Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon weekly statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1878-1884 | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1887)
Til; OKEGrOT S1ATESMAN FK1DAY.JUNE lO. lSI WEEKLY STATESMAN i Published ever; Friday by Xh STATESMAN PUB. CO. stbsckittios sates: i -war. In ilmn t months, in tdmtM. r or 11 or SUBSCRIBERS 1YESTRTSG THE ADDRESS of their papers changed must state the mama ( their lonner postolbe, as well u nl Lb office to which Uy wish the paper nhengd Ail subscriptions outside of Marion and Polk Counties will be Mopped promptly when the time paid for expire, unless the subscriber hag a well-known financial standing. You may al wTs see to what date your subscription is paid by looking at the tag on your paper. "V'O KEW SUBSCRIPTIONS wnX BE TAK 1 en unless paid ior in advance. Now that Salem is sure of the inaugu ration of the free delivery system with the beginning of the next fiscal year, July 1st, and that she bag very fair pros pects of securing a government postoffiee building, let her add one more step on her road to a metropolitan city and tear down those relies of her village days, the awnings and hanging signs. The States man will welcome the time when the council will compel it to haul its hand some hanging sign, wits all the rest. Tis done, the great transaction's done. The last spike on the Northern Pacific has really and truly been driven. It was Kent to its resting place at six o'clock and two minutes last evening. The nnsalted sea in which the beauties of Duluth now lave their dainty feet can send its greet ing to the City of Destiny upon the shores of Commencement Bay, at excursion rates and without change of cars. Ta coma has cause for great rejoicing. Ta ooma News. The San Francisco newspapers are de voting considerable attention to the news and general description of Oregon. This attention is directed by the proposed early completion of railway connection with that city, and is probably selfish to some extent. They are probably bidding for an Oregon circulation. But it cannot fail to have a beneficial effect upon this country. It is now stated on good authority that while ex-Senator Jones was wasting his time conrting MiBg Palms in Detroit, a young woman of Florida fell heir to $3, 000,000 and married a local assembly man in Mr. Jones' own city. Thus do men flee from certain blessings by run ning after strange gods. New Orleans Picavnne. With a free delivery system, a fruit evaporating establishment employing eighty people, and, next a government postoffice building, and with the comple tion of railway connection with San Fran cisco, Salem will grow and go ahead at a rate that will surprise the most sanguine. This is the dawn of prosjerity for the whole eoontrv. PtrcKr Editor O'Brien, fresh from his Canadian crusade, is to be welcomed to New York next Tuesday by a procession of Labor Unions 100,000 strong. For the first tinie Chinamen will march side by side with the sons of toil. This will be a novel sight for Mr. O'Brien, as well as for many of our oldest citizens. N. Y. World. Two newsaper reporters were run over and killed on a Pennsylvania rail road recently. When the companies pay their families $10,000 apiece damages it will drive another nail into the coffin cf the interestate commerce act. Under the old free pass system reporters could be killed without expense. The possession of a private picture gal lery appears not to be an infallible certi ficate of taste. According to Mr. Hall, of the National Academy of Design, "there is not a man who owns a gallery in this country who is a judge of art, or who dares to boy a picture without consulting an expert."" THE PRICE or WHEAT. The militia of Rhode Island were consol idated the other day, and there was quite a time in consequence. The festivities were only marred by the circumstance that the party had to go over in Massa chusetts every lime they wanted a giase of beer. We trust that the President will no1 think that a visit to this coast is superflu ous merely because lie ban seen almost the entire democratic population of Cali fornia in Washington. fS. F. Pot-t. The Fourth of July e;e.ratiin at Sa lem will he a big day for bicyclists. They will be here from all over the Mate in numbers that will be astonishing and pleasing to heboid , Blaine, the man from .Maine, may no! be in as robust health as is his wont, hut be is much to sturdy too please the demo cratic politician of perception. If you should shout the word Tuco nia! in tiie earsoi some of Portland's capitalists the sound would kill them deader than a mackerel. A ix who wish to have a way up time on the Fourth cf July, and be patriotic at the same time, should not fail to come to K&lera to celebrate. This welcome and generous rain will do a great deal of good to late-sown grain, and to the gardens, of this section. LASfeUOWKE AND O'BRIEN. The San Francisco Chronicle is of opinion that the present high prices rul ing for wheat are more the result of a speculative buoyancy than of a shortage or probable shortage in tiie general sup ply of the staple. The Chronicle prints the following editorially : "It is already cerlaia that the Califor nia crop and the winter wheat crop of the eastern states will fall consid erably short of an average. Bnt the crops ofOregon and Washingtonlerritory, as well as the spring wheat crop of the Northwest, of which great expectations are formed, are still to be fully heard from, and they are iuportant factors in fixing prices at the opening of the coining season. As regards the present buoyancy of wheat, there has been a good deal too much stress placed on the speculative movements in the east. During the first half of the season the markits there were almost exclusively dominated by the bears, and it may be said that as a rule it requires in these times an exceedingly powerful bull combination to counteract the less up-hill efforts of the short sellers. whose objective point is always a break, or if possible a panic. Then again , nearly ah of the so-called bull combinations are of a composite character, acting alternate- ively as bull and bear .just as it suits their primary object, which is simply to make monev bv milking the market. Had the ups and downs this season been governed exclusively by the farmers' deliveries and the legitimate competition of millers and exporters, prices would doubtless have fluctuated more widely and have reached a much higher average. It is only on this coast and in the second half of the season that anything like real bull move ment has been in progress, and its effect on the English and eastern markets is now being greatly modified by the large discount made by the ring to shippers This with the view of getting rid of the cornered wheat in the only way possible before" the advent of the new crop, when prices in the open market, all have to fall to something like a fair shipping level. The big advance here comes too late to benefit the farmer, for whom it was not intended, and the withholding a large part of the California surplus, which will now reach Europe too late for this season, has had a smaller effect than might have been expected on th markets of the world. THE tAl SE OF THE WAR. Dr. Deems has solved the problem of the war. With a logic that is more novel than cogent he proves that it was the in evitable result, of the "climatic influ ences," which so differentiated the north from the south that they were actually compelled to fight, don't you know? Why, it is plain as a pike staff, and the wonder is that so simple and self evident a proposition has never been visible to the naked eye until now. Of course ! The whole difficulty was caused by the wet season of the north coming into con tact with the sunny south and creating spontaneous combustion. Well, we have an imperative duty to perform. We must immediately fence in our climate, for it will never do to let it run alsjut loose in that Bort of a way. We shall have to get out a license, muz zle it and then lead it around with a tring like a tksj. Our cyclones ought to be fitted with a patent steering apparatus, for if they should get headed for South Carolina the "climatic influences" might "differentiate" and make the people of that state so mad that they would capture Washington before the state militia could be called out. Dr. Deems is an eloquent clergyman, and, when he talks seriously, a fine humorist. a piece of genuine snobbishness, nothing mere nor less, and should be promptly disavowed by Minister Phelps as the un authorized act of an officious subordinate, who is trying to make mountains out of molehills, and to set up barriers which Victoria herself has recently shown a disposition to throw down. If her majes ty considers Buffalo Bill a person of suf ficiently genuine distinction to be presen ted to her, there is not much danger that she will object to any American la K, whether she comes fully up to Mr White's standard of distinction or not. The New York Times asserts that the failure of electric'ty to compete in price with gas as a means of private lighting in that city is manifest. It adds there are fewer electric lights used in private dwell ing!! and places of business by at ieut :.'." per wnt. now than there were three yean ago. Tin: Re i something in beitiir a good letter writer. Dr. Harry Lane.for instance, wrote a gsxl h-tler to the Oregonian con cerning the election oi Governor IVunoy er; and Lane hah been apiiointed super intendent of tiie state insane asylum, at a verv nice littie salarv. The action of O'Brien the Irish editor in refusing to speak at a meeting where the theories of Henry George and Mc Glynn we e to be endorsed, makes the articles of the I ondon Times on "Parne Il ium and Crime" sound very flat on this side of the waters. Ladies' French kid opera slippers, hand sewed, only L7-j, at Kmusae A Klein's. 1 , In O'Brien's New York speech he made Home points which the London Times will have some difficulty in answering. He jKiints out that there is more reason for charging Lord Lansdowne with being an I accessorv to the attack upon him, O'Brien j at Kingston, than there is for associating i t.......ii .i... .i... i ... liiirii fin. nici uituo im luicmx cvuu m it ted by the sympathisers with the h ome rulers in Ireland, for he says that Lansdowne knew the outrage was to be perpetrated, and thathe inspired those who carried out the outrages. I True or false, this is just as good an ar- , gument as the Times used to convict Par- I nell of complicity with shooting landlords or clubbing agents in Ireland. The Times insisted that because these unlawful acts were committed by admirers and parti sans of Parnell, therefore he must share the responsibility of them. Of course the fallacy of such an argument is at once apparent. It iB about on a par with charging General Sherman with being a chicken thief because the ''bummers" who followed his army occasionally robbed a hen-roost, or calling General Lee a guerilla because Colonel Mosby was sometimes subject to his orders. In every organization, whether it be civil or military, social or political, lay or ecclesiastical, there are always some un ruly, turbulent spirits who refuse to sub mit to constituted authority and insist on going their own way. They have a sov ereign contempt for the rules and regula tions by w hich the great mass consents to be bound, and set laws and orders at defiance. Theoretically, the governing body is responsible for them ; practically, they do just as they please, and should share the responsibility of ttieir misdeeds with no one. It is a well -known principle of law tiiat -the relation of principal and agent can not be relied on to shelter one from the consequences of crime. The agency ceases at once upon the commisioh of an unlawful act, and each must answer for himself. Here was the vice of the Times charges against Parnell.and here is equal ly the weakness of O'Brien's charges against Lansdowne. Nobody of good Bense will believe either that Parnell in cited wrong or encouraged the Phcnix Park murders, or that Lansdowne ad vised or abetted the attack upon O'Brien One is just about as probable as the other, and for this reason the London Times finds himself in a dilemma. Unless it will admit the innocence of Parnell it cannot claim the innocence of Lans downe . Very naturally O'Brien will make the most of the attacks ujson him, and if he accomplishes nothing else ne will have the satisfaction of making the organ of the Salisbury ministrv recede from its position or appear decidedly ridiculous, and in either case it may be set down as a victory for O'Brien and the cause of home ruie which he advocates. AS IMPORTANT ENTEKI'KJsK. The establishment of a fruit evapora- ting enterprise on a large scale in Sulem will be a good thing for the city, and for the Burro-nding country. If it is a suc cess, as it promises almost certainly to be, it will encourage the establishment of other manufacturing enterprises here. There is plenty of enterprise and plenty of capital in Salem willing to engage in any enterprise for the advancement of the interests and growth of the place, if they can have assurance of a reasonable profit upon investment. This is the basis of all investment. Business men generally ate not philanthropic. Busi ness methods are not founded on princi ples of philanthropy. Money must have wages for its employment. That manu facturing enterprises will furnish wages for the money employed, both directly and indirectly, must Vie proven, and then there will not be much trouble to secure such investments. We are glad to see Ids fruit-evaporating enterprise encouraged by our jieople. It will be able to work up all the fruit that can be secured in this entire section, and it is hoped, profitably both to the munu factnrer and producer. "H HKUtlGNOKAXr IS 15Hs." The tru'h of this old adage is aptly il lustrated in the following from the New York World : It is rather discouraging to jseuple who wear real diamonds to re-fii-i-t that only experts know whether they are paste or not. It was only when a supposed diamond was taken to a jewel ler to be reset recently that the career of tii- voung man who was arrested on Wednesday for substituting false for real stones v.u closed. His adopted profes sion o! tio!e;r ami lrequeist change ot em ployers seemed to have enabled him to arry on a iucraiive bu.iness. People who had employed jit.-'l parted with him were o-silisb enough on learning what he had been arretted ior to Slave their gems tested, and learned what they had lost. Otherwise they might have lived on in definitely in happy um oiiM-ioiisiiess of the facts". ' Tim Chicago Knight of Labor having organized a Co-operative Milk-supply Coinpaiiy, the Inter-Ocean hojst-s that tbev won't water the stock. The public wilf probably hope ttiev won't water the the milk. Bai.km is showing unmistakable signs of business improvement, which promises to Vie lasting an I to grow stronger as it gets older. PELLETS. Editor Statesman : The graduating season is upon us, and now the oratorical seniors and sweet girl graduates will blossom forth with their alwtract effusions and theoretical essays in a manner quite distressing to behold and to hear. After these efforts the graduates will "go out into the world," and they will lead a kind of ethereal existence for a time.as though a piece of paper written in Latin and signed by a faculty in a style quite illegi ble elevates them just above the level of what they term "the world." But grad ually they will rub their rough corners against the grindstone of time, and the conceit will he whetted out of them. They will finally run up against the cold and stubborn fact that a sheepskin don't count for much, unless it is backed by a full stock of common sense, tact and per severance. President Cleveland didn't graduate in a college, neither did Abra ham Ijncoln, neither did Jay Gould, and there are a number of other persons 1 might mention, who have acquired fame and cash without a sheepskin. A college education is a fine thing to have around the house, and a sheepskin looks nice when framed and hung up in your room ; but don't count too high on these tilings, and underestimate the virtues of common Bense, tact and perse veranee. We fre quently see college men eating only two meals a day, und with holes in the knees of their breeches, right alongside of peo ple of independent means, who don't know a college curriculum from a wheel barrow, if they should meet it in the road. I don't believe there is anything much more lonesome in life than an old bache lor when he has grown very old. I like old maids. There is a great deal of need less abuse thrown at old maids. A wo man never grows too old to do some good but it is questionable whether a man ever grows old enough to do any good. An old man who never got married, who has lived a selfish bachelor all his days grows surely into a perfect nuisance, a crabbed, self-satisfied, discontented cur mudgeon. Now, if there is one thing more beautiful in life than another, it is the admiration and devotion maiden aunts show towards good-looking neph ews. Even a mother never has as much profound admiration and love for her son as her unmarried sister of mature years, who has pretty well given up the idea of marrying. Of course, in the oldest maid's breast there is a faint hope that some man may come along yet, and she always attributes the fault that he does not come to her own austere conduct, bless her. But if her sister has a boy, and he is good looking and attractive, how she does spoil him. And if she is rich ! Well, I'd rather have a wealthy maiden aunt who doted on me than a millionaire's daughter for my wife. But an old bache lor! Well, although I may reach that miserable condition myself, I am at pres ent at an age when I despise the kind. If they have money they are simply a nuisance. You can't show your contempt for an old fellow who has monev to leave. It's against the whole moral law to do it. And it's against the social policy as well. He might leave you something in hie will. You are pretty sure he will not, but he might, and its perfectly astonish ing, however remote that contingency may be, how much you will stand rather than risk that chance. It's like the sick man : "Doctor, are there a hundred chances I'll get well?" "No, my dear sir, no." "Are there fifty chances. "No, not that. There aren't twentv- five." "Is there one chance?" "Yes. There's one." "Then go in like thunder on that one chance." The stingiest man in the United States, until recently, was supposed to be located in Missouri, and he was so penurious that he would step the clock at night to keeji it from wearing out. He was the second cousin to the man at Oskosh, Michigan, who was a church member. He would hold onto his pennies until the last pos sible moment when the contribution box came around, for the interest to accrue on them. But the stingiest man in the world, so far discovered up to the time of going to press, is the man in Albany, Or egon, who uses a wart on the back of his neek for a collar button. Now tiie time is here when the IVlunk Academy will ps around its honorary and gratuitous titles. They will confer the degree of LL. D. on John Jenkins, w ho is police judge of Miipitas, and on Sylvester Siinpbiris, editor of the Isling ton n ."creamer. There are only a few de serving people in this country who have been overlooked in this aiatter, and one of them is John L. Sullivan. He is de serving, and all that, and there is no reason, now that the attention of the col leges of this country !. called to this subject, w by the g: scrapper should not soon lie able to- gn himself "John L. Smiivan, 1." Barlow ha 1 b. '-n !!:og to Jerohl the story of hi" w;! .. ..:i i marriage how his wife had been h: wight up in a con vent, and waon tiie pjmt of taking the veil when his presence burwt upon her enraptured sight. J'jrold listened to the end of i he sUirv, and, by way of com ment, siii'l : "Ah ! she evidently thought Barlow better than nun." ENGLISH EXTRAVAGANCE Iird Handolph Churchill, however er ratic or opinionated he may be, is not afraid to say hat he thinks, and in a speech made to the Wolverhampton workmen's club recently he told some home (ruths about the conduct of English governmental aflairs which furnish in teresting reading for those who are al ways praising English and French meth ods. We have in America some people who really lielieve that everything of a public nature is carried on better clse where than here, and England is the bright and shining example which this class of (toople always hold up to Ameri ca. Lord Randolph's S)Keeh will be to them a hitter pill, but its effect may lx useful after the hud taste has got out of their mouths. Alluding to the depression, Churchill says that the true remedy is economy in public expenditures; that the workers muHt not allow Ireland to absorb all their attention, but must bring pressure to bear to prevent the government's com mitting such extravagance as spending f500,tHK) on the army and admiralty buildings and $35,000 in decorating West minister Ahliey in honor of the Queen's jubilee. He suid that thecountry is trav eling at racing speed along the road leading to irretrievable ruin. He assert ed that in the event of war England might, after maddening delay and pour ing out money like water, put 150,000 men in the field. As to the navy, he says England has a very powerful fleet on pajK-r, but that after the liombard ment of Alexandria it was in a helpless condition; that in ISHti the ordnance committee designed several 4.'S-ton guns and aked the Armstrongs to construct them, which they did under protest, but that when done they were worse than useless, one of them bursting on the sec- r d round, firing half-cartridges, and the w hole was condemned at a loss of one million dollars. This is but a crv brief svnoi-sis of Churchill's sjieerh. In effect, he charged every administrative department of the British government with extravagance, wastefulness, ignorance and incomjieten- cy, which constitute rather a formidable indictment against a government held up to the United States as a model. As a matter of fact there is nsoresiiecu- lution, more jobbery, more waste and more recklessness in the expenditure of public money in England than there is in America, and very little more to show for it. English writers themselves admit that their vessels of war are failures compared with the best tyjies of con tinental war shijw, and that their heavy ordnance is but a partial success. Ixrd Randolph has said publicly no more than has been said in print again and again. He has not rated the army or the navy any lower than others have done, only his position and admitted ability j.ve his words weight and prominence. A great deal was said some weeks ago about the purchase of English naval plans by Secretary Whitney. Tiie most recent develouients would suggest that the projier use to Ik1 made of them is as fright ful examples, and that the proper way to b uild steel ships of war is as the British have not. W'AXTED A SMALL FAl:M WITHIN SEV 9 en or eight miien of bHiem. Price lmt to exceed ll.'ssi. Address tun 31, Salem. 6-ln-gw IOK S ALE CiOOIi BLACKSMITH SHOP and tool), small house and liarn. t lots in good location, for cah or good !MM?urity. price :i-iO. AdUrea 11. A. Humphrey!!, Macleay. Mi lru i TCTIOS f-ALE FKIliAV. Jt'NE 24. j at 1 o'clock I. m.. at 8. tt I'uifh's farm, lake LaDish, of the following dt-seritied propi-r;v: Kit. a black mare 7 years old, l hands hiii. weight is' pound ; sire anon of Black Strang er: dam by Kittemau. Nell, a bay niare 'i years old. I.e-j hanus hnfh, wuiuht about iiiki; sire a California trotting home (name forgotten); uim a Morgan mare 'auny, a Imy mare. It: years did, ll-i hands, weight hImmjiws runiiin- tired. 1 yeaning colt, sorrel with with white strip; sire Beamy; dam Nell (as above). 1 yearling eoit, color bay; sire heauty by Innugurstiou ; dam Kit ta above). 1 yeurlmg ttlly, sorrel; sire beauty; dam Fanny (as above, 1 sorrel (reldine. ae 7; !.(, hud: weight )'. an excel lent ridinsr, tmrxe. Wood Hird. a bay (."siding, 4 yeais old l--'2 hands: sired by tiie well known thoroughbred Wisrtlimry, 0,01: r'jomy ; Asides a number of g'id wo.-k horser w t-igl iiij from llisj to IS. J each, aio one goml fren young roiich cow and calf, one ttalem made lop hack, one new hoss cultivator. 'lenus of euie. Hix months' time will be given witn improved se curity at lu per cent. s.. 0. pro II. m. SYPHEKT, Auctioneer. 6 liKJw SHEKIH'KTAV NOTICE OF KALI:. V'OTK.E IS HEItEHY OIYE.V, THAT HV virtue of warrants Ior the collection of de iiii'inent taxes of me aements of ls."i and l-v'. in th'- counry of Marion and Kt'ite of Ore goi.. duly isMied by the county cieric of iirtid coiuiiy. w hir-n warrains are now in my hr.ii!. attached to tiie :its of unpaid and deunUont taxes for.the years ls. and 1-s, in aid SUriou county, and not having iwen able, aftr diligent searcu. to hud any pcrnioa! proerty within saifi county, oot 'if which to majce the luxes hereinafter mentioned, I bave levied upon ibe land dcjiciifed in ine list hereinafter set forth as the privheriy of the pe.r.on wtiose name is set opjiofiie ea'-li tract H-. tiie same ajj-Rr a..red on said delinquent las roil and w ill, on SittturdH.v. tiie 1 I th ifa.v 01 tltiue, 1SH7. A, ihed'ior of toe county court huu.-c. in sa iein. Marion county. Oregon, ai the hour of one o ei''k in the i-.ftcncKiu of d dr.y, soli at pub lic auction, to tie hignet bidder, for cash in hand on tire d.y of ioe, all the hercuiHfler U scrited lao'l-. or m, iroicit of each tract as may le nece-ary to ray and satisfy the tax a-e.Nei against toe ow her of uticii tract in said Marion county for t:ie yearn l smi ls-, together w ith ac'-ruing eo-t? aad exjten-es. which mt is as follow; Chandler Hauiel Cooper K I Cleveland J O t'nbrlon Mrs M S ? w, W) aorei t'regs 1 M Mortgsge, liavidson D .Mortgage, Hay W H " Prater Helen C 'Mortgage, IK-vren Audrew JHuuevLle, 1 2 b 8 Handee mortgage trust aud Invest ' nient company, 2UU I'J.Vl AIKi 100 800 limited f 2 w, 97 aerea Til v, ITiiiHrres 7 s i w, ir.0 acres 7 s 1 w. gjo acres Mortitsge. Sis, urn acres Morti'sge, b s 1 w, ftOacrea 1-VI MX 1 3Ti Forrester ) I" Ferehn F. t, rim 111 nr J F Oarrel Jas Green wood Mrs M J I Mortgage, Orange Hall at l 1 in se cor of land HriHiks i owned by I, brooks Hsriman PA 7 1 . mo acres Hamilton John M s fl w, 2 acre. Hmrpbreys V U s'l w, 17 acres llobsrt Mrs MarrAiOervals, I lit, HiitVmahii Mr.M A Mortgage, Sou Helm K A K Salem, 1 '1. b K Mensiey estate Isalem, 1 7, b is Hont A estate 17 s 1 e. so acres MHseltine J K ACo Higbfleld W U Jones E P Jc.sup M K Kloskev Mrs F Khiuk W Lance l' Lyons t"1 l.e Catharine Lowengard I LaUoiiuc estate Mnrgau B W Mortgage, Salem, 1 4, b 2f' Mortgage, Hubbard, 2 lots N Salem, 2 lots Mortgage, ftAK 1IISI 2WIU Salem, 1 5 A B, b Mortgage, Jefferson, 1 lot till too 2rtl Wfln AH h s 2 w. tVIOarres, 4 a 2 w , 400 acres f s 2 w. 94 acres Magers MrsMellndiN Halem, 1 6 A ti, b W Mortis Mrs Mel vltta: Mortgage. 2tm Money kiarion Martin AtuandAPi Myers F H Murphy Mrs Mary Muss l.orttida J Mutt A H McKinney Flora Wi Mortgage. Nelson Oils T iirner, 2 lots Neeland T J s Salem. 1 lot Nordvke heirs 111 a 2 w, pm acres m-kobock A w Mortgage, finni i'lhard J it j Mortgage, 400 I'nce J H ! Money. !MKt I'atternon Harriet; Mortgage, 2Mi( Phelps L F. " 1SSSI Parker t'bas " .100 l'arrish E K estate 10 s It w f acres Heed Mrs C A iSalem. 1 7, b .' heed Mrs (' A ' N Salem, 1 8, 7 & , b Kankin Mrs KlisalS Salem. I lot Kankir: heirs i.N Ssleai. 1 7, b 3 Kiggs Iisuiel iMortgage. hotKTlS John Knss Mrs M C Iteiiney W rn If. s 2 w. SO acres Smith Margaret J Mortgage. Smith EL I swans Simon '7 3 w, lot) acres Swarts Htiuoit '7 s It w, 2J2 acres Ste'art J(m Y Mortgage. StevensMrs Kertha oervais, lot S, b 1!2 Sawyer Sarah K Holm liul Wsin-cott S C Yetgan A I) 470! fttNli 900 .SOU btSli 4imi; looi Hailey estate Itlaliton Isaac Hrown Mrs 1; .1 ltarlow & White Harlow ( M Sogart heirs How ie C Pall Mr Mary Harm I.T bctunanu A Rosen luatt Campbell P W !7 s 1 w. 74 acres Cannon Jane el al Mortgage, Mortgage, rm las. Hubbard, frb I I w. 114 a.-res l-'i!verton, 1 1. b 1 Ml Angel, 2 lots 1 Mortgage. is halem, 1 1, 2 A S. b - Personal property V s 2 w, 2S acres 'Mortgage, Ml Cannon Jane Cox Mrs Norris Crete Mrs Rosa Pavidson ! Peuuis O K I son! 200: aOU Oervais, 1 , li 2T. ''1 s 2 w , 109 acres Mortgage, ti s S w, 1H7 aw Salem. fr I 1, b 17 X Salem. 1. 2 and 8 9 s a w,4 acres Ituttevllie, 1 2, ti as N Salem, 1 lot Day Oco Pavis O W Pevren Andrew I'lgman Jos iitiudee Mortgage. Trust ii Invest mentt'o.Llmlted'fi s 2 w. 97 acres ' " j7 1 w, l.'sl acres " !" 1 , lf.o acre 17 s 1 w , y.'O acres Elliott Mrs I II jlu s 3 w, ai res, Jcf I ferson. 1 lot Mortgsge, A Mortgage, :i:-,o 11 LSI Salem. 1 2, b Is lonoi N Salem, 1 '.. b 17 at 1 lot s e cor land now owned by L prooks I'- s 2 w. l.s't acres ' s s 1 t.. so acres I s s 1 e. so seres M.irtttnte, 47.". s '' . Ml acres M s w, 1 1 -j 7 acres 4 s ' i , n acres Sll.el.l. 1 -., b S s 1 e. lt.t acres 7 s 1 v . so acres s 1 w . n 11 acres JtM lISsl 172 ft 02 8 84 2 h7 8f 8 M 6 Sit 1 S7 4 01 2 67 StSJ At) 2 00 a 67 S 02 9 86 6ft 2 67 s r. 2 fi7 f) 84 1 (10 4 01 4 HI 5 AS 2 7 7 a1. fi ftst 18 ; git 72 12 04 2 11" f 6s 1 K7 tti IK! 7 Ki" 134 0 8 M 2 U0 2 f.7 7 Kft n is 3 f.7 1 f7 8 fit 2 00 4 111 8 no 2 f7 10 69 s Irl b 84 120 24 8 84 2-r 8S i 6 2 67 4 fi 2 K7 S4 B 3 5 (12 12 02 16 08 8 02 14 OS 4 tS 8 ,14 Mt M 1 7 V 02 2 -M 1 2 4 41 18 tts 2 Ifi 1 :a. 4 m 12 6 S2 2 72 tr 19 VI g 73 )ki 1 71 S 82 S Sg 2 70 1 Ht 8 2 2 7il Sft Fisher Mary c Fessler Srtioiue Fotre.ter J It (ireen Mrs 11 L Oraves P Oouley Wm Orange Ka'.l ttrook Hughes J A Huffman - iltl!muli 1--." Hun-aner o W II arty I rank Howell Mrs Imni Humphreys P Ilium I A K Hepburn John Hopt A etnte Harmau 1 H llaseitllie J t A I o Mortage. Junes Ef i ' Jones J M et al ' Ketch mAMurpcy s s - sst seres Keppharl Plui.ip sutyt.iu, .sultsi ft Lynch Frank N Saiem, 1 1 and 2.b24 Lamb Mary 'Mortgage. 1UU! Lemon Mrs M A ;9 s 2 w, .is acres Linguar W nllau My Leasure VVm el a';; " ssimiJ Landtile Tbos " luooj Loweitgard p we Leiniuger Rev 11, s a w. I1H1 acres I LaRociif estate 4 s 2 w ,M0a,4 2 w.PSla1 Magers Mrs.Melihd N Salem, 1 .i and O.bai s 1 w, i.t acres r a 1 w, id acren Mortgage, i. s 3 w. so acn Mortgage. Magone Ann Mugone hd Money J M M vers J Morri. Mrs M Murray Pat Mercer Mrs Geo Me! via Aiithony Mackenzie A Muheuhack II Mutt A h M.'mford Henricta Morti-aee McCoy Mrs M J 7, 3 w. 1 acre JleK limey r lora A;Mortgag :ni ltwoi Mm. bee Sain 1. Miller Miller l fieal Peter N'eal Peter Kag r John Morgan Mrs o Nordvke heirs Oslerhamincr F Powers Ira F I'helps L K Prevosf. Julian roller fcurah J ;S salem, I lot is s I e, 170 acres :9 s 1 w, 11 acre , ,N Salem, 1 4. 7 A S, bs Jenersou. 1 lot isssi; 1 Isalem. fr Kit I. b 4 .letlerson, 17 A s, b 7 IMor.gHge, ! Sub I 7, b Mi Unb 1 3. 7 A 9, b 1 Mortg.ige. 270 7 ft 3 v, acres if. s 2 w , lilli acre! 'Personal projterty ; Mortage, ' Mortgsge. Mortgage, Mortgage, 2011 Itnsll rarrisn r. r. estate 111 s ;; w , ; acres PHtti rson I A Mortgage, 1'ierianu I li Pi..;- Jo, i Rudolph John s,i. 1 u and 12. 1 Ktnl.uon M-iru'iu M s 1 e. 'At acres Kaitd-dp-i J (', est 1 e, 21 1 acres ko-- I. V 7 s 1 e. 120 acres Rankin heirs ; Salem, 1 7. b 3 Kstikin Mrs Eliza. s halem. 2 lots K .i,e: ! Johu Mortgage, smp.h K I. 'Mortgage. Stevens Mrs He. th Oervais 18 b 32 Stevens K P j - U,2A6, Svilltou W 0 Mortgage. Stewart 1 O iMortgage, oo-uier jos ;Mortgag leiniiau-ser 11 Traer O W t'ul:;iown 240 list b 44 3.SII 4lSi I-. s 2 w, 40 acres ' is Salem, 1 1. 2.7 bm i.N salem, 1 7. b wi I vAiiK 'i"v-.llt;1ll;!!'(;:--; f . -alTix ArciiiUnd SJ Mor'ig.ive, lisi.? 71, American Mtg Co ' :-;) .'. ii " ; ; : I " I..S.I ! " piUOl Barlow 1' N " o! i hriiwti Emu 1 " litai) s i2 keeriiaiiJ tin 1 w. luo acres 1 j i P.rendt C iSLverioD, 1 lot f hariflLT (Mortgage, i2".l! g 1.7 RH)ick John ! s 1 w. 4u ncre- j id R.-gurt heirs I.N s i.i-w, I 1, 2.3,1) 21 4 in Cannon Mary K .Mi rtgase. i iVtl 1 m Caiiuon Jsue el " 'tl.'s.j -'s 7 1 I (SKioiirn, 1 .1, b 3 1 ' w-oodburu, fr 1 lot iSub 1 l,4,.'.,R,7 S, b.V !Snb I 2. 8, 4 A ! Sub 14, 6, h in, ul ,.,. " tHuobard. Ir 1 7, b4 V linger Peter ACo:r s e. jii acren ' Vangarden 11 A ;s s 1 e, 40 atres 1 aucleavcMrsTay-i , l"r s 1 w. 1 acres X.itaw Henry I, S 8s em, fr land I t an W inkle .ISACo Mortgitge, 77: W iiterbury Matt l .isl w , 1 acres I W,iierbury Oeo s 1 w. 6 acres I o.-Boer r.hlll Mortgage, 'jsfl tt .liter I A Ills 3 w. 40 seres i W hlieinau Mrs ert 9 s 4 w. 111 acres I t aihsfolt C .N 'Mortgage, I.7..1 Sssl;,,--!, rV Mii-.l:-f-, Shepheid Mrs E 7 s 2 w, acres ; Herbert 1 mm est lot) acres Kagncr liavid 4 1 w, 10 acres j Tax payers please take notice that the are to la-added to the above amounts U-fo ueineui. 715 76 1 71 45 Hii 2 tk 2 Ut 7 Hi 18 M 1 2s 2 73 H fct 4 09 4 ( SJ 6 4 1 70 1 h 4i 4 09 4 77 2 1 2 g SI 13 -4 2 39 2 70 1 lu 4 2t; I 70 1 70 7 f.7 10 91 13 14 s 10 13 M 1.1 :r2 2 O'i 7 OS 7 OK 8 82 8 IS 4 (W 13 M 12 2s is 2 0.-. 4 U9 1 2 HI S4 12 2'. 4 W SO 1 in. g 13 8 75 5 71 8 is, .'1 J) 2 73 -T. 9 2 8 41 10 1)1 3 4 5 -44. S Is SSI SV 3 41 g (r2 s.-, 2 73 S IK H IS g 06 5 12 '. 07 4 77 41; 1 2 4 09 4. 2 3 I 2A K 41 g 0U 1 02 9 !W 2 0. ) 1 31 I 70 1 VA 2 92 4 09 go 4t 9 Jl IS 77 12 7 JiO e Rosta his U'forift. st- JNO. W. M NTil. sheriff Marion county, Or. yOR RENT. A SMALL COTTAGE OS a Church stree-. near Wilson's Aveaue. fu Itiire of E. Rreynian al tl.ce of Rreynian brtn., or on premises. -2 -lm