Image provided by: Dallas Public Library; Dallas, OR
About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 15, 1893)
T Ii« U a llM T a n n e r y . TME OFFICIAL COUNTY PAPER. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: •1 UO............................................Per JMT I 09 ................................ Per »ix month. 60................................ Per three month» Adrflrifttng rat«, mxde known on »police ion. Correspondence i» solicited. Fine Job Printing doo» nt reasonable price» Mr. Wilson has an improved apple drying house. Mr. Moody’s wife has left him for the hop patch. Mr. Blankmanship tfmike of quit ting the Hollow. Will. Warfeld hauls immense loads of baled hay to Monmouth. Eva Towns went to Hazel Dell to visit her old pupils and friends. Eva Towns and Ernesta Sloan visit ed their valley friends last week. Minnie Cobb will teach the Guthrie school, commencing October 2nd. Call at Towns to play croquet. O r re is the champion. Ask Charlie. Elwood Sloan will soon go to liis ranche on the coast to spend the win ter. Mr. Towes ra hauling wheat and hav ing a picnic oaring to the slippery roads. Mr. and Mrs. Mack, Grandma Mack and all the little Macks have gone hop picking. C. H. Powell has finished cutting grain none too soon for the rainy weather. The McCaleb family are sojourning in Cooper's hop yard north of Indc Muir A McDonald have fiOO sides tanned, dressed and ready for the mar ket and about as many more in process of tanning. They get all their hides here in the county, paying from 2f to 4 cents, according to quality. A two year old steer has not so good a hide at a five year old. Early in the summer they had nine men two weeks cutting hemlock bark near the head of Peedee, seventeen miles from here by road. And now two teams are busy hauling out the 100 cords of bark, making four trips a week, and each bringing 1} cords to a load. That is perhaps the best body of hemlock in the state They paid the owner of the timber 15 cents a tree and skinned nearly 300 of them Last year they used 200 curds of fir lurk and say the 100 cords of hemlock will do as much and better tanning. Dull times effect the leuther trade as well as all others, but the advices from the leather markets are that there is apt to soon again be an active demand all arouud the country are making a racket telliug their neighbors about it, and that causes another racket by ev erybody rushing there to buy goods, aud that causes still another racket among the merchants who miss so mauy sales ou account of their high rices. The boss of the concern is E. . Barnes and we can assure you that he is a jolly good fellow. P LEWISVILLE. B. F. Smith and H. D. Staats are fanning seed wheat. Heury Lewis is improving his prem ises by a new woodshed, Emmett Staats end Morris Fowle will attend the normal school this win ter. AMONO TBS HOP PICKERS* Wednesday forenoon we took s stroll W. H. Zumwalt, of Astoria, is spend down the Lacreole and captured these ing a few weeks with relatives in these newalets. Opposite the home of Hi parts. Plummer in Horatio Morrisnu’s ten •ere patch were thirty four {tickers who H. S. Smith has strawberry vines had begun the day before and picked that have on them blooms, green and 87 boxes. In both quantity and quality ri(»e berries. his yield will be better than last year. i*. Hadley has rented the farm of H. P E R K Y H A LE. Manfred Sears is dryer and Dick Stake- Fowle and John la-wis that of Frank ly lireman. They run the concern night Philip Mulkey will begin teaching Lewis for the coming year, and day, and expect to get a kilu of here next Monday. about 100 lioxes dried every twenty- Lena Keyt is in school at Salem and four hours. They aim to keep a con Willie at Monmouth. stant temperature of 130 degrees. J. M. Campbell is ticket boss and the baling Rev. C. E. Crandell will preach here will lie done by George Hinshaw, Jack next Sunday evening. Morrison aud Chas. Schrocder. The A. 8. Johnson has moved from the pickers were gathering all the way from Keyt farm into town. two to four boxes a day. Frank Morri sou and Mr. Mashhurn were busy The Enes family and others will soon emptying the boxes of hops. Mr. be off to the hopfields. Morrison expects to have four acres petulance. Wm. Swartz ha» rented his farm and of additional hops next season, and We had a steam thresber this yerr, in the same enclosure Mr. Mash- Weaver A Riggs favoring us with their will move to Yaquiua bay. burn has six acres of new hops. fine machine. Charlie Meyer, formerly of this place, In an adjoining yard we found the for is now an Amity merchant. Ernest Thurston will leave us for ly pickers of Dr. Kirkpatricks <fc Sons. Bert Fisher spent .»iinday in the Th- y have fifteen acres to pick this California soon and Leslie will be left normal school with his other girl. year and on the Lyle place, just west to bis sweet self. of the mill dam, have in thirty-five Tracy Wilcox, of IbdUton, line be< Mrs. Towns has been suffering se acres of fine young hops. Their fifty verely with a fe'on for three • weeks. visiting his friends here a couple of acres next year will call for at least 160 Send in a remedy. days. hands and another dry house. Theii Mrs. Finn and Mrs. Richards, of Mrs. McCaleb and Mrs. M ick mads present, crop has not been harmed by McCoy, have been over trading at our lice or anything else and is good a successful run with their cook wag store. enough. The capacity of their dryer on, being out eighteen days. About 35,000 bushels of grain has is about 110 boxes a day. Chalmers Mr. Powsll is not the well fed man is doing the drying now, but next week he used to be, as his wife is making been received at the Wise A Keyt will go to dry for Rowell, Coad A Wil mopey while he stays at home to wash warehouse. liams on the Luckiamute and Jim will dishes. . Hammerly, a well-known buslnes» man Mr. Tea Coffee has gone to the ot M itiusboru, 1 ». semis iiiis IcsiiiiiuBi to take his place. Clif. has charge of the Miss Town’s school at Cochrane be mountains to rusticate aud look up a the merits of Ayer’» Sarsaparilla: "Several ticket business, the pole pullers being years ago, t hurt my leg, the Injury leaving homestead. a sore which led to erysipelas. My su8er:ngs Ue rge Steingrandt and Lynden gins on the 18th add Miss Sloan will my leg, from the knee to the J. A. Wolfe has rented a house in wesescxtreini-. Whiteman. Taylor Dunn is fireman go to her school at Red Prairie on the ankli being a solid sore, which began to ex Monmouth and five of his children will tend to other parts ol the body. After trying and Win. Corley and Mr. Stiengrandt same date. various remedies. I began taking Ayer a will do 'lie baling Every kilu full Misses Minnie and Mabel Cobb were attend school there. Sarsaparilla, and, before I had finished the t rns off from 1,500 to 1.800 pounds down Sunday and Mr. McFee called Mrs. Alice Blodgetthas BobChaney’s flrst bottle, I experienced great relief : tha of dried hop*. Many of the pickers for them in the evening, when they re cook wagon at John Walling’s hop aeeond bottle eflected a complete cure. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla are there before sunup and after sun turned to Dallas. yard where she is boarding many ol down and they will not fini h for ten Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ay»r A Oo., Lowell, Bass. the pickers. Call at Osborns for 'blackberries and days yet. Their crew will pick several C u r e s o th e r* ,w ill c u r * y o u Editor Ryan and bride are daily ex acres for Mr. Dunlop, north of town. at Dressier’» for grapes. Tom Osborn A few hundred yards east of the has been shaking, but the berries still pec ted from California. There are two other old bachelors in this midBt that flouring mill we struck H. B. Plum cling to the bushes. ought to go and do likewise. mer’s jolly crew of about tbirty-flva. M IL L O K K K K . He has six acres of as goods hops as 8 t» te I n s u r a n c e C o m p a n y . you ever saw and four acres of little Hop picking in full blast. All over this county and as to that fellows that will be in the market next James Syron has moved to the H. all over the state you will see on year. On Tuesday the force picked 9(1 F. Reed farm. dwellings, barns and other building boxes. They will finish there early H. Hinshaw and family spent Sun the sign of the State Insurance Com next week then many of them go into pany, located at Salem. They indicate the Groves yard. M. V. Austine anti day at Upper Willamina. that the buildings are insured in that Miss Minnie were picking at the rate A little Oregon weather again and company. Its risks are so scattered as of ubout nine lioxes a day, while Dora some late grain in the stacks remain. to prevent the possibility of a heavy Craven and Tenta Kimball were pro J. M. Davis has among his hop pick loss in uny one locality. The manager gressing at the rate of about four boxes eneb, Mrs. Isabell Stump and hei two ers thirteen Indians from Grand Ronde. H. W. Cottle has been in the insurance bu»iness a score of years and is reputed small children gathered seven boxes A. Hinshaw has sold his one third Tuesday. Mr. Plummer was doing his interest in the Hinshaw hop yard to to he one of the ablest insurance men on the coast. Like a solid and success own drying and W, R. Stump and Zim Hinshaw for $1,500. ful banker, he knows exactly what In As sure as the sun shines he who Fred Koser were firing for him. Al F. Cox has rented John McBurney’s is doing, there is no gut-ss work or ex lHaoneya the laws of the nature will Stump was passing out the check ufl'er for it, And just as sure will George Richmond and L. M. Taylor farm on Red Prairie and Jolinie will perimenting about it. Then at his back us directors are a number of the best those who fail to pulling poles while George Conkey aud move to Brown’s Baw mill. known business men of the state. The Charlie Stump hauled to the dryer. We USE COMMON SENSE Joe Black is making arrangements paddled on down stream to Henry Clif to move to his Mill Creek farm und we company i> now in the tenth year of its Suffer in purse. The man above ford’s fine twenty-one acre patch where welcome the family back among us existence and is constantly growing in pici tired had occasion to buy a sll directions. In 1884 it assetc were seventy-five hands were just beginning once more. $100,000, now they are over $372,000. large amount of to make the big and thick hops fly. On Thursday last we had the first Within its short life it has promptly BOOKS AND STATIONERY His yard has been kept in excellent condition and is now paying him big good rainy shower for four months, paid over 1000 losses. The comp And thought he could get them interest for his labors. He expects to farmers got theii hay and most of their any never lakes any very large or about as cheap one place as another hazardous risks, always keeping on the get 2,000 pounds to the acre and to grain in the dry. IT MADE HIM SICK consume three weeks in picking. His Ed Woods has failed to make pay safe side. As the years roll by it will dryer is thirty feet square and will turn ment on the Summer’s place and it become still stronger and its reputa When lie learned how much he had off 180 boxes every twenty-four hours. falls backs two degrees and is once tion will draw patronage from far l>e- lost by not patronizing yond its present field. Remember Ctay McTimmonds has charge of the more Wm. Ralston's. PATTON BROS., SALEM. these facts and net upon them when tickets and he will do his own drying. you need insurance. P A L L S C IT Y . The pickers are from all over the coun ■ »♦» try and perhaps half of them camp P IO N E E R . Mr. Meesman has built a neat barn there. Several families come in wag S T . P A U L ’S A C A D E M Y . Ora and Roy Harrington will attend T h is e le g a n t ami com m odious building is fitted J. N. Hart occupies Otto Meesman’s ons and go home at night. That yard th ro u g h o u t w ith every appliance of a flrst class edu the Willamette university. •lone will scatter lots of money over new house. cational in stitu tio n , a nd is s u rro u n d e d by extensive Ifrounds, th u s m aking i t a m ost desirable boarding the county. Mr. Clifford is not worry Robbins A Co. had quite a run with and Camp meeting is not very largely at da} school. T horough and practical in stru ctio n ing about picking money, for he knows tended, too much rain and hop pick their horse power machine, in th e p rim a ry and hig h er b ranches of e ducation is af forded. Term s m oderate. M usic, p a in tin g , s te n o g his hop checks will be good at the ing. School will commence October 2nd rap h y a n d ty p ew ritin g form e x tra charges. F o r fu i- stores until he can sell at least enough th e r particular*, apply to SISTERS OF T ’lE HOLY The harvest hands have all returned with Mis* Wimberley as teacher. hops to redeem them. While we were NAMES, St. P aul, M arion c o u n ty , Oregon. there he w h s very sensibly having Ins from the various machines, nearly all John Middleton and family are pick hop property insured for aliout $3,000. minus any money, as money was out ing hops for Henry Clifford and the CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC. On the Roweliffe place a little farther of the question with their employers. Guys for Mr. Cutler. •way Slone A Whatfnrd had some six Falla City is nearly depopulated only The families c? John Robbins and ty hands at work among their fourteen a few old batches left to console the P. Willamette University, Salem, Ore acres of hops, which will make a good M. and overworked merchants, while John Robinson are rusticating at the gon. School of music for piano, organ, mouth of Salmon river. yield. the fair maidens and elderly dames, as violin, singing, orchestral instrument«, Oliver Dennis and family and Lana- harmony, counterpoint fugue, orches well as old and young of the sterner ■ » •te r n O regon Crop*. are rusticating in the various hop da McFee have been over from Tilla tration and higher musical composition. Showery weather has continued since sex mook county visiting relatives. yards. No better grade of work done west of the Hth of September. Thunder storms the Rocky mountains. Price low. Seven occurred in the mountainous d strict», S p r la g V a lte r . teachers. Next- term begins Sept. 4th. the were generally attended by hail. Last Saturday night about 9 o’clock Henry Fawk finished a auccedaful Send for annual year book or address, The mean temperature of the week was 61 degrees, which is six degrees below as John Walling was driving out from ri n of 21 days with his thresher last Z. M. Parvin. Mus. Doctor, musical the normal. There was a deficiency of Salem in his cart a man jumped out of Thursday. The rain «topped them at director. sunshine and the rainfall averaged the brush to grab his horse, but the Tommie Brunks where they will have 0.66 of an inch, which is largely in ex horse being a splendid one was too about 3 hours more work if it clear* up cess of the normal. The dense smoke, quick for him^ind left the would be in time. in the rear. Last Monday while can sell by numerous forest fires, has robber Hop pickers are having quite a dis Phillips was in Salem and his Tonic Builder disappeared and the atmosphere is ones Sam agreeable time camping out in such family at the hop yard, some one enter more pure and healthful. Threshing ed his house and stole $800 worth of wet weather. A few are leaving, but has temporarily ceased owing to the others come to take their places so dampness of the straw. There remains notes, a shot gun, a pair of ojiera glass there will be plenty to harvest the crop es, a suit of clothes and some gold considerable work for the headers in which is in very good condition so far sections where the grain was sown and free from mold or lice. Putnam late. Growing crops have received Bros, are baling ns fast as they dry, i gical benefits tiy the rain. Vegetables have sent ten hales to Salem hut will i have l«en especially benefited. Pas not tell at present. Eola is quite a live- j ture» have improved so that the pros ly little place and hop tickets are a le- [ ’. W ILLIAM S» pect for sufficient grass on the range gal tender. We have no saloon here, I M EDICIN E C0-, is good. Stock are fat and beef cattle so everything is very quiet for having 1 p er b « ii Schenectady, N.T. are plentiful. There ap|iears to be less so many peoplagaroiind. H. Hayden • for 9 4 .S 6 . ••a Brockvtlle, Out. damage done to fruit than was first employes aliout 55 pickers, Tommie I esiimaled. Tender plants were injured | Strain being box tender, Bailey H Hay ay-, «* I If i I I by a frost which occured on the 9th. den and Ed Schellberg dryers and The second crop of alfalfa has l*en se Henry Stanton teamster. cured. and farnters are prepared to en ■ ■ L I S « . * SOLA II H IL ter the winter season with well filled barns. W. T. Pearce is drying hope for Put-,! SALEM, OREGON. nam Bros. H«l> N «w» 1« O m s r a l. There is a rattle snake under Arthur ’ Conducted by the Sisters of the Holy The trouble over Chinan* pickers over Mr. a W. Hvd« Smith’s house. i Name ol Jesus ami Mary. This insti in Marion county has about subsided in lavoc ol the Caucasian race. So far Dick Pierce has been helpiaqt Claud tution is pleasantly situated, and the building is supplied with all the mod the raitvha» done no liarm. In Lane Starbnck build a barn. ern improvement»—no expense hav countv ltce are aoarca and hop« good “ T w M o r i i f a n prior lo isas. Olor» - _ Prof. Frank Nelson, of Oak Grove, ing been spared to provide for the com Over at Puyallup ihe appearance of kardij a d a , tin t I was fr w frota bou» ami •raptioni ol Iho»kto «rlalag tram Impur- WM '»round Popcorn Sunday. fort of the inmates. The course of vermin has canted many In b> gin pick ing a wi ek earth r than they had in- Mr. and Mrn. Am Shreva, of Oakdale, study embraces the various branches of landed, 17 eenta is the l>est offer on have been visiting her aislar, -Mrs. s solid, useful and ornamental educa tion. Terms (payable quarterly in ad. contracts, nor is any belter expected IK., oftao Mood. I b»*aa to lak« Ho»#» fiar- Pearce. vance)— Board and tuition in English, until picking 1« oeer. In New York upvtlla, m 4 botar» 1 bo« tuubo« Uw iklrd Jack White who haa been a guard French and German, per quarter. $43. storm» nod other cause« will reduce lb* I bud mr»»M munir n ra 4 .- a ». output twenty per cent below l*«t year. • S t k a Tatar * Hyd., loot El««». D» over at the penitentiary has returned Piano. Organ. Guitar, Zither, Mando I to his Polk rouuty home, Erma». Canterai». lin, Drawing and Painting form extra They are tmgtnmg to reiae Imps up in | Umatilla county. The Albany Demo Dr. Smith, of Scotland, is here in the chargea. Studies will begin the 4th of crat ••)'• that in Unn county hop men ' hills for a months slay with bia sou and September. For further particulars apply to Sister Superior. amfkaj whites and thay hava no trouble, j says he likes tins oouatry. WE TOLD YOU SO. Nerve Blood Heart M ill Have Hood’s,i> Cures I April that promise several bales of bops. Picking will last 15 days or more. At Wm. Wells yard they ex pected about 79 Grand Roudc reserva tion Indians which were al riving to \ begin Tuesday on his 18 acre yard, llad sprayed twice uud had no lice u> speak of. Hops of the Red Vine varie ty. He has two dry houses anil it take» three men to run them. It will take Mr. Hughes and Miss Emma 16 or 18 day s to pick the crop and 150 been ailiug, but are convalescing. bales are expected Notions and edibles Rev. Fofter, the new Methodist min are supplied by Mrs. Coutu. Joseph ister, gave us a splendid seimon last Miller's yard of 16 acres is run by Mr. Sunday. I Powell. Pickers here number 75, all Miss Flora and Mr. Lovic Jones have whites, 60 of whom were former ueigh- eutered school al the Willamette uni | bors of Mr. Powell in Benton county. The hops are the Red and Cluster versity. varieties, have been sprayed twice, and Frank Emmett, a former principal are like the others clear of lice. The of the public school here, spent Sun- y#r(j ¡n 8p]endid condition and may day in town. expect a good yield. John Powell car John Wells, Frankie McLaughlin, ries the tickets and Mrs. Hall sells edi Mr. Snyder aud others have just re- bles. An addition to this yard of 9 acres was set out last spring. Picking will turned from Alsea hay. last 15 or 20 days. Henry Seaton’s Your scribe spent a few hours in yards containing over 20 acres are run some of the hop yards on the Marion partly by J. A. McClain and the rest county side of the river near Buena by J. R. Bedford and E. S. Longacre. Vista Monday where we gleaned the The latter says he is head hoes, but un lolLwing facta: Mr. R. G. and G. J . der present circumstances lie is trust Moore’s yard contains 15 acres of ing tha management entirely to other Golden and Canady hops. They have members of the firm. Pickers here are waited until the hops are thoroughly all whites numbering 80. Will take ripe and expect to make number oue between 12 and 16 days to pick. We samples. Their pickers number over find the growers all agree on two im tK), half being Indians from the Siletz portant facts. The crop is as good as reservation and the others local whites. they have ever had if not the best, and They are prepared to dry and bail as the soil is second to none in the state. fast as they pick. Between 150 and 175 boxes aae picked in a day. Pro Newton Putnam living on the hill prietors keep a supply store on the grounds. They expect a yield of 2,000 above Eola died Tuesday, aged 67 yearr. pounds to the acre. We saw a thous- He was at work in the hop yard that nd hills wh'ch had been set out in morning. 23XX»X-iS A L L O W E D 33 "2" C O T T i m r FO R W H A T C L A IM E D . A Hinshaw . . . W S Johnson.. J J Davis......... Ronco Bros .......... J B Teal ............... Ben C Irwin A Co W L Well» ......... W I Reynolds........ D P Stouffer ........ W L Wells............ Naomi Shelton Prescott A Veness West S id e ......... T (> Hutchinson. C H Chapman. . B F Mulkey Willis Rowell . . . W L Wells........... Rowell Bros.......... W L Wells........... C W Smith .......... J M Berry ............ W A Wash J C Wagner.......... Rowell Bros.......... H B Cosper.......... G W McLaughlin. Rowell Bros . . . C 11 Chapman. . H Byerley.. B F Mulkey.......... John E H all. Meston & Dygert. pauper Catherine Stanley medical services pauper pauper account E J Purdy lumber lumber stationery fees for August..................... examining teachers................ examining teachers............... fees Hoffman vs Polk county keeping Chas Gibbons ........ lu m b e r............. .................... p u b l i s h i n g teachers notice. . . salary and expenses............... lumber, etc.............................. fees and expenses August bear scalp fees I N 'Davidson road. . lumber ............................... State vs Glaze..................... justice fees State vs Glaze. . attending Chas Gibbons.. p r in tin g night watch August lu m b e r.... .. salary August tilin g ............. lum ber............................................ coffin Mrs Purdy pauper ........... commissioner fees anil mileage.. indexing commissioner's records. goods to pauper stationery present ownership maps. If you are interested in T ILE WORKS. A D VE R TIS IN G John Leach, Proprietor. you ought to be a subscriber to P rinters ’ I nk ; a journal advertisers. DALLAS, OREC. sued weekly and is filled with contributions and helpful sug gestions from the brightest minds in the advertising busi ness. only two dollars a year. A »am ple copy will be sent on receipt of five cents. PRINTERS' $ 20 00 15 00 25 00 12 25 25 00 7 25 53 70 15 00 15 00 1 30 42 00 124 79 1 90 82 70 4i . itO . 70 E. . INK, Have again opened their wagon and blacksmith shop at the old staud 10 Spruce St., - New York. Near Covered Bridge. They solicit Ihe prtroixage of former customers and others. They are gi t- ting some seasoned stock from Poit- I land, hut the bulk of it comes from t ;e I east. DALLAS. ORECO.Y X». 33. F E A Z E E , Stock Inspector for Polk County, A D D R E S S M c t'O Y , O R E G O N . P ortlak d . O regon . Open all the year. .$15 . 22 . 32 REOPENING. HUGHES & SUN HUGHES & .AODIDmLZSS A. P. A r m strong , P r ir ch - a l . S tu d en ts m ay en ter a t a n y tim e. C a ta lo g u e free A B U S IN E S S EDUCATION PA Y S. S Y Iz liM AM OUNT ALLOW ED AMOUNT PRICES PER i,000 FEET: Three inch Four in ch . Five in c h .. Six inch Seven inch Eight inch Printers’ Ink costs C O X T I^ T . C L A IM E D . First class tile of all sizes from three to eight inrhes in diameter. Printer»’ In k i> i* fi. L. 1 20 00 16 00 L IV E llY S T A B L E . Propric-tor. LAMOUREUX Formerly known as th e Ellis & Whitley S ta b les. IKE NEW REO FRONT. 25 00 12 25 25 00 7 25 53 70 15 00 15 00 Mr. Lamoureux is a thorough horseman, and a reliable man. Your team 1 30 wili be well oared for when left in his charge. Patronize the RED FRONT 43 00 * 124 79 Stable. Terms Reasonable. 1 90 82 70 Goi. Commercial and Trade Streets, S_/tLEM, OREGON. 2 00 2 00 70 60 5 00 4 10 2 56 7 00 5 45 48 00 5 60 5 (X) 8 40 62 50 34 00 21 09 25 00 8 40 55 50 13 00 59 10 70 5 4 2 7 5 48 5 5 8 62 34 21 25 8 55 13 59 60 00 10 56 00 45 00 60 00 40 50 00 09 00 40 50 00 10 Brown & Smith, —DEALERS IN— Stoves and Hardware, —ALSO AGENT FOR THE LEADING LINE GF— /Agricultural Im plem ents, —NAMELY, THE IMPROVED— OSBORNE BINDER, MOWER AND RAKE. STATE OF OREGON,T > 8. 8. C O U N T Y O F P O L K ,) —THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN SALEM TO BUY— I, B. F. Mulkey, county clerk of Polk county, state of Oregon, and ex-officio clerk of the circuit court for said county and state, do hereby certify that the foregoing transcript of schedule of expenditures for the September term, 1893, has been by me compared with the original, and that it is a true and correct copy of said original, as the same appearsof record in my office and custody. I I A Y T O O L S O F A L J , K IN D S , —AND ARE PREPARED TO MAKE— T he B est Price on B inding T w ine. CLA.I_.IL_. -AJST j D S E E T J S . WITNESS my hand, and seal of said court this 10th day of Sept., 1893. B. F. MULKEY, County Clerk. L\ INDUSTRI O P E N S S E P T E M B E R 271 3 Q ITIC ^ C L O S E S O O T O B E . 88. HIBERATI’S CELEBRATED MILITARY BAND-e- W ILL FU RN ISH T H E MUSIC. A W ORLD OF M E C H A N IC S IN M IN IA T U R E . T H E SPECIAL FEA TURES W ILL ECLIPSE TH OSE OF ANY PREVIOUS YEAR. M A D A M E G IR A R D G Y E R ’S P R I S M A T I C F O U N T A IN C o n structed a t a cost of $10,000 and throw ing a fthoossad Jets of w ater in all th e c o lo is o f th e rainbow will beautify Music Hall ^ / ^ K > T - L A R G E A Q U A R IU M S * Seeders and Drills, Plows, Harrows, Road Machinery, Wagons, Carts, iarm Implements of Every Description Hardware, Iron and Steel. The Largest Stock, Best Selec tions and Lowest Prices. C ontaining Osh of all varieties found in Oregon w aters, have been co n stru cted a t g r e a t expens* ------- T H E A R T G A L L E R Y ------- Will contain a collection of paintings selected from th e W orld’s Fair- Am ong them E llsb u ry ’s oele hrated painting C u s t e r 's 1. h s i F i g h t . To visit th is g re a t Exposition and view its w onders in every to the W orld's F air a t Chicago. d e p a rtm e n t of A rt and Science, will he nex t th in g to a REDUCED RATES ON ALL TRANSPORAATI0N LINES F or fu rth e r inform ation address IE . S u p e rin te n d en t and S ecretary. G R A Y B R O S -, Corner State and Liberty streets, Salem. «< PORTLAND UNIVERSITY.^ £ 3 L A J R .I N " E S S T J N I Y B B S i n r P A .R K , P O R T L A N D . College, Academic, Grammar, Normal and Busineos Department*. S H O P , Farm Harness of Best Oak Tanned Leather. Single Buggy Harness S5.S0 anil Upwards SCHOOLS OF THEOLOGY, MUSIC AND FINE ARTS. Location, RttrmctiT», h»»thful »nd »ccowibi«. U u i.o rtitv P»rk h»« p u re «ir, Rood w»t*r »nd n « plac e , of t» m rt» tin n . I . w ithin toucli u M h . prl.ilo«»», llUrmr) , »oct»l »nd r»liRtou», o t » RraU city, u id yM b u all t h . quiet a n d re tire m e n t of the c o u n try . ,*.«««.«• . , . . ... , S tu d e n ts can board in W ert H all, in th e U niversity Club H ouse, in p riv a te fam ilies, o r secure pleasant room s a t economic n t e s , in hom es, for self bnerding ___ , .* v - i . g-fV-Facilities for the stu d y of m usic, vor»I and in stru m e n tal, unsurpassed in th e Pacific N orthwest. g -T In Norm al D ep artm en t a r ta te diplom a can be given, ami after six years of teaching a life diplom a, S^rE xoensee per vear, including b o a rd , furnished room, fuel, light and tu itio u . f-om $1?5 to $?.r>*> a y ear. C atalogue sen t • m application F»»r any additional inform ation address, C. C. STRATTON, D. D „ i W , o r TH< >S VAN8COY, D. D .. Dean, U niversity P ark , Oregon 4 » a t . t . t e e m o r E z s r s s e f t e m b e e i s t b . <5'*~ :W . W . J O H N S ,i = -»-® 244 COMMERCIAL STREET, SALEM, OREGON. CAR LOAD OF BUGGIES Patronize Our Home Mills. —IF YOU WILL BUY YOUR— MENS, YOUTHS HD BOYS’ CLOTHING —OF THE— Salem Woolen Mills Store, From the Corvallis Carriage Factory. j Also carts, wagons and a general assortment of You will help to build up Home Industry besides / U J R IC U L T U R A L - M / iC f U f lE R Y . keeping money in circulation in our midst, i . h b . piummer, Daiia*.