. As » twelve years old. as b«s parent, haw» »»' "If she were a beauty,“ her think I ought to marry? precaution against dust they keep m tag punished Rebastlan flau '» f -->r- "You see, I want eventually to de younger sisters used to way. "wo l-ay «* other food In the bsru bu t«-»n years old f r being In 1« • ■ ' a wouldn't so much mind having Ma ' vote my life to my little mountain »• tid it m as It Is needed, by msitii r-f s ptacket <>f Rose of the Pralria, j mission That's always been my am tilda walk off with all the laurels " |nok«M searrhlngly at him "You j of a trolley system. MAN WAS TOO ENTHUSIASTIC billon, and when I first spoke to the And they perhaps t«x>k a little satis know pH-rfectly well I chucked smok Every day the cows are Inspect« faction In the tart that several years bishop about II be advised me not to ing when I waa eight.'' txmdon Olob«. after they tout Loth married Matilda marry until I had established myself, Noted Horse Trader Wou’d Not Lie by » physician and any cow not it perfect condition Is Immediately re About Horse's Good Trslte — Mere- because of the hardships of the work Grant was »till Miss Grant still, to Big Bank's Buvlnets Methods. ' moved from the herd. Twice a monti ly Suppressed Truth. I II didn't seem hard then, for a year be sure fasclnatlngg and amualng Ii<,r» <1 t < . ii '. i . k -o y ,«t*r tha j chemists analyse the milk to mak< Everyone used to think that Matilda I ago I had never »ven considered the Hank Dobbs was noted as an "boh sure that It to fully up to the standart Bank of England requires at toast would end by marrying her childhood possibility of wanting to marry. But two good British names, one of which vet" horse trader He would not lie ■ of richness aud purity. , since l have L«»--n bore It has come playmate »nd companion. I’aul Meade, must be the m < - »ptor It seldom holds Before being milked each cow It about a horse He would merely sup and II had been whispered mors than ' upon me very forcibly Of course I over IH-noo- j tn > ip, discounted OBce that ’here was an engagement wouldn't want to marry a woman proas the truth. Incidentally, be ai groomed and sprayed with pure sprint and securities of all kinds ways beat th» customer who dea t water by a man who Las been med , who wasn ’ t as devoted to the cause And It was also whispered, though Matilda made a confidant of no one. It ' as I am. but a young woman like w ith him. The w ay he could slur ov»r leal I y examined and baa Just bad ■ was Paul's fault that wh- n. not long i you. a little older than I. with her the defects and buss about the vlr bath and put on a perfectly clear after Matilda's twenty-aevrnth birth whole heart tn the cause, couldn't tu«s of an animal amount- d to genius white suit A second man dries th« Once Hank waa trying to sell s cow with sterilised single service tow day. he went off to South America on help but be an Inspiration to me.” Matilda bad listened to this studied neighbor a horse that had an eye • la, after which the white clad milk a big rngln* < ring scheme, he did not but obviously heartfelt, declaration which was nearly sightless. The neigh era. silting on spotless metal stools lake Mn’llda with him. “Matilda acta exactly like a disap with the color deepening In her bor kuew Hauk would not lie outright perform their duties. The milk to strained through steril pointed spinster," said her sister cheeks and her eye» lowered with to him, so he queetloued the boras Ctors on» day. "She’s gone Into embarrassment. “It only he liked trader as to tho various points of the Ised cotton pads Into sterilised can» and cooled in a dustproof room whlct church work as tf her Inst hope went me for something besides my devo brute, "How atxiut his eyesight? Can he no one except the white clad worker» with Paul to South America. 8b»'s tion to th» cause," she thought, and see out of both eyes?" to ever permitted to enter Here th« at church now taking charge of one i th<-n, after a pause. sh<> said: "Mure," said Hank, “he's got good milk to bottled, sealed and packed foi ”1 understand your point of view of those tiresome guilds, and aha spends more thnn half her time going j perfectly I am glad you have put It eye*" Here he leaned forward, hie Its journey to the city. Within thirty about and visiting the poor pariah j as you bavu Yes, I do think a wife »>•>• fairly scintillating with sup hours after the milk to packed It to de loners." would be helpful to you: one who ad pressed honesty. "On» eye la particu I liver«! at the doors of the milk com j mitt« e s model laboratory In New Constance smiled and looked up ' mires you and would have your Inter- larly good " Hank’s enthusiasm for th» truth had York. from b«r sewing "Dlsapitnlnted I evts at heart. Tee, Stephen. I think Five men work In the laboratory spinster!" she sold with a laugh "I l you are right." Sb» ejioke with heel- carried him too far The deal waa off sterilising and filling the bottles. It think you have forgotten our new : fancy and faltered because of bls un- Sweden'» Church Boat. Happy Thought. reality they ar» filling prescriptions curate It's his guild she's working i demonstrative behavior. The church b at to a ptopular insti "Your story to good." said the pub "Thank you from the bottom of my for every baby has Ila food espexdailj tution In Sweden It brings families for, and his poor she's visiting, and the end of It all will be that he will j heart. " said the curate And then lisher to the author who bad called designated by a skilled physician, th« to service from th» farms around propose like the rest, and I almost ■ora« one, the sexton, no doubt, came to learn his fate, "but there Is one prescriptions varying from week tc latke Wljan to lasksand The water Into the room and ended bls confes thing a: it It that I can t under week acct rdlng lo the ag» and con.il rout» 1« th» nearest and moat conve think Matilda would take him. too" stand." tion of 11« child. Clara gasped \ ou don't mean that sions. nient. snd so the big bort goes from "What’s that?" queried the author. Matilda went home that day with little Mr Cobb, i. . you? How perfect These men In their spotless whit« farm to farm along the shore picking "You have the climax in tho mid suits and cap» work In a speckles« ly ridiculous! Why, a man ilk» that a confusion of ld»as, some pleasant, couldn't even amuse Matilda lie's a some very disconcerting To devote dle chapter Instead of the last," said room that to sterilised with steam| by ' .<• s. r-.^'e — WLL- V. rid Mag- mere l.oy and he hasn’t bad any ex- herself to the mission of the neigh the publisher 'Why Is that?" »«cry morning, preparing food aftei aslhc. “Oh,” answered tho author, "that to th«» most scientific methods and ac perlence. To bo sure Inis the most boring wild mountain district might Vee Cea Get Allee’s Coet reM rRft. be almost as absorbing as being an a little scheme of tuluv to keep worn cording to physicians' prescriptions ' r a engineer's wife tn South America. < n from knowing how the story Is go ii"! for Infant millionaires, but tor ba I » • »eating Sot •»»linn, aching L-< < li makes And then she thought with her cheeks Ing to turn out by reading the last Lies of the tenements. new <•« n«hi ir. ,i easy. A •■- r ...a < -are lor burning with annoyance that she had chapter first." ■••rIr.«-owing u«... »nd bual-m« til drug- gUust-illL -pt any •-itouiuis. hoped for a mor» ardent declaration Matilda kept her promise to bar Not According to Webstar. PROFIT IN SYSTEMATIC FARM Anxious Rainer's Advertisement. slaters, and when she found her way A bad « opj»er A policeman who A Frenchman’s sdv»rri»»ment In a to their tea table that aftornoon she takes a bribe. Light Scratching of Soil and Carstost Bn«ir>n pap»r. ran In th* f--’' -Ing told them that the curate had pro- A Mad hull- A broker who sees tbs Breading of Llvo Stock Proves slng’ilar st-raln "Lost l.»«t evening; poeed. “In a way," she explained mark’t decline when be wants It to Quito Costly. a child about five years old: whoever "it was a queer sort of a proposal, advance. will return him to his home. In Fore but I didn't refuau him. The sexton A Polar Star- The leading lady of (By WPI.1.IH J ri-ANl'KIlM. llllnoto ) street, shall bs handsomely rewarded Interrupted us. but It Is settled I'm an Eskimo operatic company. 1 am willing to conf«-*« that I did Mrs Parson Cobb for the rest of my A Lyric Note A singer's "1. O. U." not wake up to the real necessity ol by his afflicted fath«*r J»'n Baptist*, Ufa." A Work of I-ovo Kissing one's sis system on my place for three or four who likewise doato In French bran dy " From a l-ondon New«p>aper. It was while Matilda was waiting ter. years after I started In fur myself for the call from the curate that she H’avs of Execution A c- rwet too My land la so rich that If I scratched I«0? was expecting that evening that a tightly laced.- Judge's Library. ’be surfac« a bit and cultivated a lit telegram reached her from New York Go I generally got pretty fair crops, Her heart sank wltblr her as she HOT WEATHER FEATURE. taking one season wfib another But read, "I will be with you In two days I finally began to notice that even If ■‘I used Camarvts an-l n-el like a new Paul Meade “ And as she re read it my land was rich some of my neigh man I have been a »uffrrvr from drs- the vision of mountain missions and bora »ti.se land »a» poor wore rato pepeta an.l «our «bxn ich Lx the test two curates vanished from her and In Ila ■ Ing better crop» Finally I dtocov year* I have born taking nie-licinr and place came a thousand recollections »red that the main trouble waa lo other drugs, but cowUi tirxi no relief only of the old friend. Paul cated right tn my own person and I for a abort time I will recommend Fortunately for Matilda's peace of came to and began to attend the In Caecareta to my friends aa the only thing mind, Stephen Cobb had been called indigestion and «our stomach and to stltutea and read farm p>ap>ers and f>>r keep the bowete in g«-ud condition. to hla beloved mountain mission the ! actually trit-d to learn something Tbev are very nice to eat.” day after the telegram came and bad about real farming 1 have a great ri-YMM» KaiglBt»» i'toOsnt T*rt* Yg<*wl I Am Going to Marry Deaconess Gray. left Matilda with only a very kind lh» l^*«l Neva* SMI"*. W*ak«»« .«r <«Ftp< deal to learn yet. but I have found 10c Tse. Jue Ntvsf e<4>l in bulk Tlka >?«»■ farewell, and did not seem to notice •tn« tahhet •tami. *1 CC G Uuaranla>*l ta out some things unsophisticated and delightful boy tn the look of anxiety In Matilda’s • g «wrw or r Aar at mav back. One to that car» I ess breeding of the parish, but h» doesn't know any as h<- promised to tell b»r all »w live stock la a costly proceeding It more how to manage a girl like Matil his plans on hla return came bard, for instance, to pay 1115 da than one of hla own choir boys SCIILMACI1IR ri'R CO. An hour before Paul's arrival apiece for thr«m thoroughbred cowa Wan«faeturrm «»f Fiini Kaw Fur* would '* ar»4 Stephen return«! from the mountains •• Id rvfnslr -«Í a •f-orialty 2OM Madri** and then pay )15 for the services of M.. ba« Ion A few minutes later Matilda came and hastened to th» house of Matilda, tirai ar*d fr<w«t V» iNrfo* a bull. But when the time came to upon her sisters. "Here." she ex who bad decid’d that whatever Paul’s «»Il year-<>ld ealvea I found out bow claimed, undoing a package she had reason for returning, she would stand ; those Investments paid I sold a bull brought with her, “won't you take by her guns and marry the only man ! calf for 1150 and two heifers for |>0 some of this svw-tng? Stephen that she had ever really encouraged If ••ach the first year and three years Is. Mr Cobb—wants to gt t the work she bad made a mistake she would I later I had a herd of nine animals off tomorrow It la for his mission suffer the consequences, she resolved, 1 that were worth 11.000. In fact, they up in the mountains, where he sup- but when she saw the curate's face ¡-aid me more than that In the long ports a deaconess with bls own before her she thought with a guilty Wicks What do you consider the RY MURIME EYE REMEDV money. Isn't that generous of him? conscience of th» telegram and Paul most remarkable feature of the pres - run. That lesaon In good breeding Far Red. Weak. Weary, Watery Lyn uto W l helped me to see things right. I promised to finish these garments "<>h, Matilda." said the curate with ent hot wave? CRANULATFDF.YF.UDS I Then I learned that a bunch of tonight, and I never could manage by beaming blue »’es. "I am going to Hicks That there have been 2? theep negtocted. half fed, pxx»rly Murine Doesn't Smart Soot hes Eye f^in mys»lf.” marry Deaconess Gray In the spring Sunday school picnics, with no rain housed tn winter, with no system ss D«W(»«> leg NaelN Ire *.«Uy. l».U. »<. Mx. II M Clara looked up In surprise. "The My little mountalo deaconess baa to break them up. to breeding, was a poor Investment Mu.taa Eva Saira. ta A•••()< T u S m . JSa. X I OO first thing you know. Matilda, that promised to marry me as soon as her My father gave me a flock of ten EYE BlK)EX AND ADVICE FHHB BY MAIL little curate of yours will be In love pledge expires Murine Eye Kamw<ly Co^CIiicaupo I am the happiest Already Trained. when I started to farm and after three with you." she said, reproachfully "1 man tn the world She la so Imps "Yee, you see my son served a tern years this had liiereae«»d only to six should think you'd have more sens» ttent to m»et you." In the army and he has gotten so in ! teen, owing to my neglect Then when than to trifle with a man's fevllngs It came upon Matilda tn a flash, the habit of obeying orders unquee- I began to alt up and take notice, I like that” and because the excited curate waa so W hy," laughed Matilda. "1 think full of thoughts of hts beloved dea tlonlngly that It has ruined him, he •ent the whole bunch to market and ; bought ten fine grad» Shropshire ewea I'd make a very nice minister's wife, coness he did not notice the excite will take orders from anyone." "What a lovely husband he will •nd a thoroughbred two-year old ram don't you?” ment In Matilda's voice as she con make for some girl." «nd took care of them This (licit You aren't engaged, are you?" gratulated him or the abruptness with ¡■aid me over 100 per cent tn three asked Constance, timidly. which she roes and bowed him to the Haunted. years and so I waa taught another “Don't get excited," Matilda as door First Political Grafter—Did you ever •»son. sured her "He hagn't even proposed Two days later Matilda announced see Rcoaevelt? yet. I'll tell you when he does ” her engagement to Paul Meads, her fkreond Political Grafter—Many a Before many days had passed ft old boyhood friend, who had never Planting Popples. was quite obvious to the two younger known till he left her that he bad time. First Political Grafter— Where? Ever try planting pmpprf«» in the sisters that Matilda actually had de loved her all his Ilf*. Second Political Grafter—In my fall? They will come through an or- te nota “f-«xl" It tea medicine, end the signs upon the affections of the hon sleep. llnxrj winter all right and get an est eyed Mr Cobb. la the woiId for cows only. sarller start next spring than those Went Slowly. "Alter all." said Constance, "she planted then. A Mean Suggestion. "I understand that hla wife has run says she would like to be a minister's Winter weather Is mighty hard on He—As I spoke to her a rich, warm wife, and I suppose she baa to marry away and left him?” buildings and fences. G<xxl time to "She has left him, all right: but color flooded her face. some one some time " She What queer rouge! ft must xse the paint brush before the rain “Yes." sighed Clara, *but 1 still she dldn t run—she had on a bobble tete tn. have melted. think she Is tn love with Paul, and skirt" Loss of Appetite How Matilda Helped the Curate and Hood’s Sarsaparilla SOUR STOMACH