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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1893)
WHY THE SEA IS SALT IT RECEIVES MINERAL SALT FROM LAND AND LOSES NONE. Th Procoaa of Evaporation RiIimn Water from th Octane, but tha Salt Remain. Therefor tha Sea It Continual! U roar lug Mora 6altj. Why is tea wator salt? is qnction Hint has been regarded as s mystery nd baa given rise to sonm curious specu lations, but a little consideration on the abject must, I think, satisfy ns all that it would be very wonderful, quite in comprehensible, if the waters of the ocean were otherwise than salt as they are. The following explanation was first suggested to myself many years ago when receiving my first lestons in prac tical chemical analysis. The problem then to be solved was the separation of the bases dissolved in wator by precip itating them oue by one in a solid con dition, filtrating away the water from the first, then from this filtrate precip itating the second, and so on until all were separated or accounted for. But in doing this there was one base that was always left to the last on ac count of the difficulty of combining it with any acid that would form a solid compound a difficulty so great that ita presence was determined by a different method. This base is soda, the predomi nating base of sea salt, where it is com bined with hydrochloric aciiL Not only is soda the most soluble of all the mineral bases, but the mineral acid with which it is combined forms a remarkably solu ble series of salts the chlorides. Thus the primary fact concerning the salinity of sea water is that it has selected from among the stable chemical elements the two which form the most soluble com pounds. Among the earthy bases is one which is exceptionally soluble that is, magnesia and this stands next to soda in its abundance in sea water. Modem research has shows that the ocean contains in solution nearly every clement that exists upon the earth, and that these elements exist in the water in , proportions nearly corresponding to the mean solubility of their various com pounds. Thus gold and silver and most of the other heavy metals exist there. Sonnenstadt found about fourteen grains of gold to the ton of seawater, or a.dolkr'8 worth in less than two tons. As the ocean covers all the lower valleys of the earth, it receives all the drainage from the whole of the exposed land. This drainage is the rainwater that has fallen upon this exposed surface, has flowed down its superficial slopes or has sunk into porous land and descended underground. In either case the water must dissolve and carry with it any sol uble matter that it meets, the quantity of solid matter which is thus appropri ated being proportionate to its solubility and the extent of its exposure to the solvent Rain when it falls nppn the earth is distilled water, nearly pure (its small impurities being what it obtains from the air), but river water when it reaches the ocean contains measurable quantities of dissolved mineral and veg etable matter. These small contribu tions are ever pouring in and ever accu mulating. This continual addition of dissolved mineral salts without any cor responding abstraction by evaporation has been going on ever since the surface of the earth consisted of land and water. An examination of the composition of other bodies of water which, like the ocean, receive rivers and rivulets and have no other outlet than that afforded by evaporation, confirms this view. All of these are more or less saline, many of them more so than the ocean itself. On the great tableland of Asia, "the roof of the world," there is a multitude of small lakes which receive the waters of rivers and rivulets of that region and have no outlet to the ocean. On a map they ap pear like bags, with a string attached, the bag being the lake and the string the river. All these lakes are saline, many of them excessively so, simply because they are ever receiving river water of slight salinity and ever giving off vapor which has no salinity at all. There is no wash through these lakes, as in the great American lakes or those of Constance, Geneva, etc. The sea of Aral and the Caspian are lakes without any other outlet than evaporation, and they are saline accord ingly. The Dead sea, which receives the Jordan at one end and a multitude of minor rivers and rivulets at the other end and sides, is a noted example of ex treme salinity. It is, as everybody knows, a sea or lake of brine. The to tal area of land training into the great ocean does not exceed one-fourth of its own area, while the Dead sea receives the drainage and soluble matter of an area above twenty times greater than its own, and thus it fulfills the demand of the above stated theory by having far greater salinity than has the great ocean. According to this view the salinity of the ocean must be steadily though very slowly increasing, and there must be slowly proceeding a corresponding adap tation of evolution among the inhabit ants, both animal and vegetable. The study of this subject and the effect which the increasing salinity of the past must have had upon the progressive modifications of organic life displayed by fossils is. I think, worthy of more at tention than it has hitherto received from paleontologists. W. Mattien Wil liams in Science. Her Point of View. A charming lady of the old school, who is a member of one of the historical fam ilies of Massachusetts, says that she never goes by a statue of her most distinguished kinsman without wishing it did not stand there in the sun and in the storms. "Other people like statues," she says, "but I do not I don't like to see my cousin rained on, and I always feel it when the snow falls." Boston Tran script, We mr.f render the words of one lan guage literally into those of another and ) et I jee the very spirit of the whole, but tLore are cases of what may be called 'avmmthatta truulaiion." SOUTHERN CREAMERIES. Dairy rroapevta In tba Mild Cllmata M tha Smith. The development of the great re sources for dairy enterprise in the south deserves careful attention for one rea son among others that the mild winters afford the best opportunities for butter and cheese milking, when all the north ern dairies are in enforced idleness or working under disadvantages on ac count of the cold weather. There are creameries now at work iu Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana, South Carolina and Junto, Carolina, and there is no good reason why this should not be the case even in Florida. Butter made in the winter might be shipped to northern markets and to foreign countries, where the prices paid are euonuous. , This foreign business is now in the hands of the Daues and French, aud those countries do uot possess the cou- veniences that are found in the southern states. The feeding is so cheap that butter may be made for ten cents a pound, and the profit from the manure that would be made, aud which is so much needed, would easily be equal to half as much. The conditions of the season are reversed in the south, for the mild winter affords equal advantages for butter making that are enjoyed in the summers of the north, with a large preponderance in favor of the south. Dairying would cheapen the cotton prod uct, for it would fit the soil well for this crop and would supply the best manure for it In the southern mountains the busi ness may be carried ou every day in the year, and the fine grasses there grown, with the cheap pastnre in the cool sum mers iu the shady woods, where a vari ety of grasses aud edible weeds and the numerous cool springs afford the finest facilities for summer dairying in the whole country. Butter of the finest quality may be there made for less cost than elsewhere in the world. American Agriculturist. Cold Cream Churning. Vice President Morton's butter maker has started the fashion of making hi Uneruesy cream into butter at a very low temperature. His process, as ex plained to the editor of Tho Rural New Yorker, is as follows: When the evening uiilkiug is about one-quarter done the separator is start ed, and the milk, warm from the cows, is run through it In a few minutes after the milking is done the cream is all separated. It is at once aerated and cooled, getting it down to about 40 degs. It is then put into the cooling room and held at that temperature until the next morning. The morning milk goes through the same process, and as soon as it is cooled the night aud morning creams are mixed together and churned. "At what temperature do you churn?" "At from 38 to 39 degs." "Thirty-six to thirty-nine why that is revolutionary! How long, pray, does it take to complete the churning process with the cream at that low tempera ture?" "Yon will be surprised when I tell you that it takes only from twenty to thirty minutes. When we began to churn sweet cream we started in with the cream at a temperature of 62 degs. But that was not satisfactory. In spite of our most careful and painstaking work the Babcock tester applied to the buttermilk showed that we were losing about 2 per cent, of our butter fat. "We then began a gradual reduction of the temperature, testing the butter milk carefully all the time. The indi cations were favorable we were on the right track. When we had got down to 36 to 89 degs. we found we were prac tically getting all the fat, the butter milk showing only about one-twentieth of 1 per cent. As you say, this low temperature churning seems to set aside many preconceived opinions and the ories, but it works perfectly with us." Farm aud Creamery Butter. Our best hotels, restaurants and pri vate customers pay higher prices for creamery butter because it is always uniform. On the farm there is often a lack of facilities, and first class butter cannot be made. Too much of it is made in the kitchen, and the cream raised right where it can absorb the odors of j boiled cabbage, onions or other veg I etables. Give the skillful farmer and his wife the facilities of the creamers, and they will produce butter as fine uo or finer than can be produced in the creamery. Many cows most of those from which comes the cheap butter are now run ning out and eating frozen grass and dry cornstalks, foods that will not put flavor into butter, and the cows are what are known as "strippers" in milk since last spring. The high priced butter, or most of it, is made from milk of well fed cows fresh in milk. All along in the journey of butter from the milk pail to the butter tub there is a chance for butter to pick up flavors foreign to its own. Exchange. Making 11 utter Come la Winter. Nine times out of ten the reason the churn does not churn in winter is be cause the cows have been in milk a long time and give a milk which is some what viscous. Owing to this viscosity or stickiness 1t would seem that the fat globules are not able to clear themselves and cohere to form the larger butter globules. The best way to remedy this difficnltv is to have Dart of the mvi fresh in the fall, in which case the difficulty usually disappears. If milk is set in deep cans, pour in one-fifth of the bulk of warm water at time of setting; perhaps this will even help in the shallow pan setting. Since the cream from shallow pan setting is very thick, try diluting it with water, and also ue little salt at churning ttine. Professor Henry. HAULING IN FODDER EARLY. Aa Opinion on lha Fermentation of Cornstalk. The colnmon objection to drawing stalks iu early is that they will heat in mow or stack. If piled in large heaps soon after being cut the mass will rot down and be good for nothing except manure. But soma fermentation is not objectionable if not carried too far. It in a way cooks the sulks, and even when it resnlta in some loss of nutrition it makes what remains more palatable, ml probably also more easy to be di gested. We have often seen cattle iu winter greedily picking out the stalks that had become overheated in the mow, and whun fed were still moist from the heating. Some of these stalks were mildewed, and we feared that they might, if fed to cows bearing young, cause abortion, but we later abandoned that theory as a mis take. It was certain that the cows liked best these mildewed because heated stalks, and in the matter of feed we have a good deal of faith in a cow's judgment as to kind if not as to quan tity. Probably the fluids that aid diges tion have power to change tho food, un less it bos a pungent odor like turnips or cabbages, so that in the Btomaoh the mass is resolved into nearly the same kind of mass, whatever the food, and ouly differing as to the kind and amount of nutrition it origiually coutaiued. There is, we believe, less danger from excessive and injurious heating of fresh stalks, dried as much as they can be without exposure to rain and freezing, than there is from wet stalks that have been exposed to atmospheric changes for several months. The green stalks will heat if piled up, and in hot weather will soon rot down. But we believe it pos sible to get them in barns or stacks dried as much as they can be without exposure to rain, and by mixing dry Straw with them keep tho whole in bet ter condition thun is possible any other way. If the bundles of stalks are made small a layer of straw between each layer of bundles will alworb all the moisture that the stalks give off iu fer menting. The straw itself thus sub jected to heating will become more pala table, aud will be eaten by stix-k which will refuse dry straw from the stack. Straw is plentiful at this season on most large farms. There can be no better way to use it than in helping to save the corn fodder in good condition. In the heating of cornstalks that have not been exposed to rain or freezing there is much less likelihood of the moro injurious fungous growths that come from fermentation of cornstalks whose I nutrition has largely been washed out I of them. The rich juices of the ripened I cornstalks act partially as a preserve -j tive, and at any rate the richer feed th ,t stock gets from these sweeter sta' ks maintains vigorous health and enaMes I the animal to resist the fungous prions j that depend on physical exhaus ,on to j make thein effective. A well no irished animal can easily resist danger f :om im j proper feeding for a time tl at in a j starved animal might soon piove fatal. American Cultivator. Iloinemade Hee Feeilera. The first is a quart basin of cheap tamped ware with a l)4'-iiich hole cut in the bottom, into which a tulie is sol dered. The top of the tube comes to within one-half inch of being even with the top of the basin. Now open the hole in your honey board, or remove packing and cut a small hole in the quilt, over which place the basin so that the bees can come up through the tube. Make a tube of coarse paper and push it into the tin tube to aid the bees in climbing up. Fill the basin with sirup as far as the top of the tube, place a float of cloth or anything to keep the bees from drowning. Now cover the basin over with paper and make it as warm as yon please with packing. The bees will come up aDd take that feed in cool weather, and no openings have been made to allow the much needed heat of the hive to escape. The other feeder is made in this way: Take a Mason quart jar. Break the porcelain lining out of the cover; punch a dozen or more small holes in the cover with an awl. Now get a piece of pine board y. by 4 inches square; with an ex- tension bit bore a hole through it large enough to receive one-quarter inch of the top of the jar. When the cover is on, fill the jar with thin sirup. Screw the perforated cover on tight; place the block over the hole in the honey board or quilt; insert the jar and insert In the block; replace packing, etc. The bees will suck the contents out of the jar in one or two days, though of itself it will not run out. I think this is an improved method of using the Mason jar as a feeder. Gleanings. Live Stack Poluta. The story is told that a young tailor died in Bellevue hospital, New York, from "sheep rot." While cleaning wool en clothing he got "homo of the stuff" under his finger nails, and blood poison ing set in. It is quite probable that while cleaning the clothing the young tailor got infectious microbes of some kind under his finger nails and so caught the contagion that resulted in erysipelas and death, but it is more than improbable that the poison was sheep rot. It is far more likely to have come from the person who had worn and soiled the clothing before the young tailor took it in hand to clean it. The Rural New Yorker is authority that dried brewers' grains are an excel lent dairy food, in the proportion of eight pounds brewers' grains to two pounds of cornmeal. Among the ' steeds at the New York horse show were a Clydesdale stallion that weighed 2,200 pounds and a Shet land pony that weighed seventy pounds. There is considerable fun to outsiders when the railroads and the dressed meat combine quarrel. Some experts claim that the best cross in raising poultry for broilers is that of Plymouth Rock hens with Brown Leg horn roosters. Vlanb Ferry's Seeds and man a rich ' barren. illearaalwa reliable. alwaye In demand, alwaye the tieet FERRY'S SEED ANNUAL! Far INDII la Invaluable to Try Plainer. Jtua fwyrtijunliii or the laieai rarniing i luluroiaunn rrmu uia niaiiaatauuioriuee. i Mallei) . tree. kD.n.FbKRYA. DETROIT. Mirn. BILLIOUSNESS The S. 11. Headache and Liver Cure, I PHYSIC J If Taken m Hlreetetl, we (luarantee Halls faction ur brfunil Your Money. Don't Sicken. Don't Cripe. 50 cents per bottle, by L. M. Andiikws, the Seventh street druggist. vint row a case it will not cumc, AnaorrcoHhle TjiisHvc and N KH V K TON IU. Sold by liriurir'ataoratjiit by mail, tic., Wc,, and $1.00 per packutre. tJaiupli- fn-o. lr Mrt Tha Favorite TOOTH POTtH HU il Ufcu-tuo Tout" and lirvaiu.Sio. For sale bvC. (i. lltintlev. A GOOD INVESTMENT Is one that brings big returns. A G00O MEDICINE Is tho one that does what Is claimed for It. OREGON KIDNEY TEA will oire nil Iliarnara of the Kid neyi bio! t'riiiary irn-iua. Cou-ti pntiou, iMiibrtca, Scalding l'aio wbcu Urinal init. Piiilli in the Hnclc aud Li.i.Im, Irritation ol the llhulilrr, llrick I)ut Dcpoaitt and Urihfe Dut-ute, CURE YOURSELFand Live a Lone Time with out paying Interest on your Lease or Life, by suffering- W. S. MAPLE, Blacksmithing and Repairing. Having one (if the best aimers in the ftiite in my employ, I rnuke H0RSM0EIXG A SPECIALTY ALL WORK ATTENDED TO PROMPTLY. Shop opposite corner from Tope's hardware store. ORECON CITY. ORECON. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court ol tho State ol On-gon, lor the County ol Clitckamm, : Mra. Mehaln Ann Teeter, plaintiff, v. Sarah L. Munli, Dycle A. Hope, Iiavld V. Hope, Krnent F. Hope, Daniel K. Pone, Hardy M. A. Hope, abd Clarence Floyd, deleuilniita. To David r. Pope, F.rtieat F. Hone, Danlul E. Hone, and Hardv M. A. Hone, delcuilaiita: In the name of the State ol Oreiton, You are hereby required to appear and auxwer the com plaint filed aimliml you Iu tho ahoveentltled milt ou or before the Brat day of the next term of the above entitled court, to wit: the term be ginning Monday, April 17th, 1HU3; and if you fail o to anawer for want thereof the plaintiff will take a decree HKuinnt you for the relief de manded In the complaint, to wit: lor a decree tiartitlonliiK the N. !jof the 8. W. 'i of aectlon lo, and the N. W. M of tha 8. W. '4 of aectlon 10, In T. 4 H K. 1 K. In Clackamaa county, On-koii, according to the respective rlilita of the pnrttex, and for an eiiml distribution of the coals here in, and for inch other relief aa aeema meet and proper. This aummnn la made by publication In the Oregon City Kntnrpriae by order of the lion. K. D. HIiHttuck, made at Hortlaud, Orcfrmr and en tered of record ou the 27th day of February, isti.), 3:3 II. K. CKOHS. Atfy for pl'll. F COMPANY, FIHHT KKOIMKNT, O. N. fi. Armory, Third and Main. Regular drill night, Monday. Kcgular bualncaa meeting, flmt Monday of each month. urricsRH. J. W.Oanong, - - - Captain. F. 8 Kclley, - - First Lieutenant, L. L. Plckena, Second Llciitenatil, Portland-Clatskanie R'Q-U'T-E, STR. G. W. SHAVER, J. V. BHAVKIi, Master, Leaves Washington street dock, Portland, every Monday, Wednes day and Friday, at 6 A. M., for St. Helens, Kalama, Hainier, Oak Point and intermediate points, arriving at CLATSKANIE At 3 o'clock p. m. Return trips for Portland following mornings at 6 a. m. - For freight or passenger rates apply to dock clerk at Portland or on board stamer. This is the nearest and most di rect route to the Nehalem valley. lT'in.Jv.. .lri IBJM, IT ht -Irafl r TV tl WISO NOTICK ritlt ITM.ICATION. r.aofllo..tOr,,e.Vn.f.K-.( Nolle U hereby Weil " "' '"''""j;:" named aelllcr ho tiled , ' ? ''. In tuHkn tlnal nrnof In anpport "' 1,1 . , a aal.1 I on wilt bo nia-lo hctnic "I" '''"' ami Receiver '.I II. V. ''" ""' ' "'"" riiy, ori'smi. ' Ny " tlierlca O.I-NI. Heme .1 ei.lry, N U. ('' f, J 77 ran H IK Me itaniea the lollowtng fta-ei prove hi. contlnuou, re.ldeuee uijjn .ml cultivation "I "Id l". '"'i " '"V ril Tl-ll.e.-" K. H, vl. nry l.uigcrl. Alire. I . Heine ( Fred A. Thuin-a..u. Fiank I- hldrldgc, U ' i"7:ui"'k,mVT,AVrKUH;;N:...Ki....r. K'.,l,... .it AiilulllltUlulltOf Klrt'UUir, Noll. Ill hereby given, that Ihe '""';:'"!"; ho Im-cii appointed by the r.miny ' i'l '" lT..-..m.a oo.icty. ' ''";' VIiT ml! the Lai will audtcatamenluf Olive M.r.Hni. dci-eai.ed. All pcreonr hayhn Pllnn '" lbeeliel the mm oi.vo n. . 'i' -- ilulv verirli'.l. or nt Iho "lhe "I I'ri.wuril lrc..-r Iu Oregon City, Mlii ' i".""11'" ,r"m ll.l.'l.le. A II. JIAItgt ANI. KeM.t..r. Oreitoii City, Onuou. Mreh 17. , llrowuell A t'reor. Alt yt lr h r. I' ' NOTICK OK AI'IMICATION KOK 8 A LOON LICK.NHK. Nollee l hereby lvii lhl llieiii..ler.lt...-tl will amity to the elly eoiiiiell ol Oreo.i t liy. Oregon, at the rem.Ur meelli.g In April, lor l'.'iie (or a mIhoii on Main lreel between Thlr.l ami Kourlli altveta Iu obi eliy p. r II M AiN(ii Oregon City. Oregon, Mare h 31, IWM- SUMMONS. Ill Iho Clronlt Court ol Ihe Stale nl Oregon lor IlieCniinlv ol Clarkamai. A.hlle II. McMillan, .laiutlir.l va. K. II. MrMlltan. defendant. To K. It. .Mi'Mlllan, above named defendant: In the name of inornate ol Oregon you are re .iulre.1 lo appear and anawer Ihe emnplalnt ol the plaintiff herein on Monday. Ihe ITih.layof April, I; aud II you fall o to auawrr. the plaintiff will apply to the rourl for the rellel prayed for In the eoinplalut. lo wll: For a do i'reedlolvl.i e ' JUt of mairlmny now rulktliig belween and Ihe plalnllfT. and for iirhuilirr and lurlher relief inn the court may aeein equitable, and for horeoaia aud die tiuraementa In tlilaanlt. Tliliaiiiiiiiimialiiibllahed by order el l-ovel II, Miearna. Judge of Ihe 4ih Jii.ll. lal dlalrl.-t, niado ou the th day of Man li. Ivit llHouxtii. A lmi"Ka. g-0 4-14 Alloriieyi for Plaintiff hl'MMtlNS, III the Circuit Court of the Sta'e of Oregon fur the County of t lacktmaa. ora Faiilkm-r, planum, va. 1. D. Faulkner, di-'i-ndaiil ' To J D Faulkiu-r. Dip a twin- iinm-d di-li-ndant 111 the liauii-if the Statu of (iri'noli you are rviU('lcd In appi-ar ami anwt-r lh- i-iinilalut of llir plalulllt hrrelu. mi Monday, the IVIh day o Arll, a D. I-'J.I. ami II you f.ill loaiii-r the platlllltf will applv to the Cnurt h rtlu- relli-l prayed lor III Hie cunplalul, lo all: For a de cree du.nlvlug the I-umU of malnim-uy lo-w ti l.t mil In-twi-eii you and tlie plainllrl and lh.it lie have the rare, miti-dy and control of her mliioi child, Kuiii-iii- Faulkm-r. And lor urh other and (urUicr rellel lo tin- court may -cm iiiltHti- and )ut. And for her roMn and dlnboriicinrntR In tlil uit. 1' It 1 it Hiimmi-ui la imhllklo-d by order nt Hun l.oyal II. Si-ariii-. Ju.Ik-- ol the Fourth JodU'ial ll-l!li't id the State of I ir.-tnci Dated. February I.i HIUlMNFI I. .1 Dltr'SXKIt, i Jl- 3 :tll Alloriieyi hr plaintiff. SI'MMUNS. In the Circuit Court of the statu ol On-goii, f. -r the Cniinty of t larkima. Mary K Htt-veua. plaintiff, va. lie,, rue Miller and Catherine A. Miller, drfi tid anta. lo i,c, mc Miller and Catherine A. Mllh-r, laid llefendalKa; In the name of the State of Oregon. Ymi are hereby re,iiir--l to atieir aud amaer tin- riim plaint filed against vou In (tie ata-re eniltleit ult by the flmt day of tne next regular term of the alaive entitled court, to wit lliu termite- ginning April 17th, lM; and II yen fall o lo anawi-r. (ur want thereof the lainiltf will at--ply to the Court for the relief demanded In the complaint, to wit fur a Judgment analiKl you for the ,im of .ijHi, lu r s gi-ld coin, with It. tcrcRt thereon kluca (letota-r lat. lat, al a per cent, per annum i for the further aum ol nite biindi-M and fifty dullarn attorney fee, au-l for a decree furei lualng that certain mortgage eccuic-l by ymi on t-ald ocintH-r l.t. I't, lu fa vorot Ihla plaliitlrf. and n-cnr-led In tl-H-k page X.'i of the lecord of m-trlgagea fur aald count) ami -tale, ami for a italc of aald property and for cuhii ami dlhuri-emut. Ihla tummona la pul,li.li., In the tireiruti city Kntrirle by order ,,l tin- II. ,u. II Hurley, Judge of the lih judicial dl.trlrt, ma-le at Port laud. Oregon, Man h l.t, I -in : 1.14 II. K. Cltoss, Atfy for I'l ff. WOOD TURNING SCROLL SAWING BOXES OF ANY SIZES MANUFACTURED Parties rfuBiriiiu Vool Turnlnu, l'it terne, Urackt-tH, or Shop Carpenter's Work WllbeNuitti.l by Callinifon Mo. Doors, Windows and Blinds TO ORDER. Q-. H. BESTOW, 0. tlm ConirnKHtioiml Clnirch X ;jjuui..Illl S . :: .i i- i'. - - . . . '-.1 - aiia-ittiaTiggl eap. B rartsian Enamel: For the Ircnt.on of perfect C0u.pllon the lavonte I'renth Coametlc. ' Tlle Appel s Comploxlon Croam rradi Appel's S kl n Bleach, Kmdicate, n Ucm,he.ndd,Kob,r,..mnfll,,J17 "Ian, Sunburn, Freckle,, bwarll v a , a Bre""ynPPrnceolthela,e. y n1 APP! Orlontal Powder In Fie,h White, Pink and crei.ni ahadea, T, t 'rUM Ck"r 'ni lr""'-'t APP',Nl"'al Blush Theonly Rouge true to nature, when applied to the f i ?,! -It. . Vn1'""1' '" "a"' hruneltea TU Ajuiil Caimottc Co. Dig rr.nclicn clt OHARMAN &z CO, C ATA K ACT HOSK CO Nn 9 O.H.i.KaTow.BecV..U'S'F'r. FOUNTAIN IIOHK CO No 1 Regular meeting, aecond wli. 1 1 . month at engine K n. . rMlr. ,n between Hcvcnth and FhTbih MhI" "tre' I ACKRKMAN, Hi-c.'y, HiV.n.. P',TTE.9.KI::I:.K0RANfjK.Nna, B mecuaiiiicirha in M.P ,."r- n. nrday l each ,h " " " '"". '-cond H,t- np-mlicraal way. welcome- ' fc ra' V1"""'ll B. JACK, Becretarg J-R-WHITE, Matter, 0mm NOTICK Of flNAli HKTTl.KNKNT N'ollre la heteby given, Dial Ilia uinl.r.i .' ulll. I.IM Utlll MlltlM.H.I . e.ialool W. W Hullo"e. deeeaaeil, hai ltM M.itiiiu airair.ii -.".... ,i ai'ilouul or final aei.ii-ii.ru ii. .,uiny . ...l...... ,,!, i. tiiraoii, and 1 1 , . eourl ha. .i.poluled Monday. Ihe l.t day ian:l, at the honrof III oel.a'k A. M of n fur hearing onieeiioua ,uaui Ilfnirnl theieol mi KMII.Y If II I' LI OC K, Aduilnliii .i,i. it,, .ill aiiueied ol III eatate of llulloi'k, de.'ea.od. I H "Al,MI(,M ATIIU H Noili K. It Ihe miller of th " Charlea II. Jul! . de.'ea.e.l Nolle la hereby given, Ihal III undent,. 1 ' .' ,,.i. .li. .,1 March. IM.I. ,ll. Wll, Oil HIP l"" , ., ' ' pled a. a.tmliil.iral.l ol the e.iau t, I Myera, Jun. deeeaaed, by III Hon Connly Court of Ihe.iale .d Oregon fat r maa county. All per 'avl'ig elalm.a aid eaia.eare hereby nollHe.1 In pr.'tion with the proper vo.ieheta. wllhlii al u r" .7 I ,1 Ili'n In I i llluln,, Hln, iron, mo oair i - . al tbeollleeol Thoa. Hyan. Mailt Mrret goii CHy. Iiregoii. C'oHNel lA It Nm Haled Ihla IMh day f Meirta, NOTICK ItrriMAl. HKTTI.rMKNT. In III mailer of Ihe tl l John Hell deeeaaed. Ill Wlioill II nm, Nolire la heiehy given. Ihal Ihe tilider.!, i..,.i.,r ,,l ibe eilaleof John Hi- la .i ..!.i i,.B hUmI hia Snal report and art, ai.u.'h adiulnlilralor III Iheeoiililv e.lrl o! tale of Oregon lor the cntiniy nl Clark, and Ihal lueaday, the lllh .lav ol April, K til n clock in , a. .a.-i c.-mm . ..-.t....i.,.,u,iiLiHl aa Ibn lime and li Ur the ..-tlli-uieiil ol .aid filial ret" rt and am and in bearing ami .ii-im-u. -. , . , I .1.. 1 it N NK.I.l.VXll A'llil r of Iho eilalo of Johll HoiIwimkI, dee, iatel Standi I, lM. ' NOTICK OF AU.M1NIHTI1ATOI1 H HAU i- ..i..- I. I..l.w Ivmi lhat hv virtue l-lll I M.... .-J H -- - - order of aala tluly made and aulered ul i hy the Honorable Cmiiili: t'ourl "'I lha n. u( Clackaiiiaa. ataiv of ilregou. In Ihe main Ihe eatate ol Julim l.oua, uecoae-i. i ai al ancllou o Ihe nigneai iaiuer, ai ma k,,n. ,l.,r In DreaitU I lly, r-tilllly ol ('! maa, alate ol Oregon, ou naturdey, tha I.Kh ... . ...il I...I iI.h lion. tl Ian ..'rliM-k II 1-1 n rot, .1.. .. tl. .l.e,llM..I Irai-ta of laml lu.li, low - .-a ............ . - --- the u ii I y .if Claekaniai, aiaia nl lirofuu Wll: M-ia i, a. aim i. to in,. v -rivB.u t acconltug lo the recorded plat tnernul Hal, 9 to be aol-l lor eaali and lota I and 7 to I logellier, one nail earn ami lit tail,- iq year al a per cent, iinereii -or auniiin MK (.. , ..1,1 lli J a. ill 7 riiAiii.m l.oiiig. Adlu'r f the ctate of Julim l.-gua, ieot. Match :, K-.1 l lu Nolli K OF HALF.. In .lie mailer of the ratato ol Hofa Ann Mcu decea.e-l .Nollee la hereby given, Ihal in aurauatiiv an older of aalt- made and entered mi lltti day of Maruti. A l lo, l,y tin- Cuiiiy l ti.t---A-.-m. ..-.i-,., ... - a" i. in titbit.'. ,,f II, A e.l.le a, I Httfa Ami Mi'.itt.-. cea.cl, ine uii.erii(iif. aiittiiiiairai--r it e.Mte. will veil al pit Itlb att-( loll, an lt)ee ft t t.l i..t. l, ..1,1 et.itrl Ibe b-lliii. httf tl.- real property In all IlieN K ttiarler of the N F. tilarter-if tlt.ii lii In I' .v 11 ill K I K ol lite W M . tainlng toity ac-ea. more or b-aa.aii-l situate' 1' ..-L.t-,.. eoiiitlv HI. In or lire., ,li l" lurk nun rMiinly, nf tfrgn nal I ale will be Dt leoll Frl-lay Ihe lllh 111 Airll, 1-J I. l Itiru.l I1 M nil lha l-lrnt .1, irt,.. 1. 1 III ..1,1 I lae It am., rnititl v .1 f.rt'il-l In 4ll ( lii'Miiiki rttinily tn trrini nf talr ( In tiri ,. u t.rl In-titl li. 1 1 inr fteetire. M - .....il .-.l U afc' II. a...... A'lm r nl the ealate nf Hofa All II Hrt-tlc lllowllell Jk I'reoer. Alt ) Inr A dill r Apt S 19 .Sullt F. tF HAl.K. In the I ntiiily i imrt of the Malt ol (Ireg-ai the county of Claekataaa III the mailer ol the e.talc ol John l Cole det eaaed .Noltee la ItereTty given, that III purtlianei an ortler of aale ma-le an-l euterrtl lit County I tin It nf theciiniiiy nf I'lai-lialnaa. a ol tiregnii, mi nut rati itay of March, A I' In alate e.tale, the un-leralgued a-luilnlM' IrU.it aald ealate will a-dl al Iml, lie aueUi Btllilei't tu i-t.-lflllliatloll by aabl I ntirt. Iti loalitg deacrlla-d real ealate altuate iu Clirl maa cnillily. ataie nt Oregnll, o wtt I he N half nf ihe ,N K -iiarier and lot No Hee III 111 I iMitllt If. ul the W M . c-.LU lllg bVaerea, Innreor leai. rial-l aale will be ma, In mi Tuealay, lha day id April. A. U Ivj.', al I o elia k I' U tlie Itremlaea, In ai I lackaluaa cotllltr alate 'lerma of aale to beca.li or credit, ao-1 the Itlgheal bidder U I A I 11I.111S A'liiuni.traina nl the eatate of Jnliii It, t'ou ilei-naae,. Ilrowuell Jk lirea-r, All'ya for Atlm'g. J l Society Diroctory. IHK..OS CITY IIIIAItll UFTKAIllt. Meetaal Couit Hutu.' ou Hi-coud Moinlaf each mmilh. Vlaltora welemne F. K. UoNAl.liHiiN, IIAIl KY K Cltiial Secretary. rreallc ST. JdllS H IHIAM II Ml al7. C K nl A Meei. every Tueaday evening at their ai e-iiii-r an, i it aim lentil ntrceta, Oregon I It " JiTiN.nec y. i. w. MI I.I.IV" L'ANIIY tlm lilt nw TIUIlV Meet, at Knlghta Hall. Cauby. nn flrat u ...ii-i riitin)-ui eacn niolllll. laltora weirna n. J. iMHNIai-N, Hee W H. K NIO II T. I'Crt MI'l.TNOMAII l.ul)7iK.N(). Ta. F A A. Holda ita rerular eomtnoiitealloiii on and third rtatunlava of ..., i, 1 1. .1 7 iwi Hrethreu In good landing are Invited In ams I.. I.. I'ollTKK, W.H T. F. ItYAN.Mecreiari OKKHiiS LDliiiK. No. J. I.I). I). F. Meet, every Thnraday even ..a at 1 tyn'eb r. in the (1,1.1 Kellnwa' Hall, Main r emiiera in the Ortlerare Invited In attena. tiKo C. KI.Y, N il Thm, Hyan, Hecrelarf WACIIFM) TltlllK. Nt) 13. M t Weiiii.k,ty evening at Armttry Hail. V lllllK i era Invited. Ctua. Kgu-t. , ,, Haelien J H.iin, C.nf K. HI NKIMK I.OfKiK, No. ft, A, I). C W , Meet, every aecond ami Inurtli Hiitiii'lur of ei month at Wllattnvlllc, (ireg.ui. . l-IAJl Ml III i.rua, Jl . n . T. rnoK, Keeiirder, omVKim l.ol iiK. No tct, . li. (). F """' at iithl Kellnw'a hull, iiawegu, rtr Hatutilny eveinng, Vlalllng breihien mi w,'b'onte. i ... 1, 1,,, uul.lt W I- J- F. Iti-t.rv. Hee. ' MliAliF. I-oh No 2 "I A. It., iKI'AltTMr: .... . I'F OIlKiMiN. M '"V "' "loiilh I . all. Oregon city, Vl.itlng coinra welcome. in. at a ratlea in: 1 1, u ""-MAN 1-AltKKIl, Commander I. I'. Hiiaw, Ail), K.N. CK00K I'OHT. No.' w k , He Incut of tlrcgiin. r7"t '" I'ouaeat Needy oil flrat M n l y nench month t 2 ',.1(;,.k p. ,. i comtad. a, , ,.,,, Ja(.1, h',,,,,,.1. KTAi,KK,Aijt. ('oiiiiimudef '1(1 IKON LoiiiiK NO. ;tj, A. O. tl. VV. Mecta I'l'nru -et. , 11 "' r-oay evening at tutu fi"'- hi II, traweg,,. Vlalllng brethren alwayi '".me. , ., ...u,,,,,,.!, K- Rtiiackh, Recorder M. ...... Mo.,.'AI-'-A I.OIKJK. No. an. A O If. W .... K.lr"! ''' Third Haturday In ' weleoii'ia ' Vlaltlng mem-hem m J. W l ... .. .. .!. nrirr, m. " OMA, Rec. "OI.AII.A OltANfiR mri in t .,r It "'""nd" Ha!!',';1,' Rt W'1"1"'" ''fi'1"" 0D Felbw m ".. r'l"lr "'. montli alio t, main welcome. K " Cmiegg, ,.. Ngl.aoN, Half1, "KAIIK RKI1KF COKI'H, No. 1H. DEPABl MF.NT OF ORKUON. from ... '."'ll. Member, ol corf -."t-iiaiiY welcomed. ir'lrir t v1XsvniS,rre:i:Khutti'eK-o'p-b" Ha. At.BHtntiT, J., C. C. J E. KHouga, K. oltt. "uJI X