UNTY VOL. XVII DALLAS, POLK COUNTY, OREGON, OCTOBER 21, 1904 NO, 32 mZ 3TYLISH DRESSERS .ini-..: ,ho contemplates buying a new suit or new overcoat should see those elegant new ALL SUITS at the Hub Clothing Store? If not, orrt buy until you have. If you want good, honest, ledium-priced Clothing, we have it; and if you want a genuine hand-tailored suit, sewed with silk thread throughout, we have it in THE FAMOUS Hart Schaflher 8l Marx MAKE fffff pfl Don't your boy need a new KJ V J. U -1 V X -J.- , I AX a suit from us and he will get a nice present with each suit or overcoat. We will give with each boy's suit or overcoat a nice box containing penholder, pens, colored crayons, eraser, pen cils, etc. Ue;;tl)!l 1904 ? Hut Schtftau JUn e have added a complete line of the celebrated Black Cat Hose for Ladies and Children. unks, Telescopes and Suit Cases for any who are ing to travel. In furnishing goods, you will find ast anything you want. L Jacobson ! irllpatricK Building. DALLAS, OREGON Vhaiiner f 3 din bird y " j. JM)JJ mm 1 jy miff Vk ft ,- J (m Co. alias Ice H Cold Storage Co, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Cold Storage Rates are Cheap. Our Ice Is made of Pure Mountain Water. EAT MARKET OLESALE AND PAIL ....... CONNECTED WITH OUR PLANT. We Guarantee the Choicest and Best Cold Storage Meats. ssages over Mutual Telephone at Our Expense We give a World's Fair Tour Coupon with every 25c purchase. Bell Phone 366. Mutual 21. .rz Dallas, Oregon. PAINTS, WALL PAPER and . . . MOULDINGS o r.'ov Wall Paper & Paint Store. TH & CORNES, Mill street, Dallas, Oregon l 1 I ami S!.e- - . ta!. i E. 3, STOCK Hogs, Mutton and ,'hest market price Vddress, V. D. NO. 1, OREGON Yn :: Nice Lamp? ,ot sV y 1 tfc 3 f. 1 r t. V, ' ii -lay buying, when for the next 5 or 6 ' .11 have constant use j of the pleasure and s derived from a good ";er aupper you take ""at ing book or work ,! disagreeable eve own fireside. 1 furnish you with a 1 lamp and globe, tfing lamp. 2 & MEISER October Sunset Magazine gives fine pictures of CALIFORNIA LIFE Gen. MacArthur and other army officers describe the recent military maneuvers in California, each article being profusely illustrated with half-tones and colored draw ings by Edward Cucuel. Interest ing articles on California and Oregon, How Olive Oil is Made, How AlmoDds are Grown : and fine descriptions of Plumas and Sutter, two great California counties. 224 pages of articles, Western stories, sketches and verses. 10 CENTS A COPY. YOU CAN BUY SUNSET MAGAZINE at all NEWS-STANDS. EDITORS VISIT HOOD RIVER Oregon Newspaper Men Hold Enjoy able Convention and Attend Fruit Fair. The country newspaper men of Ore gon have had their annual vacation aud have returned to their homes con gratulating themselves upon the wisdom of choosing Hood Eiver as the place of the 18th annual meeting. No more pleasant social gathering than the one held in the famous Hood Eiver valley last week has ever been recorded in the history of the Oregon Press As soeiation. While the attendance was not as large as usual, the convention was composed of men and women who are actively engaged in newspaper work, and the usual crowd of idle plea sure seekers was conspicuously absent, As a result, the publishers were en abled to get down to earnest work, and steps were taken to place the Associa tion on a substantial business footing and to carry out measures that will financially benefit every newspaper in Oregon. The members, one and all express the belief that the days of idle junketing trips are over for the Oregon Press Association, and that a bright and prosperous future is in store for the country newspapers of the state. THE CONVENTION CITY. Hood Eiver is a beautiful little city of 1600 population, situated on the south bank of the lordly Columbia river and at the mouth of the stream from which the city derives its name It is 64 miles east of Portland, and 24 miles west of The Dalles. Being on the main line of the O. E. & N. rail road, it has excellent transportation facilities, Portland being reached by a two-hours ride. The town was platted twenty years ago, but up to within the past five years its population did not exceed 500 souls. Since that time it has grown in size and commercial im portance by leaps and bounds. The town has an excellent water sup ply, electric lights, well-improved streets, a $20,000 hotel, and numerous stores and shops. A sawmill of 100,000 feet daily capacity and a large fruit- oox iaciory give employment to a small army of men. Two large public school buildings and numerous hand some churches speak eloquently for the educational and moral tone of the town. Many costly briok business buildings are in course of construction The residence streets are lined with beautiful homes, many of them be longing to Portland capitalists who have orchards in the valley. The business interests in Hood Eiver, as in Dallas, are controlled by young men, and it is needless to add that no opportunity or advantage is overlooked that will add to the welfare of the town. The people, young and old, are hospitable and are ever ready to extend the hand of welcome to the stranger within their gates. They are proud of their beautiful town and its rich surroundings, and are con stantly on the alert to make known to the outside world the wonderful riches and resources of Hood Eiver valley. WHEEB THE APPLE IS KING. Hood Eiver valley is about twenty miles long and averages five miles in width, containing an area of 64,000 acres. The Columbia river is the northern boundary; to the east is a mountain range 2000 feet high ; the timbered slopes of the Cascades form its western boundary, while majestic Mount Hood stands sentinel at the southern end successfully disputing entry. The area of tillable land la estimated at 50,000 acres. The high lands are generously covered with oak and pine, with little or no underDrusn. inese wooaea slopes, when cleared for cultivation, are better adapted to apple raising than is the low land along the banks of Hood river and its numerous tribu taries. The low. bottom land is where clover and berry fields are seen in all their perfection. Water for irrigation purposes is plentiful, and dairying and vegetable raising contribute no small share to the prosperity of the peoplo of Hood Eiver valley. There are now 2800 acres planted to apples, less than one-quarter of this area representing bearing commercial orchards. The Spitzenberg and Yellow Newton are the chief varieties planted, few of any other kiiids having been set within the last four years. The apple crop now being gathered is expected to fill 73,000 bushel boxes, or 125 cars. The entire crop of the Hood Eiver Apple Growers' Union has been contracted for by a Portland apple buyer at the following prices: Four tier Spitzenbergs, $2.10 a box ; four-tier Newtons, $1.73 a box. The five-tier apples sold for $ 1.75 and $2.25 a box. Hood Eiver Spitzenbergs and Yellow Newtons bring higher prices than any other apples in the United States. This, the buyers say, is because of the high color and superior quality im parted to the fruit by the volcanic soil of the Hood Eiver valley. Hood Eiver Spitzenbergs retail for 10 cents each on the fruit stands of New York City. Hood Eiver apples find their way into the markets of New York, Lon don, Berlin, Paris, Honolulu, Japan, China, Manila, and the mining camps of Alaska. In London, during tbe holiday season of 1903, Yellow Newton pippins from Hood Eiver sold as high as $j.65 a busnei, netting the grower $2.25. The Clark's Seedling strawberry first made the Hood Eiver valley famous as a fruit producing section. The berries are shipped in refrigerator cars to the markets of the Mississippi and Missouri river states. This year's crop of 90,000 crates netted the growers $140,000. THE FRUIT FAIR. The sixth biennial fruit fair of Hood Eiver was held while the Editorial convention was in session, and proved a revelation to all who had never seen a display of the products of the famous Hood Eiver valley. Language is in adequate to describe this exhibit it was simply beyond comparison. Two long tables running through the center of the pavilion were covered with apples, peaches, pears, grapes and quinces o,n plates, while on either side, banked six boxes deep and rising tier after tier, were apples packed in boxes as if for shipment. It was not an uncommon sight to see 45 apples completely filling a CO-pound box, Such a wealth of color, quality and size has never been seen at any other fruit show in the world. It will be good news to every citizen of Oregon to learn that this magnificent display of fruit is to be forwarded to the St. Louis Fair, to be placed on exhibition in tne Oregon section. The expense of shipping the entire display will be borne by voluntary subscriptions by members of the Portland Chamber of Commerce, the Lewis and Clark State Commission and the citizens of Hood Eiver. This fruit display will go further toward advertising the pro ductiveness of Oregon than anything else that could be sent from the state. President E. L. Smith, that grand old citizen of Eastern Oregon, was always on hand to look after the comfort and entertainment of visitors, and the newspaper men will never for get him for the many kindnesses shown them. The writer also desires to thank Superintendent G. E. Castner and P. O. Chandler, both prominent orchardists, for personal favors, not the least of which was the filling of our traveling bag with the choicest specimens of prize-winning apples The press gang also remember with kindness Editor Arthur D. Moe, of the Hood Eiver Glacier, and his able assistant, E. N. Blythe, who were always on hand to see that the boys did not miss any of the good things provided for their entertainment. The Glacier office kept open house, and the editors were shown every courtesy and kindness. The Daily Glacier, pub lished during the the three days of the Fair, and containing the late tele graphic dispatches, local news, and full reports of the proceedings of the press convention, was a triumph of up-to-date journalism. VISIT TO ODELX. One of the pleasant incidents of the trip to the writer was his visit to Odell, where he was entertained at the hospitable home of Mr. and Mrs. Eos well Shelley. We were met at the train by Mr. Shelley, Thursday morning, and after our luggage had been safely stowed away in the hotel, we visited the fruit fair and were privileged to meet and talk with many of the lead ing business men and apple growers. At the olose of the press session in the afternoon, Mr. Shelley called for us with his horse and buggy, and we were soon out on the country road among the strawberry fields and apple orchards. Mr. Shelley's driving horse has a track record of better than 2 :30, and the seven miles between Hood Eiver and Odell were soon covered, the roads being in perfect condition for fast driving. Odell i3 properly termed the hub of East Hood Eiver. It i3 situated at the junction of the Cloud Cap Inn and the Falls roads, and has a church, school house, blacksmith shop and store, Mr. Shelley is the founder of the little BO E Soft and crooked bones mean bad feeding. Call the disease rickets if you want to. The growing child must eat the right food for growth. Bones must have bone food, blood must have blood food and so on through the list. Scott's Emulsion is the right treatment for soft bones in children. Littledoses every day give the stiffness and shape that healthy bones should have. Bow legs become straighter, loose joints grow stronger and firmness comes to the soft heads. Wrong food caused the trouble. Right food will cure it. In thousands of cases Scott's Emulsion has proven to be the right food for soft bones in childhood. Send for free sample. SCOTT & BOWNE. Chemists, 09-415 Pearl Street. New York. gx. and ttM ; all dmgptU. A Shaking Uo Old-time Blethods relegated to the past, and new innovations introduced. The happy-go-lucky days have gone, supplanted by modern and practical ideas in merchandising. BEGINNING SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, and continuing until the end of month, this store will cut prices on lines indicated below. We mean CUT PRICES no measly 5c reduction. All new goods and up-to-date Dress Goods, Waistings, Underwear, Ribbons, Laces, Embroideries, Furs, Neckwear, Several lines of SHOES Belts and numerous other items. Umbrellas, Silks, Linings, Domestics 52-inch Broadcloth, $2.00 grade at $1.39 52-inch Broadcloth, $1.50 grade at.. 1.19 50-inch Granite Suiting, $1.35 grade at l.OO $2.50 Men's Shoes at ' 2.00 Men's Goodyear Welts, $2.50, $2.75 and $3.00 other lines of Shoes at correspondingly low prices. 42-piece Dinner Set, handsomely decorated, Sale $4-.50 Two Weeks Only from October 15th. YOURS FOR BUSINESS Pollock's Cash Store UGLOW BUILDING, DALLAS, OREGON. village, having opened a store there two years ago. He prospered from the beginning, and today no store in the valley is better known or more widely advertised. He recently built a sub stantial warehouse and fruit storage room across the road from his store and is prepared to handle all the pro ducts of the valley. He is assisted in his business by Mrs. Shelley and his son, Kalph. .Living in tne most beau tiful portion of the famous valley, where the soil is rich, the climate is delightful, and the surrounding scenery is grand beyond description, it is small wonder that the family is contented and happy. Mr. Shelley still has a warm spot in his heart for Polk county, and wishes to be kindly remembered to his old friends in Dallas and Independence. EDITORS IN CONVENTION. The 18th Oregon Press Association hold two business sessions in the rooms of the Hood Eiver Commercial Club, and also a public session in a large auditorium adjoining the fruit pavilion. The latter meeting was open to the public, and the large build ing was packed with citizens and visitors, who availed themselves of the opportunity to hear the speeches and discussions. The members of the press in attend ance united in declaring that the Hood Eiver meeting was the most earnest business session ever held by the association. Of the business trans acted at the meeting, we shall have more to say hereafter. At the closing session the following officers were elected : E. J. Hen dricks, Salem Statesman, president; J. C. Hayter, Polk County Observer, first vice-president; A. D. Moe, Hood Eiver Glacier, second vice- president; Albert Tozier, Portland, secretary ; Francis E. Gotshall, Port land, treasurer; George H. Himes, Portland, historian. Portland was selected as the next place of meeting, the date to be fixed later. Eobert J. Hendricks, the newly- elected president, is a native of Polk county, and is one of the ten charter members of the Oregon Press Associ ation. He is the last of the ten to fill the office of president, and is the only one today engaged in active news paper work. Mr. Hendricks is a progressive newspaper man, and will give the association a good business administration. VISIT 1905 FAIR GROUNDS. In response to an invitation from the Lewis and Clark Fair Commission, the Association appointed a committee of 10 to visit Portland and go over the grounds of the exposition. The com mittee arrived in Portland baturday evening, and spent Sunday rorenoon at the grounds. Here every courtesy was snown tne committee ny vice President I. N. Fleischncr and Secre tary Henry E. Eeed. The buildings and grounds were examined, and all the visitors expressed surprise at the magnitude of the proposed fair and the progress that has been made. After returning from the grounds, the party was entertained by a luncheon given by Mr. Fleischner in the Port land Hotel grill room. Hero Director General Goode joined the party, and the fair and its advertisement was thoroughly discussed. The officials were informed that tho members of the Oregon Press Association stand ready to do all in their power to adver tise the fair, and that this publicity will bo given without thought of remuneration. The committee visiting the fair grounds was composed of Albert Tozier, E. P. Bacon, W. C. Woodward, J. W. McArthur, William J. Clarke, C. L. Starr, William Matthews, Walter Lyon, S. L. Moorhead and J. C. Hayter. Travis McDcvitt visited relatives in Dallas, Sunday. Mrs. Claude Dunn is visiting rela tives in Woodburn. Mrs. Dr. L. N. Woods left Saturday for a several months' visit in Iowa and Pennsylvania. Mrs. D. M. Metzger and son, Norval, went to Portland, Friday. Mrs. Metz ger attended the regular business meeting of the Board of Trustees of tho Odd Fellows' Home. This is the age of advertising, and progressive business men have found that they can as easily do without goods as without newspaper publicity. The merchant who fails to advertise will soon find the grass growing up through the cracks in the sidewalk in front of his door. Mrs. A. N. Holman received a letter from her brother, James McTimnionds, this week, dated at Auckland, New Zealand, and another dated at Sidney, Australia. A few months ago she re ceived a letter from him, written In Honolulu. The young man says it is his intention to make a tour of the world, earning his way as he goes. Smith Gilliam, of Walla Walla, is visiting his sister, Mrs. F. M. Collins. He was Sheriff of Polk county in the pioneer days and has many ac quaintances in Western Oregon. James Crawford, a prominent mer chant of Pendleton, accompanied by Mrs. Crawford, visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hardy Holman this week. Mrs. Crawford is a sister of Mrs. Holman. Mrs. Margaret McMillan, of Mon mouth, was in Dallas, Thursday, attending to business connected with hr late husband's estate. She will leave in a few days for a six months' visit to her old home in Canada. TJ. S. Grant is of the opinion that one reason for the fineness of the Turkish mohair is tho scanty herbage of the country in which Angora goats are kept in Turkey. He has observed that tho finest hair iii his flock is found on Kids whose growth has been in some way checked so that they are more or less stunted. As goat feed grows sparsely in Turkey, it is pre sumed that the goats there grow slowly and do not attain the size they would have if more plentifully fed. There is plausibility in Mr. Grant's theory. A goat which is on plentiful food from the date of its birth until it is mature is much larger than if it had boen kept oa scanty rations throughout its period of growth. The number of hairs on it is no greater because it has been well fed and has grown large, but each hair is in all probability as much thicker proport ionately as the goat is larger than it would have been if dwarfed by scanty rations. Of course, mohair like wool is seriously injured in quality by such scarcity of feed as materially affects, the health of the goat, but this applies to the mohair on the goat at the time it is on starvation rations. It is also probable that a goat's growth can be materially cheeked by scanty rations without materially affecting the qual ity of its hair. Eural Northwest. DR. FENNER'S o JMdlimey 0 AND Backache Also Purifies the Hlood. All Diseases of the kidneys, bladder, and urinary organs. Also catarrh, heart disease, gravel, dropsy, rheumatism, backache, female troubles. TO Doa't become discouraged. There Is a cure for you. If necessary writ Dr. Fenner. He bos spent a lifetime, curing just such cases as yours. A'l consultations FREE. "This Is to certify that I was laid np with Pclatle Rheumatism IS months. Vln? nnaWe during that time to jM-rform any labor and hud jiaid outtw) lo 1 sicians without bentHt. Being advised by a friend to try Dr. Feuner s Kidney and liackauhe l ure I did so and bottles cured mo. t-ince then liiave recommended it to fattnuntis hufivrinx kllii troubles and the result has beea a cura iu every case. O. S. Sl'KA Y, Uluominsston, lit. Bold by Pruprglsts, 50c. and f 1. Ask for Dr. Fenner's Almanac or Cook Bixik Free. tT IIITIIf' til HOP 'WehavesoldDianydorensof Jr. renner'sft -.Vitus I If I I I I N I I ft f I I H Dance Speclh anil ererv ra-c h:n been cured by it. Vll III UW UrtllUa.ItUa bluiiu. Aunn-CuKt luio CO..Akruu.O. For Sale by BELT & CHERRINGTON