DAILY OP.lfCON STATESMAN. v FTtIT T, OCTOBER 17. 1902. n:z cnc::. v.miv stmit.ixu v rm nim wbo mlrf? in t- xTjnrLiTjxiT-WLr)jT.rCrtrrcrcixrvxiaaTruxfTjTjijxi' the Garden of Olives to weep alone. itiLlwuej feijr Taodajr andTndiijr t -J I Those lachrymose, despondent, help- ' less annoying creatures ' themselves martyrs of i 1 weaklings who blame destiny for their rTATESMAS FCBUSHISO COMPACT : R. 3. HE'lKl K!,Mriter. : Distress . inTrr. Jxfterr s Eat ins o year. i Mi.;...;;.i $txc own lack of spirit and ability..; There I between mcili, telchln?, v'om- mourn, iamBM... i aawuibM. in idnoai '..( y.-r, o Utit.t Therefore. J again, instruct your grief to be proud The 3 ahMrotari h ietitabiihcO trsea-lr unl rernemeber that lie who suiters In fif'y-tworearvaud UriaasoiBesoreerftierawbo ji.j.i.i i. j r?tri.l u Deany ttuu tang, mwt m silence I not disdained , by any Cod r'L 'li1 tl . ?- lf , r by any niin. Pride I reckoned the at u Uut et x.Uauou o(,tbi ui-riiuoo. -. first of the Eleven deadly sins, but it If fcav-enioid to dneonif im ub t-riptiou. I sometimes, also, a very decent, com- ouly w ben n ul u do . All (iC'kmw iMaj-iog-rrM nutiKRfiMnK. psTing in ad wilt iiave tit toeotflt of Ie oollerra.e. Sot it they io not py I r moo'hn, the rale will I (!. rear. Hrrtafter w will send the PPe Utslf rrl4,uitl rrMiiu ho olvr It, lhoujri thcjr r tiiay not etMi the money, with lh nnu-manning that that art t-t rj $1.25 a yavr, iuea I bey at the MiWiiiiUoa twouut rus oiir xx tnoiuha. 1 1 order Lil there wwy b jjo tatMin trinlff)g . w will keef.Uiia Uoticc ltLtdti) at Hit ftlam in tha papr- i CIRCULATION (SWORN) OVER 4000 inendable, cardinal virtue. BAD SPELLING. ) I-fir ltlngt flatulence, fits of nervous Lcad- scbe, pain in the stomach, are all symptom of dyspepsia, and the longer It Is neglected the harder it is to cure It. Hood's SarsapariUa and Pills Radically and permanently cure it i strengthen and tone the stomach and other digestive organs for the natural Only Es out of 141 freshmen at the J performance of their functions .e DONT WHINE. 'iPmewh-fre or other It is written, as memory vouc.het who nuffers in silence is not disdained by) any God.w This may be a verse from a chorus of Aeschylus, father of the Greek drama. , nr tt fay be art epigram from one of the smart modern comedies of Oacar Wilde, Henry Arthur Jones, Arthur Win PInero or Sydney Grundy, ' it . may have been addressed seriously to 1'romej.heus, bound to the rock of (,'au casus! or half la banter to some hus- band of the drawing-room drama be- ' moaning the infidelity of his wife ' Whatever Its source it serves as a text for a Ilttlo4ay sermon on Whining, by a writer in the San Francisco Bulletin, at follows: i " The whlner is a bore and be gets little sympathy and deserves none, Constant or frequent complaining show-a weakness and pettiness) ' of soul thai naturally disgust and repel people. !The whlner has not that 4-our- age ahd fortitude which a true man and a true woman ought to have. One cannot he!p feeling a little contempt for the whlner who brings up his pulns and griefs and holds them, as it were. uiuler one's nose for sympathy. There Jare jiome peoplp who will not let Us forget their troubles. They have a way tit heaving deep sighs when the cdm pany'ls. merriest,; and of bursting into -tears whenever they see or hear any : thms; that reminds them of some dear d'arted hunbund, parent or: child. They remind you. with intonations of unutterable sadness, that they are lonely, lonely, and there U nothing left for therrt In life. " I This whining is more than half yan- II jr.. tinctured with hypocrisy. , .The whner Obtrudes his anguish on? his friends-because it makes him consptc nous and -turns all eves.and thoughts In his direction. HympiUhy and condo le fjcefc hatter him. He like tb? atten tions that his griefs bring him,' and h prolnngshls aponles as do the' suffer ing hero' of the cfieai melodrama. Xorthwestern University were able ' to pass an examination In spelling, - ac cording to a report In the New York Sun. They" were-tested with ordinary words, not with difficult and, perplex Ing ones; and the test was too much for most of tkVm. Probably similar' exam inations at almost any American uni versity would show substantially the same results, spelling is not an ac- complishmeat in which college' youth exceL Nor do the graduates of the common schools distinguish themselves in this useful, but now somewhat su perciliously regarded branch.-The let ters of the average' public schooJT grad ual or university graduateare likely to be prolific In bad soelllnar' 4 Prof. Clark, of the Northwestern Uni versity says the trouble is with the so-called "Scientific" method of teach ing spelling, ' The public schools .turn ut graduates who have learned with Kreat pains how not to spell. The un dargraduatea and graduates . of the colleges probably srell ft little or con siderably worse than the public school children. "' t '" ."t But the great thing is the method. .N'othing can equal the pity which the enthusiasts of the new method bestow upon .children, who - have learned to spell without reliance upon it. Spell ing is nothing; method is everything. Iet us remember that, when we come across a fantastic or blundering speller. The worse he spells, the more superior is the method by which he came to that pre-eminence as a muddler and twister of orthography. Accept no substitute for Ilood'a. "I had dyspepsia twenty-firs years and took different medicines 'but got no help until I began taking Hood's SarsapariUa. Have taken four bottles of this medicine and can now eat almost anything sleep wen, bars no cramps In my stomach, no burning and no distress." Ma William a Babbett, 14 Olney SL, ProvidenceTK. L Hood's SarsapariUa .promise to curs and keeps the promise. . . west for the amount paid out for ' a single year' rent, mali farmers in the irlast can get for the value of thefr farms five times as much land out West as they owned there. , - " "Tou; can buy. five or six acres In the Western States for the price you would have to pay for one acre In the 'East. Many that I know of have disposed o high-pricei lands ?id have secured for the price they obtiried for them farms that are Jive times larger than- their fld ones. The land j Is just as proluc live as the land east of the MI&Blssippl. "The settlers have raised crops in two .years that we re large enough to pay for their farm The settlers are mostly from the central Kast,.and they are good farmers, cultivating the soil ana raising in addition to their crop. tock. sheep and poultry. It Is aston ishing to see the progress made by these settlers; when passing through the country recently I was, reminded or the experience of Rip Van Winkle so great had been the improvements and developments. The enterprise of the settlers Is remarkable, and the sue cess of one Inspires the others. , "The value of land Is materially In creasing in that section; and the rise is not n-)ng to speculation, but to th large demand." against ffree trade.- Thia contest may e somewhat modified by the action of the Republican majority in Congress, In, case a revision of the tariff Is; at-' tempted, reducing the duty 'upon arti ilea produce! by trusts, or taking it ..ff entirely. COUNTRY THAT HAS NO STRIKES. The Church Review " says: "New Zealand haa done the I most daring things ever, attempted liy any modern ijovernment. . The -New " Zealanders . lairn tluit New Zealand Is a country without strike Laborers and employ ers have their disputes thete as else where, but the one cannot 'quit work, or the ether lock out workmen,, pend ing a settlement of the dispute In the courts. It Is also a eountry. without paupers or poor-houses,- for; injured workmen .are cared for- by their em ployers." The aged workman Is pen sioned by the Government p.o a soldier of Industry sworn out in the ranks." The supply cf good Oregon butter li not keeping up wiLi the demand J No butter, to spMk of, has oen shippel tt Portland by the valley creame;j for several weeks. They have: not all the ime been able to keso uo with tne local demand. There hes bc?n a Icige Increase in the output in the past year. and this Is continually growing. But 'he demand is growing faster, and des tined to so continue Indefinitely. More separators and more cows is Oregon's crying need. And more new people from the Kast to come here and gw into dairying and all the ether branches tf diversified and' Intensified agrioultun r? - n sr mp p ra oniio-CiiaD't? piplitsa.. , It takes live of ths ordlnsry "qusts, to make a fsnon, cut hay?.K quaux is a fall Quart, an honest quart of 32 ounces, four to the rsiion. r.ow. you pay ' jour oeaer at least $IJM a bottle lor whiskey that cannot possiDiy Many Detier man da ifltn, u a good, or t7&0 a ssllon. If yotbuy HAYNEK WlliSKEV you save at least U 60 pa every sailoB. We sell two sallODs for about tbe same as you pay for one ration of probably poorer whiskey. Just t&ink that over and remember that H A YXKR WHISKEYtpM direct t rom our distUlery to you. carries a UKfTED STATES REGISTERED IlSTrLUSR S OUAK ANTEE of PURITY and AGE aad vaves you tbe dealer' enormous pronts. That's why It's so good and so cheap. That's whywe have orer a Quarter of a million satisfied cus tomers. That's why YOU should try Ifc Your -money back if you're not satisfied- , Hircrbt f pom oniIotlllcry io 011 Slvts Csdxrs' Profits! Pmtnts Addttrstlsn ! FUnE GEVETJ-YEAR-OLD r FdSILlL Cl .00 EXPRESS u ir JL Mm u nvr? PCEPAI We will aeod you FOUTt FXTXt, QUART BOTTLES of HAYN"EBS SEVEN- -YEAR-OLD RYE for U 00, and we will pay the express charge. Try it and If you don't find it all right and as good as you ever used or caa buy from anybody else at any price, then send it back at our expense and your 4.00 will be returned to you by next mail. Just think that offer over. - How could It be fairer? If you are not perfectly satisfied, you are not out a cent. Better let ns send you a trial erder. If you don't want four quart yourself, get a friend to Join yoo. We snip in a plain sealed case, no marks to show what's . inside. If yon can use CO Qwarta or can ret acme or your friends to fofa you, we will aend you SO Uaarta for 10.00 by Freight Prepaid, thus . saving you S&.OO. we have bees in business over 4 years add have a r paid-up capital ol fc00,00a00 so you run no rUk. , . Write our nearest offloe and do It NOW. THE IIAYNER DIGTILLUIQ COHPANY ST. PAUL, niMM. - DAYT0W, OHIO ST. LOUIS, U0. 48 . i DlSTUiiBT. THOT, (X SSTABUSSgO 4866. I S mm. -ii I I If the report that tho railway tine to i Forest Grove and illMnborj Is a "sur; thlng'r at last, and will bulltln-n year, is correct; it is a very gool pite cf news. Both the cltr an J th coun try to be traversed need act a rail road." and it should b enourogtl. Portland Telegram.5 The I moto. liner are coming., Tlie Willamette valley will be crossed and recros4-l with thfm. like a checker board, r -a i. , THE ISSUE OF 1904. Th whlner, when he has a toothache. - . " ;wrltnes and groj .--.. crleis ,ari,l makes himself a nuisancej When he Is ill he assumes a :Icturesjue air of being about to die, and he either com plains that nobody loves him orj ,he prepares to take a theatrical farewell of his family befiwe his temperature passes 100 deKrws. When he has busi ness reverses h blames destiny and says, sighing, th.it he has been fore doomed to . jMTpetual disappointment ar.d failure. : i' r I ; There is something fine; something noble about Silent suffering.. Which of us do not admire the Indian bra vtl at J the stake, smiling and taunting hi foes while the flames lick hTs flesh. If the Christian confessor. burning in Nero's gardens or facing- the wild beasts In the elrcus. had .whined and lamented and been voluble with j re jtrouches and cries ' for mercy. Instead of ' meeting death calmly and silently, would their martyrdom "have the digni ty and grandeur which so lmpr-ssed th pagan mind ami recommended the new teaching. It Is "true thst he who suffers In silence Is not disdained by any God.', :j- ' , , . j l ' Instruct your grief to be proud. Face trouble bravely and cheerfully. I When you feel that "oi must-weep and break ; down go into your closet, as you would to pray, aiul hide the spectacles of of your deep sorrow from the eye of men. In this, as In all other things. My Lungs La erippe left me with i bid cough. Mr friends ssid contump tion.' I then tried Ayer'c CSiefrr Pectoral and was promotly cured. Ak K. Randies, Nokomis, 111. 'rf You forgot to buy.a bot tle of Aycrs Chcny Pec toraFwhen your cold first came on, so you let it run along. Even now,: with all your hard coughing, it will not disappoint you. There's a record of sixty 1 years. TafNbst uc.Mc.tiJ. Coaaalt your doctor. If he say take It, tbea do a be y. If h trllsyu not to Uka it, then oottt take iu Ha knows, SHOULD COME FROM THE WEST. "If the Republican nomination for the Presidency gort to, the East, as it doubtless will go, the West should be permitted to name: the. Vice PwhI- dent." . ;h-' ; : . r This Lsthe opinion of former Senator John M. 'Thurston, of Nebraska, a prominent statesman and politician. It was expressed in San Francisco last week.. while Mr) Thurston was en rout from the Hawaiian If lands to his' home in Nebraska. Mr. Thurston who' re tired from Congress 'in the spring ' of 1900, was apKinted by I'resldent ' Mc Klnley as one of ' the Government Di rectors of the St. Louht World's Fair. He was permanent chairman of the Kt. IxuU Convent ton ; which nominated AlcKlnley, and is regarded as an able and Jvonserv at! vc gentleman. Ilht views re sought by the party mana ger. ' : ;';'' . -'l rThe time has long since passed when the great West may be overlooked In the matter of framing the Republican platform and selecting the' nominee," continued the Henator. If the West hud been Tairly treated' In Con grey and nt the National Conventions we would Jiever have heard of Populists or Populism. There was a deep-seated, Jlrmly grounded Idea prevalent aniong the Western ' eoj!e and , especially among the resident of the Central West that Eastern Interests received attention in Congress and at the Na tional Conventions at the expense and to the detriment ; of . the great West, and while' I do not think this Is true, the feeling has existed, nevertheless. It is time now that . we demonstrate more specifU-aliy the Untruth of this be lief.' ': .,' j :. 'I "It we can put some Western m.m on i Jhe ticket with ltoosevelt. I believe It -will greatly add to our voting strength. Of course there are many good men who would make admirable running mates with president ltoose velt. Sena torDoU Iyer, of Iowa,, would have been hHnlnated for Vice Presi dent at Ihliarvlphla two fears ago, hid I'resldent ltoosevelt declined lite place, which at one time seemed possl ble. I see no reason why he would not make as strong a candidate before the next . National Convention. He is . a strong, able man of wide learning and experience, secured through : long ser vice In the Legislative halts at Wash ington. We want a man In this posi tion who has the confidence of the peo ple a man who has been tried out, as It were a man whom the people know and whose opinions on public questions are a matter of record. The Vice Pres idency la no longer a place for a dead The campaign text book of the Dem ocratic ; Congressional Committee cleaxly defines the attitude of the party respecting the tariff. It declares squarely and unequivocally In favor of free trade. The committee does not resort to the subterfuge of calling It tariff reform, but , indorses . without qualification Ihe ruinous doctrine "ad vocated by the men In power during the second .Cleveland Administration and which produced an almost com plete paralysis of the industries of the I country. " The Democratic text book says: "The tneory or free trade la that both seller and buyer are benefited by an exchange of commodities and that, as all - i consumers, the greatest vgocd to the gieatest number requires that Ihere be no barrk-rs to trade In ' order thai goods may be a cheap as ixisible and the cost of living be reduced to a min imum. Pre trade will open our mar kets to benefit our country. It Is hos pitable and seek peace and good will With the ' nations. Reciprocity e-iret-, nothing for the consumer and hunt.- foreign markets with a club.; Its sto k In trade Is high tariff, favoritism, dls- erlmlna,tiou and retaliation. It Is based upon the saixM theories as 1st protection. and. like protection. Is a slum and i humbug, and to most people hasb(!ti and w ill ever continue to be a delusion and a snare." Tjiw is tlw traditional Democrats doctrine and it enianates from a source that fully commits the party to fre trade. The' declarations of state con ventions in favor of a "tariff for revenue oniy" must , be viewed in the light of the utterance of the Demo cratic CongressionaKCommittee, which speak for the entire party, fitate de clarations have no force or value when not In harmony with those of the au tnwiaea representatives of the p;t rt as a whole. The unmistakable position or tne Democratic party, as disrtoseu by its. campaign text book, la hostlllt " wrutection ,or American industries If the Democrats stick to one thing I long enough; they may live to'get an- nother. whack at the' tariff, but the nances are that the Republicans will sidetrack them before that "time comes. Mobile (Ala.) Register. It Is to be hoped, that the peope of ; the present generation, who haye Hved-through one whack" of this kind, will not have tt. j onflure another. One experiment of 'the Vind in a Uptime Is quit enough. PARK AND WASHINGTON, PORTLAND, OREGON I The school where thorottgh 'w-orlc is done; where the t5orj is always- given; where confidence is developed; wherev bookkeeping is tanght exactly as books are kept in business; where ahortliand is made easy1; whtkre penmanship is at its best ; where hundreds of bookkeepcis and stenographery have been educated for success iu life; where thousands more will be.; Open all the year. Catalogue frt, A. P. ARMSTRONG, LL. D. PRINCIPAL Ind-?r; the Stress of the fuel famine raised -by the strike In the anthracite miWes, the price of hard fuel In JijJos loa has risen to $14 a cord and kld- Ing wood to !. . Lt 4he oppressed people come out to Oregon, where then is j plenty of cheap fuel and kindling ana wnere ruei is not needed Ii is'Iarge quantities as in the East- Oil and electricity will make Call- f.inia a manufacturing slate. San !ee Mmury, And oil and electric ity coal and lumber, and her many othe iwiurai irauurrn, win maKe tJregon a manufacturing state, Oregon will be come the greatest manufacturing statf west'of the Itocky Mountains. , John P. Markley was guilty of mur der lit the first degree, or he was In nocent. But he was convicted of mur der In the second degree. The Jurors, who believed him guilty, according U I heir verdict, wished to be kind to him. tor reasons f urged in the brilliant peeches of his lawyers. . - It Is reported that there, has been basing at the Oregon State University. The Jiazers ought to be expelled 01 thoroughly thrashed. This Is an East rn Importation of brutality that ought not to be tolerated In Oregon, especial- ly in atv Institution supported from -the- public funds. I S . Continually I At lt...: . k! I t'oiitiiiually rctvivitig ami, continually scnliiiir out car , ets ani other lloor ever- liitr. You 111 want your nld ' worn out car pots replace! lie-. fore wjnter hcIh In. Have it clone by . s&3CC The Kouso Furnishing Go - 303 Commercial St.. Next to PosiofNce Stores at salem and ai bany 'isssassxsstxi PERSONAL AND GENERAL. f and laoor, , It pronounces that iolcy, unoer which our industrial upremac h.is beer attained "a sham and a hum Dug. , it proposes to strike: down th protective system, the results of which have been so beneficent, and to opet the great American market to the fret a rtO-burled statesman. We should I admission of the, products of the ill- have in this office a man who. if called ; npoiv could fill the office of President to the credit of himself and the Amer- j lean people. Fortonately -we had suehl a njan In President Roosevelt." .: , "x - i : ; i LARGER THAN EVER BEFORE. Max Bass, general western Immigra tion agent of the Qreat Norn tern Rail. road, with headquarters at Chicago, Inj paia laoor of Europe, i A policy tha. builds uo industries onserves the In teiesu and welfare of labor. It bene fits the agricultural producer by giving them a' profitable home market. Iro tef tion has done these things and now when the country Is prosperous, wher the Industries are act I vey when labot is HI employed and Its average earn .; . s . --' nr ajr- larger than ever , before, th Son ofthe Salem bums say thst the market Is not vet,ur to -r. rein for choice hots. Rut, they admit that mat js wnai many of the rowes want. Probably the 'ma for'tv of them will not be In a hurry to sell fo.- i5c. hen they know they can get It. . . a a t., ' m aw . . nie autnorities at isome nansed a condemned man a short time ago In an ice-4iouse. It-1 suggested that they might ut least have chosen a, warm jl ace and have,. made the transition of .he unfortunate fellow to hl nort Aorld less abrupt and startling. out or all the Information that has teen given-concerning the, retirement of Speaker Henderson, the most grati fying and at the same time most sur prising item cf news is' that he Is hot How do We lenrn about the ecSinHer' asKea a .aiern pater fared cf hit boy lastevenlng. "From the news paiers.of course," mtid th youiu' opeful. "Rut how do the astronomers ndout abrut itr nsked the father. "Why. don't you think the astronomer read the newspapers, too?" resounded thJ boy. : w o " , Wonder If the members of the solic iting committee for the advertising runa of the Oreater Salem Commercial , iud. wnen they were boys, read in the old school reader the storv of the larks that built their neikt in(th Tarm ers wneat Held? IIow the whe old lark refused, day after day. to move tne nest, though the vouns larks were frightened -apl wanted to move; when they heard the farmer and his sons talking about getting their neighbor to cut the wheat? Rut when the farm er ana his sons said that thev them selves wouldgo to work next dy and cut, tne wnent. the wie ild larV. ad vised the. young ones that it wa time for them to move. . . o o o A scarrltv of sthoof tochers for the country districts of Clackamas county wan rennnert in k RiitHm.. t j . - . - I' I ll'l (l A tf W oaya ago. jsow comes news from Polk -ouniy inai tne same condition xt mere, and that some of the sch;s ore vacant on this account. ' " ' .- O ; TW - 1 1 l . - 4TIng"to New Tork to practice law. I New. Yorkers at high prices think thev Exchange. Coal Ono of At era ' Pills at bedtime aids the Cherry Pectoral ready in breaking up a cold. J. C ATEtt CO, Lowell, IUm. R an Interview tSt. Paul recently- is yJlJL tZ Z ..J 77 . , , v-" '' .. Democra tie party proposes the over quoted as saying that while the Jmml- ,hr- r .ki- V - . r . , throw of this pdley and the Inaugura gratton movement from the middle (tun of free trade. wicai . no onn w iirp u last j The campaign text book leaves-no spring, tne number or settlers rrom the 'doubt of this. It Is not simply a revi Kastern states who have taken up larvls'sion of ttie i tariff that Is urged, not ' In Oregon and Washington has been merely modification of some of the H larger this year than ever before Con-JiKhdules, but a sweeping away of au tinuing, he ssldi 'protection. This Is the demand of the "The low homeseekers rales offered lemo ratlc party, as authoritatively by the roads have a tendency to iu- declared bv its National Congressional crease the tide, but the great reason Committee. ;' . behind the movement Is that the peo-i Vhl)4 ' . pie of the-l-st have many dJdvn-! Thlrdn Boe even further than tages from which they are seeking "('iWI'r Cleveland would have his party relief in the new regions of the North- o. He has lately advised the Democ west, A large proportion of the r.ast-, racy to rtick to "tsrlrt reform. - f .rn farmers till rented soil. -and th;' 1, -vi,i)nl ,,,,, , proceeds of their labor goes to pdy i!,e' ' l v,,Ient , campaign of lent. They are getllng to sea that the l!W ' lo fUfilt out on the .tariff can buy an entire farm in the North- lines. - It is lo be practically protection The coal mine operators found they were up against the real thing, when hey confronted, President Roosevelt md Governor Odell, backed by eighty nillion people. - i - ,r - It Won't cost nave a joke on the Yankees, Ibices tumbled yesterday. . o any more to nw words than small one In the Kt.w- maw's classified columns It Is a cent a word of any sixe first insertion, and a halfa cent thereafter. o caxxnx Justice nf ilw P t.a. - To restore Vlg- tezuma. X. Y.. Is rlx feet tall ami Ilie system I weighs 47.', rounds When the witt oolhi iiplrltt on an attorney In that "t... it.. Vlctbn disappear s frojn the case o a Now that United Ktafes Judge ito-s solid flesh joti cannot take a better, m!l-i v - j a. - " - a 1 M : I. - a . Irl A Vr l,MF renoered a decision adverse to it.- x-S-V C7-fV "IJtera. Ity InteresU. the shincle trust i ex; t-eU-.l to come oft the roof. - , fN ..STOMACH , P-ItTGd vcurlne i faCgettlca CiUoataess IsMaBaiaaad fttelaria fever oue :oihI lienllli U tuMtUteU. Try It A cablegram Informs the world f-ie the fourteenth tioi that Dictator C.-i-trn, of Venezuela, I in tV-.;)st iiir-b. He h-ts been there n ttn It h nlut time he was being calletl DiUhtaior Castro. ' " o .. ' ; . - . Reports from the re otuiicarV-e tern of Macedonia tell of bfrtll- at j DJumabl.t, ; Raxlog and Novrok.,H jTJiis is almost as bad as the South At 'rican war. . '" ") o o o Mr. f!rlJnger, ho has. charge .'of th"7 construction .f the Dallns-Kails 'iiy railroad, says the line will Ik? extend ed to the Hlletz emintry. It will -i;n up sortie valualdbe country in which .lot of the rrKd people of Salem are Ini.-r- -c:ite!.. When the line I.-t afro extends! to Sjtlem. it will be Iumdy for Hi'e gHd people. ' . .'. . : o o o . J. V. Morgan, can see a iM.lnt with out having a brick buse ffill on l.i ii. O O t ,.- KimuUaneously with the news hat OiM-nland got along a whole year wlih out a physician conies the ruinourico ment that K Is the most healthful coun try in tfie world. '". ',, O o o V'. - New York is to have a church with a. nlne-sttH-y tower. r The cd'nfuslon of tongues' will probabty comej when the. , trustes and the contra tora-meft to discuss the. bill for extras. i o o o "... : ., - There Is northing like arbitration; A Nevada mining dispute b.is Just' been settled after only fourteen years of dt- CUKMion. 5 J o o o . '., ;; v ; -There wiir now be arbitration, soil then there will be mining of aritlira ite toal. , While The arbitration goett wi,; th. poor people wilt shiver.. .-' c o That advertising fund of the fjreatr 8alem 1'ommerclaT Club Is getting it ", blgjr fast. ' " ' , , o n o ; In the circuit court yesterday one man pleaded guilty of larceny from a store, saying it was hi n-rjt otTens He got one year. Another man plead ed guilty of the same crime, and sail in was him first offense here. He got two yeinC The word "here" rort him re year In the Penitentiary. Catarrh and Hay Fever. J quid t'ream Ralm Is becoming quite as opnlar In many I m ealltiew as W) Cream ISalrri solid. It Is prepar ed for use In atomisers, and Is highly. prlved by those who have been accus tomed to all upon physli Inn for suth traetrnerr;. Many phxiclsn are w- Ing'and prescribing it- Xll the medic inal properties of the celebrated Ot-arnf Ralrn ftr contained In the I.lq-Jld f.r:n, which Ia7S cants. In -In ling n stravSri!r fuhs. ' All druggists, or ijt mII.- Kly Iirothers, CS Warren St N-tw York.