Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927, September 03, 1908, Image 2

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    THE POLK COUNTY ITEMIZER.
A tlm utrd til till- .«H.ihd rlaaa ot m ail m atter.
— :-----------—
LABOR DAY IS RECOGNIZED.
UNDER THE BIG CLOCK.
DO YOU GET UP
WITH A LAME BACK ?
Kidney
Trouble Makes You
What Our County Official Have Done
Since Our Last Issue.
Miserable.
THURSDAY, SEP. 3, 1908.
now of the wonderful
cures made by Dr.
Kilmer’s Swamp-Root,
tnc great kidney, liver
V. P. FISKE.
and bladder remedy.
live«! away so many years will it not he
It is tlj»e great medi­
nice to come hack and see what their
Estate of John F. Davidson, deceas­ nephews ami neices ami pel haps grand­
cal triumph of the nine­
e
d
;
final
discharge
entered.
.
»1
50
teenth century dis-
Itemizer, one year in advance.............................................
children have been able to produce.
... 2 00
'l covered after years of
Guradianship of David East, insane; The fair is now four week’ s off, and tin*
SUBSCRIPTION ■ With Weekly Oregonian or Semi weekly Journal..........
... 1 75
[[ scientific research by
Nancy Gee appointed guardian.
plan is to about two weeks beforehand
§ Dr. Kilmer, the emi­
Estate of Martha Fuchs, deceased; i mail a unique circular invitation to
nent kidney and blad­
final account approved and administrat­ i each old reddent, now living away, re­
der specialist, and is
questing him on those dates to again vis­
or discharged.
r i Office,
257
1
TTT,T a I Í 0ffice>
11
wonderfully
successful
in
promptly
curing
it his old countv seat and he entertain­
BhLL ) Residence, 113
|
11 T AL ( Residence,!401
Guardianship of Hurk minors; final ed by friends and relatives. The first
lame back, kidney, bladder, uric acid trou-
This
woman
says
that
after
settlement
approved
;
guardian’s
resig­
bles and Bright's Disease, which is the worst !
thing needed is a list of those away, and
months of suffering I.ydia K. nation accepted and 0 . K. Focht ap­ Mr. Seymour hereby makes a special
form of kidney trouble.
Patroni t* On* A n o th er fo r the tJpbu ililina o f Tow n a n d C o u n ty .
Dr. Kilmer's S w a m p -R o o t Is not rec­ IMnkliam’s V«K«tuhle Compound pointed guardian.
plea to the children to take the matter
Estate of L. S. Perkins; deceased; up ami send him the names ami ad­
ommended for everything but if you have kid- ! matin her as well as «ver.
{final account appioved; executrix dis­ dresser- of their uncles, aunts, grandpar­
ney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found i
Just the remedy you need. It has been tested I Maude K. Forgie, of Leesburg,Va., charged and estate closed.
ents, cousins, or any former Polk county
in so many ways, iu hospital work, in private writes to Mrs. l'inkham:
In re.estate of Mary Neal; deceased ; residents that they may know of.
practice, among the helpless too poor to pur-
Father and mother might he likely to
inventory
and
uppraisiuent
filed
and
ap*
“ 1 want other suffering women to
chase relief and has proved ao successful in know what Lydia E. Fink ham’s Vege­ j proved.
neglect the matter, so this special plea
every case that a special arrangement has table Compound has done for me. F«>i
In re estate of Henry T. Baughman, to the young people, for they more than
been made by which all readers of th.» paper months I suffered from feminine ills deceased; bond tiled and approved and any should take an interest it» having
who have not already tried It, may have a so that I thought 1 could not live, i 1). \Y. Sears. F. S. Wilson and H. Hirch- their far away relatives present and see
sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book wrote you, and after taking Lydia E i burg appointed appraisers.
what they have exhibited. To make
telling more about Swamp-Root and how to Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, ami
the affair a success this matter cannot
find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble, i using the treatment you prescribed 1
be delayed, so put on your thinking
When writing mention reading this generous felt like a new woman. I am now
cap and send or hand Mr. Seymour a
list at once. He will then know how
offer in this paper and
strong, and well as ever, and thank you
many invitations to issue andean get to
send your address to
_ „
for the good you have done me.”
j R W Hogg et ux to W O Nevins,
Dr. Kilmer & Co.,Bing-
land in t 7 s, r 3 w .
2450 work at once. If yon are not able to
see
or send him, phone the Iteiuizer of­
FACTS
FOR
SICK
WOMEN,
hamton, N. Y. The
—— .
I N Woo<Is et ux to J I) Holman,
will see that he gets it.
regular fifty cent and Homo <>r Rwamp-Ttoot. | For thirty years Lydia E. Pink-
240 acres, t 8 s, i
10 fice, ami we
----------- -------------------
dollar bizes are sold by all good druggists.
ham’s Végétaiile ComiKiund, made Jessie H and H D I'ugh to Dee
Dr. W. S. Carey and pary, Mrs. Em­
Do not make any mistake, hut re from roots and herbs, has been the
Parker, 9 acres, t 7 s, r 3 w . . .. 1340
ma Belt, Miss Xnla Coad, Mr. and Mrs
member the name, Swamp-Root, Dr standard remedy for female ills, J R Arthur et ux to G E Cutler,
J.
M. Campbell, H. C. Eakiu ami fami­
Kilmer’ s Swamp-Root, and the address and has pos itively cured th(msands < 1 1
950
land in t. 7 and 8 s, r 5 w .........
ly, Mr. and Mrs. C. L Crider and Mr.
ingharnpton, N. Y . on every bottle.
Wesley .1 Atchison to Aaron May-
women who have l*en troubled with
Mrs E. bipton, returned from New­
bee, lot in Dallas.....................
1100 and
displacements, inflammation, ulcéra Martha B Stafrin to J SCook, lot
port since our last issue.
tion,
fibroid
tumors,
irregularities,
in 1 >alla * ..................................................
350
»tute* in the Uuion. It u u »triking
periodic pains, backache, that bear­ J I Murphy et ux to Margaret M
f.ict thiit though lumber prices have ing-down feeling, flatulency, indices
Devine, 89 acres, t 8 s, r 6 w .
1150
papers is sure
Probate Court.
'PHONES:
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
been steadily going up during the tlon, dizziness or nervous prostration.
l.iat half century, the per capita con­ Why don’t you try it ?
Mrs. Plnkham Invites
sir’s
sumption of lumber has also been go
In the matter of the C. A Kerber
women to write her for advice. road petition ; Jus. Burn*, Ja«. Lee and
ing on.
Mhc has guided thousands to Ben Bagley made viewers to meet w ith
I the county surveyor or» September 11th.
After long debate last night the | health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
Commissioners’ Court.
all
The man who goes away from his mercial organizations which are work­
home town to buy good* generally ing to increa e the state’s population.
gets buncoed. A little investigation
Figures of the lumber cut iu 19 *7
would nearly always show that you
compiled bv the bureau of the census
could get the article cheaper at home.
and the forest sevffce showed the
The chairman of the Multnomah largest t tal ever reported in t,,e
republican
precinct com m ittee has United States, exceeding by over sev­
failed to comply with the request of en per cent the cut reported for 19<I6,
tkc democratic chairman for both j until then the record year. This does
parties to publish a list of their cam ­ j not show a larger actual cu t than
paign subscriptions. Is some of it , 190«, for the returns obtained last
vear we e more com plete than ever
tainted?
before. The figures themselves dis­
Advertising Oregon is the title of a close some interesting facts. The fig­
page in Printers Ink of July 8th, one ures of production show that during
of ‘ he most widely known of advertis­ 1907 Washington fell off very decided­
ing journals. And it is no wonder ly from its huge cut of 190«, while its
that the state’s work along these lines sister state, Oregon, is credited with
has attracted this attention, for no a slight increase in i's total. In the
portion of America is circulating the early part of the year W ashington
attractive literature that burdens the suffered from a car shortage, and at
mails of Oregon every day in the year. the end the combined effects of busi
Now that the colonists rates are to he ness disturbance and higher freight
into ettVct <5very citizen «.f the state rates had hr on _ ht the industry al­
should feel it his duty to advertise the most to p ralvsis. Oregon kept up
fact in his personal correspondence, its cut because of its larger propor­
to send information about his com ­ tion of coastwise and rorei.-n trade.
munity to eastern acquaintances and These two states together produce
to aid in every possible way the com- more lumber than any other two
ADAMS & BROBST CO.
Central Federated Union, which is |
tlie central organization of the iaborl
unions of this city affiliated with the
\merican Federation of Labor, i -
dorsed a resolution a* opted by tin
Elevator ( W m - t f l .
..
,m,l M ill Wo‘nen Suffragists Turned Down !
Want no Taffy.
wright's Union. The resolution reads!
as follows: At ft special meeting of I
------
the
» hove or^.inuntioii held oil j Oakland, C alif, Aug. 28.—Woman
August 27, 1908, it was resolved that suffragists of California hurled defiance
we pledge our support to the pre idem at delegates to a state republican con-
of the American Federation of Labor vention in this city today, after refus-
rd of
of the
the same
same big to accept a risiug vote of thank
and the executive board
by our votes to defeat the republican tendered them as consolation in lieu of
a resolution favoring extension of the
party, which has been responsible for ballot to women. The delegates were
drastic action taken against labor’s just ready to adjourn when Frank D«»m-
just demands. We pledge further ingue moved to extend the thanks of
our support to W. J. Bryan and the the convention to the suffragettes, “ who
denp « ratio party in the com ing elec inspired the delegates to acts of higher
tion for protecting organized labor by statesmanship by their presence.” At
inserting in their platform a labor this the delegate's stood up, doffed their
recommend and pledging its support hats and cheered the women. In the
midst of this, however, Mrs. Agues
to the same.— Oregonian.
Perse, of Denver, one of the suffragettes,
walked down the aisle with clenched
Teams are over from the Horst yard fists and facing the chairman said:
“ Mr. Chairman, the women refuse to
to take over the Lovelady, Frakes, Cut­
ler an*l other families, who will pick accept tin; the thanks of this convention.
You
need not think you can pass us off
there.
with thanks; we are not here to please
Stanley Noel, a brother of Felix Noel, men, we are here because we have g«*t a
anil who at one time lived here and right to take a part in government.
worked in the flouring mill lias pur­ We will not give up this fight.”
chased the Washburne mill at Spring-
There was cheering on part of Mrs.
field. Mr. Ndel has been living at Pease’ supporters, after which the con­
Klamath Falls, of late vears.
vention adjourned.
We have rented a part of our store and in order
to reduce our stock we will slaughter prices re-
ardless of cost.
Our big stock of Furniture,
toves, Farm Implements, Vehicles have got to go
to be reduced.
f
Æ^yW
A ^\ x /l m
\ à
V* /
/
V
■
‘ v.
¿
y
V*
J' ~ ;
Great Western Air Tight Hot Blast Heaters
Are great f u e l
savers, great lasters
and the n e a t e s t
heaters on the mar­
ket.
Yes the price
will suit you.
SIDEBOARDS
In quarter sawed
oak, very Hakev and
highly polished.
Large glass and
lined drawers.
Dallas Furniture
Co’s price
#45
Adams & Brobst
Co*8 price.
$30
B U F F E T
In
quarter sawed oak, highly polished, bevel
plate glass, largo and roomy.
Dallas Furniture Co’s price
.. $38
Adams & Brobst Co’s price
$27
DRESSERS
In quarter sawed oak highly polished, large
roomy drawers, bevel plate glass.
Dallas Furniture Co’s price
.....
#38
Adams & Brobst Co’s price
$26
H A C K
A HACK JUST LIKE CUT
Triple spring in front,
1 1-8 inch axle and
¡wheels, riveted rims, double reach gear, leather
i trimmed seats.
Dallas Furniture Co’s price
................. $85
Adams & Brobst Co’s price
$70
OPEN HALF PLATFORM WAGON
Climax gear with bent reaches and center reach.
Dallas Furniture Co’s price
$110
Adams & Brobst Co’s price
$80
Pears by the Carload.
Bear picking af the Wallace farm in
Folk county is still in progress. Them
is a large crop being harvested of fi ;e
pears that are kings of their kind.
About 300 tons of this fruit will be pick­
ed which goes to Portland i«>r cold stor­
age until next winter. A car will hold
from 500 to 700 bushels of fruit. About
a car load is picked eveiy day, though
on the second picking which is now on,
it m iv not quite read» that amount.
The pickers were laid off the latter
part of last w’eek because the pears were
net filling as rapidly as usual. This
was on account of dryness «>f the soil
LAUGH A R Y ’ S GROCERY.
*
>
>
Mrs.J. L. Dunn, of Elienshurg, Wash.,
is here visiting her sister, Mrs. W. P.
Miller. She will go .next week to Vail
couver, where her husband is conduc­
tor on the new railroad.
Rickets.
Simply the visible sign that baby’s tiny bones
are riot form in g rapidly enough.
L a ck of nourishment is the cause.
S c o t t ’s E m u l s i o n nourishes baby’s
K
entire system. Stimulates and makes bone.
Exactly what baby needs.
ALL DRUGGISTS! 50c. AND $1.00
>*">*
NEWPORT
Yaquina Bay
Marriage Licenses.
Oregon’s Matchless Beach
OLD HOME REUNION.
Polk’s Former Residents to be Ask­
ed to Come
And Look Once More on Scenes of
Their Childhood.
B. F. JONES
Attorney-at-Law
j »imiified
!i
S
P
5
%
W.H. R O Y A
CO
WOOD FOR SALI
¡ADAMS — & Successors
BROBST
CO. f j ,
To—
AUGUST BOWMAN
Resort
T he P lace to (io fo r P eraect Rest a n j Every Conceivable
Form o f Healthf.il and D elightful R ecreation
ITS F A C IH I TE ARE COMPLETE —Best or fool iin i an abundance of it.
Fresh water from springs. All mo lern necessities, such as telegraph, tele-
phoney markets freshly provide«! every lay. Fa *1 in aoundance. Cottage
partly furnished or unfurnished to be had ch uplv. Stiict municipal sani­
tary regulations
NEWPORT is reached b vw ay of Southern Puriffeto Vlbany or Corvallis
thence Corvallis tSc Eastern It. R. Train service «laily and the trip is a pleas­
ure throughout.
RATES FROM
Patents.
Yesterday the Iteiuizer suggested to
Cnuntv School Superintendent Seymour
INDEPENDENCE, OR.
! thot it would not he a bad idea to send
Probate work a specialty.
out invitations to pll the old Polk coun­
ty hoys and girls requesting them to
again visit the scenes of their youth on
| the dates arranged for the Polk county
School Industrial fair. Mr. Seymour
thought the proposition a good one and
hi» do sire to do all he could to
grand success after the papers
fa i!
it a gram
9 C j of the countv h ad sufficiently advertised
the fact and he furnished with the nec-
list of absent ones. Such old
S i : ssary
.............
home comings have been in vogue in
the east for a number of years. ai»d
I have proven a grand success wherever
| tried, in fact many places, especially ii»
New England, they have been made an
| annual affair, something along the lines
HOUSEW IFE
Jgl ! of our pioneer reunions. It is a chance THE
{for all who have lived in each section to will have good crockery if'
meet together an«! recount old times. she lias to go without Other)
Many hack there come from as far as
tilings to get it Good crock-1
across the ocean, just to once again
ery
is the housewife’s pride. I
mingle with their childhood friei»«ls. It
not have to g o 1
is a great pleasure to those who have You will
continued to reside in any given com- j w i t h o u t O t h e r t h i n g s i f you
H: »»»unity, and the eagerness with which
n
they come from all directions shows it 3 t i y
Y our
C rock ery
Her 1.
•
. » ...
.
jjj to he a twofold jov to those who have i;
h«en long away. W ill»,,,........ o „r
a ,1 ,| ltl0 n t o t h e f i n e s t
er residents just begin to think of those I ;^D(i m o s t
C o m p l e t e i i s s o r l- \
who lived here twenty, thirty, fortv or H lO llt o f « l i s h e s y o u C a n i l l i a g -
fiftv years ago, w here thev are now. and m e \VC o f f e r
n r ic c s
w h ich
£
«3
“J
J
■"« « r»....... »
'» ...........
!T e ” r , “ i - |
hands with them once again, find out i
1
,
r.x. .
,.
h o« th,. world ha» u»ed them, and hear d e l » " r d > a se ,l.
i I lls applies ,
of their troubles and their joys. To ^ w h o l e Set.S o f f ilm c h i Mil
thmeoutainer», t<>«, would it not 1 « a w a r e o r t o t h e c o m m o n e r ar-
Axle 1 1-4 inch, body 7 feet long, 2 feet 10 inches
pleasnre to them to onre more come ( ticlfcS f o r k i t c h e n 1,86.
i wide and patent wheels.
hack and greet their old fi*ien«ls, see the ,
changes that have taken plaee in old
Dallas Furniture Co’s price
#115
Ik county, its towns an«l its farms, j
Adams & Brobst Co’s p rice.........
S 9 0 S find
« out who had taken the long journ- [
ey of life, how others had prospered,
f s etc.?
e
We think it would, and that such
a celebration could bo made one long to
l»e remembered by all concerned. The
Dont miss this great sale, it means money to you.
Itemizer stands ready to do all in its
power
to assist, and knows that with
! We have not room enough to list all of our reduc­
the ri/h t kind «»f engineering, such as
tions here, hut give us a call and Sol Blessing will
our school superintendent will gladly
do, it can bo made a grand success.
Do you nee«l wood? In pre­
I show you the goods and prices.
paring to place your order
The school fair will lie held on Tues­
tiers remember that I am
day, Wednesday an«l Thursday, Septem­
able to furnish you all kitnls
ber 29th, 80th anti October 1st. At this
of slab w»>od from either of
time hop picking is entirely out of the
the Dallas sawmills, at the
way anti prune picking nearly so. Our
best possible rates. Send in
people are willing to relax a little anti
your orders bv either phone.
art* begin ing to look for something a
Mutual 119«; Bell 443.
little out of the ordinary dull routine.
They are hunting amusement, anti
DALLAS FURNITURE COMPANY
5 should have it. The school fair will thus
be made one of double purpose— the
education of the young by competition
in many branches of industrial anti
school work, and the amusement of the
elders in seeing what they have been
i able to perform. To those who have
MITCHELL HALF PLATFORM WAGON
H o rtL ARRIVALS
.’hursday:
Frances Cooper, Independence.
,J. S. Cooper., Independence.
J. M. McBride, Siletz.
Mabel Cooper, Imleuemlem^e.
t ienevieve Cooper, In«lepemlence.
11. Boydston, Dallas.
M. Browu Dallas.
Mrs. M. Blown, Dallas.
Friday:
K. C. Eldridgc, Independence.
J. 11. Flower, Falls City.
W. Douglas, Dallas.
Saturday:
K. P. Weir, Airlie.
Vanskike, Dallas.
W E. Martin, Dallas.
Sunday:
H. L. Fitchard, Independence.
E. C. Stray er. Dallas.
J. S. Cooper, Independence.
F. H. Pepper, Dallas.
Ed Bricker, Dallas.
R U. Craven, Dallas.
Mrs. A. McClay, Independence.
A. L. Sperling, Independence.
Monday:
Phil lip Bock, Monmouth.
Carlotta Bock, Monmouth.
Hazel Seeley, Monmouth.
Tues«lay:
R 1». Patton, Falls City.
Mrs R. L. Patton, Falls City.
Wednesday:
A. String* r, Dallas.
-j
WISE TALKS BY THE OFFICE BOY.
Gee, wouldn’ t it disturb you the way
some of the bottled and canned goods
come in with the pure food labels on
them? Some of them look like a tour­
ist’s suit case that has been going the
rounds of the swell hotels. You see the
government has a pure food law that,
works all over the country and each
state has passed a pure food bill of its
own which is supposed to line up with
the federal law, but iu a good many
Guston A. Sutter and Anna B. Mcln- cases it is stamped up too tight. That
osh.
doesn’ t do any harin', of course, only it
L. O. Ramsdall and Edda M. Dimick. puts the manufacturers to a whole lot
of extra trouble and expense for print­
ing the different lube s, but our brand
of canned goods doesn’ t need any pure
IT. S. to Santa Fe Pacific railroad.
food labels. These are the best grown
U. S. to H. Hinshaw.
and best made and best ever. They are
«is good as canned goods can be and
far better than most of those sold. No
artificial coloring or preservative of any
kind. They are priced only a trifle
higher than we would have to charge
you for the cheaper brands and I guess
they are about twice as good. Our
puri-ton-ated coffee is canned, nobody
can beat it and M. J. B.
xyyyuuuuvuuuwi s tm iiR R iiim nnim p
«Sa;:
-«m
PORTLAND
Salem, Ore., Sept. 1 ..(Special.)—G ov­
ernor t’ hamherl tin today L-sued thejfol
low ing Labor Day proclamation :
Whereas, The Legislature of this state
has set apart and appointed the firs«
Monday in September of each year as
Labor day and declared th same to be
a public holiday, now. therefore, I.
George K. Chamberlain as governor of
the state of Oregon, by virtue of the
power in me vested, «lo hereby pro­
claim Monday, September 7, 1908, as
Labor day, anti recommend its fitting
observance by all citizens everywhere.
Let all public offices be closed and all
private business wherever possible be
suspended, and let the «lay be observed
generally ii» appreciating labor’s worth
ami the part it has always played in
our national life and achievments.
-----
------—
In the matter of the b:ds for the grav­
eling of the Independence, Flannery
and Ash Swale fills: J. N. Jones got
the contract for the Independence fill at
30 cents a cubic yard : 8. B. Hill on the
Flannery fill at $1.39 a cubic yard and
on Ash swale at $1.87, to he measured
Hfu‘ r
‘‘ I'"?“ «1-
R. P. Winslow was appointed to take
entire charge of the rock crusher, ap­
point someone as timekeeper, and make
report to court.
Ira Mchrling secured the contract for
the railings, hub and felloe guards on
these fills at 2« cents a running foot for
the first named and 21 cents for the
others.
Ira Mehrling got the contract for Mill
creek bridge repairs at $117 and the fill
at 24 cents a cubic yard; the Savage
bridge at $349, fill 22 cents; moving and
rebuilding Flannery bridge and lepair-
ing Shelton bridge $105.
Tate & Nelson got the Gooseneck
bridge work at $15, Scroggin bridge at
$121, and filling at 20 cents.
DERIDE VOTE OF THANKS
Great Furniture and Implement Sale
Governor Chamberlain Makes Nex
Monday Holiday by Pro­
clamation.
Season
Six
Months
Ticket
Saturday
to Monda y
Ticket
. $3.«0
. . 2.«5
. 2.50
.$5.75...
4 50 . .
. 4.20.
Dallas.............
Derry.............
Independence
Our elaborate new Summer B > >k gives a concise description
of Newport, including a list of hotels, their capacity and
rates. Call on, telephone or write
I. N. W O O D S , Local Agent, Dallas.
W m . McMURRAY,
General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon
■ • s a s ; T?.
^
—v—v—-,i i ;
-
M
LOOK AND SEE
WHO’S HEBE
We take pleasure in announcing to the
people of Polk County that the firm of
CROWTHER & OLTS
have opened a fine line of PIANOS in the
Adams ct Brobst Co’s Furniture Store.
You can save from $100 to #2ri() by pur­
chasing a piano from them, also you will
be allowed a liberal discount on your old
Piano or Organ. Cash or easy payments.
= = - = ,i ^ ~ = =
~ — ¡Tili i £ h S= h &— ü
>oooooooo<>ooo<x>o^oo©ooocc'
JUST ARRIVED
J
Morris, the leading jeweler, has just recei ed a
beautiful line of gold l»ea«le«l umbrellas an 1 wanes
from $2.50jto $15 each, all guaranteed, also a new
one of late cuts in Libby cut glass.
O P T IC IA N
f
DALLAS
H. MORRIS, = « = »
-
-
OREGON
>O O O O C <>O ^O O O O G CO O C C^C O O 0<i
When it comes to
GROCERIES
N O N E OF T H E M A R E IN IT W I T H
SIMONTON & S C O n T“
”