I .t.v ret GOOD GOODS at Alexander's. & i Are You Prepared For the pLlDAYS ??? : is not so far off as it seems these winter davs so beg'n now that piece of fancy work intended for v;nd We are showing the very newest in pillow .nd linen filo, etching, rope and royal silk. Hand- linen, fine laces, art denim and cushion cord. Big Handkerchief Values icio dozen Ladies' fine linen handker chiefs, plain and fancy borders, each 35c 25c 15c 10c 8c 5c ;ander Dept. Store RELIABLE CLOTHIERS. " GET A PIANO ? OR CHRISTMAS ng can be conceivea war win make a more joytui br youi wife, daughter or mother than a beautiful : piano. Now is the time to consider buying a piano. r wareroom and Fee the magnificent pianos we are You can afford a piano because we arrange the so easy that it is scarcely noticeable to you. Come four easy payment plan. L. WAKEFIELD & CO. Wareroom on Court Street DIES I VOU desire to be well dressed, and to and Bee us. We promise to please yon and save you money. Our Business Is to snpply you with Skirts, Jackets, Shirt Waists and Tailor Made Suits, i and we are in a position to do so and give you entire satisfaction. We make the wearing apparel to sit yon Individually tt Is correct The. EASTERN i CLOAK, SUIT, SKIRT and WAIST FACTORY, ED, EBEN, Prop., 645 Main St. 'Omplete satisfaction at money saving prices TIE TOWN OF OKI WINTER COMFORT tatnief ,mea's and a warm house go a good ways in ill I , ry winter comfortable and bright. Our COOk onnA I. j ..7 i. .1.. r,,:i j- mcaib anu our neaiers win mane wie "dln6 warm and comfortable. ke Thompson Hardware Co. WELL SITUATED AND GATE- WAY TO GOOD COUNTRY. Surrounded by Stockralslng, Dairying and Great Timber Belt Good School and Prosperous Business In- stltutlonc t Staff CortTspondcncr.l Uklah, Ore., Nov. 10. Ukiah was named for the town of Uklah, Cali fornia. The grounds occupied by the town were originally laid out by the Camas Land Company In 1890, and the postofflce was established the same year, with D. C. Whiting as first postmaster. E. B. Gamble, one of tho organizers of the company named tho town and still lives near the place and Is one of the oldest pioneers of Camas Prairie. Uklah's Advantages. Uklah Is not only the central point of a wealthy portion .of Camas prairie, where stockralslng and dairying pre dominate, but is surrounded by a large scope of country with undevel oped resources. The timber belt ah.ne lying at her door promises a large in- nme in the future. It is now hclni: tikea up at a rapid rate and all of tho Idle lands are being fenced. UKiah is also the gateway to the traffic from the John Day country aud ether rich points in the interior of the state. It is a popular stopping point f-r teamsters, stockmen and travel- ei s. Millions of dollars' worth of cat tle) aio driven through this placo an iiH ly, as many as four thousand head having been driven throned -it fed at this place within a few days' tint'. Three hundred head, a??rogal ing $12,000 In vaHie were fed here re cently in one night. Early Mall Service. The first, mall route was establish- to Uklah in 1890. Prior to that time citizens had to go to Alba for their mall, and old pioneers tell about how in olden times they used to send across the Blue mountains for their mall, the carrier often having to go on snow shoes. The first four-horse stage driven between Ukiah and Pen dleton was driven by J. T. Huston, pioneer of this place. A "Dry" Town. Uklah is one of the oddities among interior towns in the fact that it is strictly a prohibition town. There has never been a drop of liquor sold in the place. When the company that organized the town was formed, an agreement was entered into by which no property should be sold upon which the sale of liquors should be permit ted. The first deed contained this clause and all subsequent deeds have contained It and the agreement has beeen lived up to religiously. The "drug store racket" will not work here. The owner of the drug store Is justice of tho peace and a tee-to&taler and uder no circumstances will he break the rule. Educational Point The school is one of the features of Ukiah. This, it is claimed, is' one of the good results of a prohibition town. They claim that farmers send their sons to school here through the winter months without fear of having them led astray. They also expect the place to make a great educational point. They claim that it Is a healthy location and that the universal mild ness of the climate makes it a desir able place to live. Uklah is situated In school district No. 80. Alisses Stella L. and Lulu O. Marple, of Pendleton, are at present teaching and have one of the best schools in the county. There are 74 pupils cmolled and G3 In a.t nulaiice. Thirty-eight of these are la the prim ary department and 30 are in the higher grade. The school Is well equipped with apparatus, but has sold its library for tho reason that It vat not well se)ec':c"l. The di'.t'-'ct owns property to tho vulue nf about $1000 and Is about out of deot. The school board consists of William Mc Reynolds, (chairman), Frank Hllbert and Tom Gllllland, W. T. Sellers Is clerk. The school Is open nn average or seven mouths a year. Good Water. Uklah is a well-watered place. The water Is cold and pure and travelers claim that It is a treat, in fact, to get a drink of water anywhere In Camas Prairie, and It abounds everywhere. At only a short depth It may be found In unlimited quantities. Churches. Besides being a dally stage station, with express ofllce and postofllce, Uklah has a telephone line and Is well equipped with business Institutions. She has two church organizations and one church building. The. I.ibeial branch of the United Brethren have a building which cost about $1000. The Methodists are organized, but have no church building. Neither or ganization has a pastor at present and no services have been conducted hero for some time. Reverend Baldwin, a Methodist minister recently from Kansas has been stationed at Pilot Rock, and will divide his time be tween Pilot Rock, Alba and Ukiah. Business Institutions. Uklah has a weekly newspaper, tho Sentinel, which Is in Its third volume. J-red Hewctt Is the editor and proprie tor. C. A. Despaln runs n general store. Ho has been connected with the store a number of years, having recently bought the interest of his brother, Jem- Despaln. one of the best known business men In the coun ty. He Is fully capable of keeping up the high standard of tho business. His stock Is well arranged nnd he sup plies a largo trade. S. Kirk also has a go d store, far above the average In small towns. He carries an assortment of general mer chandise, and this means almost everything. He hns been In business In Uklah six years and draws a large trade throughout Camas Prairie. W. T. Sellers carries niedlelnes and sundries as well as a large stock of cigars, tobaccos and confectlonaries. Dr. G. U. Snapp also has an office at this store. He has been In the prac tice of medicine at Uklah for three years. E. E. GIbbs has a splendid black smith shop. He does general black smithing, horseshoeing, wagon repair ing and woodwork. Ho is also agent for the Big Jones mowing machines, for which A. Ku'nkel & Co., of Pen dleton, are the agents, F. W. Boynton has a meat market, at which he handles a large amount of fresh meats. He has been In busi ness four years and his trade extends as far as Pilot Rock. He puts up his own ice the first of tho year from Camas creek and It Is a splendid qual ity. In February the Ice Is several Inches In thickness and he has no trouble In putting up enough to last from one season to another Uktah has a saw mill with large capactly, which Is not In operation at present. H. H. McReynolds runs the Uklah hotel and the livery stable. These are two of the best Institutions of the kind In the county. Mr. Huston has been In the business for four years, though he has lived In the Camas Prairie country for more than 20 years, and operated' the stage line between Pendleton and Uklah for a number of years. The hotel proper ty alone cost more than $3500. He Is able to entertain all travelers that come this way, as well aB provide comfortable quarters for teams. Among the coming towns of the In land Empire, Ukiah will not be left behind. She has the country to back her, and with a splendid corps of live business men to develop her resources and keep her well to the front her growth cannot be otherwise than rapid, both as to population and wealth. DE LANEY. Rubber Goods OVERSHOES, ALASKA HIOH FRONT RUBBERS, OTTAWAS, nOTORMEN'S RUBHER VAA1PS, ARCTIC, 3 AND 4 BUCKLE, ARCTICS FOR CRUISERS AND LUMBERMEN .... Tho most complete lino in tho city. All of tho beat quality. 1902 stock, and nt calico pricoa. . . The November Clothing Sale is a Suc cess and You Ought Not to Mss it AIR SHIPS FREE With every purchase of One Dollar or more of Children's clothing of any kind McGEE SKIRTS. $1.50 to $5 see postofTice window What do you know about them? BotterBeo them today while they last, wo have an unbroken still Kid Fitting Corsets Eft it on sale today. The new "Crescent Hip" gives promise of a perfect figure. Watch for Our Great THANKSGIVING "AD" Boston Store IH1IIIUUII1HI UUinUUIl UBMBMM Grand Clearance Sale j STEAKS jj You can always get tender, Juicy steak at our market. It's just what you need to satisfy yourappetlteaud build up your strength during the full and winter months. Any thing you wont In the meat line, come to us, we hove It uud the bent of the kind. Low prices and satisfaction prevail Otto Miesckc C O V H T S T H.Ii H T Natives Are Indifferent. rvno Imlioi- Xnritinr recently from Mlnhlmn urilrt; "Yon Oreironlans aro strange people. Here you have lived for years In one of the finest timber belts in the United States and seem oblivious of the fact. Many of you Imvp ni.vnr Imiiuht nn acrt of timber and not even exercised you home stead right. People from the de forested states in the East especially Michigan. Wisconsin and Minnesota aro locating the finest of the timber In Southern Oregon, Tillamook, Grant and Crook county timber belts. You seem utterly Ignorant of the value, and indifferent to the fate of your lorests. Kxcellent timber exists In Eastern Oregon. Finer timber than that In Tillamook county Is not any where to be found. Your resources are so numerous it makes you Indlf lerent to one of your most Important products your timber. When It Is largely owned by outside corpora tions you will begin to wonder why vou did not preserve It from spoliation." For the next Sixty Days we will sell Carpets, Rugs, Lace Curtains, Poitiers, Wall Paper and Sewing Machines at a Big Reduction. In fact everything in our store will go at a Great Discount for Cash. This is the chance of a lifetime to buy goods cheap. Call and get our prices. Undertakers' goods always on hand at reduced prices JESSE FAILING Phone Main 24 iiinnnnii niMHHIHIl :j GOOD SHOW TONIGHT. Startling, But True, "If every ono knew what a grand medicine. Dr. King's New Life Pills in." writes- D. H. Turner, Dempsey town, Pa., "you'd sell all you have lu a day. Two weeks' use has made a iiew man of me." Infallible for con stipation, 3tomach and liver troubles. IB cento at Tallmann & Co's. drug store. The supreme court of the United States has decldod that any stream In which logs can be floated Is a nav igable stream and that therefore no obstruction, such as log booms, can be constructed therein without the con sent of the war department. The Comedy-Drama, "On the Stroke of 12," at the Frazer. The patrons of melodrama in th's city will have an opportunity of see ing W. IJ. Lawrence's production of the sensational comcdy-dramu, "On the Stroke of 12," the great success of the past three seasons. The sue ress of this plcco has proven It a strong play, abounding In btartllng scenes aud climaxes and with com plete new scenic equipment and greatly strengthened company, It should be one of tho strongest popu-Ian-priced attractions on tho road this year. The play takes Its title from an attempted escape from pris on that tho hero makes In tho third act, and a scene In a counterfeiter's den Is another novel and exciting In cident. The scenery Is carried com plete for the production, and It will bo among the handsomest shown on the stage this season. "On the Stroke of 12" should Insure a packed house at tho Frazer tonight. Mr. Horace Lewis In "A Poor Rela tion." An attraction of an exceptional high order will bo the appearance of Mr. Horace Ixswls In the late Sol Smith Russell's famous comedy, "A Poor llclatlon," at the Frazer opera house on Saturday night of this week. Mr. Lewis has been tho great favorite of the Castle Square Theater In Doston for the past flvo years. It Is said that he gives such a strong and life-like performance of Noah Vale that tho audience Immedi ately enters with complete sympathy Into the story of his trials, reverses and success. The Indications are for a very large audience for this attrac tion. The seats will be on sale at Frazler's tomorrow morning, Wednes day, at 9 o'clock. Fat Veal. Plenty of nice fat veal at Farmers' Moat Market. O. Platzoeder. General Grant's War Hone. fleneral Grant took great delight In exhibiting his horses to his friends with whom he was intimate, Onco at his stahlu with a frlond he said: "Perhaps you would llko to seo the horse I rode during all tho campaigns I commanded. Tho animal was or dered to bo brought out. Tho gentleman was surprised to And the horse no larger than n lady's palfrey small, slender, agll limbed, black as a coal. Intelligent, mild, an eye llko a hawk and n lick on tho man (or all tho world like a boy's cowlick. It was such an animal as women and children would make a family pet. The gentleman pronounced tho ani mal a beauty, but expressed a doubt to Its endurance, "Kndurance!" said the gnwial. "This animal exceeds lu endurance any horse flesh I ever saw. I have taken hlin out ut daylight, and kept him In the saddle till dark, and ho amo In as fresh when I dismounted aB when wo started in tho morning. There Isn't enough gold In America to buy him." A Neighboring Industry. Tho La Grande Sugar Factory, wiiitn twit vt ilnim with this season's beet ctop has had the most success ful run It lias or.joyca since us es tablishment. Up to last night, tho nmrinnt n r linotH handled was 10.000 tons; tho amount of new sugar made, 23,000 sacks, besides ww sscks 01 brown sugar, from tho syrup left over from last year. The crop will bo har vested by the end of next week. The Michigan bean crop Is short this year to such an extent that far mers will lose $1,600,000. Tho price has Jumped from $1.00 to $2.25 per hundred this week. The International Livestock Kxpo sltlon will be held In Ohlcugo, Nov. ember 23 to December 0. 1