pullman herald (pullman, wash.) 1889-02-23 [p ] · 2017. 12. 19. · we will sell watches and...
TRANSCRIPT
The Herald.THOMAS NEILL, Ptjblishek. ~
-J. J. SARGKXT. - - Editor.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:Ifpaid in advance, $2.00 pep Year.Ifnot paid in advance*...... !2.,"i0 per Year.Six Months only 1.115 in adv'co
ADVERTISING RATES
; Are liberal, nnd made known on application Inperson or by moil. Legal Notices at the legalrates, Give ns a trial.
Entered at the Post Office for Transmission in".";> .-\u25a0 the Mails at Socond-Clnss Hates.
Voters of Washington.The officers of the municipality and
the board of trade of the city of NorthYakima, do hereby invite and requestthe voters of Washington territory to
/ assemble at the voting precints in theirseveral counties on a date to suit their
>. convenience, and elect delegates to aconstitutional convention to be held insaid city of North Yakiraa, May 21,1889, for the purpose of framing a con-stitution for the state of Washington.The said city of North Yakima, by itsofficers, hereby pledges and agrees tofurnish ample accomodations for the con-vention and assembled delegates.
Per order of Committee.
A man in Portland claims to havediscovered " how to use water as fuel.'7
Fuol believe it, however.
The Walla-Walla papers say that afashionable lady in that city has a pairof diamond garter buckles valued at
$800. We'll l>elicve it when we see 'em.
Ifit be true, as has been asserted,
that Adam was 121 feet in height, he isnot to be blamed for not wearing pants.The tariff tax on a pair of pants for aman of Adam's size would have been aeerious burden in his day.
Says the Washington Fanner of the15th inst: We acknowledge the receiptof the lot of choice fruits and grain fromWhitman county, referred to in a letterpublished in to-day's Farmer. In proofof the statement in regard to the super-iority of our wheat over that of Minne-sota we ask the neighbors to come inand examine samples from both localities.
The latest advices from the Samoanislands (up to the Ist inst.) confirm all
previous reports of outrages against theSamoan government by the Germans,and against American citizens andUnited States interests. This conditionof affairs still continues, with new out-rages calculated to irritate Americanfeeling in the. breast of every patriotsave the cowardly old fossil who presidesover the state department. Bayard'scontemptible course is humiliating to
the last degree. No respect whatever is-paid by Germany to our rights in theislands; our vessels are illegally seizedand searched, and American citizens arearrested and imprisoned on the most
trivial pretexts. There is one comfort-ing reflection, however, and that is thatan administration so disgraceful andinefficient, and 60 regardless of nationalhonor and pride, is in the last days ofits authority.
Philosophy of Advertising*
At a recent meeting of the Illinoiseditorial association, Manager Scott, ofthe Chicago Herald, presented the fol-lowing pertinent thoughts with referenceto advertising, which are of much inter-est to merchant and publisher. Hesaid: "Inpresenting a handsome sheettypographically one should rememberthe advertisers as well as the readers.A man likes to have an advertisementpleasing to look upon, catching to theeye, and indicative generally of the ad-vertiser. This class of patrons are soimportant to success that they shouldreceive encouragement. Impress themwith the desirability of keeping theirwaree before the public. A man neverrealizes the full benefits of advertisinguntil he has placed the matter beforethe same people fifty or a hundred time*.The first ad. is good, but the one hun-
dredth is worth more than 500 times as
much as the first. Some one has saidthat the—
First time a man looks at an advertise-ment he doen not see it.
The second time he does not notice it.• The third time ho is dimly conscious
of its presence.The fourth time he faintly remembers
seeing something of the kind before.The fifth time he half reads it.The sixth time he turns his nose up
at it.The seventh time he throws the
paper down impatiently.Tho eighth time he ejaculates,
'There's that confounded thing again."The ninth time he wonders if thoro is
anything in it.The tenth time he thinks it might
possibly suit somebody else's case.The eleventh time he thinks he will
ask his neighbor if ho h;is tried it, orknows anything about it.
The twelfth time he wonders if the
advertiser can make it pay.The thirteenth time he rather think.-
it must be a good thing.The fourteenth time ho happens to
think that it is just what ho wants.
The fifteenth time he resolves to fcr
it as soon as he is able.The sixteenth time he examines the
address carefully and makes a note of it.
The seventeenth time he is tantalizeto think he can hardly afford it.
The eighteenth time he sees painfully
how much he needs that particular article.The nineteenth time ho counts over
his money to see how much he wouldhave left if ho bought it.
The twentieth time ho rushes frantic-ally forth and buys it."
>'iles & Viuson's Marble Works.A little more than a year ago the
above named gentlemen conceived theidea of starting a marble works inWalla Walla. The result of their enter-
prise has fully compensated them forcoming. Their reputation for producingfine work is not confined within thelimits of Walla Walla, but extends to thesurrounding towns in this territory,Idaho and Eastern Oregon. One cannot
visit a town in this part of the countrywithout finding specimens of their work-manship. Since rebuilding their works,which were destroyed by fire in Febru-ary last, they have shipped fifty tons ofcompleted work to cities and towns
throughout the country named aboveand they have expended for labor alone$3000. The firm manufactures allkindsof marble and granite work of the finestcharacter, and at most reasonable pricos.Four men are kept constantly at workand their books show orders which willkeep them busy for a long time to come.Mr. Niles is the business manager andis kept almost constantly on the road;
he is a rustler with all that the termimplies. We have yet to hear of thefirst order of work which he has obtainedas having been unsatisfactory.
C'clfax.From Gazette, 15th inst.
Snake river ferriage rates have beenreduced by the county commissioners.
Thomas Mullan has sold his dray andice business to A. H. Lanky and is pre-paring to move to the Sound country.
An Oaksdale correspondent writesthat S. A. Marney has sold his hotel atthat place and skipped out, leavingabout $800 in unpaid bills. He camefrom east Tennessee, where ho is said tohave played the same game.
Jim Blampeed, charged with horse-stealing by Green Holbrook, of Garfield,was arrested at Waitsburg by SheriffBerry, and lodged in the county jailhere on Saturday.
Deputy-sheriff Frank Young returnedSunday from Spokane Falls, having incustody Sadie Avers, who was indictedfor perjury at the June, 1888, term ofthe district court and released on bondsto appear at the December term. Fail-ing to appear, the bondsmen had herhunted up and turned over to theauthorities.
William Peterson, ruentiop of whosopresence in the city for medical treat-ment was made last week, had his legamputated at the knee on Friday last,from the effects of which he died Wed-nesday of this week. His leg wasbroken recently at a place where he hada running sore, by the kick of a mule,and to determine what was necessary tobe done the surgeons cut the leg open.Finding that the bone had rotted, am-
putation was decided upon in the hopeof saving a portion of the member andthe man's life. The operation provedtoo much of an ordeal and he died asabove stated.
The Herald's Offer.The Herald desires to do its share in
making known to the world the superioradvantages of Pullman and vicinity andto induce emigrants to come here andsee for themselves. With that end inview, for the next 30 days we will sendthe Herald for one year to any addressoutside of Washington territory, for thefollowingcash prices:
One copy one year, §1.75Two copies " 3.00Three copies " 4.00Five copies " 5.00
We willalso mail six copies of any oneweek's issue, for twenty-five cents.Single copies, five cents. You cannotspend 85 for the advancement of yourtown in any better way than to send fiveyearly subscriptions to parties in theEast.
We will sell watches and jewelry at10 per cent, below cost for the next 30days. Fakiss Bros. 16tf
M. C. True has for sale two span ofgood horses, suitable to work or todrive; also, buggy harness and twobuggies. 17w4
One of those 60-tooth Scotch Harrowsfor twelve dollars at Reed & Prentis' istho beet bargain we have seen in thePalouse country. Call and see thembefore they are sold. 16w2
Ifyou want a good business or resi-dence lot in tho thriving young city ofPullman, the trade center of the greatgrain region, address, or call on Thos.H. Kaylor, Pullman, W. T. I have, al-so, several dwelling houses in Pullman,and good farms iv this vicinity that Ican 6ell cheap. 12w4
MRS. S KEELS
has located on Grand street, where she will bepleased to meet her old friends.
Dress Making & Plain Sewingin nil their branches neatly done.
- PULLMAN, - - WASH.
-T-VO NOT DELAY TOUR StTBSCRrPTICN FOB
** LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE, fM' which now standi in the front rank of month}/public*-
iionjand oecnpie* the position of
A LEADER AMONG LEADERS.Each number contain. A COMPLETE NOVEL,also •liberal quantity of mito*Uaneous matter of an interesting
andlutruetire Baton. One jear'i subscription gives a
LIBRARY OF 12 COMPLETE NOVELSby American aathon, toother with AN ABUNDANCEOF SHORT STORIES. POEMS, ESSAYS, and matters
of unusual interest to general reader*, making a volume of
NEARLY TWO THOUSAND PAGES.The luocess of Lirr-meorr'a stands unprecedented in
the aun&l. ofMaraiine publishing, end to-day its familiartitle is welcomed la every hamlet. Tillage, town, and citythroughout the United States.
The best writers of the age hare been secured and nnrfeatures will, from time to time, be added which willgintcLirruoomA DISTINCTIVE PLACE OF ITS OWN.
Amelia Birea, Edgar Baltna, John Habbertoa. EdgarFawoett. Captain Charle. King, U.8.A., Grace King, H.Elliott S«a well, Belina Dolaro. Maurice Barryrnore, Ouida,and many others will contribute to it. pages for 1389. Forfull prospectus, address Upplncstt's Maguise, Phila-delphia. 25 cent! cumber, $3.00 pet year. Geadlor wry.
KiTTIIIH PAPERS—with —
THE SAM FRANCISCO
WEEKLY CALLPrice, »1.53 pec Year,
onTHE SAN FRANCISCO
MORNING CALLPrice-, ©G.OO per Year,
as PREMIUMS FOB
oia a q.orPIIK SAN FUANCISCO WEEKLY CALL
is a handsome eight-page paper. It is i--
bu.'w every Thursday, and contain! aH ofHie important news of the week,gleanedfrom every quarter of the Ijlobo, completeup to date <:f publication, it contains in-
terest 1113 special correspondence from ell ofthe pducipa) cities of the worm ami a vastamount of the best selected and originalgeneral literature. It furnishes the latestand most reliable financial news and mar-
ket quotation:-, ami gives special attentionto horticultural ar.d ajrlcuitttral news, andis in every respect n flrst-clnss family i"Oper,a;.poallns to the interest of every memberofliio household.
THE r*IORN!NG CALL.(r.EVEN MSCB3 A WEEK)
Is a live metropolitan dally. It has theLAUCESTCIIICULATION"and isrecognisedus being the LEADING KEWSPAPEaofthol'uciiie C oust. Either of the above paperswe v.-iil send postpaid a; a premium on re-ceipt <>l the following subsciipliou. pricesfur tile i'i,inhiu::tion:
The Herald and Weekly CallBOTH
One Year for $2.55.
STAYER & WALKERDealers in
pa
comprising
STUDEBAKER FARM AND SPRINGWAGONS,
LITTLEGIANT GANG PLOWS,
J. I. CASE WALKING AND SULKYPLOWS,
KEYSTONE DISC HARROW,
THE STANDARD SPRING TOOTHHARROW,
CLARK'S CUTAWAY HARROW,
ACME PULVERIZING "SUPERIOR STEEL LAND-ROLLERS
BARLEY CRUSHERS,
HOOSIER SEEDERS & DRILLS,
HOOSIER PRESS DRILLS,
BUCKEYE FEED MILL & POWER,
DIAMOND FEED MILLS,
Dedrick Hay Presses808 SLEIGHS,
ROSS FEED CUTTERS, FOR HANDOr Power,
Acme Brick and Tile Machines, Swell-Body Cutters and Sleighs,
J. I. CASE THRESHING MACHINECO.'S ENGINES & SAW-MILLS
Chandler & Taylor's No. 1 Engines andSaw-Mills, &c, &c.
PVI.LM.iy, - WASH. TER.
KNAPP,BURRLLL&
COMPANY,Dealersin
TheLeadingLines
of
FarmImplements,
micliuhthe
MONITORDRILLS&
SEEDERS,GALESPRING-TOOTHSEEDERS,GARDEN
CITY
PLOWS,tbecelebratedP.1).
GANGS,McOORMICK
andDEERING
HAR-
VESTINGMACHINERY,
BAINWAGONS,
RACINEHACKS,
COLUMBUSANDE.kF.
BUGGIES,ETC.
PleaseDropIn
andLookUsOver.
PULLMAN,WASHINGTON
TERKITOHY.
Main Street,
LADIES'CLOAKSIN
GREATVARIETY!
whichwill
bedosed
outat
lowerprices
thanever
before.
LargelotFurCaps
ATA
BARGAINBIGHT
NOW.;
DEALERS IN
P. O. BUILMXG,
THOMAS NEILL,
Attorney & Counselor at Law,Will practice in all the courts of
Wasliington and Idaho.
Office: Rooms Nos. 3 and 4, Nodine Building.
PULLMAN, WASn. TER.
TAYLOR, LAUDER & CO.,
MANUFACTUItEItS or
BRICK and LIME,Contractors and Builders.
Allwork guaranteed
PULLMAN - & - MOSCOW.
A. D. Boyer,
Carpenter & Cabinet-Maker.I willcontract to furnish, bnilcl, or make
\u25a0lnything that conies in the line of
CARPENTERING &CABIXET-WORK.
REPAIRING done first-class. SATISFACTIONguaranteed in all cases. Shop in the
PRENTICE block, north "be of Muin-st.,
PULLMAN, WASH. TEIi.
THE UNION£ll£illl*£illC»CCO.
OF SAN FRANCISCO.
fash Assets, - - $1,250,000.
LOSSES PAID—FIVE MILLION DOLLARS.
The Favorite Coast Company.
W. V. WINDUS, Agent, TuUman.
ZENDER & DRINKWATER,THE LEADING
Blacksmiths, Wagon MakersHORSE-SHOEING A SPECIALTY. I
[J3f" All our work is guaranteed.
Con. GRAND & OLSEN STS., - - PULLMAN, W. T.
SELLING OUT AT COST !Having concluded to retire from business, I offer my entire stock of
General Merchandise, at Actual Cost!I would ask my old customers and all others \u25a0wishing to buy goods
CHEAP, to call and get their -winter's supply whilethe prices are 40 per cent. LESS THAN
regular rates. I also have
]>J!illiiiei-y& Fancy Ooocljs*,a well-selected stock, that willbe sold JaiF° regardless of cost.
C. S. MASON, - - Grand St. - - PULLMAN W. T.
P. BREMER, THE GROCER
Has a fullstock of GROCERIES & PROVISIONS, Hats,Caps, CLOTHING, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Confection-ery, Cigars and Tobaccos, CROCKERY and GLASSWAREall at prices lower than ever before known in this country.
Pullman, W. T.
13o>viicn 4&: 3Xillei*9
\\ TRAnr vBmJ kj»or* //
\SHOE/For 25 years the game Hey-wood or\ a boot or srpe hasbeen a guaraqtee of its rioqestyin material aqd workmanship.Tqe Heywood Shoe is tqebest weariqg and rqost com-fortable sr^oe made for meg'swear. Tqey will suit you so
well tqat you will insist upon
having them afterward. Tqenext. time you buy a pair ofshoes ask to see the Hey-
wood.Sold only by DOWNEM k MILLER
Gents'Furnishing
1
Goods.PULLMAN.
Owing to the death of Mr. Reed, of tho firm of P.EED & PRENTIS, their entirestock of Agricultural Implements will now be closed ont
CHEAP FOR CASH!consisting of Plows, Harrows, etc. Call early and get your choice.
REED & PRENTIS. (1G) J. M. PRICE, Agent.
F. L. Sanbokn & Co.GENERAL
Harness and SaddleryDEALERS.
Everything pertaining to the business kept instock or manufactured to order on tho
shortest notice, and at lowestprices for No. 1 goods.
Repairing, all Mindsin our line, will be
N promptly + done I
Grand St., - Next to Expire House,
PULLMAN, W. T.
THE GREAT
Transcontinental Route
Northern Pacific R.R.VIA THE
CASCADE DIVISION, MAKINGIT NOW THESHORTEST, BEST AND QUICKEST.
THE DINING-CAR LINE.
The direct route. No delays. Fastest Trains.Lowest rates to Chicago and all points EAST.Tickets sold to all prominent points throughoutthe East and Southeast. Z£r Through PullmanDrawing-Room and Sleeping Cars, Reserva-tions can be secured in advance.
EAST-BOUND PASSENGERS?Be careful and make no mistake, but be sure
that you take the
Northern PacificRailroad, and th.it your ticket reads via this lineto St. Paul or Minneapolis, to avoid changes andserious delays occasioned by other routes.
THROUGH EMIGRANT SLEEPERS (berthsfree I run on regular express trains full lengthof the line. Low rates, quick time.
General Officeof Company, No. 2 Washingtonstreet, Portland, Or. A. 1). CHARLTON,
Ass't Gen'l Passenger Agt.iE. F. Cbawfobd, Agent, Pullman.
Herald and San Fran.Call one year for only$2.55, cash. E
REDUCTION\u25a0
\u25a0
;..-::\u25a0./ \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0-
on all of our\u25a0\u25a0 i \u25a0
\u25a0 '.
Winter Goods. f\u25a0
We have TOO MANY and they MUST be sold within
The Next Thirty Days!
to make room for our ._ . f
--SPRING STOCK--
now on the way.
IT WILL BE THE LAEGEST AND BEST SELECTED STOCK IN THE
PALOUSE COUNTRY.
GOLD---Watches, Chains, Jewelry.
SILVER-- -Watches j Ornaments, &c.
SILK--Scarfs and Dress Goo;ls.
FLUSH-*-Dressing Cases, Mirrors, &c ,
ZS~ in great variety of styles and price.
We Know Just What You Want And Willhave it on hand.
Wo Have a Splendid Assortment of/
at BED-ROCK prices; also, an \r, . \u25a0---.\u25a0-\u25a0•;\u25a0--.-' -,
Immense Stock of No. 1 RubberJßoots,at from 82.50 to $5.00 per pair.
LADIES'JVIONITORS, $1.75 to $2.23. GENTS' MONITORS, same.
in all latest patterns, from 10 bents'to 82.50 a yard.
Our .COATS and WINTER WEARwe will sell at almost cost.
Car-Load of Sugar Iat a great reduction in price from our last supply.
"Snowflake" Brand, Spokane Falls Flour,the best over sold in any market—3 car-loads on hand.
Car-Load of Nails at Pricesnever before heard of in the Palouso Country.
We have everything you wantand you should not fail to examine
§F\ §33 \ a. g-,^ . •
and LATEST PRICES. You will then W that it PAYS to trade ."
McOonnell,Chambers,
& Company