The Oregon weekly statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1878-1884, August 13, 1886, Page 2, Image 2

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    rilE OH 113 ON STATESMAN: F1UDAY ATJCtTJST 18. 1886.
Jk. KISS TH KOI Gil THK TELEPHONE.
The Telephone,
In merrv tone,
Ktutg T'lnkelty-tiiikeltytink."
I put my ear
Close up to hear,
And what did I hear, do you think?
"Papa, hello!
Tin me, you know."
The yoice of mv own little Miss,
"You went away
From home to day,
Arid you never gave me kiss.
"It was a mistake,
I wait not awake,
Before you went out of the house;
I thought that a kins
Would not be amiss
If I gave It as sly as a mouse.
'8o hear goes, papa, ;
And one for mamma,
And another when you can come home;
Just answer rae this.
Is ituioe to kiss
When-you want through the dear Telephone?"
. "Hello!" I replied.
With fatherly pride,
Tre got them as snug as can be:
I'll Rive them all back,
With many a smack.
Whenever I come home to tea."
THEY WKBK ONK.
On hammock pnpa chanced to blunder,
Where 'twas gwiaging in a leafy niche;
And the old man psuscd a while to wonder
Which was which. Merchant Traveler.
A Story of the Tang.
BY W. II. L. ATKINSON.
Twenty-five years ago a circus waa not
fruch an overgrown affair as it now is. A
tent covering one wing, a few modest
sideshows, formed the entire paraphern
.alia before the days of, "Triple-Allied-Mastodon
shows, with three separate
rings, three sets of performers, and three
bands!"
Twenty-five years ago I was a middle
aged man and a doctor, but I venture to
say that I knew almost as much about
the management of a circus as I did of
pills and prescriptions. I resided in a
considerable village in Ohio, and for
twenty years I had visited every circus
which had come within fifty miles.
You wonder why? Well, I will tell
you.
When a very young man, just after re
ceiving my diploma and while the mystic
letters M. D. tacked to the end of my
-name were still a pleasing novelty, I be
came engaged to the prettiest girl in the
village. Folks said she was a little wild,
but she never seemed so to me. I know
she was full of animal spirits ; I knew
that she flirted a litttle, but, though I
loved her dearly, I was not in the least
jealous.
I think I loved Annette too well to mis
trust her. I always believed in girJp,
and boys too, having lots of fun, so long
as there was no wickedness back of it.
Thus it enme to pass that Annette went
v.'heie and with whom she pleased, with
no word of interference from me
I have said that we became" engaged to
te married. VV e were to wait two years,
during which time I hoped to build up a
practice which should warrant me m
taking to myself a wife and home of my
own. lhe two years Hew bv. .bvery
thing prospered with me, and within
three months I expected to marry An
nette.
About that time a very Email, "one-
horse" circus visited our village and made
a two days' stand. Among the perform
ers was a bare-back rider, roughly hand
some of the Spanish gypsy type but
totally uneducated, tie succeeded, how
ever, in fascinating Annette.
Alter the show left town Annette and
"Leon" doubtless corresponded, though
I never knew it. Three months later, in
the fall of the year and within a week of
the day set for our wedding, the circus
once more came to town. W hen it left,
Annette left too. I was terribly grieved.
1 was so gneved that 1 became physical
ly sick. But 1 was proud, too, and I
would not assist in any measure for bring
ing the runaway back. Indeed, had she
come back right away 1 do nut think I
would ever have married her. My pride
waa hurt, and when one s pride
wounded the sore is very sore.
I tried to put Annette out of my mind.
I prospered in my profession, but I never
married. Yet I think I always yearned
for my wild, lost love ; lor, as the yeans
rolled away, an uncontrollable impulse
aent'iue to every circus that came within
reach of me. But I rmver saw Annette.
nor Leon, either, although I want have
visited over a dozen showaevery summer.
Twenty years parsed away, aud I wan
a lonelv m an oa the shady eiue of forty.
"The Great Monster Imperial Circus,
t'r n from a triumphal tour through
Ivicope," was advertised to make a stand
i -i t ornviile
f course I went. There wan no print
ed i-rogramrne, but toward the end oi the
wriormaiice the ring-master announced
with a loud voice, Mademoiselle An
netU?, the Parisian prodigy, champion
lady bare-back rider et the world r
My ears could not have deceived me.
lie did say "Annette; but, then, a
thousand chances to one it was not my
Annette. Bhe would be forty years old
now not a likely age for a woman to
show heraelf off as a bare-back rider.
Htill, for a second or two, I was in sus
pense
Ha! the curtain across the entrance is
pushed back, the ringmaster cracks his
whip with a great aud sounding crack,
and two milk-white steeds canter into
and around the ring,
Then the apology for a band starts up,
and, as the horses near the entrance to
the ring once more, a gaudily though
scantily attired girl rusher) out, and, amid
a cracking of whips, "hurrahs" from the
circus men, and a shrill "houp-ia!" iroin
herself, leaps at a bound to the back of
one of the horses.
But it is not Annette at least not my
Annette. This is quite a young girl; I
can tell that, used as l am to the "make
up ' of circus fairies, etc.
Mademoiselle goes through the hun
dred and one tricks in which a circus-
rider usually shows off her powers. Her
last trick is to bound thro'igh rings of f r
made by steeping iron rings in coal-oil or
some other inflammable liquid. I sup
pose the girl had done the trick a thou
sand times before, but tins time was
once too often.
Her flimsy drees caught fire, and miss-
in 2 the horses, she tell heavily to the
ground a huddled head of burning silk
and gauze.
Knowing that tny profeswioiial services
might be required, I waa in the ring in
an instant, lhe tire was speedily ex
tinguished, and the limp crushed form
was earned tenderly to the "dressing
room," where 1 examined her.
The cm mubt have been a favorite,
judging from the eagerness with which
men and women crowded around to Know
how she was the women inside and the
men at the entrance of the Bo-called
"dressing-room."
After u careful examination Iliad to
report to the manager a broken arm and
severe spinal injuries.
It was not altogether disinterested pity
which prompted me to insist on having
the injured girl taken to mv house. For,
inside her dress, fastened to a silken
cord, I found a tiny package which
aroused my curiosity.
1 could not help somehow connecting
her name and the package with myself.
Ko she was carried up to my house, and
for several days my old housekeeper and
I devoted the greater part of our time to
the sick girl. 1 was fearful that she
would be a cripple for the rest of her li e,
and so I had a celebrated Philadelphia
physician come down to see her. Ilia
opinion was that she would get quite
well, and very soon, too. .
Annette was very pretty ; not at ! an
cearse m any way, while, her conversa
tion indicated that she was far from an
ignorant girl.
tor a second time, 1 think, 1 was tn
love. Once or twice I ventured to ask
Annette something of her parents and of
her life, but she was very reticent and I
thought 1 could wait to know. One thing
I thought I could not wait for, and that
was, Annette herself. Bo when she was
able to walk about the bouse and yard, I
asked her if she would not make my
home her own, as my wife, one was
protuse in her thanks for mv hospitality,
but could not say "Yes." The utmost I
could get from her, was the promise of a
definite answer in a day or two.
The second dav after that 1 was out all
day on a visit to a patient at a distant
farm house. When I returned I found a
note lying on the desk of my office, ad
dressed to Dr. John liedlield myself. I
opened it and read :
Mv Dear Doctor: uood-oye. l nave
gone for good, and have taken an unusual
way of thanking you for your kindness.
I know you are curious to learn the con
tents of "the package around my neck. I
will tell you. When I struck your village
it contained twenty-two dollars. It is
now somewhat larger, as I have added
four hundred dollars of yours which I
managed to take from your desk. I can
not very well marry you, because I am
married already. Do not feel hard to
ward me your money may save my hus
band's life," for at present he is very sick
in Mexico.
"Once more, good-bve, and thanks.
"Annette."
No, I am not married, neither have I
attended a circus for twenty-five years.
I am sliy, rather, of a woman and a
circus.
A GKAND SUCCESS.
Two or three actors who were stranded
in Chicago last week reached Detroit the
other day, having got thus far on their
waj- east. One of them called on an ac
quaintance to see what he could raise to
help him along.
"Why don't you pawn that diamond
pui : " was asken wnen ne mined at a
loan.
"It's onlv glass, and wouldn't soak for
a nickel."
'How about your watch?"
'Nothing at the end of this brass
chain," he replied as he drew out the
pin which held it in his pocket."
Haven't you any relatives?
'One in a lunatic asylum and two in
thepoorhouse."
'Can't you cheek through on your
baggage?"
"The baggage was cheeked to get here
on." t
"Well what did you go into business
for, anyway? This is the fifth or sixth
time you have been busted."
"txactlv. mv friend, but u you only
knew how often I was busted as a house
painter you'd believe 1 was making a
grand success of this."
He was helped to liunaio. iiwirou
Free Press.
THE NKiKT EDITOR.
'Mme. Adam, the well-known French
journalist," says the exchange, "writes
from midnight until 4 a. m. Her dress
in her study consists of a neglige costume
of white silk with pearls about her neck
instead of a collaret, and with red kid
slippers on her feet." This item has a
curious interest as showing how nearly
trench method in journalism resembles
our own. Here fllso the night worker in
journalism eay the night editor wears
a nerliy 'tume in summer. It is not
of white silk, and he does not wear tiny
red slippers, but it is neglige, lhe ab
sence of collars and culfs and the pres
ence of a great deal of perhaps unneces
sary profanity over the forms make just
as neglige a tout ensemble as Mme.
Adam wears in Paris. There is a slight
difference in detail, but the neglige gets
into midnight journalism all over the
world.fChicage Tribuue.
THE KIND HE KEFf.
A dealer in firearms at Butte City asked
a tenderfoot 21 lor a revolver which
could be purchased in Chicago for one
third of that sum, and the would-be cus
tomer observed :
"AreH't you seeking to make a tre
mendous big profit on that weapon?"
"Why, yes, I suppose it does look
rather larie." he replied, "but. strancrer.
you don't begin to know what a h U of
a time a man has here trying to keep a
religious gun-store. ' iv all-street News,
HE WENT INSIDE,
Little Johnny, aged five, was taken
with the circus posters and begged his
papa to take him to the circus. He
could get no promise from him, however,
until making a last beseeching appeal on
circus day, his father replied: "Well,
Johnny, we will go down street to see
the tent
Johnny walked along with
his father, looking very dubious indeed
at such a scanty privilege, until, glanc
ing up he remarked : "Papa, I'd much
I rather see the con-tents." That decided
it. They went inside,
HILL NYE'S BU1M1ET. J
Hl'NTIMO AM ICIITllYOttAlRl'8.
Several years ago 1 had the pleasure of
joining a party about to start out along
the banks of lUtter creek on a hunting
expedition. The leader of the party was
a young man who recently emiped from
college with a large amount of knowledge
which he desired to experiment with on
the people of the farwest. He had heard
that there was an ichthyosaurus up some
where along the west side of Bitter creek, i
and he wanted us to go along and help
him find it.
I had been in the west some eight or
nine years then, and 1 had never seen an
ichthyosaurus myself, and I thought the
young man must know his business, so I
got out my Winchester and went along
with the group.
We tramped over the pale, ashy, glar
ing, staring stretch of desolatiou, through
burning, quivering days of monotony,
and sagebrush, and alkali water, and
aching eyes, and parched and bleeding
lips, and nostrils cut through and eaten
by the sharp alkaline air, mentally de
pressed and physically worn out, but
cheered on and braced up by the light
and joyous manner of the ever-hopeful
James Trilobite Eton ol Concord.
JameB Trilobite Eton of Concord never
moaned, never gigged back, or shed a
hot remorseful tear in the powdery, hun
gry waste of gray, parched ruin. No re
gret came forth from his lips in the midst
of this mighty cemetery, this ghastly pot
ter's field for all that nature had ever
reared that was too pxr to bear its own
funeral expenses.
Now and then a lean, solid gray coyote,
without sufficient meral courage to look a
dead mule in the hind foot, slipped
across the horizon like a dirty phantom
and faded into the hot and tremulous at
mosphere. We scorned such game as
that and tugged on, cheered by the hope
that seemed to spring eternal in the
breast of James Trilobite Eton of Con
cord. Four days we wallowed through the
unchanging desolation, four nights we
went through the motions of slumbering
on the arid bosom of the wasted earth.
On the fifth day James Trilobite Eton
said we were now getting near the point
where we would nnd what we sought.
On we pressed through the keen, rough
blades of the seldom bunch-grass oyer
the shifting, yellow sand and the green
ish gray of the bad-land soil which never
does anything but sit around through
the accumulating centuries and hold the
world together, a kind of powdery poison
that delights to creep into the nostrils of
the pilgrim and steal away his brains, or
when moistened by a little snow to ac
cumulate around the feet of the pilgrim
or on the feet of the pilgrim's mule till he
has the most of an uasurveyed "forty" on
each foot, and the casual observer is
cheered by the novel eight of one home
stead striving to lump another.
Toward evening James Trilobite Eton
gave a wild shriek of joy and ran to us
from the head of an old creek, where he
had found an ichthyosaurus. The ani
mal was dead ! Not only that, but it had
been dead a long, long time I
James Milton Bherrod said that "if a
college education was no more use to a
man than that, he, for one allowed that
his boy would have to grope through life
with an academical education, and very
httle of it."
I uncocked my gun and went back to
camp a sadder and madder man, and
though years have come and gone, I am
still irritable when I think of the five days
we tramped along Bitter creek searching
for an animal that was no longer alive,
and our guide knew it before we started.
I ventured to say to J. Trilobite Eton
that night as we sat together in the
gloaming, discussing whether he should
be taken home with us in the capacity of
a guide or as a remains, that it seemed to
me a man ought to have better sense
than to wear his young life away trying
to have fun with his superiors in that
way.
"Why, blame it all," says James,
"what did you expect? You ought to
know yourself that that animal is ex
tinct?" "Extinok!" -says James Milton fiber
rod, in shrill, angry tones. "I should say
he was extinck. That's what we are
kit-kin' about. What galled me was that
you should have waited till the old cuss
was extinct before you come to us and
told us about it. Y'ou pull us through
the sand for a week, and blister our heels
and condom b near kill us, and all the
time you know that the blame brute is
layin there in the hot sun gittin' more
and more extinck every minute. Fun is
fun, and I like a little nonsense now and
then just as well as you do, but 1 11 he
eternally banished to Bitter creek if I
think it's square or right, or white to play
it on your friends this kind of a way.
You claim that the animal has been dead
going on five thousand years, or some
such thing as that, and try to get out of
it in that way, but so long as you knew
it and we didn't it shows that you are a
low cuss not to speak of it. What differ
ence does it make to us, I say, whether
this brute was 'or was not dead and
swelled up like a pizened steer long be
fore Nore got his zoological show togeth
er? We didn't know it. We haven't
seen the Salt Lake paiiers for weeks.
You uce your edjecation to fool people
with. My opinion is that the day is not
far distant when you will wake up and
find yourself in the bottom of an untime
ly grave. You bring us a hundred and
fifty miles to look at an old bone pile all
tramped into the ground, and then say
that that the animal is extinck. That's
a great way to talk to an old man like me
a man old enough to be vour grand
father. Probably vou cacklate that it is
a rare treat for an old-timer like me to
waller through from Green river to Yal-
lerstone, and then hear a young kangaroo
with a moth-eaten eyebrow under his
nose burst forth into a rollicking laugh
and say that the animal we ve been trail
in' for five days is extinck. I just want
to say to you, James Trilobite Eton, and
I say it for your good, and I say it with
no prejudice against you, for I want to
see you succeed, that if this ever happens
agin, and you are the party to blame,
you will wake up with a wild start on the
follerin' day and find yourself a good deal
extincker than this here old busted lizard
is." Chicago News.
Mr. Henry Ward Heecher uses and gives away
over three hundred Allcook'a Porous Masters
every year. She writes that she has found them
a "geuuiue relief for nun of tho aches aud
pains which flesh is heir to." Hon. Hauiuel J.
Randall stud that they cured hlra of Inllain
matiou of the kidneys wlieu everylhlug else
failed, aud cured him of a severe Bold that
threatened to run Into pneumonia. Hon. Jainea
W. Rusted writes that theycurud his sou of
chronic rheumatism aad relieved Uimof serious
pulmonary troubles.
Geo. W. Tompkins, M. P., Cumberland Htreet,
Hrooklyu, N. V, writes Juuot), lsHS: "Hake
pleasure In toonimendliig Allcock's Kermis
blasters In all cases of general debility, eapec
ally where the pal lis are severe over the regions
of the kidneys, liver and chest: marked Im
provement occurs aonn as relief from su tiering
Is obtained, for lumbago these plasters sur
pass liniments, Ac."
IIKNUY'8 CAItllOI.lt; SAI.VK.
The beat salve used In the world for cuts.
chilblains, coma, and all kinds of akin erup
tions, freckles and pimples. The salve la guar
anteed to Rive perfect satisfaction in every case.
He sure you get Henrys Carbolic Salve, as all
others are but lmltatious and counterfoils.
The curative power ol Ayer's Baraaparllls Is
Coo well kuown lo require the spacious aid of
any exaggerated or
aggeratea or uci
ilcmlous certificate. W It-
uesaes of ita marvelous cures are to-day living
tu every city and hamlet of the land. Write
Or. J. 0. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass., for names,
From 115Lbs to 161 Lbs.
To the Cuticura Iiemedies I
owe my health, my happi
ness, and my life.
A day never passes that I do not think and
speak kindly of the Cuticura Remedies. Seven
years ago, all of a dozen lumps formed on my
neck, ranging tn siae from a cherry stone to an
orange. The large ones were frightful to look
at, and painful to bear; people turned aside
when they saw me.ln dl.sgust,audfwas athamed
to be on the street or In society. Physlclaus
and their treatment, and all medicines failed to
do any good. In a moment of despair I tried
the Cuticura Kemedies Cuticura, the great
skin cure, and Cuticura Boap, an exquisite skin
beautlner, externally, aud Cuticura Resolvent,
the new blood purifier, Internally; the small
lumps (as I call them) gradually disappeared,
and the large ones broke, In about two weeks,
dlacharving large quantities of matter, leaving
two small scars lu my neck to-day to tell the
story of my suffering. My welghtthen was 116
sicklv pounds; my weight now is till solid,
healthy pounds, and my height is only live feet
five Inches. In my travels I praised the Cuticu
ra Itemed ies, north, south, east and west. To
Cuticura Kemediea lows my health, my happi
ness, and my life. A prominent New York
druggist uked me the other, "bo you still use
tne cuticura Kemediea; you took to be in per
feet health?" My reply was, "1 do, and shall
always. I have never known what sickness Is
since I commenced uaiui the Cuticura Keme
diea" Sometime I am laughed at by praising
them to people not acquainted with their mer
its, but sooner or later they will come to their
seuses and bellve the same as those that use
them, as dosens have whom I have told. May
the time come when there shall be a large Cu
ticura aupplie house lu every city in the world,
for the benefit of humanity, where the Cuti
cura Remedies shall be sold only, so that thero
will be scarcely a need of ever entering a drug
store. m . nrniiAnifO,
210 Fulton 81, New York, N. Y
Cuticura remedies are a positive cure for
every form of blood and skin diseases, from
pimples to scrofula. Sold everywhere. Price
Cuticura, so cents; Soap , 2ft cents; Resolvent, II;
Prepared by the Potter Drug and Chemical Co.,
Boston, Mass.
Send for Bow to Cure Skin Dlseaaoa.
TTTII PI-ES, blackheads, shin blemiabes, and
j. X-ULL oayo numors, use cuticura soap.
SNEEZING CATARRH.
The distressing sneeze, sueete, sneese, the ac
rid, watery discharges from the eyes and note.
the painful tnflsmatlon extending to the throat,
the swell of the mucous lining, earning chok
ing sensations, cough, ringing noise in the head
and splitting headaches how familiar these
symptoms are to thousands who suffer period
ically from head colds or istliuensa, aud who
live In ignorance of tue fact that a tingle appli
cation ofSanford's Radical Cure for Catarrh
will afford Instantstneout relief.
But this treatment ill cases of aim Die catarrh
gives but a faint idea of what this remedy will
do In the chronic forms, where the breathing It
obstructed by choking, putrid mucous accumu
lations, the bearing affected, smell aud taste
gone, throat ulcerated tnd hacking cough grad
ually fastening ltselt unon the deblllated svt-
tern. Then it It that the marvellous curative
power of Sanford'a Radical Cure manifest Its
elf In instantaneous and grateful relief. Cure
begins from the first application. It Is rapid,
radical, permanent, economical, safe.
Sanford's Radical cure consists of one bottle
of the Radical Cure, one box ol Catarrhal Sot
rent, aud one Improved Inhaler, all wrapped
In one package, with treatise and dlrecUoos,
auu soia oy su aruggitis ior si.uu.
' Potter Drug it Chemical Co., Boston.
I HOST GIVE UP, I cannot bear this
pain, l sveue an over, and nothing I
try doea me any goood. Beck-ache.
urtiue paiua, soreness, lam ass, hack
ing oougb. pleurisy aud chest Pains
cure oy mai new. orittninai anu eie-
taut autidete to Daln aud luflainmttion the Cu
ticura anti-pain Plaster. Especially adapted to
xauies oy reason ox lis aeiicate oaor sua geutie
Med iclnsU action- At drugglats, ltdo. ; Are for l.
mailed free by Potter Drug A Ctjeuieai Co.,
JWSWU.
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History of the United States
Nil ElllFFH MALE,
KOTIfiK 18 IIERKBY GIVEN THAT BY V1R
tue of an execution duly Issued mil of the
Hon. Circuit Court of thu State of Oregon for
the county of Marion, ami tome directed on the
mil day of July, Dvstl, wherein Moses Lauktree,
defendant, recovered Judgment against Joseph
Bohrolber, plalmllT, said Judgmeut belug for
the sum of titty and SO-UK) dollars, being costs
of sultupou which execution waa issue, to
gether with Interest thereon at the rate of H per
cent, per annum from the lid day of Octo
ber, Ws-J, and all costs herein taxed at M HO,
together with all accruing coat and expenses
nereiu, i uave lovieu upon, auu will sell at pub
lic auction, on
Hnturdny, the 4th dor of September, 1HH6
At one o'clock n.
of said day at the court
nouse uoor in Salem, Marlon oountv
Marlon county, Oregon,
for caah In hand oil the day of sale, all the right
title and Interest which the said plaintiff Jo
seph Hclirelber had on or alter the yd day of
woiooor, iwz, in aim tome tonowiiig ueaorineil
real property, to-wit: Two town lota numbered
seven 7 aisd clk-nt (8) In block No. th rtv threo
(JI3), In the towu of (now city) nervals, Marlon
county. State of Oreirou. as doacrlhed and mini
Dereu on the plat ol surveys ol said towu now
city, oi uervai.a as the same appears on record
n the clerk's otllceln Halem.lu said couutv and
state atoreaam, all In Marlon county. Oregon
lMled at Salem, August lid, 1H86.
JNO W. MINTO.
Sheriff Marlon county, Oregon.
NOTICE FOR l.K liNHl;.
10 THK HON., THE COUNTY COURT OF
Marlon county, state of Oreirou. The tin
doralmied leiral voters of the nreclnct ol hutte.
vllle, Marlon county, Klateof Oregon, would re-
spectiuiiy aaK your Honors tn grant a iictmac to
sell spirituous, vinous and malt llouors lu less
Uiintllies than one gallon, in said precinct of
Itutiovllle, to J. J. Ryan fur a period of six
moiling:
listed this 2-Jth day of July. 1KS6.
H. Jeiinluie. Jos. Hclieurer. Y. Hartica. Moses
McKay, Johu McKay, J. J. Ryan, W. Vlcthers,
K. Malhlet, B. loners, J. B. Wolf, J. K. Matthlcti,
as. Whitney. K. X. MatthlcMi. John Ureeulnaf.
P. J. Couo, T. Plnard, J. W. Long, Peter Keller,
A. II. Cone. Charles Mittthlcu. Chas. E. Bhaw.
K. P, Bents, Francis Keller, John Kennedy,
;reat 'OlileuhClilHuer. I,. B. Handera, krauk
Field, llonrv L Heuta. w. E. : er. u. Dcntol. J
W. Bhleu. t. C. Aehoraou, C. 11. Pillow, K.
ltatctieller, Jacob Miller, Thos. Reea, II. It.
one. J. Arndt. Ueorice Ilarlueek. Bernard
Flynn, H. A. Bogom, James Hunt, Tbomaa Hunt
sr., .inonias J. Hunt Jr.. Robert Whitney.
John JohiiKtou, Thos. Collinsoii. Joshua Coltiu-
sou. John Ututo. F. Beesliair. E. Bauer. M. Keu-
neuy.
notice is Hereby given ttiat the foregoing pe
titlon for license to sell spirituous, mall and
vinous llquurs In les quantities than one gal
lon in Buitovtlle precinct, Marion county, Ore
kou will he presented lo the Hon. County
;ourt oi said county on the stli day ol Hcntent-
ber, im. 8.V41 J. J. RYAN.
FINAL KKTTl.KMICNT.
In the County Court of the Htato of Oregon for
siarion touniy.
In the matter of the estate of IJauiel Clark, de
ceased, final account.
TOTIUK IH HKRKBY UIVKN THAT THE EX
I editors ol tald estate have filed their last
and final account, and that on Tuesday, August
I tth, at 10 o'clock a. in. of said day in the court
house at the oftico of the county court Is hereby
xt apart as the time aud place to hear any ob
jections to tne keiuemem oi nam account.
una. I'AMI-.l. JJLAKK,
R.tt. CLARK.
8alem, July 15, 1180. Executors.
NOTICE.
MO WHOM IT MAY CONCKKN, THAT THE
1 undersigned lias been duly appointed ad
iiilnlstratrlx of the estate of James 8. White de
ceased. All persons havfngclaiuia against said
estate are required to preaent them with the
propel vouchers within six mouth from the
dale hereof tome at Holmes A llayden't of
fice in Haiem, Marion county, Oregon. All per
sous Indebted to said eaiate are reiiueated to
mage immediate payment.
uaieu August ttn, i
I8AHKI, M. WI1ITK
7-0-61 Administratrix of said estate,
N'OTICK. TAKKN CP BY THE Hf'BHCKI
bcr, one brown horse, shod all round, t
little white on two feet, small atar ill forehead
harness marks on sides: had a small rope
around his neck when he came to my place
oout nov. 14, lm. j, . uit AHAM,
Hec. li. lUxi. (iralmni's Kerry.
7:80w.H P. O. address, Buttevllle, Or,
Ym.
N. Ladne,
Pres.
Dr. J.
Reynolds,
Vice Pres.
John Molr
C ashler
3ALEM.
OHKUON'
Transact a
GENERAL RANKING
-BUSINESS
SollrltaDeDoslta sublect to check or on tsee
lal certificates.
Kxchange on Portland, Ban Francisco, Nev
York. London and Hoiik Konx bouttht and told
Stale, county aud city warrants bought. Hpec
ial inducements extended to patrons of thi
bank.
armors are cordially Invited to deposit and
transact business with us. Liberal advances
made on wheat, wool, hopa and other property
at the legal rate of interest and no commission
charged. Insurance on such security csu be
obtained tu the bank In most reliable coiupau
ies.
AVK BOL'OHT OUT THK 8TOKK OH K. E.
McKlnnev A Co.. at Turner, nnd lire re-
ceivlug a
New Block oT Goods
Of all kinili. which they propose tn sell at
prices aa cheap as are coiialatenl with itood
goods. They a-k all old customer of the firm
to cull aud see lliein. and solicit the natronaifu
of all.
7-2S-W WITTHCHKN 4 SCHMIDT.
WILL AM ETTK VALLEY
HortpgeLoaD A Trusi Co..
OK 8ALF.M, OUKGON.
I.onii money on improved fnrma and other
flrttclaas real ettflle. and personal nroDiirtv.
Buy notes, bonds, rcortgiigeaaud other aeciir,-
iiioa.
Buy aud sell real estate.
Write Fire and Murine Insurance in first
Class companies.
Furnish abstracts of title to real estate, make
collections, etc.. etc.
OHIceover First National Bank, Hnlom, Or.
T. McF. Patton, W m. N. Lamik, li. W. hiunkh,
President, Vice President, Secretary,
IF YOUK WATCH IM
Out of Order ! !
Take It to
I1. D. McDowell
gVKml have It 'repaired and warranted
No. il Commercial street, Baleui Oregon.
BliEYMAJi BK0S.
Money Brokers.
Money to loan
la sums to suit on real estate or approved pe
tonal security. Purchaser t)f
Notes, County and State Warrants, and every
Othsr class of securities. Office In Breyman's
biwi, up tiairs. aaicm, uregun. aw
IflWGtlS!
Wittsch S Schmidt
rlHKItlPF'H 8AI.K.
NOTICE 18 IIKKKDY GIVKN THAT BY VIR
tue of an execution ami denrnn fftilv Issued
out of the Hon. Circuit Court of the Htate of Or
egon for the county of Marlon and to me direct
ed on the loth day of July liwil, wherein K Levy
plaintiff, recovered a Judgmiiut aud decree
against Win. 8. Hiuimnna and Oacar tHmnions.
dofendanta, said Judgment being- for the sum of
t' w MKuiur wuii an costs, accruing costs
ami oxpeiinet and Interest thereon at lawful
ratsa trout tne 17th day of June, imi, I have
levied upon and will sell at public auction on
HuturUny, the 14 Hi day or August, 18X0,
At ten o'clock a. m. of said dav at the court
houae door lu Balmu, Marlon county, Oregon,
for cash In hand on the day of sale, all the
hereinafter described promises, or so much
thereof as will bo aulllnioiit to satisfy the plulu
lllfa Judgment and coats, to-wit: Lot ll sec
tion U, T ti H, 11 l w of Willamette meridian,
containing 80 M-100 acres of laud: also all of that
parcel of real estate, to-wlt: Beginning at the
corner of sections 13, 14 -a, IM, township l south,
range x west oi too n iiiumciio nioriuiHii, run
ning thence north 80 rod , thence west HO rods,
thence south IB.') rods, thence eanl Wrods, thence
north 5tt rods to the place of beginning ooutalu
lug Hs.'2-l acres of land in Marlon county, Ore
gon. It appearing from the record, first that on
the 21 day of March, l7ii. aud also ou the SOlU
day of May, 1S7H, the defendant Wm. H. Him
mnns, transferred by deeds the above described
parcels of land on the respective dittos last
above mentioned to hit ton Oacnr Hinimnns, a
minor, wow the court adjudges and decrees ,
thatthe said deeds nunitiiuiod herein are frsilu.
lent and void so for as thu uliilui of the plain-
tin, r. Levy, la concerned, and said deeds are
therefore set uatilc to that extent and the tald
lands hereinbefore described worenrdered sold
as upon execution, free from the claim of said
Oaear slinmoiia, and hla tltlo thereto Is hereby
adjudged aa nothing so fur aa tho claim of
the plalutlfl' la concerned, anil the proceeds of
said salo shall he npplied according to the said
Judgment and decree.
Ualed at baleui, July UKh, li";.
JNO, W. MINTO,
Hliorlll Mitrion County, Oregon,
HHtltll'I'-.S sai.j-:.
VOTICK IS I1KHKHY GIVEN THAT HY VIR
1 lue of an vxViMitiuu and decree duly Issued
out of the Hon. ('ircull Court of the Hlntc of Or
egon for the county uf Marion and to me di
rected on the loth day ol July, liwi, w herein J.
M. Rosuiiburg and Joaepli Myers, copartners
doing bunliie.-ia under the Him iiuiuo mid style
of J. M. KOMMihctg A Co., plitiulitla, recovered
a Judgment and decree again t J. K. holt, J. L.
Koir, M. K. Holt, anil Jl, 1). holt"; defendants,
said Judgment being for the nun of fi:uKi :!7 la
I . H. gold colli, together with nttorneys fees,
coals and disliurntMiieiita taxed at 1112 t" aud ac
cruing costs, aud interest thereon at the rate of
10 per cent, per annum from the 21st day of
June, lrXi, I will sell at public auction ou
Hutui-fluy, the lfflidny of AuCut, IHHO,
At 11 o'clock a. ni. of tald day, at the court
houae diHii ib Halem, Marlon county, Oregon,
for cash In hand ou the day of sale, all tho
right, title anil iuturea which the sulci defen
dants J. P. KufT, J. 1.. Koir, M. K Koff, and M L.
K o 11", or either of them had on or after the l'ith
day of February. 1ks6, (the date of said mort
gage) In and to the following described real es
tate, to-wlt: BegiiinlMg at the most northerly
north-east comer uf John L. Kofi aud wife's do
nation laud claim, notlhcatlou No. Swi, claim
Mo. do lu T 7 B, R. W uf tho Willamette merid
ian and running thence west 'il 13 1U) chains;
thence south sh 6A luuclislnt to the center of the
county road leading I rum said laud to Halem:
thence H H4 degrees E along Mild road 1V.IM
chains; theuce N 171, degrees K 5. ill chains:
thence east il.lifi uhallis to vsvat boundary Hue of
said claim No, fi!, theuce north itf.iW chains;
theuce went 1H.22 chaiua; thuuue north 17 U d
greea K '2.37 chains lo corner In angle of said
claiai No. 65, theuce north Udegreeis 22 mill
utes W 7X-II, chains tn the place of beginning,
coutaiuing 1U) acres of lun J situate lu Marlon
county, in the state of Oregon, said sale to be
subject to the lieu however of Breymau Bros,
as therein named.
Ualed at Bnlem, July 10, 1
JNO. W. MINTO,
Hhcrirf Mariuu County, Oregon.
wiiKiun x hale
VOTICK IH HEUKHY (11VEN THAT BY VIR
i of an execution ami decree duly Issued out
of the Hon. Circuit Court uf Hie state of Oregon
far the county of Marion, and to me directed
on Die (4t li day of July, InHU, wherein Andrew
Heiu, plaintlir, recovered a judgment and de
cree agalual Cha-s. A. Frost and Margaret A.
Prost, his wife, defendants; said Judgment be
ing for the turn of lon.i: In V. H. gold coin to
Keillor with JSO atlorueya fees and all costs aud
expenses, and Interest thuteon at the rate of
nine per cent, per ftnunni from 2-lthdayof June,
low, together with the lelns mentioned In said
execution aud decree. I have luvied upon and
will sell at public auction on
Saturday, the 14th day or Auftuat, 1MHO,
At one o'clock p. m. of sail day for caah In
hand on the day of sale at ti e court house dour
In Halem, Marlon county, Oregon, to satisfy
said plaintiffs Judgment sod decree, all the
right, title and Interest whL-h the said Chas. A.
Frost aud Margaret A. Froat had on or after the
day of December, ism the date of said
mortgage in aud to the following described real
eatnte, to-wlt: Bounded ly beginning at the
north-west corner of the dinatlon laud claim
of Allen J. Davie ant wife and run
ning theuce west forty-alx (40) chains, thence
south thirty-four chains and eighty links
(M Mi) theuce east forty-six (40) chains; thence
norm inirty-iour (;hi eMails auu etgnty links
(no) to the place of beginning and containing
one hundred slid sixty actes of land, all situ
ate In T. H. 8., R. 1 W . of Willamette meridian
and lu Marlou county, Oregon, and in case of
any aurplua remaining In my hands after the
payment of said plaintiffs Judgment together
witn costs ana expenses, tie same to be spoiled
In satisfaction of the lieu named In said Judg
meut and decree In tne older of their priority.
A'aivu si oaiuui, uiy I, rJ.
JNO. W. MINTO,
Hlierlff MirUn County, Oregon.
NIIKItll'F'H HALK.
VOTICK IH HKKKIIY UIVKN THAT, BY V1R
l the of sn execution sad decree duly issued
out of tho Hon. Circuit C'Wri of the Htato of Or
egon, for the County of Marlon, and to me di
rected on Hie fith diiy ol July, lsno, wherein
Andrew Heiu Till recovered a Judgment aud
decree ag lust S. A. Keel, deft., said Judgment
being for the sum of H-"''.lu in l. 8. gold coin,
together witli costs taxed at 77.0V and interest
thereon from dale, at therate of nine per cent.
per annum, l nave luvi u upou. and w in tell
at public auction, on i
Hiiliirily,(h 1 1th ih? of August, 1880,
At i! o'clock ti. in. (if said dav. for caah
In hiuicl, on tint tiny jof sale, at the court
hotl-o iloor, in riiiloin. Marlon coiiuty, Oregon,
to sttiMfy said plawtHVa jiidgmcnt and decree,
all the right, title, mid lnlcroat, which the said
Deft. H. A. Keel nail ou or after the Mil day of
December, lm.:. lu uud toliie lollowiiu; deacrlb.
edreiil valale to wit: All that certain piece or
imrcel of land bounded aisl described as follows:
iegimiiiig at a point tlilrly-four and rnveuty-elglitoiic-liuudrciitha
(HI Is loo) chain south of
the northwest corner ol the ilouiitlou land
claim, taken up by Allen.!. Onvle, and running
thence, south iiiueteea mil fifty-six oiie-hun-dredtlis
(la.W-lOO) ohaiiM,:thence veat lorty-slx
(Hi) chains, thence north nineteen aud fifty-six
ouo'liiiiiilredilis (ly W ioo) chains, theuce
east forty-six (-Hi) clmln-i to the ylace of
beginning, anil containing ninety (U0)
acres, more or lean, end being in sec.
l t 8 h, r 1 w of lhe Willamette me
ildisn. County of Marlon, and Htate of Oregon.
Dated at Hslem, July 7tll, lf6.
JNO. W. MINTO,
Bherlff Marion County, Oregou.
H1IP,K1F1" HAhKr "
VOTICK 18 IIKKKBY GIVBN THAT BY VIR
i tue of nn execution and order of wile duly
issued out of the Hon. Circuit Court of the State
of Oregon for the county of Marlou aisl to me
directed on the oth day of July, 1HM, wherein
J. Meyers, plaintiff, recovered a Judgment and
order of sale HgiiiiiHt J. F. Koff and J. U Koff.
defendants, said Judgment being for the sum of
4t,3 UO in U. 8. gold coin together with attor
neys fees and hU costa and dlsbursments here
in taxed al7l luand accruing costs, aud Inter
eat thereon at the rate of ten per cent, per an
num from the 1-llh day of June, IHno. I will sell
at public auction ou
(Saturday, the 14th day of Auu;ust, 1886,
At II o'clock a. tn. of said day at tie court
hoiite door In Halem, Marion county, Oregon,
for cash in hand on the day of sale, the herein
after described real estate, the same having
been attached oy me ou the Vth day of April,
land, to-wlt: The south-east quarter of the do
nation land claim of John I.. Koff and Mary D.
Loll', his wife, notification No. X77 In Mwnsblp
seven (7) south of range '2 west of the Willamette
meridian in Marlon county, Htate of Oregon,
excepting 5 acres thereof heretofore conveyed
to John Happlugfluld, containing one nundred
aud fifty-five acres more or leas, be.ug all of
said donation claim now owned hy tbein, all of
which of the above desorlbed property is In
Marion county, Oregon.
Dated at Halem, July vth, I'M.
JNO. W. MINTO,
Sheriff Marlou County, Oregon.