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About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1893)
Independence at Stark's hotel, which TME POLK COUNTY ITEMIZER ' , has been repaired aud greatly improv Jackson is the sole proprietor of the Goldeudale meat market. Doctor A P. Slowed and wife arc in Ohio at the lied ide of an atHicted broths, of ( Mrs. Stowed. James C'oflield has returned from the World’s Fair aud Janies Brainard amt wife and Lclc Goodin« and wife are now at the White City. Harry Wheelhouse has removed from Columbus to Colfax. Hugh Oourlay M ILL CHEEK. gives good satisfaction as editor of the J. B. Netherton is driviug Syron’s Goldeudale St ntinel. lumber team. MONM OUTH! The building season has just begun in earnest and all the carpenters have their hands full. Otto Meesman, the Vassal! boys and Wm. Ellis will each build fine houses, while T. C. Bell, D. W. Gilliam, C. C. Gardner and G. W. Gardner will erect hop houses. Sever al others will build barns and other wise improve their premises. one to dig and blast out a foundation j Let us again remind correspondents for his flouring mill on Mill Creek. | that matter sent hy Thursdays mails Having been a lime quarrvman in does not reach us until after the paper 1 Wales that exactly suited him. He has gone to press. All correspondence j did considerable work for Mr. Buell who should I e seut as early in the week as The new addition to Dallas, lies four blocks southwest of was making lumber which he had to possible. I the court house, commanding a view of the whole town and exchange for stock as money was then about like it is this summer. Afterward surrounding country. Shade trees are set out along all the he worked for Nathau Conner. Dr. Jackson and others and made money streets, which are graded and 80 feet wide. Size of lots— enough to hu v forty acres of lanj where 1 80x144, with allleys through the M ocks . Isaac Hughes lives this sida of Falls City, then he bought a team and hauled anything and everything, and as fast as he had a little money ahead it was invested in land until he had 800 acres where the Meifarth’s now live. He These lots are sold on the installment plan— $10 cash, lias sold down to about 200 acres. For balance on three, six, nine and twelve months’ time without several years he has been boarding in Dallas and living at his ease His pres interest. This is by long odds the prettiest and best addi ent home is with Mrs. Naomi Shelton tion to Dallas. at the Arlington house. He has seen seventy-five summers come and go and is getting stiffer and less strong. He took cows for his mill work at Buell's mill, and let various people have them to milk until ha was ready to keep them on his place. All his possessions It is not a lieer schooner that the were the result of hard work and fruga little man ia gazing into with sur lity. prise, but a basket of novelties pur chased at E. Kimball's barn raising was on P resident , ................................................. W. H. HOLMES. PATTON’S SALEM BOOK STORE Wednesday and not Sunday as our V ice -P resident , - - ' ............................................ Z. F MOODY. For the most meritorious members S ecretary . types erroneously stated. ............................................................P 8. KNIGHT. of a country school. They did not T reasurer , ............................................................. J. H. ALBERT. Fail not to read that interesting ar cost much, hill will delight th ticle by Dr. Waterhouse about the first DIRECTORS: children. They have everything fruit trees in Oregon. imaginable for school use. P. 8. Knight, J. II. Albert, J. M. Keene, E. C. Crow. VV. H. Holmes, Mrs. Mary Bogue, of Corvallis, is BLANK BOOKS OF ALL KINDS. here visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. I John Ellis. FIB. PARK! ed in all respects. The town seems to hold its own but is not just now grow r. A . W A S H , ing very rapidly. Many homes »how resum ía AMD morunua. outward signs of care and culture, but it is evident that the dram shops have WALLAS, ÏRIDAY. JUNK. 80 . Ite». too much prominence fnd exert too great an evil influence in that midst. Before 8 o’clock next morning we had th e o f f ic ia l c o u n t y paper . tied up at the new residence which Jasper Kennedy is building for Mrs. Lots of coasters and lumber haulers Mulkey A Hale have their brick store Susan Jones two miles north of the passing along. SUBSCRIPTION RATES i house about ready to move into. * U6............................................. Ptr TMur commercial center, having halted for Rev. D. R. Evans has eight acres of 00 ........ .................... P«r nix month. The town is extremely quiet since 80............................... Per thra« month* a brief interview with George Macauley fine looking prunes. school is closed and students gone Adv.r bring ret« ruk U known on .pplioa- at the old Dice homstead. J. A. Grigs The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. J. home, » ion. Correepondence ie solicited. a Pine Job Printing don. et reeeonehle prices by now owns 2G 0 acres of the place, C. Taggart has been very sick. Mrs. Dawson has gone to Butte C ty, which Harry Burbank sold to Elisha 8. Hinshaw will go to seek a new Montana, on a visit to her daughter McDaniel. Mrs. Jones lives ou a part home in the Nestucoa country. living there. R A M B U S tí AROUSO. o f the Hawkins donation. She came Mrs. L. Belts. Mrs. Cyrus Blair and Miss Mary Foulkes, of Portland, to the county with her mother, Mrs. Laura Hinshaw have been sick. esme up to attend the normal exer- Lust Friday afternoon we started out Fudge, in 1847 and is a cousin to the L. M. Oviatt has several acres in cises and visit friends. to reconnoitre some of the country be Whiteaker brothers. The Kays family beans and is building a new barn. Mrs. Jacobs and her two daughters tween here and Independence. Ju.-t abide at the old Fudge homestead, and Apples, ¡iears, prune» and the like in left Wednesday for their home in Port bevohd Wm. Millers home we noticed land. We shall miss them. on the east side of t' e road a little this section are not very abundant. t hat T. M. Bailey has dug a tine cellar People will soon begin to fix up their north is the gloomy looking, decaying Hinshaw Bros, are doing some grub in the bank near his new residence, and big house built by Bethuel Dove about bing, preparatory to enlarging their rooms again for the students in Sep on the barn beyond is a sign which in tember. an it will not he long until the 1849. Just there we passed Ben Hay hop yard. big crowd will be here again. dicate« that the Grant place, where J. H. Hinshaw has sold his interest in den trudging up the road with a cane, C. Proctor’s family now live, has been 8. K. Crowley came home from the the Yamhill sawmill and is back on his stiff and tottering steps showing Califo-ilia piines la»t Thursday for a named Maplewood. Just this side of the creek. that he is fast getting frail. That has short visit with his family and reports the old Harris homestead, now owned The road between here and Sheri work progressing finely there. become quite a hop region. The low by Geo. Rowel iff«, is located on the dan is being much improved by Super lands both above and below Independ On account of continued ill health visor Guttry. brick yard ground the tile factory of ence are covered with them. Among Holt Fulkerson has resigned as presi John Leitch. Everything is now in J. M. Davis has finished his hop dent of the council. No appointment the new crops put out George Macau house and Al. White and wife have to fill the place has yet been made. good running order and half a dozen ley has 15 acres, Oliver Jones and Eph moved to Dallas. hands are turning out lots of tile of all Young 10 each, Ben Hayden 20, H. S o u t h M e t o d lu t C o n f e r e n c e s . With four horses Gene Brown drew aises. Bee advertisement and price Hirschberg 45 and Ed. Dove 80. We 2,700 feet of green lumber from The first one held in Oregon was iu list in this issue. After being run 1866, Bishop Kavanaugh presiding and found John Teal and Wm. Jones re Brown's saw mill. through the molding machine the sec W. A. Finley, secretary; Bishop Mar ---- THE VERY BEST QUALITY OF---- pairing the Dice bridge and the day be Your postmaster Grant has been vin came in 1868 and Bi hop Wight- tions are set away in the shade to dry fore Jesse Berry had been badly hurt out this way iu search of trout and to man in 1870 with Jos. Emery as secre before being burned. They are allowed there by falling from a tree while make him feel better. tary. Next came Bishops Keener, Mc- from one to three weeks to dry, accord The cheapest and the best feuce in use. Winds do not blow it down ; Hood* fastening a guy rope. A short distance A young horse kicked the cart of Tyiere, Doggett and Pierce. In 1882 ing to the dryness or dampness of the do not wash it awuy ; overflows do not injure it; it does not decay. For fur north is the home of Mrs. Jas. Jones, John Bones into kindling wood and came Bishop Hargrove with J. W. ther particulars call at our office over weatli >r, and after that comes two to Compton as secretary. Then came and near by that of her soninlow, Eph left wounds on his face and arms. Bishops Galloway, Hendrix and Dun three days in a heated furnace before Our camp ground has been cleared Jones. A. J. ByerB lives next and then can. The annual conference of 1867 A good supply on hand and for sale at either the mill or St they are stacked away for farmers use. we came to the hop yard of Pierce up and the Methodists will begin a was held on Lacreole camp ground, the yard in Dallas. protracted meeting there July 8th Mr. Leitch has already sold considera 10 T Correspondence solicited. Salem, Oregon. that of 1870 iu Dallas, that of 1874 at Riggs, before crossing the Brunk bridge. ble of it and the indications are that Mrs. E. H. Stone, a former Dallas- Dixie, in 1883 at Independence and at Many a time in passing to and irom C H E A P AS T H E CH EAPEST. ite, now of Nestucca, is back from a Dallas again ill 1889. Some may say there will be a steadily increasing de Salem have we seen Harrison Brunk visit of some mouths among eastern why go back and bring up these old mand. He has a machine for making sitting on his front or hack porch and friends. time things, our answertieing because brick, and proposes to soon turn out a - they will bring back pleasant recollec his grand child playing around him, H. Bailey,.once of Buena Vista, now superior article in that line. The old but never before had we an opportuni of Wil'amina, has invented a haling tions to many who attended some of brick kilu has not very many left, the thoee conferences. ty to stop and interview him. He machine which he thinks will bale present price being $8 per 1,000. C. straw as fast as it come» from a steam P io n e e r R e m in is c e n c e s . J» H. Nunn, Proprietor. came to this county io 1849 and settl- thresher. It is arranged to feed ill the P. Zumwalt was there getting a load In 1852 Morris Jones arrived over a little northwest of Dixie, some of his center and bale both ways and will be to line a well near Perrydale. The Jos land at The Dalles dead broke, and gave Full stock of best quality seasoned lumber and all neighbors being Thomas GofT, Col. ready for work in a few days. his watch for passage to Portland. Not Emmons place looked lonesome, his kinds of dimension timbers. Doors, windows, brace ts, Ford, H. M. Waller, Dr. Boyle, Ab and finding much to do there, he struck REA L ESTATE TRAN SFE RS. home being in Dallas, and P. 8. Green Perry 8mith. After living there for out into th«1! country at random, hunt mouldings, laths, shingles, cedar posts, ornamental fencing wood occupies the George Tillotson ing work. He drifted to the Salt Creek and stair material. six years he sold the place to A. C. R. Sarah Ritner to John Kitner, 130 Prices of doors, 2£x6|xl^, $1.75; 2§x- place. The next farm belongs to E. P. acres of land in t 10 a, r 6 w . $ store of Uncle Jimmy Biggs, who t<*W Shaw for $5,000, and paid Mr. Shiiw David Sanders to A V Hamilton, 6§xlJ, $3; 2|x6£xl£, $2; 2§x6fxl£, $2.25; shingles, $2.50; him that Father Buell wanted somfc Gwinn, who now lives in Dallas to edu $6,000 for the section of land on which 80 acres in t 8 s, r 4 w ........i . . 1 common windows, $1.25 to $2.50. Door and window frames cate his children. Chas. Coolidge al he now lives. In 1857 he bought the E W Cooper to V A Hamilton, carried in stoex. Terms cash, or bankable note in 30 days. ways manages to have plenty of every 100 acres in t 8 s. r 4 w 6,500 present Manley Martin place of Hugh thing around him. and when water W G Campbell to Ishaaml Peters, t ; McN»ry and moved to his present 350 acres in t 7 s, r 6 w ....... 4,000 *' 1»i. 'Î K l i ï i i melon time conies around he generally Ì k ì E home in 1861. His wife, who was a Warren L Frink to Walter G heads the piocession. We had a pleas sister of Mac Waller, died only a few Vassail, 45 acres in t 8 s, r 6 w 343 ant chat with Mrs. C. A. Miller, who months ago. He is in his 82nd year Ella V Heflley to T R HetlWy, £ seems almost like kinfolks because her interest in certain lands in t 8 and not very atrong physically and his s, r 5 w ..................................... 2,000 father, David Parker, who lives south sight is very defective. Until 75 years John Ellis to W H Hester and Ewer offered in footwear. $ 10,000 worth of ladies, miss Lawn Mowers, Garden Tools, .Rubber Hose, l ’lows, Har of Independence, first saw daylight in of age he was a constant worker. H B Plummer, lot in Dallas 2,000 es and childrens’ shoes will besold at actual cost. We have rows, Road Machinery; Wagons, (.'ar.ts. Mowers, Rakes, the same county where the writer was When his present place- was bought it J (> Davidson to Directors school born in the blue grass region of Ken decided to close out our shoe department and therefore we farm Implements of Every Description, Hardware, Iron and district No. 11, 1 acre in t 9 s, had hilt twenly acres in cultivation, tucky. Charlie Miller may not bo v offer these prices. Save youi money See our goods and Steel. The Largest Stock, Best Selections and Lowest Prices. w ......................................... 40 now there are 40ft Not less than $2,- M r C 4 and F K Hubbard to W L rusher, but he keeps moving and no save yourself 2& Per cent. 000 has been spent in grubbing and Gilson, lots in Falls C ity........ 1 season ever fails to find him with a other wise clearing the land and W T Bhurtleff to A M Bryant, variety of things to sell. Things look Corner »State and Liberty streets, Salem. lots in Falls City .................... 1 this season they have sixty acres of well around the home of David Martin. Krai« Oil new ground. His son, Tom Vniideriiiaii Scott to Catherine E 307 COMMERCIAL STREET. SALEM. OREGON. Stump, 101 acres in t 8 a, r 5 w 956 Jos. Loe has 140 acres of good ground, mie, is running the farm and is put W E Williams to Mrs Sarah Se- of which more than half is auminerfal through the Boothbay (Me.) JtegUUr, ting up a large stock barn in the ele bring, laud in Airlie........ . . 10 Speaks of the beneficial results he has received from lowed for next years wheat. If a buyer Hanford Fowle to F A Link, 20 vated woodland southeast of the rt a regular use of A yer's Pills, He says: “ I should happen along he would sell it deuce. acres in t 9 s, r 6 w .................. 1 was feeling sick and tired and my stomach Cyrus Buell to Laura B Buell, 20 at $56 an acre. Grace Evangelical seemed all out of order. I tried a number acres in t 6 s, r 6 w ................. 1 of remedies, but none seemed to give me church, situated where the Monmouth F A L L S C IT Y . relief until I was induced to try the old relia W 8 Mott to James Mitchell, 160 and Independence roads diverage, has ble A y e r’« Pills. I have taken only one The young men who got so badly acres in t 6 s, r 6 w ..................4,000 been leaking around the spire, which used up are ge ting along nicely. box, but I feel like a new man. I think they D B Stevens to W S Mott, ^ in are the most pleasant and easy to take of has just been repaired. Several deno terest in 165 acres iu t 6 s, r 6 Lumber from the various mills w anything I ever used, being so finely sugar- w ................................................ 2,500 z W . W . JO H N S — minations preach there, and they have passing through town at a lively rate. -*s® coated that even a child will take them. I Sarah Sebring to A C Merler, urge upon all who are in need of a laxative Sunday school at 2 :30. Turning into R. M. Gilbert is now drawing lum land in Airlie............................ 200 to try A y e r’s Pills. They will do good.” a gate on the right half a mile brought ber with two teams, having purchased Mrs A A Cattron to J P 1 liens, Never had a larger or better stock. F o r all diseases o f th e S tom ach, U v e r r us to where Wm. Percival settled al a new team and outfit. and B ow els, take lots in M onmouth.................... 150 most forty years ago. Harvey Guthrie Small grain is looking splendid end J F Harritt et at to J Y Bryan et ux, 4 acres in t 7 s, r 3 w 200 now owns and occupies the farm, but promises an abundant crop. Grass is Jno Metzer to Sam Stone, 25 Prepared by Dr. J . O. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. was away working in his father's hop also very liar and the prospect for a acres in t 6 s, r 6 w ................ 75 large hay crop is good. 4 - Every D o s e E f f e c t i v e yard down on the Willamette. Here Ladies soft and laundried waists, The very latest and Wild staawberries have been very LU CRI A M UTE. we go trotting eastward and right here best o f everything in their line. plentiful this year, while the tame ones is the place to introduce to the public have only been a medium crop, and A. J. Harmon is carpentering at ou. good old black horse, Coaly, who find reedy sale at 20 cents |>er gallon. Buena Vista. has seen fifteen summers glide by. Our - chin >1 will close Friday with R. M. Cramer, the organ man, is He is gentle as a kitten and Hairy planting organa in this vicinity in a appropriate exerciges. Coad’s children loved him almost as if manner that astonishes the native». John Leach, Proprietor. Mrs. J. Ashenfclter has been visiting he had been a brother, Now little He came in with a load of five this her parents in Salem. All the latest novelties in spring suitings. Full line ol week. Mias Eva Wash calls him her own, worsteds for dress suits. When in the city, call and look Will. Ireland has a new boy and Ed. Falla City is to have a blacksmith at Richardson a new girl at their homes. rides him astraddle, bridled or unbridl over his goods and have a suit made in style. ed and oan drive him any where. last. A smith has just arrived from Henry Lewis, our road supervisor, First class tile of all size* from threw Hungary with his family, and will in a has been doing some much needed French Chip, Tuscan Braids, English Mil.ms, all colors, including a line of Where Ben Whiteaker lived in years to eight inches in diameter. few days be ready to serve the public road work. pretty plaques, everyone cheap at $4.50, will be sold for $2. agone Oliver Webster now owns 200 in the capacity of an iron worker. A new lot of summer styles, elegant shapes, beautifully an d artistically Will. Miller and Miss Grace Chapin, acres of ground for which he paid $9,- trimmed, everyone cheap at $3, will be sold for $1. PRICES PER 1.000 FEET: of your city, spent Sunday at J. F Childrens’ hats, new and stylish, just the thing for summer w \ar, assort* 1 000. He is a worker and has extra Holman's. Three inch ........................................ $)S colors, prettily and daintily trimmed, cheap for $1.50, will be. sold for 50 cents. good crops as a result o{ it. He has Real, genuine, bighearted, bankable values—just w\iat the people want, find John Burns and family left Thurs Four in ch .......................................... 22 already put in 3,500 feet of tiling, day for eastern Oregon, to be gone Five in ch ............................................ ;tj to be appreciated must be seen. sunk three feet in the earth, and will Six in ch .............................................. 42 about six weeks. ORDERS SOLICITED ON APPROVAL. Seven inch ....................... (SO add more year by year. He is absolute Dyspepsia and Indigestion Seveial from this neighborhood at Eight inch........................... 70 ly certain that tiling land pays a big tended the Baptist association near per cent on the investment His Albany last week. neighbor, M. W. Mix, tried a little of it Mrs. Floyd, who has been very sick and was so well pleased with the result for the last few weeks, is improving slowly under the treatment of Dr. that be proposes to add shout 1100 Parrish. worth yearly. On a i»rt of the old Ed Harmon has bought a new steam Dice farm lives George Rogers, another threshing outfit of Mr. Graves, of Mon extra good farmer. He began tiling mouth agent for Russell A Co. and ex four years ago, and now has 92,000 feet pests to do first class threshing. — MANt’ FACTCRE K ANI) DEALER IN— of 2$ and 4 inch tile on his place. Wm. Leonard and Frank Ireland The smaller tile is planted four rods have in alsml 30 acre-« of |Kitatoes apart Any one who saw his last year’s 8ammie and Albert Thetherow half Ss ¡¿Sir crop eould no longer be a doubted as much and John Walker about 5, while * 5 '- — Also carts, wagons and a general assortmentjof— Ijtugharv Bros, have in about as much to the superiority of tiled over untile«' of corn. ground. Mr. Rogers will add more of Are warranted to thrush more grain in tt as the years roll by. We found him a given time ami do it belter than any FHOW » O l . URN D A L I W ASH IN G TO N . other machine made. building a tool and implement house, FRONT S T R E E T S A L E M , OR E3Q N. M r , . .V. P U k a Growing crops of gram ilo not prom .H B. Plummer, Dallas, „ ADVANCE TRACTION EN6INES Han Franetseo. and next winter all his farm machinery ise well. We have so far not had suf Are the beat in the world. Remem and utensils cau be found therein. The combination of excellent stomach ficient warm weather. A few warm Just as w drove up to the home of A Ionics In Hood's Sarsaparilla Is such that, days and gentle showers would gladden ber— large work means large profits in «C the threshing business. Catalogue j with proper attention to diet. Indigestion B Aikios, their soninlaw, John Kirk and even the worst cases of dyspepsia are and encourage the farmer» of Klickitat, mailed free by the general agent, who are just now uncertain as to what, laud ami his wife, came from Indepen cum! hy this medtclna. K.»d this: A nd a good lamp -Haring lor tSTSrnl years been crest], they will harvest. The wool industry EDWARD HUGHES. PORTLAND. 0RE6. dence. Mr. and Mrs. Atkins have a — DF.AI.KRS IN— tvoubled with Indigestion, and haying seen lias received a black eye in this that must be simple; when it is not simple it is j it ,-e home and plenty around them Hood’s Harsagarllta ndyer'lted. I eooclodod to there seems to be no demand for the a . I not good. Simple, Beautiful, Good— these ■ last clip and growers are unable to get IN C rV C Hia experiment with |*ach trees is not I J w -rds mean much, but to see “ The Rochester ” t an offer or even a small advance top.n T o n i c punning out well and lie will anhatiti.te will impress the truth more forcibly. All metal, -Builder for shearing Your old friend, Samuel IW IIIL tome more certain fruita. A couple of | tough and seamlesa, and made in three pieces only.A D. Carroll, living above town died on it is absolutely safe and unbreakable. Like Aladdin’s years ago we told of Fay and Norvel j the 24ih. New* was received from New o f old, it is indeed a “ wonderful lamp,” for its mar York of the death of John Urafion a making bank o«|aie<U. Thev now h.ve! Quassia, whale oil soap, hop twine, sulphur, burlap. velous light is purer snd brighter than gas light few days since. Mr. Crafton waa long their nionry out at interest, and before ' softer than electric light and more cheerful than either. a resident of this county. Isaac < Sole agents for Robert’a improved hydraulic pump 1 aorso long will have a snug »uni to luv what gfvs tt 1 trial To My happiness and great satis- Darland is now the Goldendsle jawt ta sk fca- t W . W r a p —T w a R o c n f l T i i . I f th » U n jp d »»]»T h»* o t th - p m l M lo c h c ft e r . t a d the y o a want, »end to uj (or oar new til not rated catatofne. they please. On ttw Jerome 1 Kirn.ill- n r tk m ! found it to 1* power sprayer. m i / remedy for this master with John Howard as assistant. t w ill eeod you a lam p aafely b y e s p ie s * yoor cbo*ce o f ower S ■NTl|4lVf pamph'et. r* from the Largtxi Lmmp Store in the W orld, farm we found A. Tnmludl, who paid & £ £ £ & * ■ A verst t Howard, the late postnisster Wool, mohair, hides, pelts, furs and hops bought at mar- io c h b s t k s L i a r o o .. «a r w a « ■ ■ » , t « a cur- has with his wife gone to L*>* Gatoe, Mr. Atkin» $65 i .- i a • •> tifty acre» . WILUANS’ M m «*» FMta sot anally, y.t promptly sod California, to reside. Simeon Bolton et price. MEDICINE CO., of it 1 » i. • ■ ........... » neat rvsi sMrlswtt,. sw tho Hear sod bow«lo. lie. an I Hugh O, t’ hiUips hsve purchased Schenectady, ii . t . dance lUereou. Nightiail found us iu 1 the I. C. Richards drug business. Hugh j *** O ffice. 231 C om ^ n ercia l strqpt, Salem , O regon . ••d ftnKkrlllc, Oat, F ou aauu) I v m t P u d at B t LOOKING INTO IT. PRICE $65 AND $95 PER LOT. Wm. P. WRIGHT, Agent. OREGON HEDGE J. A. G O O D H U E, General Manager, Suitor’s Saw M ill. Combined Hedge and Wire Properly Constructed Hedge Fences are the Most Durable. Rough and Dressed Lumber. LADD DALLAS LUMBER YARD. BUSH BAN IS. bt - GREATEST BARGAINS - y, GRAY BROS, P&l&c? D ry Qoods and Shoe S*orf' A FR IE N D HARNESS D R Y GOODS. J. J. DALRYMPLE & CO., SALEM SHOP. Farm Harness of Best Oak Tanned Leather. Single Buggy Harness 85.50 and Upwards 244 COMMERCIAL STREET, SâLEM, OREGON. A Y E R ’S PILLS TILE WORKS. D ALLAS, O R E C . JACKETS OF ALL KINDS. E L A n R -T ,- Leading Merchant Tailor, Special Sale Until July 1st SALEM, O H ^E O -O JSr. O F L A D IE S ’ FIN E T R IM M E D H A T S . CAR LOAD O F BUGGIES Hood’s Cures MRS. S- C- REED, ADVANCE THRESHERS 2 6 5 C o m m e r c i a l S ‘^ ’ « c -t j S ak^ m t ^ r * Doors. Windows Frames, Moldings A IL L KINDS OF FINIS». AND SCREEN DOCAS ANO WINDOWS. /tqniCULTUR/KL - M ACH IN ER Y W m . Brow n & Co. HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES and From the Corvallis Carriage Factory. Blood Seeing Is Believing.” Hop Grower’s Supplies, j SF “ The Rochester.”