INDEPENDENCE $200,000. tti Improvement will be mad u Independent and vicinity during the year. In ;::i:: ftp Devoted U tbe best Interests of Polk County. men ; r V' . VOL. VIII. $2.00 Per Year. INDEPENDENCIii, POLK" COUNTY, ORIiGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1690. Five Cents Per Copy. NO. 1. Is f THE THE WEST SIDE. rniLLsuit. .ttLtcri-d at V P.Wt ,,' Itt ladvpvadaa. 3rtvtl, aa wound f U milrr. UHACMIPTION KATKS. rvu in advanci. On Year i.ao Six Month I. oe Three Monlh JO When uot paid in advance l.jo TO ADVERTISERS. !u4crn4f! Mwatad M tht kaad af a- tatUUI (ID mnH 4 irv mil, IM WWItlll rim, aud mi th mailt n t Uat Caaaua aad Calil.wnia Matln4; anatataa a pnfbaaeTal li Mu,,l, la ih prlaataal ',pm tm tha eoaaiy, wku-h to en of Uw Ivtart, M iHll.T d tatakij uimm w laa wamav k a. Tatadt1 iBMaaalat aliealaMaS Ma, KM Rial U alnyUtf aaataAaa It W tn.ooa at aa at Adfsrtfaia MMua. - JOB PRINTING! Litest and Best Styles, 1KB At VKI LOWEST h LIVING r RATES. I.i I.J, .4JLl!JI.JliLJJJ If PHYSICIANSDENTISTRY. leeITbutwr, Physiciaii3 & Surgeons. U. S. Examining Surgeons. onto: m4 Ma at Mala It. 1SDEMSNPESCI. OMOO , K.U K.KTCIIUM. Physician and Surgeon. Office: Oppoali Ftfl National Bank, INDKf KSPtNCK, ORIQOK. DR. J. K. LOCKE, Physician and Surgeon. Buena Vista, Oregon. J. E. DAVIDSON, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. v. s. ixiMimxa sdsqioh, Independence, Oregon. DR. J. B. JOHNSON, Resident Dentist, AU work warranted to give the bt of Satisfaction. ATTORNEYS. W. L. WILKIN, Aitutuey mt Oiuiiaelor l lw. All LfSftl Hualno" eiilrtnlrd to me will rm-lv Prompt Atlooilon. (01 1 ICT10NS A SIl.CIALTY I n: r In lper 1Iihi. Indrpt-ndenr, (it A. M. HURLEY, Attorney and Counselor at Law. Offlea: Cor. Main and Monmoulh StA., INDtrRNDEDCI. OREO J. H. ALEXANDER, :Deler In: Drugs and Medicines, BEUNA VISTA, OR. nvine purrhRMd the Hock of Drugt ferierly o-neJ by L. W . RobtU tm prepared to meet nil the oM cuato merii. and many more new one.. Fair nd courteoua trealiuenl to all. TAYLOR'S Cash Grocery & Bakery OS 0 STREET. Fr, ii Hi-, f.l. IMr and fake" on hand ererr dajr etpnl Hnnilar. .u, a nt fre.lt at.iek f aaiiaed nan. fl"iir. ci.lf rf, ,i,ar, wuillM, clKara and hibaitooa, D. B. TAYLfJK, ProiirlWr. M US. A. M. HURLEY, MilKasryiPwcj Goods Hext to Indopeniliiiica National Bank. Ikdkfkndienci, Okioow. V. E DALTON, COMMISSION MERCHANT. Olllco with Hyde 4 imltn, Independmiee, Will py CAHH for nil kliidHoMIoiinlry j'rodu.. Wheat and ).ita HilHliy. I. FARMER, TONSOKIAL ARTIST Main HI., Independence. UtiuvInK, 16 cwnta. llnlr mitltii. Hham- ,pmilnfcnl. Durham Bros. 11TY - iViHAT MARKET, (ll.olce Kwif, Mulliin. fork and Veal alwaya in hnnd. Jlndrod tallow Main Ht.. . - ndenva Dressmaking Parlors I MI S3 GEOKUIA K1HOB, Lately from Portland, ha opened Droaa making Parlor. In the Nel-on b""" Main Ht., and l now prepared to do all worn In her line. Jasperson & Parker, INDEPENDENCE, OB. Architects, Builders and Cont'rs. Alwav In their Haiih and Door KaMflry, nd WUI try V, pliaw all. Olve them a trial and be iinvliieed that they are worthy of your pair foliage. BAXKS. pirjtfiatioQalBaQK IKDBPUDIMCI, ORIQOK. Proaldont .... . COOPER. Vto Praald.rrt, L. W. ROlIRTtON. Cnahlar M....W. H. HAWLIY. DIRKOTORSl O. J, faaaijuaa, . f , Caaaar, Tnaaaeto ttaatal Waklaf Vadaaaa, Bt ad aUt eialnafa oa ail lainaaial aaaaaaj Ikaaoaltt taalT4 filial a, aaak at aj WrUanata ai dwoalL flallaWlaM Bad aa all folaa an taaataala am CaOB ataNilA.ltlt4P.il. Haifa aurfUr pratl aWa Mamtat af Tala riaMUck. THE INDEPENDENCE National .Bank I CAITTAL STOCK, 150,00a H. HIRSCHBIRO, Pfaaldont ABRAM NBUION. Vlo PraaMmt. W. P. CONNAWAY, - Cathlar. A iraaral naaklnt and ateKani taataaat araaaaniaii. waaa auaa: aula aiaanaawii aoai- aMrelalaradlla maud: daanalla raoalvM aa la aa carnal aeenaat eaejaat a) haoki Inlarat, mm aa iiaM aepoana, DIRKCTORSl Joahua MoDanlal, H. H. Jaapvraon, A. J. Ooodman, H. Hlraohbar. Abram Nation, T. J. Lm. k A. All). THE POLK COUNTY BANK, MONMOUTH, ORaXION. p-rtVat, femllaml) .... Vll I'Mi.lfttl., I .-"! ., t. A. MACRt'M r. U CAM I'llKI.I. ... I & ruwix Capital Stock, Paid Up, 150.000 3S.000 PIRKOTOKS: I A. M"Rt'J(, T. . ffWtJ.f . II. HTl'MP, IMA AU M. aiMPSClS ) v. 11. nt 11 rn, a. h. uKiuxa. r, L CAMI'BlsI.U A smwal UnVIni hnatniiM lranmited. Pa hm 1. ii..-vvd ..I'lja.! to check, or on rarttflcai .( .tr',.it. U ana mad, bllla dla-oaiited. at ei, lii,hi aud mid, InMmrt paid oa liuie d..;..H. Firetnwf ranliand burflar proof aat. tarared by i lima Iwk. JaOfiebnaral a. ax tota. m, (Etabtllied by National authority.) : THE ! : NaU : IM ! OF SALEM, ORBOON, CAPITAL, PAID UP, $5o,ooo.oo. SURPLUS, $16,000. K. t. WALUC1, W. IIAITW, maMral. VteaPiaaldail. I. H. ALSIET, Cubaar. LOANS MADE. Ta raraaar aa waaal and other marehanlabl paodaai. aoaaacaa or la aaHa,llbar la prlTal Dnaadam dlraal ealtaw Tort . C Mf o, fatrlaal. Uoadaa, rarta, aanta. The Celebrated French" Cure, "APHR0DITINE" I roi.b oa A poairivc OUARANTEI 10 ear any form ot nervoiia dlneaae, or any dUordnr nt Ilia (iieratlra or nana ol eltlmr BtFOBt l'li l""n the AFTER ateeMlv IIM Ot BtllllMiailH, innancn nr lipnnn. or tbnmirh youtltful Indlwretlon, oter liulitlr ence, An., ni'k U of Mraln Power, Wakxlul n.na, Hearing down Palm In the Hark, Hamlnal Weak neat, llyaterla.Nnrroaa ProatratlnnNoclurn al KmlMlutu, Uiu nrrlwra, lilaalneaa, Weak Mem ory. k of Power and liiipotfliiry, whleh II n- f leeted ollen Irad lo prematura nfd ear and lnan ty. 1'rli-o 11.00 a txu.tboiM lor 16,00 Mcut ? mall on reeelpt of prlre. . A WKITTK (Ml WAR ANTE It for ovary IMP ord.r, to refund the money If a l'ermaiien. pure l not effected. Thoinanda of teallmonlalt (mm old and yean, of both Mitee, pannaneutly cured by AriiaoniTiaa. (!lrenlar free. AddreM THE APHRO MEDICINE CO. waaratiH banch, BOX 27, PORTLAND, OU. For aula by Bnator A Locko. 11: Wllllll mm VEGETABLE PANACEA PREPARED FROM ROOTS & HERBS, FOR THE cunt ur AND ALL OTHER DISEASES ARISINO FROM A DISORDERED STATEhtthe STOMACH OR AN INACTIVE LIVER. raft flALC TV ALL DRUGGISTS ft GENERAL DEALERS. Mtadaandarhif earwl. Bnolct luaraed in etim.ii.'iitJrf. 'I -Hll"t"ii .In tP'tm .11 pnr1. 0 ihan'tA, I' ""I'-ttLPOBT ntRa, Milt t-l , '(n'l .'tlli'H t'i Prof, A. lubatui, li I :'! " " Vrlc IT aaatM Buy your tleket Baaf of kHQllSl K- v' Pentland. Ixiwaat rataa and roat favori (ranted. Call at the Weat Wd oMca. Capital V A BARItlER BETWEEN THEM. Hotttl Malalibara la Afrtoa Waa Haea Kalabllahad N Haa'a Laad. A UtUe Dritiah expedition rarootly bnHd ftvr np the Donna braurh of th Hlgnr river in a imall iteam Uanch, and final ty nUre4 a tdbntary of th Banna and niplorml a reirlon whloh no wbiu nian ha ever vlalted U fora, TIM moat : tnttttmaUnK thin ahout their jonrnoy1 m tlia cunoua eiperienca they bad with the native. They ha4 ban tat(n(t fur A gooA while thnmKh a r((Um thai waa tnhab ited by Moaluia blank, frnlU of U rather aerera mothoda of eonvaraion employed by tha Arab lnvadnr of tha Bondan. Tha eoontry waa very fartll, and tha people war numaTooai bnl all of a udden, thongh tha eovntry (till wore it nmial aapeut, and tha oll waa apparently rich, population tntirnly eeaaexl. For a (tretch of over twenty mile not a hut waa to ba aaaa, nor waa a atntila aipra of human lifaanywhara oh axrved. Tha eipadltion woadar4 at Uil rcnwfcabla itaU of affair, fur tha eoontry waa certainly InrlOna;. and they eoold not Imagine why It had no tnhab lUnta. ' AO at onra, however, at they roondod a bend In tha river they aaw big crowd of nativa ruoninff down th alopa of the hill to tha bank. They brandlahad their pear at tha white men on th lit tle boat, and told them to go back, for they wanted no Moalem In thlr coun try. There) waa an interpreter on tha veaatd, who auwwded in convincing tha native that tha visitor were not Moa lema, and thereupon tha people became quite) friendly. Then tha rooaon for tbia curaona laok of ixipnlaUon waa aacerUlnaiL When tha tribe who had lawn converted to Uhuu fonnd the native near them were juat a (truiig a they were, tha pred of their mliirionin tlvat direction ab ruptly ceaeed. but theae hoatlien peopl and tha Miatlem convert near them could nut live at peaca with on another. It waa finally decided that aa they coold not ba Rood neighbor, a atrett-h of ftinntry atiuuld I placed between tbew where no on haiUd live, and in that way they exported to get along with lea blood abed. 80 all tha people who Inhabited Oil fertile region, about twenty wile wide, packed up their littla belougUiga and moved away, and the atrvtrh of eonntry thn caiue to ba without a alngla inhab itant. Today it i a No If an' Land, aud tha only reaaon ia that tha people who ara neighbor there cannot live on friendly teruu. and, having tired of fighting, have put thia barrier between them.- Boaton Herald. fraah af a aeaaaaaaaallet. A young man who I well known In tlii city had an niipleaaant experience a aliort time ago, llota a aomnamboJlat and often doea peculiar thing in hit tloep. He went to visit anme friend in Watertmry, and a he waa not in th habit of retiring a early aa tha member of the family be waa vial ting, ba re mained np and took hi ehoe off before aacendlng the ataira. A few nighu after hi return to hi home lie lay down on a lonuge and fell aeleep. After deeping annndly a half hour ho aroae, walked to the foot of th ttaiM, took off hln ahow, and not bring ctmtmt wllh doing that, he drew off hi itockiiig nlao. He then clamhereil np talra to hi room. Taking a maUh from hi XH'J;et he brought one of hi feet up o that be could reach tha bottom of It, and then dcliberutely (cratched the match on the flat urface. The match did not light immediately, but he kept on n-rntchlug. Finally tha match did ltghL Tb bolder waa uucon clou of the fact aud kept on (cratch lug. SiuMonly he awoke in great pain from the burn. He limped about for teverul day, and alnce that time qnw tiun alxiut the proper mode of lighting a match have been dUtaatoful to him. New Haven Palladium. Ilnaora to a Dead Dag. I aaw a ineer corpae In the undertak ing eatabliahment of Lewi Jonea, on LnOrange atreet, a few day ago, queer even in tlmt grim receptacle. On the embalming board lay tha body of a irt'tty brown apanlel and nar by a landaninely conatrnctod hardwood box, elegantly lined, which waa to be doggie' chain lx when planted in tha cold, old gronnd. The animal waa tlie pet of a rich laly, who, when ha one day became ill, aunt him to the dog hoapltal, and when he died had hi body cared fur with aa much tendornea a though be were a human being. Doggia waa hipped from here to the lady' former home in Maine, where the animal waa interred with full honor. Doaton Rec ord. A Poor Sportamaa. We have all encountered him in the field, the man who howl like a maniac at hi dog. It U not becanae the dog is deaf, for even if he were there would be no noed of the howling and ahrieking, bnt it i that the howler know not bit better. He ha the notion that a hunt ing dog mtwt lie worked like a (ledge dog amid Arctic ice field, and so he moke an Esquimau of himself every time he goes shooting. And vono of n ver yet aiiw a dog that worked any bet ter for the racket than be might work, or might at leant have been trained to work, without ItForest and Stream Wall Prwaarved Blaaketa. Hon. Hose Tenney, of Georgetown, tate treasurer, and receiver general from 1B00 to 1861, sleeps between blankets woven by hi wife' mother 100 year ago. Trie blankets have been In nae the greater part of the time since thoy were Ibado, and are in a remarkable state of preservation. Mr. Tenney is nearing fourscore years, and is remarkably active for one so old. Haverhill Bulletin. Old Kooagh. Mrs. Qrnbbs And so vonr daimhter' wedding U set? Don't you think she i too young to marry! Mrs. Dnbba No, indeed. She has ruled the whole family for three year. Good News. " A Fair Chteken Fancier. A society lister of the quill ia Miss Bessie Marbury, who when In town live with her father at No. 70 Irving place, and when out of town either at their country bouse at Oyster Bay or at Lenox. At Oyster Bay Miss Marbury raiae her auill by means or an incubator ana a fowl run. In New York the wield them, pocket th resulting cash and spends it in Lenox. On any question of chicken raising when Miss Marbury ia about the farmer of Oyster Bay and neighborhood are not "in it" This charming young woman baa written some of the cleverest skit on tooiety that have been produced in recent year. New York Journal. THE RESULTS (,'Al.irORNIA. Tha return from th election ar nearly complete, and th few dlrirlnta yet to hear from will hava no cOVct on tha result. Th exact figure will not ba known until the ofllclid iuv 1 completed. , Markhaiu't plurality U about 10,000. Tb Republican elect the entire ccm greaalonal delegation and (majority of tb legislator f t Tha entire Wniclpal ticket of Han Francisco was also elected f tit Repub lican, ";.' t " , WAMUmtTOtt. v' Waahington remain In th Republi can rank. Wilson U re-elected to con grea. and th tha next United (Hat senator will b a Republican. IN OTIIEtt WTATKH. ThaDemorata carried everything In Alabama, including a solid congrvaalonal delegation. ' In Colorado th Reiublloni carried th day, and Senator Teller will be re elected. Th Connecticut law provide that th governor must have a popular majority, and return giv Morria, tiain, a majority of 97, but this doe not int itule 11 Re publican and BO Prohibition votes which war thrown ont in two district. Tha legislature b Republican. ' Delaware, Florida and GoorgU went olldly Democratic by tucreaad majori tie. , Th Democrats gajued six cougreaa man In Illinois.' Th Democrat and Fanners' Alliance have the legUlatnra. Indian girv an overwhelming Demo cratic majority, Th Riiiblican elect ed only two congreaamen. The legisla ture ta Duuocratlo by 01) majority. Th Republicans carried Iowa on the tat ticket, bnt lost on the congrea ionL i :' For th first time KanaM aends broken congrnMlonal delegation. It atand 5 Farmer' Alliance and 8 RepBb llcan. Th state tirkek Is Republic. Kentucky aud Louisiana send solid Democratic cougreaaioiial dtilegation. and MtmlMippI aud Texas do th tatna. Maryland dai likewiaa. Th Republicans elect all or the state ticket in MaaaachuaetU, except governor. The Democrat gained five oongreaaiuen and the delegation now itantbi? Dein, to 0 Rep. Legialature i Republican. Oovemor Merruuu, Ri-p, re-ekn-ira in Minnesota by a decreased majority. Tha Demm-ruU capture the lveingrea- men. The DetnocraU send a full delegation to congTcae from Missouri, with one ex ception. Thoy also elect their state ticket and th leg-Mature, Vest will be re turned to tb senate. Nebraska alected Boyd, Dem, governor and the Republican carry everything Ian. The vote was heavier than in the presidential election. The Republican (wept everything in Nevada, and carried New IIamhire by narrow margin. New Jersey gave everthing to the Democrat. In New York the Australian ballot system was iiiceeae fully put iu o)wration. The Democrats gained sn overwhelming victory. The congrmamnal delegation, which stood 30 Republican and 14 Dem ocrats, is reversed. The Democrats aim) have a majority in the legislature, which insure a Democratic auoceaaor to Sena tor Evarta. In the city Tammany car ried the day against the fusion of the Comity Democracy, Republicans and Independent. North Carolina went Democratic, and North Dakota Republican. The Democrat made large gains !n Ohio, and defeated Maj. MchMniey and Foster. The congressional delegation will not lie known until oRlclal canvass is completed. In Pennsylvania the Democrat elected rattlson governor and gained four con greaamen. The Republicans elected the latlanc of the state ticket Rhode Island went Democratic. South Carolina went solid for the Dem ocrat, and Vermont for the Republi cans. South Dakota I Republican. Pierre was selected as the permanent capital. Both congrcaamen are Republican, In Virginia and West Virginia wild Democratic delegation to congress. Three of thn sueowwful candidates in West Virginia were unseated at the last session of congress. Oklahoma, Arixona, Idaho and Wyo ming went Republican, and Montana and New Mexico went Democratic. The present congress consist of 829 members, of which 171 are Ropnblicuna and 15S Democrats, According to the latest reports the next honse will stand 242 Democrats to 94 Republicans. The number of Repub licans is smaller than In 1874, when they mnstered only 9ei. The Democrat of Fifty-second congress will have the two thirds majority, which rarely falls to the lot of any party. From the latest returns it appours that the Semite after March 4, IB" I, will stand 42 Democrat to 45 Republicnns, with one sent from Now Humpshire in doubt. Coast Defense. The New York Sun in commenting on Gen. Nelson A. Miles' appeal for harbor fortifications on the Pacific Const, says: There is nothing unreasonable in the de mands, although practically the Pacific Coast can expect to share in the general provisions for coast defense like the Atlantic.- For securing and perfecting landtfffes it is believed that S35a,0(K would cover all emplacement from Vancouver south to the Mexican border. Tills is because the points there needing fortification are few in number and are all perfectly known, while the sites, to a large extent, are owned by the govern ment. With a gun factory at Benucki, and a navy yard at Puget Sound, the Pacific Coast could begin to supply its own defenses just as It is now supplying new war ship of th best sort for the Pacific and Asiatic squadron. A ColleeUoa ef Martyr. A recent canvaas was made of the conviots of Joliet prison, and out of over 000 men, sent for almost every crime in the calendar, not a tingle one would ac knowledge that he was guilty of the crime charged. The great majority looked upon themselves as martyrs to the law, ai d felt that they had been grievously wronged. DotroitFrce Press. Iteel Tanka for Staring drain. A new method of storing grain is be ing introduced. Steel tanks are filled with grain and by a suction pump the air is partly exhausted and a quantity of carbonic acid gai admlttijd, Lewis ton Journal. , HOW "ZCAO" WAS ADOPTED. rakraaaalt Dissevered, a II Tnouabt, Ih Kiti-MS af Cald aad Ma4 It. "Zero"! th part of every thormom tor that is mot watched and dreaded in thia changeable clltnata of ours. The word it from the Spanish, and mean topty, heoo nothing. It was first used on a thermometer in 1700 by a Prusnum merchant named FahrenhaiL From a boy be waa cloas observer of nature, and when only 10 yean old, In th remarkably cold winter of 1709, he experimented by putting tnow tad salt together and noticed that it produced a degree of cold equal to tha coldest dny of the year. And that dap a the coldest day that tit oldest inhabitant could reuicinbttr. Gabriel waa tha mora struck with th cotneideur of-lilt little eclentUlo discov ery, and hastily concluded that ha had fonnd tli lowant degree of temperature known in the world, either natural or artificial. He called tha degree aero, and con structed a thermometer, or rode weather glasa, with a aval graduating np from aero to boiling point, which he nmn bared SO, and the freezing point 82, be cause, a ha thought, mercury contract! th tliirty-aeoond of It volum on being cooled down trow the temperature of freosiug water to aero, and expanded one hundred and eightieth on being heated from th f reeling to th boiling point Time allowed that tha arrangement instead of being truly aciontillo waa a arbitrary as the division of tb Bible Into verse and chapters; and these two point no more represented th real ex treme of temperature than from "Don to Benrahvba" expressed th exact ex treroee of Paleatln. But Fahrenheit' tltermometer bid been widely adopted, with it incon venient scale, and none thought of any better until his name became an au thority, fur Fahrenheit finally aban doned trade and gave himself np to sci ence. Then habit mad poople time to th established scale, a habit made the English cling to the old aysUtm of cum brous fractional money. The three countries which use Fahren heit are England, Holland and America. Russia and Germany nae Bauinar' ther mometer, In which tha boiling point U counted 80 degs. above the freexing point France uses the centigrade ther niometor, so called because It make the boiling point 100 dega. from freexing point On many accounts the centigrade sys tem is the best and the triumph of con venience will be attained when tero ia made the freexing point, and when the boiling point is put 100 or 1,000 dega from It. and all the sub-divisions are fixed decimally. If Fahrenheit bail done this at first or even if be had mode it on of his many improvement after the public adopted his error, the luck of opportunity, which waa really hi, would have secured to bis Invention the patronage of the world. -Nw York World. Calllaf Ik llaaaa Ball. It Is the custom for the clerk calling the roll to prefix the word "Mister" to each name, but before be has gone far he begins to retrench his eiponae of vocal powers, This leads to some strange combinations of sound. In the beginning he calls "Mr. Abbott." "Mr. Adams." "Mr. Aldotnon," and a few more dis tinctly enough, but by the time, he reaches the Cs he begins to telescope the title, and calls "M'ster Cannon," "M'stcr Carter," and so on. When be has gone a little further he drop off some more, and it tweomoa "'ster Fitch," "'ster Flower," " 'ster Gear," etc This holds holds out pretty well Into the IVt, but at butt the two words become one, and "Mr. nopktns" and "Mr. Honk" sound like "Btropkins" and "Strouk." Down in the M'a it undergoes, another ohangn. The sonnd of the "r" i lost, and "Mr. Mason," "Mr. McAdoo" and "Mr. Mor row" become "Stumaaon," "Btumaoa doo" and "Stnmorrow." This goes on through the O's and the Ps. "Mr. Oatoa" being "Stoates" and "Mr. Peel" coming ont "Stnpheel." In the R's it shift a lit tle, and "Mr. Ray" become "Stray," while "Mr. Rlfo" I "Strifes-Washington Post II am a of Adam aad Kva. The Chicago Tribnne ho a letter from the quill of a traveler whose rare good luck it is to loaf a little in the Garden of Eden otherwise on the Seychelles islands, in tlie Indian ocean, 1,400 miles east of Aden and 1,000 from Zanzibar. It was "Chinese" Gordon who tried to prove these islands to be identical with Eden. The islands number IH. They were bnilt by coral insects and have the richest soil in the world. Palms grow 100 feet high. The white beaches are the moat bcantifnl on the ronnd earth. No one need work, for the trees are con stantly in fruit, and tlie many tinted fishes that flmth through the clear water are as toothsome a they can be. Turtles abonnd. The people live to a great age. No hurricanes ever strike the islands. They constitute, indeed, an earthly paradise Mr. t'owdsrly Ia Fond of Flowara. , T. V. Powdorly spends nearly as much time iu his garden as he does t.t his desk. When ho is not studying labor problemr he is studying the growth of his flowera The only question that has an equal' in terest to Powdorly is 'the question of food, no is exceedingly abstemious, and doubtless could give the fasting men who are coming to the front now valuable point. Towderly never cats more than two light meals ft day, and thinks that lie can do with less. Cor. Chicago Humid. The new Croton aqueduct surpasses every other structure of the kind, It is estimated that the new Croton aqueduct alono will be able to anpply a population of 3,120,000 with an allowance of 1B0 gallons a day per head. With the addi tion of the old aqueduct and the Bronx river pipe line the total capacity of tbf city's water works will be IM gallons a dar per head for a population of 0,873,- The lute Samuel J. Randall was in pnblio life for ft long period of years. With large opportunitie for amassing a fortune, it appears that the total value of his estate amounted to abont $5,000, oonsititing entirely of personal effect. The curator of the Brooklyn institute told a reporter that one beautiful butter fly in the collection of the institute i valued at (1,000, that sum having re cently been paid for a duplicate, Bouclnmlt was mfted which he cou lidWed his beet play. "The one I am going to write next," he said after mo ment of profound thovght , THE NEWS IN liRIEF. Mexico hat negotiated a 0,000,000 toun. HutM'l i already showing the effect of hi fast Gen. McKlbben, U. 8. A., died a Washington. Hhreveport, La., suffered a lost of $.150,0110 by fire. The government of Pern lias iinixaod tax on ttujMirted lord. Ex Governor Gen. E. A. O'Neal of Alabama died at Montgomery. Han Francisco used 5,211,04H doxens of egg during the past ten month. Over $l,ooo have already been col lected in Philadelphia for the Irish Na tionalist. Don Frederico Vollo, charge d'affaires of the Coat Rica legation at Washing ton, is dead. The flermtui chancellor, Von Caprivl, baa returned from a visit to Premier Crispl of Italy. The strikes at Ht. Etienne, France, are over, the employers having conceded the demands of the men. J udgmeuts amounting to $700,000 have been filed agaist the Duchess of Marl borough in New York. Tbe town of Witmlow, Pike county, Ind., ba been wiped out by fire and 400 people rendered bomclen. During the butt year the desertions from the army were 4H9 leas in numbers than in th previous year. A large number of tailor havede- Hrtod from the British navy at Halifax to avoid going to Bermuda. j Dr. Burtsell, who was silenced at New York some time ago, for sympathizing with Dr. McUlynn, has Ixeu reinstated, Harvey Flxk, one of the beat known bankers nd broker of this country, died of benrt disease at Wtlbarth, N. J., aged 87. Two Japanese students of the Michi gan unlverity at Ann Arbor have cre ated a sensation by eloping with two American girls, Tbe Canadian government will grant a subsidy of $700,000 to an English coin pauy to establiith a weekly service of transatlantic steamers. Dauiel IL Biirnham, a well known Chicago architect, ha been appointed chief of conntrnction of tbe world's fair, with a salary of $12,000 per year. Two small white boys working in a cotton gin In Anderson county, S. C, were burned to death by a negro boy, who In revenge threw a lighted match in the cotton. Milton B. Golf, chancellor of the Western university at Pittsburg, Pa., Is dead. He was aged 60. and widely known as one of the unwt popular educa tor of the day. The Russian ministery of the interior ba shipped a magnificent jasper vase and marble pedestal as a present to Pro feasor Simon Newcomb of Washington from the Poulkovo university. " Hiram Basset post grand master of the Masons, and considered tlie Mason of the highest degree in the world, has just died at Millersburg, Ky., of paraly sis, at the age of 70. He had taken every degree known to the order. The Swiss buudersnth has refused to reply to the luqniry addrctg to it by the Uuiveraity of Wisconsin asking how Eurtqie would accept the complete pro hibition of immigration similar to that enforced against the Chinese. - The Chattanooga, Teun., Times state thnt H. Clay Evans, who was defeated for congress In that district, will suc ceed Secretary Tracy iu Preeident Har rison's cabinet Mr. Tracy will be ten dered a sent on the supreme bench. Axchdean Farrar, who has been ap pointed chaplain of parliament, preached a sermon in Westmiuster Abley indors ing Gen. Booth' scheme for the relief of London's "submerged tenth." The Prince of Wale has also approved the scheme. The total liability of the Union Paciflo road to tlie government is $M, 717,562; thnt of the Central Pacific, $5a,836,705; that of the Sionx City and Pacific Rail road company, $.'1,611,404, and that of the Central Branch of the Union Pacific, $;,380,103. Col. Thomas B. Price, one of the beet known men in Missouri, ' was shot and mortally wounded at Sednlia, Mo;,- by Judge Jolin Higgina of Pitt comity. Price is a grandson of Oen. Sterling Price of Confederate fame and a brother of Congressman Price of Louisiana. The sensational career of William W. Cotrell, who acquired much notoriety a few months ago by bis course while mayor of Cedar Keys; Fla., was ended at Montgomery, Ala., with a load of hot from gun in the hands of Chief of police Gerald, whose lifo Cottrell had threatened. The treasury department has ruled tjiat the provisions of the new tariff law for books and pamphlets specially im ported for educational institutions is substantially the same as tbe old law, and provides that books are only exempt from unty when they are specially im ported for use in "colleges, , The disappearance of James H. Edgar, who was reported to have been found dead in ft Youkers.N. Y. ,botel,i shrouded in mystery. Broker Sumner, who iden tified the body as that of Edgar, has re ceived two letters from the missing man saying thilt he "(Edgar) was 'olive and would call at his ofllce ih a fw days, "i 'The last of the inlaid furniture from A. T, Stewart' mansion was sold at auction In New York.- It included bed steads, bureaus and screens.' The high est price received was $J50 for the Gen, Grant bedroom furniture. None of the other pieces, which originally cost from $2,000 to $!1,000 each, brought more than ,$200, ' . There has just been completed at the I Pullman Car works, at Pullman, 111., a novel "creationi "ie 0,1'v church on i wheels iu the world. It is constructed . socordiug to the ideas of Right Reverend William D. Walker, bishon of the dio cese of North Dakota, and is intended for use in the small villages along the railroads in that section of the country, ". Panama Hats. ,!" The beat known palm leaf hats are th Panama one, made from the finely plaited fiber of th leaves of a South American screw pine, Th treo ocours only on th slope of the Andes. About 800,000 dosens of these hats are made in Ecuador and different state of South Amerioa, aud they ar distinguished from all others by consisting only of a single pise and by their lightness and flexibility. They may ba rolled up and put in th pooket without Injury. Tha plaiting of th hat i very tedious and troublesome. Th ooars one may b finished in two or three days, but th fin one take as many months to Slait They vary in prioe, aeoordlng to neness and quality, from $5 to f 100. CIDER MAKING. aw to Obtala a Clear aad Flaaly Fla vorad Beverag tnm Oaad Apple. First see that the apparatu to be used It clean and sweet The applet may b prepared for expressing the juice, either by squeezing or crushing, a in th old way of cider making, or by some of tb modern processes that reduce tbe fruit tot finer pulp. Whatever may be gained In speed, a slow process of crashing, where the fruit only come in contact with wood, will excel in quality. There are various forms of screw presses, from which on can be selected to suit the cir cumstances of the case. Tbe pomace should remain irvernight, or at least several hours, in the receiving trough before being pressed. The cheese, a it Is called, consist of the pomace con fined in press dots, or, more commonly among farmers, a succession of layers. held in place under tbe screw, by clean straight straw turned over tbe edge of each layer in a manner familiar to all rural cider makers. The Juice being ex pressed, it at once becomes Important to free it as completely t possible from the particle held in solution. The, by their decomposition, hasten and Increase tb vinous fermentation, which if not properly treated will, be soon followed by the vinegar stage. Tbi proce should begin by (training or filtering the juice before fermentation sets in. A convenient filter msy be mads from a chain tight barrel, with a faucet through a stav near the bottom. Take out the other head and fit in s false bot tom with holes thickly bored through it just shove the faucet Lay some nar row wooden strip crosswise over the false bottom to bold np tbe coarse cloth first laid over It On tbi place a layer of cotton wool, then another coarse cloth, to be followed by three or four inche of very clean straw, then cloths and straw alternately until the barrel ia three-fourth full when well pressed down. Straining through a layer of cleanly washed, finely broken charcoal or pure sand Is another method. If the filtered juice can be put into large cask holding three or four barrel and standing upright, with open heads, for a short time until ferment ation be gins it will be much better than to bar rel It at once. Thee cask should be provided with faucets a few inche from the bottom, through which tbe clear ci der can be drawn off, leaving another quite large deposit' of fine sediment un disturbed. The scum on th top should be skimmed off aa occasion requires. Tbe cider should then be barreled and kept in a cool place, aa tightly bunged as the fermentation, which will still continue for a time, will admit Under Tit beat system of cleansing it from Im purities, early made cider, unless It can be kept in an uncommonly low tempera ture, or is treated with chemicals or scalded to kill fermentation, will grow too acid to be agreeable. The later ci der making can be deferred the better the cider will be at a beverage and the longer it will keep, says The New York World, authority for the foregoing. . Coming Baef. First cover the meat for the space of twenty-four hour with brine strong enongh to barely float an egg: then take it out and wash it in cold water, preening It with the hands so as to squeeze out all the blood. Tbe brine that has been used should then be thrown away, as It is the blood that is so often retained in the pickle that causes it to sour snd spoil Moke a second pickle a trifle weaker than the first, in which you have dissolved three pounds of brown rifpr and two ounces of saltpeter to a hundred pounds of beef, or in these, proportions for smaller quantities. Should aacura appear on the surface before the meat is used np, the brine must be scalded snd skimmed and poured back when quite cold. The package containing it should be kept in a cool place, and the meat hould always be kept under the brine. When, from neglect a portion of the beef remains out of the brine for a day or two it will affect it unfavorably; for this reason it shonld be frequently examined and shonld never be left in that con dition. Proper Temperature la Batting Milk. On the question of proper temperature in setting milk Professor Henry reports: Milk set at 40 degs. for eleven hours threw up all but 44.1 of 1 per cent, while milk at 45 degs. left 2.7 per cent of butter in the skim milk. Setting at 50 degs. ss compared with 45 degs. showed a loss from 8.8 to 10 per cent., and 55 degs. shows that the range of loss Is from 15.6 to 80 per cent over that set at 45 degs. Thlnfa That Are Told. The American Cultivator says that it is a mistaken notion that deep seeding is somehow a protection against winter killing by the gronnd heaving and thaw ing. Experience and observation are largely curing farmers of this delusion. A correspondent in The New York Ex aminer says that his way of protecting sheep from dogs is to house them at night and let them run in pasture with a herd of horned cattle in the day time. He keeps no dog, and his cattle look on all dogs as enemies and make short work of them when they come near. All stone fruits are claimed to be bene fited by potash fertilizers more than by the application of manure. A new roof may be experjive, but it is cheaper than damp stables or barns and sick animals. The animals hve no worm stoves in winter, and dryness is therefore essential. Dr. Hcekins, of Vermont says that he regards the Switzer apple as nearest per fection, in quality almost equal to the Fomeuse, larger, free from spots, the tree very hardy, and a free and elegant grower. The prolific sweeting, like some other fruits termed "proliflo, is remark ably unproductive. Roup may generally be traced to want of cleanliness, improper ventilation or undue exposure, and the poultryman who I has provided against these causes is rea sonably safe against toe roup. Exoitement Runs high nt the drug stores In this place over System Builder as everybody is using it for oatarrb, of stomach, dys pepsia, constipation and impute blood, and to build np tbe system it certainly possesses wonderful merit when all spank so well of it, Wanted. A neat healthy girl about 14 years of age for light house-work with a family of two iu Corvallls. Ap ply at this ottloe. . oct24-5t A. I Griggs keeps tbe best surloin steaks in ths market PACIFIC COAST ITEMS. San Bernardino, CaL, officer have de cided to stop gambling. . Anna M. Arnot has been chosen super intendent of school In Alpine county, ' CaL Jams Leonard, agent for aa Eastern railroad at Ballard, Wash., ha suddenly t disappeared, Pbms for water works for Dayton, '. Wash., have been completed. The works will cost $75,000. Several whalers have arrived from the north during the past week and re port a successful season. Tbe largest fig crop ever known in Tie Juano Valley, San Diego county, CaL, is still being shipped to market The Burlington hotel at San Francisco, which wss burned but week, was sacked and $15,000 In valuable stolen. ' Fresno county, CaL, marketed 161 car-, load of win but year and tbia year the product will exceed over 200 cars. ' Santa Cms harbor is filled with mack erel and parties ar salting and packing mackerel for tb first time in history. All tbe Chinese, about twenty, left Aberdeen, Wash., by request of accm' "tnittee of citizen. There was no trouble. . The line of steamer between Portland and Japsn, to connect with the Union Paciflo, will be inaugurated next May. ' The fine residence of Frank Burkett, near Los Angeles, wss burned by incen darie during the absence of the family. The fruit crop of the Umpqua valley, Or., this year was a paying one, and more fruit trees have been planted than ever before in one year. . , . j Joseph Smith, indicted at Eugene, Or., for manslaughter in accidentally killing Ambrose Ott while bunting a short time ago, has been acquitted. . t Kititas county, Wssh., wss awarded the gold medal and silk banner for the best combined mineral and agricultural display at the Spokane exposition. Tbe Union Iron Works of San Fran cisco ha secured the contract for finish ing and assembling the 12-inch rifled mortars for the Pacific Coast defense. The government is engaged in making a topographical survey of the Columbia river from the mouth of the Willamette np to about five miles above Vancouver. Salt River Valley, A. T., is coming to the front as a grain and fruit producing country. Thousands of acres in orchards and vineyards will be planted this win-' ter. ' ' Col James D. Smith, a well known Taooma real estate dealer committed, suicide by blowing the top of hi head off with a revolver. No cause for the act is known. Karl Selig, a German saloon keeper at Oswego, Or., shot and killed himself. Hs was formerly a wholesale liquor dealer in Portland, and leaves an -estate valued at $150,000. The steamer Berth, whose mission to the Behring sea caused considerable comment, has returned. She carried orders to the Bear to seize all poachers found within proscribed limits. - The controller of currency has author ized tbe First National bank of Anacos ta, Wash., to begin business on $50,000 capital stock, with Fred Ward as presi- dent and Howard E. Perrin as cashier. The people of Tillamook, Or., have been running somewhat short of supplies owing to ths inability of coasting steam ers to cross over the baron account of rough weather. The principal scarcity is of coal oil Tacoma has now an incorporated se cret bureau whose object is to aid and assist, in an honorable manner, persons desiring to marry in securing desirable husbands or wives, for which a reason able compensation will be charged. The Experiment Station record foiv October has J?st been issued by the ag ricultural department at Washington. It contains an extract from an article on "Preservative Fluids for Freeh Fruits" by E. W. Hilgard, Ph.D., of California. Inquiry instituted by the society for ths importation of German song birlls shows that the imported song bird turned loose in Oregon in 1889 have pros pered. A subscription has been started and a large number of insectivorous song birds will be imported. There was a largely attended auction sale of California wines in New York the other day. It being the first auction of California wines there, nearly every grower in the country was interested. ' Red wines sold at 16 to 88 cents a gallon; white at 84 to 48; port at 52 to 63, and white sweet at 47 to 72. A strange cattle disease is prevalent in the eastern part of Nevada, which is proving very fatal to the stock. A steer not seemingly affected will die of the disease in an hour after being taken with it It Is locally called black tongue. After death the eyes bulge out and the tongue turns black. Exactly 936,923 seres of public land have been taken up in the state of Wash ington during the lost fiscal year, as just made pnblio in the report of Land Com missioner Groff. The survey of the year amounts to 180,222 acres. The commis sioners favor the special rate, for addi tional surveys, and the taking of timber . from the pnblio domain by settlers for certain purposes. A Washington dispatch says; An ex pedition into the celebrated Death Val ley of Southern California is to be made and three months spent in exploring that region, under the auspices of the biolog ical survey connected with the agricul tural department Ten celebrated scien tists will compose the expedition, and a thorough survey will be made of this hitherto unknown country. J.. H. Aiken, a Son Jose, CaL, saloon keeper, has been arrested for incendiar ism. He formed a plot to defraud the insurance companies, and offered Charles Branson $200 to fire bis place. Branson accepted and then informed the author ities. The distriot attorney told him to carry out the plot, promising immunity. Branson got drunk and started a larger fire than was Intended, and before it could be subdued $1,900 damage was done. for Sale. Two lots In block 6 Henry Hill's ad dition to Independence for $125 each, one-fifth down, balance uext May with out Interest. This Is a bargain. Eu- quire at West Sidk office. Only one In the United State Out of 1357 oough syrups manufactured m the United States, bat one has been found ta be entirely free from opiates and that is the California Positive and Negative Eleotrio Cough cure, wbioh is the best on earth for coughs, cold, croup, etc. Hold by all druggists, - 1. 1 1 .! " Sii' ' f I, i !!! t p r 1 1 , r '31: ft I, i I i h 1 i t fl,