FRIDAY. NOfTIlirfntt 7. 1502. ,T? , ' - WEEKLY . OREGON STATESMAN, V:.Z VEEKIV STATES ruUiftbed verr Tofclajr anl Frv3j by the TATM AX FCpUKHINa COMPANY K. J. HENi'Kli KA, Xaaager. 4 BUBHCBIrTIOS KATES. ; ; f ; ri( j(r,lnilTne.. , .,',.. flXO f-i tn..oil.. In ) rrx 1 nr tnotilh. ia advance. ...... .......... -2f ouo J', ua Un.... ,...- l-2i The Hratesroan ( U-u established ICnr nearly flfly-two j-ni, and it IiM iMrae tubwlirfT who hive received It nearly l tat Von r. ant uut ho bave read It or a r t.ermlion. Horn ttt object to bavins the ri diaxniUsned Ki lime of expiration of tii-lf uuc-rifUoas. ,v.r Ut ijwnt or lh. n1 tor other r-Jm have)itHHW(1 u riiKOr.ntlmie tub crliion e i!r when notified to do an. AU person paying lieu vui!rlbiii. r paying ia nlfioit, wltl hv tb benefit of tie dollar ra.e. Sat ii they do uoi pT 1 r rU RMiaiht, tbj rate wrll tUth a rr. Hereafter e will wnd t&e aaper to all responsible p-rou wbo Oi'ier it, utoub tbey may MAt eod the inouer. with the noaeniUud I n t that ttoT ar to par a r, in rs Ibey lt the aufjaeripUon account roa exer at tnontbK. In order thai -hero ay be no ralcn oe maud I bit. we will keep this notice lauding at tuta piaca ia the paper. - -. ; - . - - CIRCULATION (SWORN) OVER 4000" Ail - , A -Vt t5rL : IRRIGATION RIGHTS . An interesting contest is now -going v on between the states of Kansas" and Colorado over water rights In the -Arkansas river. The river flows through Colorado into Kansas., Colorado ; as serts, her right' to use the water " for Irrigation. Kansas asserts riparian rights and demands that Colorado ier mH, the water' to flow uninterrupted and undiminished past her arid lands lo the lands of Kansas. , : j . Kansas filed a -complaint against Col orado and Colorado Med a , demurrer which has recently been overruled, and now, tbe case is to: come ui on US merits. The , . Denver Republican quotes" the A'ttorney General of Color rado as saying -that his ata would assert a new principle of raw; and seek- to uphold it on the ground of public necessity. The Republican goes on to say: "The answer follows the overruling of the demurrer, filed by Colorado to the complaint filed by the state of Kansas. The answer reviews the whole history of lrrlgationj but makes Its chief point on the assertion that the right to Irrigate- takes pre cedence over the ancient riparian right ft'asserts that Httle of the water Of the Arkansas naturally reaches Kansas. On the, contrary, it asserts, irrigation Is really a help to Colorado's eastern rtf ighbor, as the water taken from the river by farmers seeps back into; ; the river again and carries farther J than ltnaturftllv would. The desert land act arijl numerous otfhcr acts of Con gress. tiicluding the Irrlfritlon act of the present year are cited In support of the state's contention." - ; - . The doctrine that water once used for-irrigation will seep back Into ita original river bed with sch force as t carry farther than It would have' done had It been left to flow naturally Is one that Colorado wfll probably have a good dehl of difficulty In proving. It is one of. the r-tatements that are classed as "laterestng if true. That, however. H a mlmtr point? The feature of Inter t-mt and of Importance In the rcase : is the contention of Colorado that Irriga tlo.n rights are superior to rlnarian l-lghts. That question affects the whole of the arid West. Upon , Its original solution depends the welfare 6f thous ands to-lay and many millions of that future day when the practice j of a" comprehensive system : of Irrigation shall have redeemed from the desert f r the broad acres that are now untitled It Is not to be expected the solution will be easy. The ciise is one in which the courts wilt have contestants eax-h of to choose between whom has ; somer thing of right and reason on his side. The water rights of riparian owners have long been solidly embedded In our law. Now come the Irrlgatlonlnts and In the- name of public welfare .declare, the need of adopting a new principle It Is another illustration of the old truth that a :1a w f which may be Just and fair !n' one country wotnd work harm in another. It Is to be hoped the case as present ei between Kansas and Colorado will be sufficiently broad to determine the whole complex issue. so that there need W no further lltl-J tlon on the subject, for the demand of irrigation- Is ; pressing and It Is time that all law- points concerning It be definitely settled: ; ! ! ., IT IS HIGH TIME. It Is high time that in Oreron as Dark Hairl rhnt Aver'a Hair Vieor for a (rest many years, and al though I am past eighty years of yet I have not a gray hair in iny bead.' : Geo.Jeliott, Towson, Md. We mean alPthat rich, dark color your hair used to have. If it's gray now, no matter; for Ayer's Hair- Vio-or altvavs i re- Stores color to gray hair. I bometimes it makes the hair grow very heavy and Ion?; and it stops falling cf the hair; too. tl.H a WlW. AH Srsctljnk yxir rorirl eaawoa anralif yoo. B1 4v.imr ud we vul npraa TV" bottie." Hm nrm and rive tbe naat .( your itrartevrreMoft-. Addreaa, J. C A k.U CO.. Loweil. Catarrh Invites: Consumption It weakens the delicate lung tissues, deranges tbe digeetire organs, and breaks down the general health.' ' It often causes headache and dizzi ness, impairs ' the taste, smell and hearing, and affects the voice. - ' - j Being a constitutional disease it re quires a constitutional remedy. Hood's Sarsaparilla Radically and permanently cures ca tarrh' of the nose, throat, stomach, bowels, and teore delicate organs. . Bead the ' testimonials. Jfo substitute for Hood's acts like Hood's. Be sure to get Hood's. ; "I was troubled with catarrh 20 years. Beeing statements of cores by Hood's Sar saparilla resolved to try It. Four bottle? entirely cured me.. Wixxiam Bbxxma, 1030 6th 8U MUwaokee, Wis. Hood's Sarsaparilla promises to euro and keeps the promise elsewhere the Republican party as a whole should realize its superiority orver Its various warring factions. Oregonian. Wednesday. . : It la Indeed high time. The Repub lican party represents or should repre sent -principles, not the personal de sirea or Interests of a fev mert I who wish to control It'for selfish interests. It Is pot good for the party, nor Is It arood for the country, that the matbln ery and prestige of the gTcat organ ization of men devoted to political and governmental Ideals should be subor dinated to the uses of persons desirhig to employ them for the punishment of their 'enemies, or for the r own profit and preferment, without regard to the accomplishment of the real objects of Republicanism, dear to the hearts of the rank and file. :" t There has been too much of domina tion by factions in Oregon, or attempts it such domination. Principles have been subordinated to persons, and the real things that are important to the country's welfare have been lost sight f In. the personal warfare .-that 7 haa- r been carried on within the party.! ranks. ' . 4 ' --- ' The Republican party has a great' past, resplendent with glorious achleve nents for the country and' for civilizat ion. It has a great future, if it will subordinate men to principles, s and continually hold to the high Ideals of those who would . use it as an instru ment for the accomplishment of thn highest good to all the people. CHURCH CONGRESS QN THE LIQUOR TRAFFIC. The Society of Friends has Invited, from Indianapolis, "the various Chrla Uan bodies' In the United States to -nd delegates to a conference on the "iiquor traffic. The proiosed confer ence Is to begin in Washington the second Wednesday in March, 1906. The 'call" of the Friends breathes that gen- tie and i modeat piety which endears them even to those who have the least sympathy with their tenets. ; "We 1s Tue this Invitation with a humble realization; of the smallness of our body as compared with many others, but we do It with a deep sense that this duty has been laid upon us." The 'callr' recites that . there Is a want of co-operation In practical effort-nmong Christians to oppoae the evils of the liquor trafflcr How can Christians exert a united Influence In the matter? The Friends admit their Inability to answer the question, but they are con fident that "by united Inquiry and a prayerful seeking for divine enlighten ment, with a willingness to approach the subject with an open mind, ; the ... r- . united Church nyiy find a way by ot in of which we can serve v the cause Christ and the good of mankind seeking the ultimate elimination this stupendous evil." i ; ; . 2" Is there any reason to believe that 5uch'a. union of Christian forces can be made? How, can the sharp division tetwoen those wno would regulate and amsSlorate and those who seek to de stroy the sale ; of : liquor be Removed ? One party wouid Improve the saloons. The other party would sweep .'them all way. 'How are the radicals and the .nodernteS lo be brought to the sup port -of any definite and -; practical proposition? The difficulties in the way seem fai uiperable. but. It is suggested by a writer In the New York Sun, ihat if .he mild old .Quaker mode of expres sion could be more generally adopted ihere' w'ouid, at least be an end ot the somewhat petulant criticism of one inother' which too often sets rival schools of temperance .reformer by the ears. Passion, excess, exaggera lon, physiologically false doctrines ir. -egard to the effect of alcohol, cannot tfrve. Indeed positively injure, the nat- iral irrowth of temperance. '"That rrowtb. now and for sooiei years past ictuaily observable, is largely dae tt ommon sense.' to 'improved habits o Ivlnir. to the spread of athletic exer- iles, to a public, opinion whlch re gards drunkenness with disgust rsthfr 'hah toieratlon' , and perhaps most of til to a perception of selMnterest an4 the knowledge that In this comply and many-machlhed age even the so berest bead has enough to do to .keep Itself dear. Sobriety Is become self lefence. The practical argument, the lower argument. If . you will. Is beeom Ing more effective, perhaps, -than the higher moral and religious reasons. But a temperance conference of the Churches would b interesting for the opinions which It would elicit, whether or not' an, agreement upon a poliey couH be had or not. The three years and a half before Che meeting will be byjmo mtau too long 'for the prelimin ary discussions and proposals, aid a conference called by the Friends ought to be irenlc In its deliberations. TWENTIETH CENTAURY i TALES TALES. - There Is every reason to hops that the twentieth century chlfdren will grow up to be model men and women. It is only a question of taking advan tage of 'their opportunities. For this Is the day of the - overthrow of the shocking fairy tale and the immortal nursery rhvme of their fat;hers and mothers. The book stores are now full of brand new twentieth century fairy tales and nursery, rhymes writ ten I tor i the twentieth century child And mort are on the way. It Is only very recently that It has been realized that the Brothers Grimm and1 Mother Goose are so largely, re sponsible for the overpopulation of our reform schools and penitentiaries. The only wonder is that this realiza tion-did not come sooner. - History is full . of awful examples. iti Cotton Mather had not , been brought ud' on drlmm's witch, stories. Is It likely, asks a contemporary, that he woulo have- raised such a ! rumpus In Eaiem town? If young Joe Smithy had not read about the trio to St. Ives. Jind the Man with Seven Wives does any one suppose for an instant that there would have been any Mormons? Do not the good people' of Kentucky take heed to this day of the fate that befell Jack and Jilt who went . - to .draw water? J Can any reasonable being doubt that the career of General Grant - was the result of an intimate' acquaintance with Jack the Giant Killer, - or that 'Mark ' Twain , modeled his little work upon the Cow that Jumped Over the Moort, or that J. Pierpont Morgans rise to iower. Is primarily due to the ' teachings of Little Jack Jlorner?. f Of coi'rse these are but examples that; point the moral. It is impossible even to Imagine how much harm has been done. Think of the 'cruelty to animals Jncalculated by Old . Mother Hubbard, and Little Red Riding Hood, and Cock Robin, and the Four and Twenty Blackbirds Itaked In a Pie. The ; Knave of Hearts and ; Tom the Piper sSon ' a re doubtless resionsible for most ol the stealing in the world .Thejresults of Old King Cole's bal example pass alt understanding. " The Babes in the Wood presumably, have' been the cause- of many a scandalous elopement. " But now all this is changed. No longer dependent: mon these shameless chronicles of depravity, me twentieth century child is able to absorb good ness; at. every pore. . For., the twen tieth century fairy tale and 1 nursery rhyme : is eternized of all evil germs, and ' copiously diluted with moral maxims.- i , r ; Necessarily this chanpe will have a strong influence? upon the twentieth century child. , In time all children ought to be blue-oved and golden curled and' truly angelic In sl theli instincts," There wijl be no moto little girls who do not like to sew, and cry when bed time comes, and turn-up their noses at 'other little girls who wear poor clothes. There will be no rude boy who are enamored of the practice of the noble art of self -de-fense, and i wish to dwell remote in a cave, and plan to go to the forests or plains and exterminate, wnat is left of the noble : red ' men. The twentieth century fairy '.tale and nursery rhyme R6ckaBye Baby : These ara sweet words, but how raucl pain and suffering they used ta mean. It different now.. Since Mother's Friend ha. become knoyn expectant mothers havt been spared much of tha, anguish of child birtlu Mother's I'rlend Is a liniment to be applied externally. It Is rubbed thoroughly into the muscles of the abdomen, It gives elasticity and strength, and when the final great strain comes they respond quickly and easily without pain. Mother's Friend is never taken Internally. Irtternal remedies at thla time da mora harm than good. If a woman Is supplied with this splendid fcnt ment aha need never fear rising or swelling breasts, morning sickness, or any of the discomforts which usually accompany preg nancy. f- The proprietor of a large hotel la Tampa, Fla., writea: My wife had an awful time with her first child. During, her second pregnancy. Mother's Friend was used and the baby was born easily before the doctor arrived."" It's certainly great. Oct Mother's FrWod at the araf store. II ft fcatUa. i TES E SAD FIELD EEGUL4T02, CO., Atlanta, Ga. VTtM for ma Irm I0ttatrate4 book, "Bates St talk. - For sale at DR. STONE'S druff stores. Is evidently the biggest thing of the twentieth centuryv ; - - " . WHAT COLLEGE EDUCATION . COSTS. , What,, must a young man spend to go through college? At BeloitV University the expenses range from 15S to 1300 . a year. At the University of Illinois, where: tui tion is free, the. expenses average $1ST fa year: f the University of Kansas. where tuition is free, Uvlnff expense!, including fees in special studies, range rlrom J140 to. i30O per year. In the last catalogue of Hamilton College, New York state, is this "esti mate of annual expenses for the stu dent. .: ,;r '". Board, from Z to S4.M a week. J10S to 162. Fuel and lights. $10 to $10. ; JLaundry, tlS to $20. . Tuition, $25 a term, $75 to $75. Contingent charge, public rooms, etc. $3 a term, $24 to $24. Half - rented room, unfurnished, $3 to. $10 a term, $9 to $30. Necessary and important books, $15 to $25. : . S - ' Class and fraternity , taxes, student subscriptions, $20 to $40. Total. $276 to $886. . The half expense of furnishing a room should be from $20 -to $501 "Not including cost of attire and travel but not deducting concessions aa to tuition, one can go through the college year, by rigid economy, upon $350y An allowance tof J400 implies strict care, one of 4450 is comfortable, J $500 la liberal, and any sum above $000 ia profuse. ': y . There is no evasion or equivocation or- misleading generalizationr ' about this state'ment. Inclusive of tuition, room rent, board, fuel and lights, a man can go through the college 'year at Hamilton on. $350. $400, or $500, as his circumstances ; nfay dictate rigid economy or strict" care, or permit com plete comfort, -j At all events, a year at. a college ranking among the best of the smaller Institutions calls - for an expenditure of not more than $600 even from those who desire to live most generously. ' We believe the students of Willam ette University spend In Salem on an average something, like $200 per year Some spend more than $200, and others, 'especially those who board themselves, ; considerably, less. Then is no reason why any young man -or wojnan may not secure a college edu cation. In some cases, self-denying economy is necessary, ." and constant Industry, too, but ; . these necessities ar 4 often the best part '"of the tratuing fur the duties of life when school days are over. . ' " " v ' An' Interesting fact as to expert 'evl- deace, was brought out by former Gov ernor Black in the Molfneux trial, lie aiked a handwriting expert, who was on j the stand and who w as also e wit ness in the first Molineux trial, If he had not testified that the experts wop Id nbt mention the signs that con traidlcted the conclusions they were ex pected to maintain? "Tes." said "the expert, "and I say it now. "The Jury," continues-the. news report, "joined in the laughter and the court officers had to shout "Silence!" " The Jury appar ently weighed the. evidence of fhla ex ert for the prosecution and placed Its value upon the testimony of an expert witness who would cloud his testimony for the fee received in payment of bis testimony. The more that expert tes timony Is Introduced In criminal cases, where experts are to be found to testify on both sides of i scientific question involved, the more It appears tnat ex pert witnesses should be in the full eontroi of the court, to give evidence is -an expert and not as a witness em ployed to furnish a certain v class of testimony. ; , Portland Is the' metropolitan city of Oregon. The people of the balance of the state are Interested In Portland, ind proud of Its representative Ipsti- :u lions. Every man In Oregon should wish the metropolis well. But the few people ihere who are interested in Having new city charter' are asking most too much when they demand the ailing of an extra session of the Leg islature for the sole purpose of accom plishing this object a few short weeks !efore the meeting of the .regular ses sion. Tliese Portland men are the only ones now asking for an extra session with anything like positiveness. The people generally" throughout rhe atate are opposed to an extra session 'of the Legislature those of them who are thinking anything at all about the matter.- ' i 'z. : . - The newv Superintendent " f v the 3chool for Deaf !Mutes wants the In artttutlon moved to Salem, or closer to the Capital -City. ; Other Superinten dents have advocated the same thing. W7en the" state is ready to open a girls' apartment for the Reform School, or lo" separate the Idiotic from the Insane, perhaps.thKchange will be made. The! lots about town ha, He saId nresent Deaf Mute School buildings that a more thorough inspection of the :ould be used for either the girls de-!11" woul1 m.ade this winter. He : v, . he idiotic in the Asylum. "i Twelve thousand dollars to apply on he debt, and Willamette University .-.ill have no debt, and will be ready 'or the beginning of the boom that Is are t come, wm the Slz COO be nub- Tibed bv the first of the year? ,- ot Jinr it ift ka t , - . " ' " "-:.' must be will be. PARK AND WASHINGTON. PORTLAND. OSCCOH The schdol where thorongh work is done;, where the reason is always given; where confidence is developed; where bookkeeping isla'nlhtctly as books are kept In basiness; where ahorthand is made easy; where penmanship U at its best; where hundreds of bookkeepeis and stenographers have been edncated for success in life- where thousands more wiU be. ; Open alj the year. Catalogue free. " aaHBaMMMWI , ; SS"BaiaBaaBSSBiBiBBBrBr' ' B . A. P. ARMSTRONG, LL. D., PRINCIPAL 'A Chicago man carried knife blade In his brain for twenty-two years, and the surgeons have just extracted It. There is no announcement as to he quality, of the brain. 'There are peo- pie the writer knows who could Carry & great deal of scrap Iron In their p!acea for brains.' and still not fee! any Inconvenience. - - . During its short career the Philip pine Government has lost upward of $1,000,000 in the value of Its revenues owing to the depreciation of silver, and now we have an inkling' of; what would have happened to the. United States it we had gone on thai silver basis when the Democrats yoposed it. - ': The Statesman will - contain eight pages T again tomorrow, ':''' owing- . to pressure" on . the advertising columns. It will be entirely satisfactory if the advertisers oblige the publication ? of an eight-page paper .every day. and sixteen on Sundays. . It would not be too much for Salem to make up the remaining- $2,000 to pay off Willamette University's debt. But. there will be opportunities offered for doing that much in other ways, in the erection of new buildings,' for In-1 stance. . ' I 'John Sparks, fusion candidate, has been elected Governor of Nevada. Mr. Sparks is a grand man. He Is the own er of the fine Hereford cattle which have 'been shown at the Oregon State P'air the past, two seasons. The country is "settling up rapidly According to Commissioner Hermann, more homestead lands Were given to f settlers Jn 1901-02 than in any previous year. : , ' '.' ' One of ther constitutional amend ments voted upon In California yes terday provides that the voting ma chine may be used Instead of ballots In that state. The Republican majority in the lower house of Congress will be a safe one. The latest reports put it from 2B to 30. It will be ,a good working majority. ' There will be people mean enough tb say, after it is all over, that "the regular session was enough without any special session. - The country sent a message of con gratulations and confidence to Presi dent Roosevelt on Tuesday last. Coler In New York and Lane In Cali fornia are playing the baby act. It is an unenviable part to play... : Tom Johnson and his tent struck a political cyclone in Ohio. Ills Presi dential boom looks tattered. The people of the United States still believe In prosperity. Alabama has gone Democratic A Violent Attack -f Croup Cured. "Last winter an infant child of mine had croup in a violent form, says Kl der John W. Rogers, a Christian Kvan gellst. of Fllley. Mo, "I gave her a few doses of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and- in a short time all dan ger was past and the child recovered. This remedy not only cures croup, but when given as. soon as the first symp toms appear, will prevent the attack. It contains no opium or Other harm ful substance and Qay be given as con fidently to a babyas to an adult. For sale at Stone's Drug Store. ',;' FOR BOTKIN TRIAL. . DOVEIt. Del.. Nov. 6. The Delaware witnesses In Che case of Mrs. Cordelia Botki'n, the alleged, poisoner, soon to be tried again in California, are about to start for the Pacific Coast., It Is be lieved that even without the testimony of John B. Pennington, father of the murdered Mrs. Dunning and Mrs. Deane she will again be -convicted. The news from San Francisco that the case would probably fail becACwa of Mr. Pennington's death, he being & material witness, is said to be wrong, as the box of candy was obtained from the postoffice by Harry Pennington, a grandson. Nursery Inspection. L. T. Reynolds, who Is a member -of t the State Board of Horticulture, wasj. !5 Euene Vth1 mornin and inspected the rruit trees in and about Eugene, Ho said to a reporter that th trees in - - this section of the country were re- markaWy free from lice .and very in- Jurlous iests, but that a great deal of scale existed In the very heart of the city. Nearly everv fruit in nn iha b. j Hladdon. lust north of town. Eugene Guard.. , Luck In Thirteen. ; By sending 13 miles Wm. Splrey, of Walton Furnace, Vt., got a box of Buckten's Arnica Salve, that wholly cured a horrible fever sore on his leg. rooming else could. Positively cures J . ' Fe5on8' Ulcers, Eruptions, 'Hvl'unif., corns, and Piles. I Plies. Only ,25c Guaranteed by Dr. Stores. KIliES' STALLICI, "'MIL" Wilt otand for ware the coming season at cor ter of Kerry an t Liberry sweets. r p tgrt ud particulars ct Ion DR. W. LONG-, Veterinary Burgeon, phone 2I Salem. O-. Our advertieinents are A tT.V.K YS IxTEli r TI " llead Them. Barrs Jewelry Store. Money to Loan On improved farm and city property at lowest rates. .'N . . . THOMAS K. FORD. ; ' Over Ladd & Bush's Ilnnk. Salem. Oregon. R. JORDAN'S ch a is i HUE? it, tii micuct. tu. i WorML Wi CK. J0RDAl-DlSEASES0F Mm Trail a. tat tauiu..wy iadud A S aMinirwifcontfcitaiM r- V TrMMfnnlbTWEiiiat 1 i.i. inr Swim. A am ai. 1 V . ftf ur. jurdaa't aKiU A girilMt Inr nmi tf St IwU.I. Tn ' urn. riLMorar m , MEDICINE FAKIRS WAS MEMBER OF THE COM PANY AND. GIVES AWAY , .. . SECRETS. . , . '- A member of a traveling meillclne company had a falling out with the management and unit the show at The Dalles. He told a -pager there the following details of their manner of conducting business: ; ' ""The herbs they get front Woodard & Clarke, at Portland, $7 per gross, and sell them to the people, for $1 a package. "These herbs are composed, of bitter aloes and licorice root, some, chopped hay and old jleaves.: v "The "oil of life" they, make them selves. When they get to a town they buy a five gallon can of gasoline and one gross of bottle and add a little wood alcohol, some camphor, red pep per and turpentine, to take away the gasoline smell,, and a little root to color It.- This they sell tor CO cents jl bottle. "The catarrh salts the comedian mixed himself Under the direction of the doctor, and were composed of equal parts or It. S. V. P. salt. Arm & Hammer brand of soda, and borax ground together, and run through a. sieve. Till they sold for SO cents a package. - "Their specially prepared soap was '. nothing more than ordinary . castll soap cut Into small bars. "Their salve was the ordinary car bolic salve that can be bought in any drug store. '- "Those who came to their ofilce for treatment ' the doctors put through a sieclal course and gave them a tini . cf spec ially prepared herbs. This 'de coction was mixed by the comedian. The last batch was made; last Mon day, at which time he bought $1 worth of sugar from Brown's grocery store, half filled 29 16-ounce bottles with It, poured, in some Water and let It dissolve until it got clear, then 'add ed one-half drachm j phoa. acid, two , drachms of hydrastus and one-half. drachm of nux vomica. For the privilege of taking these special courses lhe people pay from $50 to 1"0. ,. :' - - :. Their plan of taking tape worms , were the ordinary methods used by, giving a dose of male fern and ran-, cara. These methods generally re move most of the tape worm, but lea ves the" head, so that th worm ; grows again.- In order to make the heads they take a small piece of the O string of a banjo, chew it up and brown it In a flame and drop it In- a bottle and it cannot be told from the real head. - " IN. TROUBLE AGAIN poiNTivn onws at xtn i ' SOUTHWICK. - ' , Clayton Bradley - was nl.tred under arreat atu,n tin ..t... unnn- , . '- w .ijrTU lie III juniltr vi the Peace Horxan's court, upon the charge of rolntln- a gun at Mr. n. South wick yesterday. - This Is the same voting man who w.. orruij - r . u. . laat we(. uton thf chaw ot aftf,auIt with a dangerous weapon, but the case wa dismissed upon motion of the dis- was not a sufficiency of . evidence to , convict. , . ' j Bradley was arraigned before Justice !IIorgan last evening, and his hearing l for t o'clock this afternoon, and tho Private prosecutor thinks he has evidence enough thls time to prove his charges against the defendant ij tUnntia lh8 TaKaMjCl I fataauca, iud saaa. A ..hi.ru. Ux4 p Q 0 OR- JORDAN a CO.. 1051 Market St. . F. K W a. .K. .b. A. si "M