The Oregon weekly statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1878-1884, July 09, 1886, Page 4, Image 4

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    tiijl: oiikgctn statesman: fhiijay. july o. issg.
V7ESKLY STATESMAN
Published every Friday by
STATESMAN PUB. CO.
8O1SCRIPTI0X KATES:
(KM, in advance .................. .5 SB
6 is mouths. In advene)..,.. 1 OC
SUBSCRIBERS DESIRING THE ADDRESS
of their papers changed must (law the
Mat of Iheir former poModie. a well as of
lb oftice to which they wish the paper
changed.
CoNGKKtis is still worrying over the an
tics of ex-members as lobbyists on the
floor. There is a very easy solution of
the question. Let congress repeal the
absurd rule that admits ex-members to
the floor anil excludes all other respect
able citizens. There is nothing in the
make-up ot an ex-congressman that en
titles him to privileges not granted to
other outsiders. Let 'em go to the galler
ies with the rest of Ui folks who have
business in Washington. Then they will
not he able to command higher salary
as lobhviMn than other mortals.
PjiiMUHiNT Clktslanb has not dis
played very good sense in his ap
pointment of Jasper Johnson as spe
cial land agent a fellow who has
been a hummer ia Washington for years
past, and is no more an Oregonian than
he is a democrat. He deserted his wife
in 1373 and left her in destitution. The
-people of Oregon irrespective of party pro
test against him, and his creditors here
do not hesitate toexprese a suspicion that
he lias been given office in order to make
a false report in the interest of timber
and land sharks. Sunday Welcome.
Thk American citizen who doesn't set
tle down in his chair with a great deal of
mental as well as physical satisfaction
and increased appreciation of his country
and its laws, when he reads in the dis
patches of how the poor Bavarians have
to tolerate insanity on the throne simply
because of birth title, ought to move to
one of those Swiss mountain villages
where the people are nearly all idiotic
through intermarriage, and play the part
of retriever for a simpleton chamois hunt
er. Welcome.
A m agazine in Brooklyn is endeavoring
to find out from its readers the name of
the ablest newspaper in the United States.
It has secured 206 responses from its
readers and the Boston Herald heads the
list. This would indicate thai the period
ical in question circulate mostly is New
England. The Boston Herald is a news
paper of unquestioned ability. At the
same time it most not be forgotten that
the steady reader of a newspaper usually
holds that the paper which he favors
with his endorsement is an able paper,
and it must be if it is able to satisfy him.
A despatch h peaks of a "novel" suit
brought is Logansport, IncL, against a
church for ringing its chimes to the det
riment of an invalid in neighboring
house. Such a snit is not noveL The
contest between chimes and the public
has been going on for some years. In
most large cities the public has won. Ex
cepting ia rural districts, it is unfair, both
to the people in health and the1 sick, to
disturb the peace of Sunday by clanging
hells. The bells are only poetical and
musical when heard at a distance.
The escape of W. W. Saunders, con
victed of murder in the first degree, from
the linn couuty jail, is another reminder
that the officers of the law cannot be too
vigilant in such cases. Had the prison
er had a guard, or been more closely
watched, there would now be no occa
sion for the offer of $1000 reward, or a
search that will probably be fruitless.
Steasge varieties of bovcott develop
-every day. The latest form is reported
from Fayette County, III., where the farm
ers have agreed to sow no more wheat
for three seasons to come in order to
starve oat the chinch-bugs. The chinch
bugs are thoroughly organized, and the
struggle will be one of great interest.:
Tub fourteen miles of street railway in
Glasgow are owned by the city and bring
to the treasury a rental of f 76,000 annual
ly. There is no uniform rate of fare, but
a penny a mile is charged, with reduced
rates morning and evening, when working
people travel. -
It should be known that all federal offi
cers appointed during the vacation of the
senate must, after confirmation by that
liody, file new bonds, and we' believe
this has to be done before t" adjournment
of congress. .
Tas outlook for Gladstone and home
rule fcr Ireland is becoming more gloomy.
The "appeal to the country" bids fair to
return adverse results from those intend
ed. ' The fight has been a lively and bit
ter one.
Trb next thing on Salem's programme
is a woolen mill. We must have it and
we will have it, sooner or later if not in
the near future then it will come in the
distant future.
The btisinees depression from the sti ikes
in the east is dying out. If congress will
now adjourn, everybody will be prosper
ous and happy.
IlmiiABK has been telling the lioys of a
ierman university that "it is easier to
-rtfii-ie than to govern." He has tried
THE VET POWER.
President Cleveland has exercised the
power of veto to a considerable extent
thus far during his term of office, but the
most of bis veto messages have been
against pension bills, about which there
was some irregularity in the bureau. There
is no reason to doubt that the exercise of
this power was deserved in some, and
probably most instances, but the' reckless
abandon with which he has gone at this
work leaves open the belief tliat many of
them were deserving Bubjecta. The na
tion promised to provide for the depend
ent families of those who fell, and for sol
diers who were crippled or otherwise dis
abled during the war." And most nobly
has it kept its pledge. The pension list
of the nation exceeds the combined pen
sion lints of all the European nations, most
of which have made war a business for
hundreds of years. It exceeds tlie entire
expenses of this government before the
war. As a further expression of honor,
deserving Boldiers were preferred for offi
ces for which they were competent. Sir,
Cleveland should exercise the utmost care
in the matter. Better pension two unde
serving than to let one deserving subject
go witltout the help that was promised
him and his dependent family.
PRsaKPECTlVK OarHAtiAGE.
The two leading mugwump organs of
New York have got the country into a di
lemma thai it will take delicate states
manship to extricate us from. Harper's
Weekly declares that no other democrat
than Mr. Cleveland can be elected in
LS8S. Then it predicts Mr. Cleveland's
defeat by the bad democrats of the south
who wanted the spoils. The Evening
Post says that Blaine cannot possibly be
elected if he is nominated by the republi
cans, and that if any other republican is
nominated the Blaise men will turn in
and defeat him.
That's the situation, and we must get
along the best way we can without any
president after the foarth of March, 1888.
We suppose it is the feeling of prospect
ive orphanage that so wrought upon some
fellow in congress that he introduced a
bill to allow Mr. Cleveland to hold over
until April first instead of going out like
his predecessors on the fourth of March.
Twenty-six days isn't much, but it is bet
ter than nothing when subtracted from
the time we sliall be without any chief
magistrate.
AK 0TEJ8IVE rAKTISAX.
If there is an offensive partisan hold
ing a federal position in this country, that
man is surely Eugene Higgins, of the
treasury department. He is a disgrace
to the country. The following is a Chi
cago Tribune special from Washington :
No man appointed to office since the
advent of this administration has receiv
ed the abuse and condemnation of so
large a number of people as Eugene Hig
gins, appointment clerk of the treasury
department But with all the criticisms
no one has yet found out that he once
held the position of under keeper at Libby
prison, in Bichmond, daring the war.
Higgins, it is said, was appointed to the
place named, and remained there until
just before the surrender of Gen. Lee.
It is tlierefore not surprising that he pos
sesses such hatred for republicans, and
especially for ex -Union Boldiers, a large
number of whom he has been mainly in
strumental in having dismissed from the
treasury department.
The supreme court of the District of
Columbia has decided that the Indian is
a foreigner. This is possibly a peculiar
decision, but is not a surprise, coming
from the supreme court of the District of
Columbia. By the way, what is the use
of a supreme court in the District of Col
umbia, anyway? Isn't it a virtual inter
loper, if not a foreigner? A police court
or two would apparently be sufficient to
do Washington business. Judge Dundy,
of the U. 8. court for the district of Neb
raska, some time ago decided that the
Indian is not a foreigner but a citizen and
a voter outside of his tribal relations, and
the judge is right or our constitution
doesn't know what it is talking about
when it defines citizenship and forbids
distinction on account of race, color or
previous condition.
Louise Michel is not satisfied with the
expulsion of the Princes from France.
To make the policy effective she insists
that all the officials of the country, from
Jules Grevy to the humblest village
mayor, should be expelled also. "What
good," she exclaims, "does the banish
ment of the Princes do me, while the
capitalists are allowed to remain ? I am
choked with disgust. The most terrible
thing I know of to-day is life, and I am
ao tired of it that I wish they would send
me to jail." It is likely that Louise
will be gratified in this latter respect, as
she is now under indictment for exciting
the people to resist the law at the recent
meeting of the Chateau d'Eu.
Chai'xcev M. Dkpbw, President of the
New York Central Railway, is introduc
ing an important reform upon that line.
He observed that Hudson, when shout
ed in the car door, was "Bunpura," Schag
ticoke tieeame "choke" and Poughkeepnie
was "Pipsv," and be is determined to stop
it.
Listen yedowntrodden and despondent
quill-sliover! President Cleveland was
once local reporter lor the liutlalo
Courier. j
TVKOTOXICON.
Of the joys that bloom in the summer,
perhaps none have had so wide and per
manent a popularity as the ice cream.
Many a young man who is fond ot some
other fellow's Bister can testify to the
craving the gentler sex have for the cold
confection. It is, therefore, a sad truth
that every generous swain is in danger of
treating his beloved to cold poison unless
he exercises great discretion. There are,
doubtless, young men so economical that
they will rejoice in the opportunity at
present granted them of telling their be
trothed that ice cream some times con
tains tyrotoxicon. "Won't you have a
glass of soda water instead, my dear?"
the penurious young man will exclaim,
with a grim smile, as he feels in his
pocket for a 10-cent piece. Of course, no
well regulated young woman cares to eat
tyrotoxicon even in company with the
man of her choice. It seems that Dr.
Vaughn, of Ann Arbor, Michigan, has
discovered that ice cream made of im
pure milk often contains the active in
gredients of poisonous cheese. The fact
that the dangerous germs bear the high
soonding Greek name, tyrotoxicon, does
not alter the fact that they may carry
disease and death to all who Bwallow
them. In fact, they have been doing fa'
tal work this very season.
At Newton, Mich., a number of per
sons have been poisoned by eating ice
cream, containing cheese-poison, and, it
seems probable, that nearly 200 villagers
in New Jersey are ill from the same
cause. It is really startling to think of
the countless varieties of microbes, germs,
bacilli, and bacteria which are ever war
ing against man's health and life. In
water, air, and food are billions of little
rascals trying to find some weak spot in
our vital organs, and now the luxurious
jee cream has proved untrue to the hu
man race!
Some time ago a convention of niicro-
seopists was held at Cleveland, Ohio. A
learned professor said that while exam
ining, under a powerful microscope, a
human tooth, in a healthy man's mouth,
he found it covered with countless bac
teria. On applying the microscope to
the teeth of another man he found them
perfectly free from bacteria. Investiga
tion showed that the last man had just
been drinking whisky. There is much
food for reflection in this striking occur
rence. Bacteria, it seems, are prohi
bitionists by temperament. The New
York World suggests that, such being
the fact, they perish in the presence of
alcohol. Now, of course, ice cream fla
vored with a little rum of whisky, might
not be especially desirable as a summer
delicacy ; but would it not be free from
the tyrotoxicon germs? It is not plei
ant to think of abolishing ice cream alto
gether, and, on the other hand, cheese
poison is, by no means, edible. There
may be compromise in some such way as
is suggested above. Will the scientists
kindly report at an early, day their con
clusions in the matter?
APING BOYALTY.
London, June 26. Mrs. Mackay is
about to achieve a rare social triumph.
This is only her second season in London
yet the Prince of Wales has promised to
be present at the dinner sue gives on
Monday.
The above is a telegram to the New
York World. It carries with it a world
of suggestions. And who is the Prince of
Wales, that a woman like Mrs. Mackay
Bhould contrive to win his recognition?
Is he anything more than a man? Does
he have any more than the five sense ac
corded to other humans, or even the ex
ercise of them in any extraordinary de
gree? Outside of the accident of his
birth, is he not a man of very ordinary
and mediocre ability and attainments?
But he was "born great." He is a scion
of royalty, and will be the king of Eng
land in the event of the death or abdica
tion of his royal mother, Queen Victoria.
But the world moves. And it is moving
away from the absurd and ancient relics
of darkness and ignorance, the institution
of rule by the right of birth. Our own
country of the free-should blush with
shame that one of its daughters is over
on English soil paying tribute to royalty,
that ghost of the dark past! Look at
France. She has stamped the institution
out from her borders. She still tolerates
titles, but that relic of royalty will also
fade away with the progress of time, and
the royalty of England will fade away,
and the future ages will look back on the
time when such tilings existed with cred
ulity, and wonder, and pity. The time
is coming, and coming swiftly, when
men will be respected and honored for
their true worth and traits of manhood,
abilities, and attainments, and not for
the mere accident of their birth. Then
there will exist that true democracy con
ceived by our revolutionary forefathers,
who declared that all men are created
free and equal. Neither is democracy
communism. That hideous word, that
stands for a-vague and meaningless noth
ing, should find no abiding place in our
vocabulary of patriotic devotion. It does
not belong to us, and is not a part of our
institutions. It is a growth transplanted
from the hotbeds of the oppression of
royalty.
,1 I
The Fourth of July, with all of its
grand-frequence and fizzissitudes, has
come and gone, and the country is safe
for another year. 1
1
OUR SATURDAY NIGHT.
Editor Htatbsman : I stand on the
verge of the fourth of July with cotton in
my ears and an awful lurking dread away
down under my liver pad. The small
boy with the firecrackers is abroad in the
land, and the plugugly season is here.
Also the "orators of the day" from thous
ands of platforms have torn and will tear
the tail feathers but of the glorious old
eagle bird of freedom, and split the air
with patriotic eloquence, all of which will
be tolerated and passed casually by, just
because it is the fourth of July, and peo
ple feel good because it is the birthday
of the whole blessed country, and every
body has a poetical license to stand on
his head and kick his Bhoes off to celebrate
the event, if he wants to. If all the ora
tions that are delivered in this broad land
this year on this auspicious event were
collected together and spread in one place,
there is no calculating the number of acres
they would cover ; and if one of our revo
lutionary fathers could lie resurrected for
a short time and allowed to take a look at
them in all their long-winded proportions,
there is no shadow of a doubt at all that
he would exclaim something viz: "Is this
what I fought, bled and died for? If it is
I am glad I am dead, and I will willingly
go back to my tomb and rest in peace."
The fourth of July is a good institution
for ice cream stands and circular swings
that "go round and round," and other at
tractions, too laborious to mention. It
used to be kind of an irrigator of the gar
den patch of patriotism, bur it has about
outlived its usefulness as this kind of an
irrigator, I presume on account of the
agitation over "riparian rights" in Cal
ifornia. It is now used as a holiday, and
very few Americans take time to think or
ask where the day was born, or the age
of the child. Viewing it thusly, to be
popular, and with the majority, like the
sinner who preferred to go to hell with
the biggest crowd, let the plug uglies form
in line, let the sheet iron band play, let
the citizens in carriages, in wagons, in
ebriated and incognito march in the rear,
and let us "enjoy" ourselves if it costs
our lives.
The 'cute, pretty and droll sayings of
the juvenile world are attracting consid
erable attention just now. A little Salem
girl was strolling about the neighborhood
on a tour of observation when the came
across a colored man sitting on a door
step. She stood with her finger in her
mouth looking at him. Finally she said :
"You're a colored gentleman, ain't
you?"
"You're a very polite little girl," he
said. "Yea, I am a colored gentleman."
"Oh, yes, I'm very polite. I call every
nigger I see a colored gentleman."
Salem has more nice horses and bug
gies and driving outfits and rigs to the
square inch than any other town this
side of Kalamazoo. It has been suggested
that the reason Salem ladies like horses,
is that they suggest the idea of the groom.
'Any way, Salem has lots of level country
and nice drives around about, and when
the bridge is completed across the river,
she will be one of the best provided cit
ies in this respect on the coast. Owners
of alleged "flyers" in the capital city take
much pride in their horses, and there k
a great deal of competition in this line.
The other day Mr. Smith, who has a two-year-old
which he is proud of, met Mr.
Jones, and the following conversation was
overhead :
Mr. Smith. "I tell you, Jones, that
little two-year-old of mine is going to
make a fiver from taw. The other day I
passed one of those blooded horses out to
the race track on the road. How's that
for a scrub without a pedigree?"
Mr. Jones "Pretty good; but which
way you were going?"
Mr. Smith "North."
Mr. Jones "And the blooded horse?"
Mr. Smith-"South."
From present indications, it looks as if
Gladstone lias not gained much by his
appeal to the country, that he will get
back home with aliout what he started
with. May be he has winged a few un
ionists on the fly, but he will likely have
only about enough te keep his head above
water, without tackling home rule for
Ireland again. There is a good deal of
difference between England and America,
outside of the Atlantic ocean. Gladstone
"went to the country" for votes, we "go
to tlie country" for health over here. We
feel for the G. O. M., but, owing to the
distance, we can't reach him.
Ned H. Pell.
IEKATEI. JfOT CONQIEREIJ.
Gladstone may be defeated, but he is
not conquered, nor is the principle for
which he fought dead. Principles are
eternal. They survive defeat, and suc
cessive and overwhelming defeat. The
ghost of justice for Ireland will not down,
but will rise up to torment its enemies
until the rights of the Irish people are
respected. What action Gladstone will
now take is not certain. He may so
modify the home rule bill that it will be
carried now, for want of an alternative,
or he may keep up the fight, and dissolve
parliament at often as the Queen will
permit, or until he gainsenotigh strength
to carry the bill, or is defeated entirely.
It is still a great and complicated issue,
even if Gladstone has lost strength by his
appeal to the country.
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INDIAN TKAIKINA RCHOOIJS.
On the occasion of the graduating ex
ercises of the Indian training school at
Chemawa, last year, we expressed tlie
opinion that the heavy expense for the
B'.iport of these schools is money not
well Bjient,' at least that the expense is
too great to justify the government for
tlie good accomplished. The class of last
year was a brighter one than the one of
this year.
We have changed our opinion comwra
Ing these schools. They are the hope of
the Indian race. They must do their
work of civilization and enlightenment, or
the red men must itecome extinct. The
reports from the tribes of improvement
in all the branches of industry, due to
the education and training of the Indian
boys and girls at these schools, show a
gradual movement upward and onward,
not only in all the arts of civilization,
but also in Christian conduct and beha
vior. These schools are no doubt a suc
cess, and worth all their cost.
The business men of New York seem to
be learning that what they need in an ad
vertising medium is quality as well asquan
ity in circulation. The newspaper which
gives decent editorial attention to tlie in
terests of trade, and gives first considera
tion to the welfare of active capital em
ployed in commerce, and manufactures,
and production, and construction, and
which endeavors to educate labor and
teach it to think for itself, that is the
paper which will be able to boast the ele
ments of quality and character in its cir
culation. Its patronage amongst the
labor element will be those who wish to
learn tlie ways of thrift and frugality as
the stepping stones to independence, and
such a paper helps them on by warning
them against tlie anarchist and office
seeking demagogue. As they heed its
admonitions they constantly become of
greater value to the general trade of the
city, because their avoidance of the dog
gery and their preference for the savings
bank constantly increases their ability te
patronize the better trade. There is no
doubt that trade feels the burden of a
debauched press. We have foreseen the
results sure to overtake the patrons of
newspapers who supported a press with
business advertising, and permitted its
editorial and news columns to be used
wholly in the interests of classes antago
nistic to trade and bent on the destruc
tion of active capital. The reform need
ed is in the hands of business men them
selves. Tlie newspapers which always
take sides against them, which use the
profits of their patronage to support every
movement, whether of a legislature, a
congress or a mob, which has for its ob
ject the destruction of business and the
oppression of active capital, could not live
ft half year without the jiatronageof those
to whose interests they are either indif
ferent or inimicae. As we have said
before, the example of one newspaper,
succeeding by the methods deprecated by
these .New York merchants, corrupts the
press of a city or state. For that exam
ple business men alone are reHKmsible.
The statement may not be palatable, but
its sole seasoning is the truth.
AaKANSAM contributes a novelty to the
Stories of official crookedness by having a
judge sent from the bench to the peniten
tiary for forgery. Speculating in country
scrip made the trouble.
Miss Levisoworth, niece of the gen
eral, last week married, at Syracuse,
New York, Mr. Francis B. Gott. It was
a church ceremony, to offset the swear
name of the bridegroom.
The West 8ide, of Independence, has
acted very consistently on the bridge
question, and our business men should
remeniWit, and "keep it on their lint."
Conubkssmak Lb Fbvbe says that no
congressman can live on his salary and
lie honest. We infer from this that I
Fevre is a poor poker player.
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NEW TO-IAV.
K8TRAV NOTICE.
riAMETOMV PLACE OS OR ABOCT JTTLY
about7 .ears nlU. .h.Hl In front dwnnr ple.Mj
call and pay (or this notice and small expenee
luiMirrea, l'laoe !i miles uorth 1 H hileaker.
7 ,Mw 11. A. THOMAS.
WILLAMETTE VALLEY
MortgageLoan (STrust Co.,
OF BALEM, OKEGOH
Loan money on improved farm and other
nm ciana real estate, and peraonal pnmerty.
Illey bo18 mortgages aud other tecur-
Hut and aell real errtate.
Write fire and Marine Inniranee In flmt
eiaaa companies.
Furtilun abatracta of title to real eitate, make
collection, etc., etc.
.""r Firm National Bank. Balem. Or.
T. Mtr. PaTTOx, Wa. N. Laoris. p. W. Hhanzi,
President, Vice President. Secretary.
FINAL SETTLE W EXT.
V0T1CE ! HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE IK
doralEued administrators nt the estate of
Jlenry Smith, deceased, have filed their final
account, aud Saturday, August 7th, lhtmi, at 10
o'clock a. in., of said day, at the room of the
County Court, in the Couuty Court House, ol
Marlon County, in Salem. Oreeon, has been ap
pointed by the County Court in and for saUl
Warioa County, for hearing and passing nnnn
the same. Therefore, all permns interested to
yaid estate are hereby notified to be and appear
in said Court at said day and hour and show
cause, ii any there be. why aaid amount should
not be allowed and the administrators dis
charged. Salem, Oregon, July tb, )
W. If. SMITH and
II. W. SMITH.
Administrator.
SHEIUFF KALE.
NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN THAT, BY V1R
the of an execution and decree duly issind
out of the Hon. Circuit Court of the State ol Or
egon, for the County of Marion, and to me di
rected on the iMth day of June, liwi, wherein
Andrew Hein PUT recovered a Judgment and
decree against 8. A. Keel, deft-, said judgment
being for the sum of tutf.iso in U. B. gold coin,
together with euata taxed at 77.0B and interest
thereon from date, at the rate of nine per cent,
per annum. 1 have levied upon, and will sell
at publie auction, on
Satorday, tha 7th day of An gust, lsse,
. ! 2 i,'c,oel P- tn. of said day, for cash
in hand, on the day of. sale, at the court
hooedoor. in halem. Marion eounty, Oregon,
to satisfy said pianllff's pidgment and decree,
all the right, title, and Interest, which the said
Ifcft. H. A. Keel bad on or after the 8th day of
Itecember. li3, in and to the following describ
edreal estate to wit: All that certain piece or
parcel of land bounded and described aa follows :
beginning at a point thirty-four and aeventy-eightone-liundrenths
(34 7-100) chains south of
the northwest corner of the donation land
claim, taken up by Allea J. liavle, and running
thence south niueleea and fifty-six ot.e-hun-dredths
( lit att-WU) cbalna, thence west forty-six
() chains, thence north nineteen aud fifty-six
one hundredths (l 66-luo) chains, thence
east forty-aix (4ft) chains to the place of
beginniug, and containing ninety (0)
acres, more or less, and being in sec.
SI t i, r 1 w of the Willamette me
ridian, County of Marion, and State of Oregon.
Uated at Balem, July 7th, nm.
JJNO. W. MINTO.
Sheriff Marion County, Oregon.
KHCimt'lg SALE.
KOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT BY VIK
of an execntiou and decree duly issued out
of the Hon. Circuit Court of the slate of Oregon
far the county of Marion, and to me directed
on theMth day of June, 1K86, wherein Andrew
Hein, plaintiff recovered a-judgment and de
cree axainst Chas. A. Prost and Margaret A.
Frost, his wife, defendants: said Judgment be
ing for the sum of li)17.K in V. B. gold coin to
gether with T0 attorneys fees and all costs and
expeuses, and interest thereon at the rate of
nine per cent, per annum from iMth day of June,
1, together with the leins mentioned in said
execution and decree. I bave levied upou and
will sell at public auction on
Satnrday, the 7th day of August, 1880,
At one o'clock p. m. of said day for cash In
hand on the day of sale at the court bouse door
in Halem, Marion county, Oregon, to satisfy
said plaintiffs Judgment and decree, all the
right, title and luterest which the said Chas. A.
Frost and Margaret A. Frost had on or after the
2-21 day of iMwember, 1., the date of said
mortgage in aud to the following described real
estate, lo-wit: Bounded by beginning at tha
north-west corner of the donation laud claim
of Allen J. Pavie and wife and run
ning thence west forty-six () chains, thence
south thirty-four chains and eighty links
(.' W)) thence east forty-six (4B) chains; theuce
north thirty-four (341 chain and eighty link
(SO) to the place of begiuuing and containing
oue hundred and sixty acres of land, all situ
ate In T. 8. ., K. 1 W. of WUlamette meridian
aud in Marion couuty, Oregon, and in case of
any surplus remaining in my hauds after the
payment of aaid plaintiff's Judgment together
with costs and exneonos. the same to be applied
in satisfaction of the liens named in aaid judg
ment and decree in tne order of their priority.
JJuted at Salem, Jnly 7, lwtf.
J NO. W. MINTO,
Sheriff Marian County, Otegon.
STEICKLER BROS.
Sealer in
Stoves and Tinware !
Making roofing and spontlng a specialty. All
work guaramred. At tha old stand of
Hen Strang .
Commercial Street,
a Balem.