Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, November 27, 1891, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    A WEIRD LOVER.
By DAVID US.
(OORrrtchl by American Press Axi6oa.
chatter rv.
GON POWH INTO DARKNESS.
Before the sfamnlnij of hla mifity foot
Vm (rumbling stone gttve uxy.
When the sung ceased Madeleine
pressed her hands tightly upon her burn
ing forehead, trying in vain to collect
her disordered thoughts, and to devise
some way of turning to account this on
hoped for chance of deliverance. But
she was spared the trouble, for just then
the minstrel a it to amid exciting any
suspicion on the part of Keretwnyi'i
servants, several of whom, attracted by
the music, were now looking down at
him from the walls touched his guitar
Anew, and chanted the following sen
tences as if singing the verses of a song:
I am toot Henri, here toaave you,
1 know the danger In which you stand;
Have you i means of making a tore kdJarr
If fou hare, nod your bend.
Madeleine thought for a moment, and
remembered the stores of old hangings
with which the castle abounded, suf
ficient to make a dosen such Udders.
She nodded, and the chant went on:
Hake the ladder of soma dark irreen scuff,
And k It down from U tower on which 70a
stand.
Bo as to mingle at much as possible with the try;
I wiU bring a good hone hltoer.
And bear you away by night.
Then a bright thought strack Made
leine. She tore a leaf from her pocket
book and scribbled cn it in pencil:
"Lose no time, for the prince may re
turn at any moment, and this day fort
night I am to die. I will bej?n to make
the ladder to-night Heaven bless you!
M."
Wrapping a silver florin in the paper
she threw it to the pretended minstrel,
who bowed again as if acknowledging
the gift, and slinging his guitar over his
shoulders vanished like a ghost into the
fast falling darkness of night In all
this the servants, ignorant as they were
of French, saw nothr a; the least sus
A passing m.ustrel had sung a j
picious.
good song and their mistress had paid
him for it that was all.
There was no sleep for poor Madeleine
that night The excitement of discov
ering that her dead lover was still alive
and actually within reach of her would
alone have sufficed to fever every drop
of her blood; but even this was com
pletely swallowed up by the tremendous
and almost insupportable agitation of
this unexpected chance of life just when
death seemed certain.
Unable to sleep or even to remain still
for a moment, the excited girl snatched
eagerly at the timely occupation afford
ed to her by the necessity of preparing
the materials for her rope ladder.
Among the countless cords and hang-
ings of various colors that abounded on 1
every side it was easy for her to supply '
herself with an ample stock of the "dark 1
green siuu recummeimeu uy vv morw ;
1 dm i.i! ta v- . -
mart, and she began her work at once.
This was by far the best thing that
she could have done. The steady em
ployment quieted her overstrained
nerves, and her spirits rose with the
thought that she was herself doing some
thing to aid her own liberation. She
wisely decided to give her ladder the
simplest possible form, by knotting at
intervals into tho long rope that she was
making small cross pieces of wood, to
serve as rests for her hands and feet
With these she supplied herself from the
spokes of an old fashioned bedstead in
the next room to her own, and during
the long hours of that sleepless night the
work went rapidly on.
The next day it went on more rapidly '
still and was half finished by nightfall;
but how could she find out what length
it ought to be?
A thought struck her. Sitting on the
summit of the Pit tower, over a piece of j
embroidery which she had lately com
menced, she contrived to let one of her
balls of silk roll as if by accident (for a
keen eye was watching her from a
neighboring turret) over the edge of the
battlement Running out its whole
length as it fell, while she held the other
end, it reached to within two or three
feet of the ground, and thns she got the
exact measure.
By noon the next day the work was
done, and in the afternoon Princess
Madeleine went for a ride over the hills,
attended as usual by two of the jailers
who called themselves her servants.
She was three or four miles from the
castle, and had just pulled up her horse
after a smart canter, when a tattered
old white bearded beggar hobbled up to
her with a whining petition for alms.
Bnt as his eyes met hers they darted at
her a keen, warning glance, and he
whispered in the voice of Henri de Mor
temart: "Is the ladder finishedr
Repressing by a violent effort the
start that would have betrayed her
Madeleine answered "Yes," while
throwing a small silver coin into hie
outstretched hat.
"Be ready then at nightfall on the
third evening hence, when you shall
hear my guitar in the thickets," said ,
the seeming beggar, in a tons audible he Wl the sense to make no opposition
only to her, and with a clumsy gesture j when his daughter, at the end uf her
of thanks he turned and limped away first year of wblowhood, became Mint,
down the viv. ! de Mortemart.
That night Madeleine, having ltsUmed I When the story of the lUuelveard
long and warily for any sound of move- 'cliAinlsrM iu Janosa castle gut abroad
ment in the silent rase, made tip her many people openly expressed their dis
rope ladder into a bundle, in order to belief in it, declaring that Madeleine
carry it to the Pit tower. But to her must have boon out of her uiind witli
indescribable dismay site found it so terror at that time, or else that the sup
heavy that she could hardly raise it posed heads were nothing worse than
from the ground, much less carry it up wax models placed there by tho crasy
the steep, high stair of the tower. ' prince to humor his own strange moniv
But the brave girl was not easily mania. But Madeleine herself firmly
checked with life and freedom before believed, and believes still, that these
her. She dragged the rope ladder after ghastly relics were genuine, and that it
her along the passage and np the wind- was only tho courage and devotion of
ing stair, reaching tiie top of the tower her second hintlwnd which saved her
so utterly exhausted tliat site was forced from nguriiiR as "Sample No, 4" hi tho
to sit down and gasp for breath. But
the moment her strength began to re
turn she was at work again, knotting
the end of her ladder to a broken iron
stanchion which had once served to se
cure a flagstaff, and then she began to
let it down, coil after coil, between two
great masses of ivy, th deep shadow of
which would even in the day time make
it quite invisible from Mow.
With all her care, it made a rustling
among the leaves which sounded terri
bly loud amid that tomb like silence.
Had any one heard It? She clinched her
teeth in desperation as she listened, firm
ly resolved that if detected now she would
fling herself headlong from the tower
rather than-eee her hist hope of liberty
melt away. But all was still, and with
the slow, mechanical step of a sleep walk
er she descended the perilous stair.
Hut now that all was done, and noth
ing left for her but to wait, the slow
torture became all bnt unendurable.
The nearer tke time of her delirance
came the more impossible it appeared.
The rope ladder would be discovered;
Henri would be delayed by some acci
dent; Keretsenyi would return be
fore the time, or would perhaps sur
prise them in the very act of escaping,
and wreak upon them both the full fury
u-. uru .usu,
had already seen so many fearful proofs.
-1.- L -i:..k. . 1 .
Would the third evening never come?
it ciw ... -viuu, ureorT. u-.-us,
with coming storm, and as the red glare
of the angry sunset faded amid the
gathering of clouds that blackened over-'
head, Madeleine, watching it from the
summit of the fatal tower felt as if the
light of ber own life were going out
along with it Over earth and sky
brooded a grim, unnatural silence,
broken only by a hurrying hoof tramp
far away among the hills, as if some be
lated traveler were in haste to reach his
home ere the storm burst 1
Hark! was that a f.tiut sound of mo- j
sio from the black shadowy thickets be-1
low?
She held her breath to listen, and sud
deuly it came again, and this time her
quick ear caught, too plainly to be mis
taken, the notes of her favorite song.
Her rescuer was there! j
But just then, as she bent down to se
cure as best she could the trap door that
opened from the stair on to the platform :
of the Pit tower before hazarding the
fearful descent, the approaching hoof
! tramn. which had been trrowin londer
nl "arer witt e'1? moment, came
rinoinf and rl.-itterimr into thA ronrt.
yard below, and then heretsenyi'a terri
ble voice was heard shouting to his serv
ants in tones of thunder:
"Keep below, and whatever yon may
see or hear do not stir a foot, or you are
oil dead men!" j
Jfow or never! Spurred to new action ;
by the imminenceof her peril Madeleine ;
sprang to the edgeof the battlement and j
prepared to descend. Cut hardly had
she got one foot over tlwcpinjt stone
when the trapdoor, watch s.;e had closed 1
behind her, was bnrst open with a tre
mendous crash and Keretsenyi, with his
lark features all ablaze with fierce ex-
ntement and his eyes flaming like live
! loala, came bounding on to the platform.
"Traitress!" shouted he in a voice of
thunder, as he stamped furiously upon
the moldering pavement, "would yon
1 1 r,..i 1 11 . . i
ueiray m u.r uut jou snail not e-
cape so easily. The honr is come, and
this night one of us two must die?"
Those savage words were his last.
Before the furious stamping of hit
nighty foot the crumbling stones gave
way a black and frightful chasm
yawned suddenly beneath his very feet
with a terrific crash and he was gone!
No cry came up from the blackness of
that awful gulf, bnt far down in its
gloomy depths was heard a dull, muffled
reverberation, like the sound of a heavy
body being dashed from ledge to ledge
of a seemingly bottomless abyss, and
tnen all was snii. me last or mean-
cient race of Keretsenyi had indeed gone !
down alive into the grave, and
ghastly prophecy was fulfilled,
What followed, Madeline could never
have told. The horror of this crowning
tragedy was so great and overwhelming
that it seemed to benumb every sense
and thought, and the next thing of
which she was clearly conscious was
finding herself she knew not how out- ,
side the castle, and standing upon a
small patch of open ground about a bow
shot from its gate, while Henri de Mor
temart, supporting her with one hand,
held a horse by the bridle with the
other.
"Mount quickly behind me, for
heaven's sake," said he through his
clinched teeth, as he helped her up, "or
we are lost!"
And away they went like an arrow
from a bow, just as a bustle and a glanc
ing to and fro of lights within the
gloomy building told that its inmates
had taken the alarm.
By daybreak they were many a mile
away from the terrible castle, which
was destroyed by fire only a few days
later a fit end, indeed, for that den of
horror and death.
Madeloine returned to her native land
in safety, and as the jewels which she
brought back with her sufficed to re
deem the greater part of her father's lost
estate the old geiitlemuu wn very well
pleased with the whole affair, and always
looked back njsiii it und upon his own
cleverness in bringing it about with tin
mingled satisfaction. But ultiiough be
never lost a chance of talking about
"my late son-in-law, Prince Kerotseuyi,"
grim museum of her Unit
TUB KMX
ORCHARD AND GARDEN.
FRUIT GROWING AND GARDENING FOR
AMATEURS AND PROFESSIONALS.
Ths Lawn riauis, Climber anil Trees
Thai Are Nitltmt to lis Hen. air morns.
Soft Maples and llacsberrya Are Qnlck
Growers.
In the planting of a lawn to trees,
shrubs and plants do not crowd, do not
oWure, do not overdo. Any plant
worth placing in a lawn is jealous of its
pace. All lawn plants should have
heavy, rich and stately foliage, dark
green rather than sorolier gray. They
should be set iu deep holes, narrow at
the top, wide at the bottom, iu a strong
mold which will stand an abundance of
water without baking. The raladinm is
a msguincent plant The canna is an
other attractive plant Selected varie
ties of the dahlia will pay, so will a col
ony of selected tulips, poppies, peonies,
and, for screens, the new hollyhocks.
For lawn trees, the soft maple and
"
haokherry are recommended for quick
,,,,, ,
mmm itallU of
..-,,, ,h(, .WWl. hirVorv. the
bnrr oak, the red elm, the hasawond, the
white pine or the mountain pine, and
the mountain ash. About or near ths
house, says the writer of the foregoing
in Country Oentleinan, I would not plant
a single Scotch or Austrian pine. The
black walnut is lutd for caterpillars. 1
think that the chestnut, sycamore and
willow, with the weeping lieech, weep
ing birch and fir. will soon be counted
among our reliable and popular lawn
trees.
Climbers should be trained to (takes
painted either white or vermilion. At
Bishop Perry's place in Davenport, la.,
there is the. finest plantation of roses I
ever saw. The old Rhenish gardener
trains histfoneral Jacqueminots to stake
shout six feet high, and prunes them in
the form of an intergrowing twiggy col
umn something over a foot in diameter.
Tree and I'luut Labels.
The cross form of the labels so often
public parks and private orn.v
cental grounds is ojien to the criticism
Of imparting to Stlrll resorts Of pleasure
and recreation a cemetery like appear
ance. Mr. K. Endlicher, a German land
scape gardener, uses and recommends
the style of label showu in annexed cut,
a reprint from Popular Gardening.
WW,
CONVENIENT TREE AND PLANT LARFXS.
This label is not only simple, cheap
. t '
d nractical. but also nleasinir to the
eye, and at the same time showing the
j name legibly and prominently. The label
part is cut or stumped out of heavy sheet
; zinc. The form to be adopted may be
the one shown in illustration, or it may
vary from this according to individual
taste. The face side is given two coats
of black paint, and upon this, when thor
oughly dry, the name is to be written
with white paint prepared from rectified
varnish and white lead. Only the very
best quality of each ingredient should
be used. The writing may Vie done with
a common soft pen after the point has
been dulled on a grindstone, or better
wu B0Of)e nnill
as shown on sample label iu illustration
admits of crowding the name in a very
small space. After the name is put on
and has become thoroughly dry, the
whole surface should tie given a coat of
best rectified varnish. When dry, such
label will be good for many years, unless
injnred or spoiled with malice aforo
thought
For larger trees the labels may be
fastened directly upon the body, lit
proper height. For shrubs and plant n
piece of galvanized iron wire is attached
to each label in the manner shown at
the right hand figure of the illnstration,
namely, by winding it through two eyes
formed by soldering two little pieces of
lighter wire to the back.
Peach Orchards.
C. E. Hollister had the following to
say before a meeting of the Southern
Illinois Horticultural society:
Do not plant a large peach orchard
without ample means and skill requisite
to their best condition. The tree at best
is but short lived, the crops uncertain,
yet with good fruit decently handled,
ready sale will be found at fuir prices.
Were I planting another peach orchard
I would plant close, say fifteen fiset,
push the young trees two years after,
and then let them grow slow without
further cultivation till after the first
crop; in the meantime keep the growth
down and make the trees dwarf in their
habits. If by the means of plum stocks
more dwarf habit can be secured tht
better.
jii
MYSTERIES OF POULTRY" MIXJNO.
Carious Faets Abtml llnw Mongrel tlreeill
Are MnuieUmes rrmlueetl.
A flock of very iiiertor prise winning
Ply-month Koch fowls were permitted to
mil with a flock of Creeper during tho
summer, fall and winter until four weelj
previous to the next breeding season,
when they were nevrted and not al
lowed even to Keewicli other until th
hutching Reason was over again. Amonij
the Plymouth Hook chlekena was acock-
I erel, and a much better specimen than
j Is iismilly .Mn in our exhibitions, ex
! cept that, when fully matured, It had
I Creeper legs not over two Inches long,
and was sold to a poultry crank who
was attlieted with sjmrts on the brain,
and who, from this detestable mongrel
bin), hoped to produce a new hreMl thai
was to rejoice iu the cognomen of Ply
mouth Rock Creeper.
Concerning this Instance we write
from personal knowledge. Lot lis olt
a ease of a friend of ours, a man liljrhlv
esteemed and of unquestionable veracity
and superintendent of a Sabbath school.
Now don't giiKitlo down the Idea that
S:ibhath school superintendent tniiHt
be implicitly Mieved simply by reason
of his position, for that bird has flown
long ago, sorry to say. Hut a person
does not establish a life long reputa
tion and character for nothing. This
man had no conceivable motive for mis
representing the c.w, and stated It to 111
as one of the strange things Iu nature's
philosophy, of which the wisest of in
know so little.
In a transaction with a man five or
six miles distant h received six light
Brahma hens called pure stock, and
placed them with hisowu thoroughbred
light Brahmaa, the only breed he kept
on his four acre place. Six months
afterward one of these hen selected a
Best in a secluded Corner by herself,
and from her own egg hatched ten
chickens, every one of which was as
black as Sntau.
Determined to investigate so strange
a freak, he ascertained that during the
year previous thse lions had cohabited
with a black Spanish crower, and as I lis
Spanish crosa la perhM as impressive a
one as any, the f.u t that iu one instance
its influence extended into the running
year and iu the other five no trace of it
whs seen, may be added to the list of
things worth studying, if not to the li-t
of unexplained mysteries. We coulj
multiply instances, but it is unnecessary.
We admit they are comparatively rare,
but what h; occurred once can occur
aain, and we claim that the only nli
solutely safe plan is to never permit dif
ferent breed to mingle. W. 11 Uudd
in Poultry World.
Jersey and AlUernej,
There are really thne brewd of cattle
that are much ulike. in size, shape and
duiry qualities. Those are Jersey, AI-,
iloruey and Guernsey, each taking its
name from an island off tho coast of
France. Ahlerney is a little island near-;
est to England. Its cattle wer known
and bred in Kuglaud ami ubrmel before
the Jerseys were much thought of. The
island being very small, the cattle were
few, mid the more numerous Jerseys and
Guernseys have liecn bred and traine I
as distinct breeds. While the Aldernevs
differed from the others both as to origin '
and chiiraoteristit) qualities, their Inter
ests have never been pushed, and their
only herd book is au appendix f the
Guernsey herd book.
We notice that fanners associate tlm
char fawn color with the name 'Ahler
ney.'" Most Aldemeyg am of this color, '
thongh sometime ssttcd with white. !
The Jerseys are of all color from grny
to black. Must Ahlerney are larger
than Jerseys, though of much the same
shape. One reason why the names are
mixed is that a few Alderneys were
brought into the country first and showed
the possibilities of this chut of cows.
Jersey was called upon to supply the de
mand, but the original name, "Ahler
ney," was still retained until the Jerseys
became improved so as to be profitable
as farm stock.
Jerseys cannot be bred from Alder
oeys any more than ilolstains can be
bred from Shorthorns if the regular
herd test admission to registry In the
herd book is applied, bnt so far as yield
ing rich milk is concerned the daughter
of an Aldemey would throw no discredit
npon the name of Jersey. Rnral Now
Yorker.
Points of Intereas.
"It has been a long pull and a hard
pull for the cattle men," says The Stock
Growers' Journal, "but those who hav
so bravely stood by the old steer are at
last to reap the reward they justly do
serve." The Guernsey Cattle Breeders' associa
tion are officially investigating the re
ports that this breed of cows is peculi
arly subject to tuberculosis. Tho same
report circulates from time to time alsu
In regard to J ersey cattle. The Q uernsey
men are going to give the story its quietus
so far as their favorite cow is concerned.
Importers of foreign slock should not
forget that sheep mid hogs must lie in
quarantine fifteen days on arrival at
any port of the United States, if they
are brought from anywhere else tluin
either North, South or Central America,
Horses are not detained. U.Ule must
be quarantined ninety days. Canada,
however, admits sheep and hogs free of
quarantine.
A working bee lives six weeks in tns
busy season, and tho supply must be con
tinually replenished by new hatches.
A woman poultry raiser writes to the
editor of The Southern Live Stock Jour
nal that she bos four pnllets which began
to lay in October. They commenced
then and have kept it up ever since,
never having left off a whole week in
the time. From Jan. 1 to April 18 the
four laid 243 eggs, and the proud owner
of these pullets has a right to ask, Who
can beat that?
To rear lambs on cow's milk make a
mixture half milk and half wator and
add to it a tublcspoouful of sugar to the
pint. Linseed tea is sometimes used in
stead of water in tho mixture. The tea
is made by boiling an ounce of linseed in
a pint of water,
wmmmsmm
B. &af - I asm ITiaWirial-'llaTr W . . M
h ., , a J l ..
I rmr r r f" LI
THE
Ifilamette
j
Hi'H IIS IVlU'I'KMr NTS ,t'i
HOflBE' SEEKERS
INVESTORS.
We hiive lots :.0x'.tv feet, lUOx'.'U) f"'t, nil fnvornMy located. Tlieso
lots twice the onlinury hiu ore hut Imlf the usual price of other 1U sim
ilarly liH'iitdl, Wo have ono-ticre, two-nere, fivo itml ton-noro trai tx,
stiitiiblo for Hiihtirlmii homos, convenient to town, schools, churches,
etc., hikI of very prtHluotive soil. A laro, grow inn 'Truno Orchard," of
which we will sell jmrt in small tracts to unit purchaser, nud on easy
tcllllrl.
Call & See Us & Get Prices
it ohpwh my omcK, ok on
IIOUMIIT 1. TAFT, at Portland (Mice,
. HO Mlnrh Ml., I'OKTI. III.
Ilneswes.
The question is ofteu asked by ama
teurs "IX) bee make wax?' Tho an
swer is Ye. Was is a natural secre
tion of the honey been, formed in deli
rate scab 011 tho under side of th
nbdoiueu. While it is funned to aomo
1'iU'iil in activity, it U formed iu largest
qiiuntiUi' in repiwii, while the be are
quietly clustering inside tho hive. Wax
is used by the bee for Comb building.
Tho production of each pound require
iu tho ucighliorhood uf twenty pound
of honey.
Another thing that puzzle beginner
Is how to render old comb without au
extractor. Wuglvoapliut rmviuiueiided
by Iloot in his work on lee culture. It
is simply a large honey barrel having a
basket made of pcrforat! sine suspended
in it by a tuxip that mta on the top of
tho barrel. A utaiii pipe throw a
strong jet of steam into this basket, and
all one has to do i to shovel on the old
comb in any quantity. The wax U
found iu the basket
A MlnUU-rlal roajiirtor.
"We have bad nuiio curious men on
this line," said a Third avenue car con
ductor, "but I think six nit as strange a
any was one who had formerly Wit a
Methodist minister. How ho came to
get on a street car I don't know, but he
was a wholesome, manly sort of man,
and he did his work well, thonjh lie had
at first a singular way of doing things,
lie had been on tho front platform one
day collecting some fan, and when be
got back to tho rear platform a passen
ger told him a man bud got on at Hous
ton street and was sitting inside. The
conductor stood In the doorway and
looked in, bnt ho couldn't locate him.
Then ho said with ts-rfoct culmness,
'Will the gentleman who got on at
riotiston street please rise? The gentle
man who got on at Houston street stood
up like a man and paid bis furs." New
York Sun.
They Can't Do It.
There aro two things a full blooded
Indian cannot learn to do box or
wrestle. IIo is all right as a runner,
jumper and rough and tumble, but any
thing like science puts him out. His
way is to bite nnd kick and pull hair,
and he can't bo broken in to stand np
and take one on the nose. Detroit Free
IYess.
It is said that Daniel Webster was the
first editor of tho first college papet pub
lished in this country, the Initial num
ber appearing at Dartmouth in 1800.
These jonrnnls now number 190 in the
United States, while but 1 is issued in
ICiiiiUnd.
llelnrul Hint.
Tho Fruit Grower says: When red
rust appears upon raspberries or blnek
berries tho canos should at once lie care
fully cut away and burned.
The sulphite of iron has proven in
some cases to be a fair tonic for plants
with weak flower stems, Weak solu
tions should bo given ut first
Would you have an extraordinary de
velopment of fine foliage in cannas, cnlu
diiims, castor oil beans, eulalios, reeds,
ailanthiiH, etc? Then rely on an abun
dance of manure in the soil and abun
dant summer watering.
By sprayingwith a combination liquid
Paris green or London purple, or per
haps hellebore or tobacco extract In
place of the arsenite we can preveut in
jury from insects as well as fungoun
diseases.
j 1), jt
- tl
sell sum "I iiruiis trvei, II I'mim Isn't.
Kill ni'l ei'"l hillntreil itll I'M li
then large ii"iigh ' Ivur.
Noll' K foK IM HUi AlloN
I suit oillro si Oti'ion I'll j Ornn,
1 h i jd, l
Ni tine In hireliv lnn tliat the fnU'Omr
tisniril tfll'-r Im flinl tlitllrti ill Ills IlitftiU.'tt
: In umkr Sunt ernof in ui-"irl nt ill nslm nn!
Hist isii! will lie iii. Iwlnre tli !
I I.T sil l Kmelvrr Hie I' I-UI'I Dlllrn at
' ort'snti t'uy, ori'S"!!, in le'riiitMir a. IhvI, vli.
I A'mi.l Uliiie,
I'm H H N11 1X tt Ilia n ' , nl sen U 1 1 s,
! r n
I llrtmni-i the liillewllll wllneoi's tn ifii
hit ii.HMliUMiii relirii.e nin ami rullU lt'itt
i nl. ,lil Unit, via Mnrtlti liypr, Jmiiic r'lis
' ilrli'k nihI JiM'h V. kfiiua, nt Nullity I lm It-
Ntnn, I'tmlilr urcifiiii, sti l Jiirnnli II IVtir. ul
1 ai I'litiunil, liiliiii'iuh ruiiitly. ori-smi.
!ii i !.( j, I .ii ss-us. IH BlKior
Mil li K K'lH Hflil.lCATluN
U11.I nm
al Orrjnn Cltr. 'rr"B
on. P. I-WI
Si'llre li lierel'jr t(liu thai Hie liillimlin-
llatlli'il irMli-r hrt rlif-il tlnllr el h! lllll'llll'ill
In mikii n 1 1 1 I rnwif in iiiinil uf hid r!nn. ami
that M tomil will Ih tlisile Iwlnre llm li ,-st t a-n-rniiil
lii i-eivcr nl tlm t'. s l.nn. inure, at
tlrritiiu t it) , Oil's Hi Peremlier . IWI, vU
tharli'i 1 Htuki-a,
llmnraleail Kulf, No, STIi, tnrllie s nl mo
Jii I I s 1 s e
He llllll Ihe Inllnwlll wltuixm s Id imv
hi, riintliiiiiiii, rrslili-n.-e tlttli anil colli vat l"tl
ill. Intel, vii. K llrninlinll, tlm Manlier
11. 1 A. Juhnotiin iilAniftf l . ami t'liarli'S
f hane, nl Sntnly I' 11 , all nl 1 'Urkaitian r-nmily,
on nm.. J.l Arrsaxis, Itmlmrr
10 .VI IJ--4
NuTIt T. KOK PI'lll ICATIoN.
I ami om storr-inn City. iirn..ii.
Niivsmlier s. Ii.
Nmlne Is hervlif (Ivan Dial the fiillnwliif
nnnieil nfltler had fllcil tintlee nf hut liitmillnu
In make flusl eriMif In iitnrt nf lilt rUlut. niiil
that smIiI iiriMil will Iwrnle lMiim the l(iiti"ti-r
ami lUrelwr nl tlisl'.S lain) oitlre at ori-Knti
City, 1 iri-ifniL, im I'eronila'r J, l'VI, vis;
Psnlel Clliriinl,
llnmrsleail enlrj Nil AA Inr tut 4 (or liw li nl
aw rr .'Ml, IH.rKll
llci nHnim the Intlnwliif wltnenie. In irnv
hi rnnilimnii, reaiitetiee iimti ami cultivation
ol sat'l laml, vls-
(....rur W lliiimale, Jnhu K lli k r, l.tra 0
Ijo.oii.H M llni.i.liy. all nl Mnlalla, Clai-kk-
tllNi rnllllly, Ori-nti,
llil.l'JI J T API'KIIHOS, KeslMer,
NollCK Kill! rt'lll.li'AlltiN.
I ami Oltleo atoii'Knii I'lly, O-ecm,
Oct II.H, 1-01.
Nnttee la tlerehy itlven Hint Hie IiiIIiiwIiib
nitiuefl Mf-Mler Inia DUmI tmtii-e nl his Itituntlnii
In tiiiiki liieil tirniif In miiiiirt nl tiUrlfilitt, ami
thaisilil priMil will Im mmli lielore llir IO'n
ter ami lleeelvrr nl the I' H l.xml oflli'ii, t tiro
(nil Uly, Uri'ijnli, iiu Deeemlwr Is, lain, vli:
James A. Hlilliley,
Itiimmtimil Knlry, Nil Win Inr (he w Ijiiln W
ami 11 1, nl s w 1, ul see , 1 4 s, t 4 .
IIo ItHlitea ths InllnwhlK willies es li prove
tila I'liiitlniiiiiia reNlilmiru iiuiii and eiiltlvattnit
nl. alil laml. vis: H II. Kriii')'. Kilwln Unlns.
WIIII11111 K nil le stiil Jsiiiiia Mniiiiey, all ul
Hirlhiwiili'r. Clacks man eitiinly, tiri'irnti.
lui li I J. T. ArritHsoN. Hi-ulmor.
NOTICK KOIt PIUIMCATIDN.
I.snil Olllre al Ori'Kim CUy, Ori enn,
Dei. 'A IWII.
Nnllre Is hereby kIvimi Hint tlm InllnwIiiK
nnmnil mill lor hak tlliiil mitlen nl his Intention
to make II mil iriinf In Hiipiinrt ol his iiIhiiii. hikI
th'it mil'i pmnf will he mmln helnre Mm Itr-Kls-ler
ami lieei'iver nl the II. H. I.aml nliled ut tiro
gnu City, On iioii, 1111 Dei'imilwr 1", lsul, V Ik :
John T. Evans,
llnmi'ileail Kutry, No. lisw, for tlm r 1 j ol 11 w
!4, anil 11 ol 11 e 1; ol no 10, t 4 s, r i a
lie Humus tho followliiK wIIihisniir to prnvft
Ills eoiitliiiioiis riiMlileneo iiion niel ciiltlviitlon
ol, mil. I Inml, vis: J II Isovls anil It, W. tlrll
HlliN.ol Miilino, .1. (Irneu, ol OruKon (Illy itml
II. Iliickner, nl Mink, all of Clack 11111111 ooinily,
Oregon. J. T. Aitkhhon, Iti'ifliitiir.
10110: 12-4
NOTICK FOR 1'HIII.ICATION.
T.ttiid Ollloe at Ori)(Oii City, nrsiron,
Oct. 'A isul.
Notice Is hereby clven that the following
nnineil si'ltlnr tins II led notice nlhls liilentlou
to iiiiikiilliuil proof n nipport nf his claim, ami
that sulil prool will be mails beforntho KckIk
Icr anil Itiimilvnr of the II. M. I.nnil liKloo nt Ore
gon city, Oregon, 011 Hecemhcr in. Isul, vl:
Kdwsrd D. McdcO,
Pro I). S. No. 7411, for the n w of sec 84, to s,
r II 11,
Ho nnrnes the following witnesses tn prove
Ills continuous reKlilenco upon ami cultivation
of, sulil laml, vis: Martin Nhulsinil, Amltew
Hiiinl riKHtni. Albert Knglo anil Kriuis Krlksou,
all ol Moliilla, Cliii'kitniits con ill y, Oregon.
Jacob (j, Hchroilt. who msilo hotnoHtuail entry
No. Ii:i7 Is espiii'lnlly reiiienuii1 to appear ami
oflr wlinlcver nhjectlons he may have to said
proof, J, v A rpKKxoN, Hegister,
10-00:12-4
i f
Land