FROM WEDNESDA Y'S DAILY SEVERELY ISJUKED. - j : i ' A Former j Resident of Salem Meets Vith;a Serious Accident or. a Freight Tiain. In Nebraska. F. R. pavis, who. resides north of this city,! yesterday received the intel ligence that bis son, Fred C Davis, had - New York, that ha spelled out sonse ben eeticusly injured at Blair. Kebras-j what laboriously,. He bore also an ka. and was in a precarious condition,' Innocuous appearance, for he was not though hopes were entertained for his more than live feet four In height, with ultimate 1 recovery. ' The young man j tlim frame, narrow shoulders and was a bni.emsr on an Elkborn Valley eyes of the mildest and most appealing railroad freight train. Cn last Friday blue.- His spirit was tin-id for, ,4n morning he stood on the top of the ' fact, when he was addressed he gave a rear end of the csboose. when, without J little ttart of fright. . ; warning, the engine started, throvlnsj Notwithstanding all this. Pink Fir hlm oft the car to the track, where he j,Jn fe a dangerous man. This danger- fell on his head and shoulders, sus taining svere injuries. 11 was report ed that the young man's be.dy was par tially paraiyed, but hopes were enter-, tained that this would prove only k temporary affliction, as no bons wrsln-e marble t-our ter a little I lack bits fractured. The injured man remained ; whlch he tarried In his left hand. It ......,,. XTn. bh lmmdl9llV re- moved to the Methodist hospital at Ornaha, Nebraska, where he will I ave the best, of care. The Inj-ired man Is ell known in this city, having lived here from l.t to 3X06. In 189 he was the democratic candidate for co.inty recorder, being defeated by F. W. Waters. Jn 1896 h-- returned to hU former heme in Ne- braska, w here he began railroading n( ihA umt l'M his father was employed t by, thirty years ago. Ther accident oc curred within to blocks of the youn man's birthplace. F. H. Davis, fatlvir of the injured man, while conductor on the same road, a number of years ag.x. fell tir.der the pilot of an engine and was dragged for several car lengths and severely brvJfcc d, within a few yards of where the young nan recsiv-j ed his injuries. ' Lester Davis, a brother of the in-q jured man, 1 nw on his way horre ! from San Francleco, wfcere he was. mustered out of the . Second Oregon j ,-n'iinifiort nn Mrnd.iv. after a fifteen months' campaign in the Philippines. HEART DISEASE THE CAUSE. -Michael Starbsr Jr., Ivepped Dead at Wllhoit String Will Be Buried Today. Michael starrer an employe nt the brewery, yesterday- received a iehphorw; message calling him to Wllhoit Springs his eld Jtt son. V.ichael Starber Jr., aged about 22 years, having, cu the preceding evening dropped dead while enjojing a short out.r.g at the rr " Mr Slaiber left at c.nvc for Wilhmt and will today accompany the remains to New Kra where burial will be na.i In -.he family lot, . The vimns mfcii was eubjn-t to neart disease and that wan probably rcsrvm- slhU for bis untimely ln.rr. Starber. wh' ' all IMUMIICW. n.mi- has had much h ird luck. working man. during the ,-tst few yj-nrs. navinc m a ytai ag lost a tauhter by dpli thcrla. lie has the Hnre syinpaihy. in hlH bereavement, of 1 is ac i until t nares in this city. ,,.'.-. A LA ROB YIELD -Mr. E. E. Rob substantial l nrya f TAlk COUIlty'S farmers, yesterday 'brought into the Ptatesman olTlce a sample of Ciyos elale oats that he raised on his farm roar McCoy. He imported th? ?ei lr,t year from Kurore and succeeded in raisins aVxjut four bushels from it. This vear. as a further experiment, he sowed' two acre?, using one and one f urth buphela of feed per acre, and had a yield of 250 bushel-, or 125 per acre. The -s-nmp'le shown at this ofiice rueaiured over' seven ffet in length. The otit is a short plump grain and will weisrh 50 pounds per bushel. It is a white spring oats ana was sown n bottom land. ONE LICENSE ISSUED. -County Clerk W. W. Hall was yesterday call ed upon to Issue a marriage license to Ed. C. Peery, of Sclo. tand. Miss Pearl Hobson. of Stayton. Rev. J. A. Long bottom, of Albany, acting as witness. Mr. Peery is a well-known resident of Sclo. and Miss Hobson Is the daughter of Hon. W. H. Hobson, the Commer cial street clothier, who resides in Stay ton. DONT LET THE CHILDREN WADE "Keen vour crildr-iVs heads cool and Iheir feet warm." An old- rasnionea dectcr of -fifty years rgo, Dr.; For.Hc Barker, said this. And it was good advice. So many women are apt to take their children down- to jibe s-a-chore for 1 tte dry, give thejm a gool lunch, take off their shoes i and let them wade. The hot run pcirs down upon their heads and the water giws a cold shoe to the feet, which Is very apt tc give them a chilt afterward. Many ecrlocs Illnesses are brought on In this way. It is much U tier to strip the ch'.ld entirely-and' let him wet his w hole body than to let him wade. With the ually excursions to the seaside, it is a good thing tc remejnber-not to let your children wade. Soak the hands Uioronhly, on retiring, in hot lather of ConcumA Soap, the mos effective skis pnrlfying soap, as well ss purest jnd sweetest for toilet, hath, and nursery. Dry, anoint freely with Ctmocma Ointment, the great skin core and pore of emollients, wear old r tores daring night. Foe sore hands, itching, burning palms and painful Anger ends, this 4 ttlfiht treatment is wonderful. SaK UiTwarVrat flt mM. rtmS.mCCirt yws,aoWga, " iiw le hm BwaliM UUatU," frM. sjfflirii mm THE DI N MITE DRUMMER. Some of the Inconvenience of Travel lngr With L'ne of Samples. - i-1- ; sry' The little men who scribbled Illegi bly on the St. James register bore an Innccuous name. It was Pink Firkin, oune-i rites not from the inward man, but from bs ceupajUon. When he ttepped up to the dek to put his name cn the register it was with 1 he - most psinstaking cae that he plac-d up-ra . . . 4 V. .. I was a nine eng. much, iiisij, iiuwt'i- otts-looking. like ltr owner, bearing tne initials P. F., N. T. But Pink Firkin, handled It as if It weie the most val uable Mng tn the- world. Carefully, gently, he placed it by his side, and be tween almcst every letter he wrote he looked out oC the corner or his eye at tte little black -beg to see It it were really there. .As he wrote N. Y. he put cut his left hand and rested it upn the . satchel to make t-ure that it bad not been moved. : Pynamite.'" said Mr. Firkin, with a faint smile. "My firm in New York makes the bst dynamite in the world goes off at the lightest rheck esi--ciaJly in hot weather. Great hot weath er stuff. Want to see some?"' inquired the drummer, hi professions! training getting the urrr htnd. He look thj satchel In his hand with some rough- n-ss. and the profeMlonal lounger set himself in 'position, for a oulck 'sprint, Nothing hapjxmed. end the lounger hastily disavowed any interest In dy- namite. "Yes, it is a ticklUb. ' pre fesion." smiled the traveling gentleman, as he shovcid the .ratchet ii ne'er the louriwa where he hai Invited hte Interrogator to sit and chat with hiov "A littl-? dajig;rous and inconveii-'ent--ye. deuced inconvenient at t'riies. Ye have to be .'!fef and his eyes won a hunted look. i ' ITut W' get paid for i we get paid for It. You would not believe that I get the highest salary cf nny man on tho read, but 1 d. It is a big ilsk. and jwo have tc lay up r.lelhlng. The corr panies will not iiUre us." Ho grasr-ed a thin knee in bdth hands as he croeed his legs, and continued. "That is not the worst cf it Incon venient. Travelling abound with this stuff cxio?s us to all srts of discour tesies from hotel nranag-menta Son-e-tirnes we can't get rooir.s in a town for love or money, for people w-n't have the stuff In the houe, and the guests come in a 'body and- complain when they iirid cut that one of us Is regis tered. There are only lhree ir my lino yon know. 1Tnder th so eircumsiance-. ns we dare not leave our temples, th- ro)U ftaticn is the only recourse. I"n registered rs a 'sleeper it- a pod num ber of towns in tMs vicinity." j He paused a minute for this state ment t? take effect. "Then there are the railroads to buck up against. S-m.? of them have - rules against carrying explosives. Sometimes I get caught, and then oft I k at the net stJti--n, or s-c.'TiPttnis between st.'tl'cn, end I have to fot it the rest of the way. I am not particu'-arly ft"i of railroid tiavel at any rate. ' - Vvith the c::rgo 1 carry a wreck Is tonilhinsr to. he afraid of. Even ..t.e .larrini; of the cars on i re ugh roHd mfiVes me so uncom fortable that I hav- to take up my satch' l and pac: the aisle to reluce the rheck. "The one thing ttvVt I f.-ar is a wreck. If I ever get into cne It .moans good by to Pinkin. Just imagine that stuff going off underneath yc u." Both men on the sut shuddered. The prosict disturbed the lounger, iho beat a haely retreat . IJenver Repul- liciin CURED OF f TAMMERIWi EY MAUSER BULLET. Trlvate H. E. Redmond. Company C, p-itst rolfiaJo Volunteers, the star stutterer oi 'he Eighth Army Corp, has proved tha access of the - Mauser hutto onre for fctuttciir.g. An Ana conda volunteers writes to his relatives of the case. Tho young man at the time wr.s a patient in the f rst reserve hos pital near Manila. He writes: '"Ibere Imis been an dd fee hre In th hospital. H. E. Keclmcnd. a prl vat In C coniDanv rf the Colorado reg iment. has teei cured of ttutte-rlng t y a Manser bullet That's what he says. nm-iM.ar i? was shut in the mouth at the battle cf Marqvlna, March Slt. The bullet parsed downward and came out near the nape of the neck. Red mond recovered irpldly and has now Just left the hospital. All you in see of the hole where the bullet went In Is little scar Just sbeve his tirper Up and alongrfde his nose.. "Previous to being shot Redmond Is said to have been the worst stutterer in th Elgtth Army Corps- I don't know how h rsd the physical ex amlners, but he tot in somehow, and all kurds cf ttorles are told abcut his stuttering. When at the Presloio, San Francisco, he was on sentry duly one night, and when grand rounds came around he got tc stutterlr.g end could not challenge them. ; The resnlt was he w&a put in the guardhouse for neg lect of duty. At Marqulna. and. In fact, every engagement in which he took part. Jtedmcnd kept all near him laughing bv his stuttering attempts to curt-.e the negTces. Jle was alway good humorod f boat it, and eveiybody likes him. ? Y ' "Now. although he has stuttered from the time he was born, he P-'ks as freely you or ! ben nrst wounded he eculd not talk at all ex cept with great pain, but .Ybn.. wound healed he had lost all stutter ing, and he la so ove rjoyed at his cure that he talks c?ct ct the time. Ana conda Standard- HOME OF OEPUAXS WAS TB ASSFEER ED TO SALEM HOSPITAL YESTEBDAY. ' Will Be Arrangred for Its Sew Oeen-panta-A Big Hlning Deal Also Becorded. - (From Dally August fth ) ' The transfer of the Glen Oak Or phan's Home to the Sale'rr Hospital, which was pre-Jic'ed in the Htat-sman several weeks ago, was yesterday ef fected and the deed to the property, ccotaining about Ka acrea of valuable land, together with the large end com modious building, was yesterday placed cn record in the Marion county depart ment of records. The property Is val ued at about 15,000, though the consid craticn named in the deed wo a but 1. The transfer fs a cc nd'tlonal 'one, the stipulation being that the prop ry snail be occupied as a bet pital enly, anl tliat by the Salerp Hrspltal, a transfer of the premises to any ether organiza tion being entirely prohibited., and it is agreed by both parlies to the trans action that it shall rot 'be transferred to any other h'pital will cut the con want of the Oregon Children's Honw Society. It is furthe agreed and stipu lated that the hcfpltal shall, at all times, be provided with a children s ward, to be used exclusively for tha care and treatment of children. Thj deed Is signed by Mrs. M. A. Mlnto. and Mrs. E. Y. Chase, president end secre tary, respectively, of the Oregon Child ren's Home Society. It is not deflnitly known bow soon the m-w ciuaiters will be cccupied by the hoc pital authorities, as extensive -changes and repairs will have to be made In '.he newly acquired building before the present quarters on Twelfth street will te vacated. Thj present interior arrangement of - thj bui'dlniTg are not cohvenk-nt for hos pital purposes and the changes will be made in a rhert time, plans Tor which ara now being perfected by the ter-l of trustees for the Salem Hospital. When the new quartern are once ar ranged, Salem will have a comfortabl. commodious and weJI-htted hospital isolated from the ro.!se and utl .-if the city, and yet easily accessible, be ing withtf a hundred yar?s of the asy lum trolley- line. Another imfortant transfer of prop erty was recorded yesterday It wat the deed to ten mining claims in th SanUam and Mineral Harbor mining district?, wldch were sold to the Min eral Harbor Consolidated Mining Co., of Silvertcn, by L. A. Harr'a, H.. If. Lembker nd A, W. Dawes ar,d wife. The consideration named in the deed Have You the Paper? The Statesman Publishing Co. will sive four months' subscription to the Weekly Statesman to the person who will supply it with a good copy of that paper bearing date of September 23, 1893. was $24,3f0. The ten claim? are Tich In copter, jrilver snd geld, end are to be developed by the company, for which purpose mills will b-? erectel, and- extensive improvements maile. The company has a capital of' $30,000, and development wcik on the property Is to commerce at nn early date. Th; clainis are known as tho "Confidence,' True Fiiend," "Mil! City," "Portland ' "I. X. L.." "Morning Slar," "North Star," "Roy," "Chicago", and "Sllvir ton," &nd nil of them have been located and prospected for reveral yeurs, with the result that the value of the prop erty Is welt known, and the operations cf the company are not a si eculatlon. The deeds filed in the ccunty record er's office, yesterday, numbered nlni, and the eggregate ecnsMer alien was $29,004. In addition to the d-eds there were recorded four satlrfactlons of mortgages for $1000, $420, ffl.60 and $36 SO. respectively, end one mortgage for $400. Followins are the deds filed: L. A. Harris, H. H. lembker. A. W. Dawes and wife, all of Mill CSty, to The Mineral Harbor Consolidated Mining Co., of SI1 verton, mining cla'ma "CoriH derce." "True. Friend." "Mill City," "I. X. L..- Morrtng Star," "North Star.' "Roy." "Chicago," -Silverton," "Port land." q. c d 24.VO Sue an Bankis ard Z. T. Fanks, to Archie Houston, 20 acres in ' t 7 , r 8 w., w. d 2,000 F. W. Durbin, rterM, to John and Kate Quintan. X19.M acres . Jn t i , r ) v- sherlfTs deed.. 99 John W. Wolford and wife lo I. A. Taft, .08 acres In t , r 1 Gcttlfeb Kuentsi and wife to Al fred Kuentxi, 50.32 acres of land in t 7 s, r 1 w. d.. J. A- Autln and wife to Laura B. Pittenger, H ecre In Hick's addition to Wcodburn, w. d.. T. M. Hicks and wife to Laura B. Plttcnger, lot So. 13. Tout's addition ta Woodburn. w. d..-.. Martha S. Taub tc T. M Hicks, lot No. IS in Tout's addition to Woodburn, guardian's deed.... Oregrn Children's Horn Society by M. A. Minto. president, and E. T. Chase, secretary, to ihe Salem Hospital, the Glen Oac Orphan' Home property, con ditional deed 700 0 Total.. . ..$.jm Tho Best Prescription for Malaria Chills and Biliousness ts a bottle of GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TOXIC It is elmply Iron and Quinine ta tasteless form- No cure, no pay. Price 50 cents. THE INTENSIFIED HEX. . It is with & geed deU of iride, and our mere cr less esteemed friends who need to peke fun at us about It will no doubt say with some egotism, that wo refer to the ft ct that the States man first used the term Inter lined hen. The reader wil notice that we use no Quotation marks. The reason ts ob vkus. tWe would like to remark that cf lata there is no cackling at us by theie fornerIy. gay friends on this score.) Now come our esteemed con temporary, the Iortland Evening Tel egrarn with headlines ' in large black letters, thus: "FOSMHJLmES OY THE INTENSIFIED HEN. La Grande Woman Has Given Them Ample Demonstration -Snporta Her self and Invalid Husband fomforta bly, and Has Redeemed th Old Home stead from Decay. Under , tMs headbifc the Telegram prints the news itera which we are go ing to append below, and which 'we point out aa a demonstration of our old contention, a thousand times re peated that Oregon xught to pay all of her taxes with poultry products; that she ought to -completely shut out Fastm poultry prducts. and extend "her markets to all the ntintng and log ging camps up ar.d down the long la cific coast, acd to all the cities large and small, and to the Islands of th-; ocean, s nd all the c-ountri-s that are drained into the tread Pacific. Hre is the article: La Grande, Or., Aug. The exten sive hennery of Mrs. Fair hld, situ ated on the outskirts of La '.rande.- is worthy of rather mor; than- pasvlng ncUce, none the let from ita xtent and excellent nmnigement than for the slngJar clrcunittancs from which it sprang. Several years Kgo the husband f Mia Falrch.ld lHcama u hopelf tnval'd Doctor bills, travel and medicine ab sorbed the no very inconsiderable prop erly of the family; in fact,: all bit an old hi-n.e, and a few acre of ground swept into th- vortex that yawns insa tiably befor-s a stricken invalid. The wclf'at the der, and a a last espe li ent to drle him away Mrs. Falrchild procured a few hers and with frag mentary bits of lumber she .construct--ed M henhouse 4x0 Cect, and tegan growing chickens and c-sk- Patiently, perHstc-ntly ftnd mUlM gcntJy thl woman labored with h?r hens and sick husband.' and as th years rolled 'on iOie imreiii'd her flock., improved the breed of ht.T birds, and Kddcd to hencoops and breeding pen until from that small beginning has been evolved one cf the largest .henner ies in the state. Ht-r nock now con sists of nearly a thousand grown fowls, .and In hor brooding, r-e-rs over (1500 chicks of this year's hatching chirri;t. arid chattel.. She now has three Incubators, with a hatching c-ipacity cf 700 cMcfrs per setting. These cluck less hens bririK forth from S-5 to 90 if-r i nt 'ef voting chicks from th Kg! placed', therein. Tl'd'i year in a3diti.ni to the Song rows of ccorr, i-rs end stereh'-uses which sh- already had - over T-C.OOO fi et cf new lumber ha been us-ed in making nn-. roosting halls, brooding pens and an exteriflve iarn or stoieioom for feed. In Xhlch an improved nill for grind ing bones an l a cutting machine ti chop alfalfa hay for the birds to cut is located. A 12-hoite-p"wer boiler will seen be in place- to eupply hot water to keep the verlous deparlineriis warm during th? cold season, ar.d at all time run tho machinery neceffjiry to grind the bonrs, cook the food, cut the alfal fa and crack grain. ThJs fur this year she baa liatohed from the Incubat ors 16C chicks. When the Improve ments, now nearly completed, are in operation, she expects to hatch 2"00 ler month. The old lumc has been renovated, the blank walls paierei find relieved by numeroiM pleasant pictures of smil ing faces cr bright Rlimpses of land- sca). and about the whole premises there is a most genial atmosphere of thrift and ccnti-ntmetnt. Let thus. strong, healthy men who go mourning about the trtels because the oppor turllies in Cjcgcn have all been appro- piiaU-I. and tte ji.ssiliilitles for doing all exhausted, take courage from the prcriounced success cf this" plucky wo man. cease their sniveling and go manfully to work. , THE FEMININE OBSERVER. A He weH told may be as good as the truth until It Is f und out There are. some truths so surprising that everyene thnks they are lies. The enly time the ierson on th out side has the advantage Is when he has the key. Why is it even wann water is palat able cut cf a tMn glass when Ice water is absolntely abhorrent from a enrp. There la no use in a woman running herself down, but ehe apparently de lights in it If she. thinks any one will listen to her. An Indian maiden has lately killed her lover by .'the eld-Ume method of dripping water on his head. This Is nothing, however, to the nvre civilised method of talking a man to deatn. - THE SIGN OF PAINT. There wsa a sign upon the fence. Twaa "Paint." . And every sinner that passed by. And saint. Touched a finger to it and "Gee-whixx!" . "Why, so "lis." They'd say. and wipe It off, ChU-ago News. TO MEET TEACHERS STATE SUPT. ACEEBMA5 WILL VISIT M15Y C0USTIE3 Leetarinff Bsfore Edoeatlonai InstI tatea-A Four Week'g Itiner ary Arranged. . (From Dully August 9th.) Prof. J. H. Ackcrman, state superin tendent ot public instruction, is mak ing a most active end pair staking of ficial, and he is making strenuous ef forts toward visitli a county teachers ir stltutes in all the ccurt'es of Oregon, Where he can postlbly go. Jle has vis ited counties) this cummer where.- In the- past, a state t , erlctendent was seldom seen, and by his wise counsel, and his lectures cn educational topics, before the teachers of the counties and the patrons of the schools, he has done, and is d4ng, much in the Interact of education and for the benefit. Im provement and elevation of the public schools of the stale. On FHdty mernlrg he leaves for Pendleton, where he will, on Saturday, meet with the Eastern 'Oregon edu catcra to discuss the time, plans, etc., for holding the Eastern dSitioit of tha State Teachera Ar nidation, which is to meet in La Grande seme time this falL This is a departure from the past custom, when only one ann jtl meeting of the State Teachers' Association ws held in Oiegon, when the extreme dis tance made it imposelble for the edu catcrs of all parts of the Hate to at tend. Under the new arrangement, provided by Svpl. Ackerman, the state Is divided into two divisions of the State) Teachets Association the Fust em rind the Vttern- thus assuring a hette' attendance --cf'thu teacheia of the state nt the arinual gathering, nnd greatly boner.tting the educational In terest of the atate At the meeting in Pendleton, on next Saturday, the Je tails lof ihe meetlnj: cf th t:a .trn Oi?.-n division will be arranged and disc;sse.l. an-1. It i belfeved. 'a v ry profitable cession will be the result. Leaving Penrlctor. on next Sunday; Prof. Ackerman will po to Joej h. In Wallowa tountv. where he will attend i th county teachers' Institute on Mon- I a a v an.l TuvrrfBt- rttiiiiiinv tr S.ilm t on Friday, the IMh frptv nl Saturday evenii-g. August 19th, the superintendent leav s for Co -iiil'l- City, where the Cooa county teachem will meet In a ocunty Institute. Hi will atten-i the -iin, nnd deliver an addi f on some edut-nt oral topic. The same week h- wil: visit' a county institute at Oregon City, end another at Lebanon, or., both of which occas iens he will deliver addresses bsfore the assembled pe?dagogties. . On Monday. Augutt 28th. Frof. Aclc erman will attend four county teach ers' Institutes, goingto Hlilstoro, Ba ker City, Heppner and rendleton. and a good pc-rtlon of the week will be spe.t In traveling. The superintendent wl!' rpend th week, begin nlrg September Td, In visit ing teachers' institutes at ' Condon, Fofil, and The Dlle. returning to ths city on Monday, September llti. During this month, Prcf. Ackerm.nn expects o be ir. Salem or ly three or four dcy,'-as the greater r"Hion of the lime will ie ccnfiimcd by traveling lv twetr. the teveral point. Ifi be vlsfte l. in rrot of which places he is to de liver addresser, life hopes, dur'ng hi visits t, these v.irliu institutes.-- t impiess upon the t a: herjB arpemt!cil ; there, and. with whom he will me-t, th- j neceitity ci adopting me new.coui; of stu-ly for th- public schools, re cently issued by the ftite be. ard of eI-u-.at'.on. ani thus bring at out a uni form system in the s-cr roll" cf the stat-. greatly improving the efficiency of theie inftitations. ar.d a!d'iig much in the development of the educational In terests el the state. AN ENTERPniFdNO LAP. ?.hon-;as Mlntser. a H-year-o!d lad. of Ccnfehohoe ken, im probably the most energetic youngster in Mentgomery county, avers the Philadelphia Rec ord. Tbroucrh bis cwn devices, he earns $15 a week, and only works on an. average of six tours a day. His' busings is meal carrier. About -threrst months ago Tommy calUd on the en. plr.yes cf the eUfferent mills end offer ed to carry their meals for 15c a .week. As n-any of the mills are running night and day. his offer included suppers as well'as dinners. 'Met of the employ were paying ZZc a week for the same aervloe. and the boy's offer was promptly accepted. At first Tommy Hop Q rowers .. Here is something you need. The HOP BASKET manufactured by Hansen & Landon It is light, durable and cheap. Just the thing for your pickers. Call and inspect them. Corner of Mill and High streets, Salem, Ore. SAliEM IRON WOKKS The proprietors of the Salem Iron Works wish to state to its former and many patrons that they are now prepared to do all kinds of machine work and casting on short notice Satisfaction guaranteed. . Supplies for all makes of gTubbing machines constantly on hand. We manufacture all kinds of mill- machinery shaftingUpulleys, gearing, hop stoves, etc Sledges and wedges for wcod-choppers, warranted. A liberal share of your patronage solicited. ' 1 J SALEM i IRON WORKS CO SIIGHTEH SALE OF LUMBER 1 1,000.000 Feet Of well seasoned No. 1 merchantable lumber for sale for . $4 to $ and S6.00 Ter thousand feet , lit I THURSTON LU.V.SER CO. DALLAS, OREGOX. was al le to carry the dinners tn a largj express wagon, which waa hauled by a goat, but as he steadily gained cus tomers, it tecame necessary to get a large push cart, which he fltted up with shcUcs. Ills buiness finally in creased so mntVibfit he had to hire a hcre and wjfon. His customers now number ISO. In order to give aonenit scUsfacttcn 'f ommy -te rts out with the dinners at 11 a. m., and delivers thc-e that are the farth-t away, lie then makes a sec end ccTection at 11.13 o'clock, and. as thee customer work In ndlls near their hom; the manage to have all the dinners de livered by 12:0f nocn His weekly col. lections average S 1 3.50. and. as ha pays $1.P0 for the um.- of tho horse and wegen. It leuves $13 clear, which is mere than some c f Ms oldestcutou -ers earn in the null. :. At the prcsei.t rate of in.rrease the I'r.lted Plates will have tn IW) be ut l-r.OC physicians.- mi FINEST HEALTH AND PLEA8 TJHE RESORT. Nature's restorative for ailments of the body. A beautiful resort for a summer's outing. Are you sick? Try nature's remedy -the famous Wllhoit Springs water. It will make you sleep; it will make you eat. Tou will gain in-flesh. It's a specifics for Dyspepsia. Kid ney and Hladder Trouble. Rheuma tism. .Malaria. Jaundice, and all Liver troubles. Do you want a rest; ir an Ideal place. - Amusements of all kinds swings, croquet, billiards, four bowling aleya,' etc. ' '.'"' Our bath house Is completed nnd our bath Is the finest on earth .for he sick or well. We have a well-filled store; have anything: a camper needs, and at as reasonable trlces as anywhere. No use to load up with provisions to haul so far. Good stable for horses and carriages; hay and oats for sale at reasonable price. Finest camping grounds In the atate; well watered and One shade. Always cool In summer. , Rates will.be as follows: Board at hotel $10 per week; children under 13 years, halt price, .special rates for families. - Campage.or privilege of grounds, 60 cents per ' week for each person over 13 years old. Rent of cottage $2.00 per week with stoves, without $1.60 per week; baths 25 cents each; aweatouta 50 cents each, t for $1.60. For further particulars address . F. W. McLERAN. . r Wllhoit Springs, j Clackamas County, Or. Stage leaves Oregon City at 11 a. m, arrives at Wllhoit at 4 p.m.: fare $2.W for round trip. $1.50 one way. Mall stage leaves Woodburn at 11 a. m. arrives at 6:30 p. fars $1.26 each way. . uii.unrr niLiiuii