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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1891)
NEWBERG GRAPHIC. 4 l> V i:iM NEWBERG GRAPHIC NEWBERG GRAPHIC. I t 1 1 1 :» : .T w en ty Dollars ! One C o lu m n .............. H alf Column — P rofessio n al C ards. T< i. I tallare .......... Une Dollar j K e n i t l i i g X o l t r m « i l l t><- i n s e r t e d tli« . r a n - o f T e n m i l « p e r b i n « . VOL. o NEWBERG, YAMHILL CO., OREGON, FRIDAY. MARCH (j, 1891. FOREIGN NEWS. t I I I IM I I N O » K M . PRESBYTERIAN CHPRCH.—Services every acconci and fourth Ford »«lay at U A- M.and 7;:l° p. M. Sabbath-school ever\ Sunday 1 " at 10 a . m . K kv . W. A . W illison , Pastor. F R IE N D S C H U R C H . S e rv ice s every Sun d ay at 11 u. m . and 7 !» m.. and T hu rsd ay at 10 a in >ah»»ath school every Sunday a t 10 a .m . Monthly m c. tm g in 10 u. m. the tir»t Saturday in each m onth. Q uart.-rly m eetin g th e second Saturday and Sun d ay in F eb ru a ry . M ay. A u gust am i N ovem ber. E V A N G E L IC A L C H U R C H . -R e g u la r s e r v ice first and third Sundays of each m onth a t 10 a. in.; second and fourth S u n d a y s a t 7 p. ill. S a b b a th school every Sunday a t 11 a . in. EASTERN ITEMS. O F F IC I M IT IC K H . i* IM K F C T O K Y . P i t y o f X e iv lir r tf. M ayor ............................. I t co rd e r........................... T re a s u re r .......... M arsh all S tr e e t C om m issioner F . A. M orris F. H. Howard .Moscs Votaw ..A . M. Hoskins 1). I*. ht ration fN . C. M aris ! H. <\ M iles J A. W. Itees C ouncilm en .........; ('alvinStauley j. D. Carter (Geo. G ray son IRON TONIC Will Pn-tfy the Blood; r^Rnlateth« Liter and Kidney* and K*stor* thi Health and Vl^orof Youth. Dyspepsia, Want of Appetite, Indiseetioa. Luck of Strength and Tirsa Fee I in «absolute I you red.Bonea, muscles and nerves receive n w force. Enliven*the miod supplies Brain Powsr. Suffering from complaint« jeculiar to their sex will find ______________in DR. IIARTER'S IFOif TONIC a safe and speedy c ire. Gives uclear, heal thy complex on. Fre<iuent attempts at counterfeit ing only add to the popularity or the original Do not experiment—get the ORIGINAL and RUST# D r. H A RTER S L IT T L E L IV E R P IL L S V Cure Constipation, Liver Complaint and Sick* Headache. Sample Dose anil Dream Book» mailed on receipt of two cants in posta**. V L AD I E S ; ( D r. H A R T ER M ED ICIN E C O ., SLLeula, X * BEA TTY ORGANS Only 837.50. Oro it Bargains in PIANOS. Write for Latest Illustrated ( ,«tulogue- Lif'Adtlress, Daniel F. Beatty, Washiugtuu, > ew Jersey. . - ' > > H •kr C O L IC O ‘ > Z 1 h - < h- a H< o H < H < o < U K iu i P < ü u j ío s Ü J m O to D icalo cts c l - i %* : S: 8 “? s- ? ? s s - i , « 5 * V . _ -, É 'ië-s — 2, S - G . _ Î g l I © a - © = - j S -lfíJ = i S «i * = - k- S 3 .. t; “ C > «• c 5 B % f ¿9 S i t i S /H e « J l i é 5 * i * | J « , J V- t &iîhn 1 1 « - ? Z s l i - í Z P . Í ~&ï ”‘ï ! \ \ \ > <fi,c- â (D > > Z Z H H H < < < H H H H h* < O < O < O < < LU LU tí¿ û i lu & LU o OQ tû (Û O tû o ca F . L. P o s s o n & S o n , SEEDS SEEDS SEEDS SEEDS SEEDS General Agts. for D. M. Ferry & Co’s Garden Seed. Grass, Clover and all kinds of HIE PACIFIC COAST. PORTLAND MARKET ________ German Government Reduces the ¡Sureties of Arkansas’ Treasurer Tariff for Inland Telegrams, j Make Good His Shortage. Experiments Made at Lake Como With Wages of the Illinois Steel Company’s Submarine Cannon— King Otto j Approaching Death. Workmen to be Governed by Price of Steel Ralls. Wit kat —Firm, with good demand. OtFerings moderate Quote: Valley, Woman Suffrage Bill Introduced in Walla Walla. $1.20<$ 1.22V F i oi k —Quote: Standard,$4.00; Walla the Nevada Legislature. Walla, f3.Nf> per barrel. O ats —Quote: g S muí O c per bushel. M jllsitkks — Quote: Bran, flArrflO; Shorts, $D)u(20; Ground Barley, $29(u A Pot-Pourri of Occidental Happenings, ¡t*1; (hop Feed, $25 per ton; liar ley, $1.2o«i 1.3d percental. H\ y —Quote: $lt»(<il7 per ton. Reaching From Alaska to the V iokpablks —Quote : Cabbage, $1.5' Mexican Frontier. (1.75 per cental; Cauliflower, $1 (al 2.‘> per dozen; Celery, 90c per dozen; On ions. o(a\*P ,e per pound; Carrots, $1.00 per sack ; Beets, $1.50 per sack ; Turnips, A bill is to be introduce 1 in Nevada’s $1 per sack ; Potatoes, 70@75e per cental; Legislature licensing l>ar< knucke lights Tomatoes, $2.25 per l>ox. F in n s—Quote: I a > h Angeles Oranges, in that State. $2i<( 2.25; Riverside, $2.50c‘* 2.75 ; Navels, The Montana Senate lots passed the $4.50 per 1 h > x ; Sicily Lemons,$5.50(36.00 ; House bill repealing the conspiracy law California, $4(35 ¡Ter box; Bears, l l.jc against organized lalxor. per pound; Apples, $1(31.50; per lx>x; Assemblyman Groves ’ is introduced Bananas, $ 6 ( 3 4 j>er bunch ; Pineapples. a measure in the Ne.iV • Leg'-mure $.*>(<f 8 per dozen. N uts — Quote: California Walnuts, providing for woman suffrage in that ll'-tfC; Hickory, SG c; Brazils, 22c; State. Almonds, 10(317c; Filberts, 13@14c; It is said that the Oregon l ’acilic Com Pine Nuts, 17(«í 1 S c; Pecans, 17@ l8c; pany is asking for bids for a contract to Cocoa nuts, Sc per pound. furnish 50,000 more tics, to he used on B in i n—Quote: Oregon fancy cream the roae this summer. ery, 40(342lac ; fancy dairy, 67*.¿c; fair Works for the relining of crude |xtro- to good. 27'‘g(330c; common, 20(3 25c; leum are alnmt to be constructed at Ven California, 30«(6">c per pound. C iikksk —Quote: Oregon, 14(315c; Cal tura, Cal. They have a capacity of ifornia, 10(318c per pound. from thirty to forty tons a day. Iv.os—Quote: Oregon, 20(3221 2 e per The lirst of the long-threatened rail dozen. road condemnation suits against obdu Poui t r y — Quote: Chickens. $5.00(3 rate land owners in San Luis Obispo I 6.00; Ducks, >8(310; Geese, $9(311 per county, Cal., was Hied one day last week, dozen; Turkeys, 14(315c per pound. and other suits will immediately follow. H ops —(¿note: Nominally, 28c per In the suit of Mrs. Jane Clark against pound. W ool —Quote; Wilburntte Valley, 16 the Southern Pacific Company for $ 20 ,- 000 damages for injuries alleged to have (320c ; Walla Walla, 1 4(317c per pound. H idks —Quote: Dry Hides, selected been received in the railroad accident at prime, s H1.,«*, L*c less for culls; green, Lake Lahish last November a Salem jury selected, over 55 pounds. 4c; under 55 awarded the plaintiff $ 2 , 000 . pounds, 3c: Sheep Pelts, short wool. 3P The commission of fifteen members (350c; medium,60(380c; long,90c(3$1.25 ; created by the act of the late Oregon shearlings, 10(3 20c; Tallow’, good to Legislature to make and maintain a per- < hoice, 3(33^c per )»ound. manent channel of twenty-five feet depth I TI ua Morclmixlii*« Market. from Portland to the sea held its lirst meeting in Portland one day last week. C oal O il —Quote. $2.20 per case. R ick —Quote: $5.75(36.00 per cental. Plans are being drawn for seminary to P ccklks —(¿note: $1.505s; $1.33 3-«. lie erected by the Sisters of the Good C kanbkkuiks —Quote: ( ’ape Cod, $11 Shepherd at Ballard, Wash. The build ing will cost about $ 100,000 and will ac per barrel. S alt — (¿note: Liverpool, $17, $18, $19 comodate 500 pupils besides quarters for t he Sisters. Work will be commenced st x k, $11(312 per ton in carload lo’s C okkkc —Quote: Costa Rica, 22)Gc, early in the spring. Rio, 25loc; Arlmckle’s, roasted, 26^1 The police of Port Townsend are look per pound. ing for a man who Mild Max Nathanson B icans —The market is firm. Quote: a check for $100. He signed his name Small Whites, flljc ; Pink, 3c; Bayos, “ E. A. Johnson,” and the cheek, which 4 *,c ; Butter, 4 ‘aC; Limas, 5 * 21 ' per was drawn on theGiiffith banking house pound. of Seattle, proves to be a fraudulent one. S i - oaks — Qu o te: Golden C t 4 ^ v ; e x tra Johnson has no funds there. C, 5c; dry granulated, 6 lgc; cu I h crushed and powdered, (>;*«c per pound. The erection of an olive mill at Pa D iukd F ruits —T he market is lirin. lermo, Cal., in the near future is an as sured fact. There will lie enough trees Quote: Italian Prunes. 12lac; Pe in that vicinity come into bearing next tit and German Prunes, 10cper pound; season to keep a factory at work during Raisins, $2.25 per l>ox: Plummer-dried tfie season, and in a few years the olive Pears, 10(3ID*; sun-dried and factory industry will be one of the greatest of Plums, I Lii. 12c: evaporated Peaches.l 8 (ft 20c; Smyrna Figs, 20c; California Figs, the place. 9c per pound. A regular exodus of Mormons from C a n n k i »G (>() d s — M ark et s tea< 1 y. Quota Utah to Mexico is tiffing place. The Table fruits, $8.00, 2 1»>&; Peaches, $2.50, Mormons have a tract of land in Chi Bartlett Pears, $2.25; Plums, $1.65 huahua, which they are settling up. All Strawberries, $2.50; Cherries, $2(32.50; over the territory they are preparing to Black berries, $2; Baspberries, $2.55 go south to “ live their religion.” The Pineapple», $ 2 . 7 5 ; Apricots, $2.00» Pie head of the church is said to be encour fruit: Assorted,$1.50 per dozen ; Peaches. aging emigration and putting up funds. $1.50; Plums, $1.25; Blackberries, $1.65 It is estimated that at least 2,000 will per dozen. Vegetables: Corn, $1.25 leave this summer. (3) 1.50. according to Duality; Tomatoes, $1.15(33.50; Sugar Peas, $1.10(31.60; The contents of the stomach of Mrs. String Beans, $1.10 perdozen. Fish: Sal Greenwood, the lady who was drugged mon $1.25(31.50; sardines, 80c(3$l.60; and shot bv robbers near Napa, Cal., lobsters, $2(33; oysters, $ 1.50(33.25 per have been analyzed and prove to contain dozen. Condensed milk : Eagle brand, both chloroform and arsenic. The quan $8.25; Grown, $7; Highland, $6.75; tity found was sufficient to have killed Champion, $6 per case. her. It was noticed when she was dis H unky — (/note: One-pound frames, covered that no blood came from the 17c. hnllet-hole in her head, and it is now- N ails — B ase q u o ta tio n s: Iron, $3 0 0 ; evident that she was dead at the time Steel, $3.10; Wire, $3.9«) per keg. the men shot her. S hot —Q u o te : $1.75 |»er sack. Alabama is building 500 miles of new railway. Boston unions oppose biennial State elections. The population of St. Louis is officially place at 451,770. A Fourth Judicial district for Utah is proposed in Congress. Illinois proposes to compel lire insur ance policies to be paid in full. Grand Master Workman Powderlv de nies the rumor that he has resigned'. In the Indiana Senate the World's Fair bill passed with the appropriation cut down to $ 200 , 000 . The revised official count of the census The French tactician General Boia- rl,turns from Kentucky m.lkeg the popu- deffree, says Emperor \\ ilham avowed to , Utj f „ s, t , ,« 34 . him that the French had the finest army New York will elect a Governor this in Europe. year; so will Iowa, Ohio, New Jersey, The proposed visit of the young King Massachusetts and a few other States. Alexander of Servia to the Czar will Kearney and the adjoining counties of probably take place in the course of the Nebraska are now able to care for their present year. destitute residents without outside as Mrs. Jameson claims to have found evidence in Zanzibar, throwing entirely sistance. Secretary Mohler of tire Kansas Board new light on the quarrel between Jam e of Agriculture, reports tkat winter wheat son and Stanley. looks much better now than it lias at Lord Randolph Churchill is going on any season for several years. a nine months’ shooting and prospecting Tire Postoffice Department is anxious tour of South Africa. This is taken to show that a general election is not immi for bids from responsible parties for transporting mai .iIs from San Francisco nent. to Sitka, Alaska, and way ports. The German government has reduced Koch’s lymph did not kill J . B. Ellis, the tariff for inland telegrams from 1 cent and 4 mills per word to 1 cent and a Kansas City consumptive, who had been inoculated. An autopsy showed no 2 mills, with a minimum charge of 16 bad results from the use of lymph. cents. Sir John Macdonald thinks he has «in- General Da Fonseca, who \va> chosen Provisional President of Brazil at the covered a conspiracy to force Canada time of the overthrow of the empire, has into annexation witli the United States. been formally elected President of the He is making a strong fight in this cam paign. Republic. Tiie Arkansas State Treasurer lias re James Fitz-James Stephen, the Eng lish Judge before whom Mrs. May brick ported to the Legislature that ex-Trea- surer Woodruff’s sureties have paid him was tried, has broken down. It has been evident for some time that his mind was $63,740, the full amount of Woodruff’s shortage. giving away. Emperor William is greatly displeased Janies Pougliertv, the insane lover of with the recent speech made by the Sec Mary Anderson, who shot and killed Dr. retary of the Committee on Naval Esti Lloyd of the Flatbush Insane Asylum, mates. It is said his resignation has has been sentenced to Sing Sing State Prison for life. been asked for. Agents have already lieen sent to Jap The Conservatives and National Lil>- erals of Dresden are urging Herr Hul- an, China, Algiers, South America, Mex izch to resign his seat in the Reichstag ico, and to different countries in the so as to permit of Prince Bismarck being Orient to arrange for exhibits at the World’s Fair. elected to his place. The municipal authorities of Berlin The Northern Pacific Directors have have decided that no more concessions declared a regular quarterly dividend of «hall be granted for elevated electric 1 per cent, and have decided to resume street railways or for electric railways work on all projected extensions and push them to completion. requiring overhead conductors. The Pope contemplates making a large The statement issued by the Census accession to the Cardinalate early in the Department for Alabama’s population coining summer. The death of Cardinal gives the total as 1,613,017 ; of this num Cristofori leaves thirty-two Italian Car ber 830,796 are w hite, 681,421 are colored, dinals and twenty-eight foreign Car 750 are Indians and 40 are Chinese. dinals. The late Secretary Windom’s will has The threatening state of affairs in the lieen filed for probate. The gross value Charleroi district, Belgium, caused by of the estate is from $150,000 to $175,000. the workmen’s demand for the passage When the debts are paid the estate will of a universal suffrage law. has necessi yield a revenue to the family of $5 GOO a tated the holding of troops in readiness year. by the government. A line of steamers between Baltimore M. de Frevcinet. French Minister of and Rio de Janiero, Brazil, to be known Senator Dolph of Oregon has intro War, is contemplating a scheme for the as the Maryland Line, lias lieen put in most extensive army maneuvers ever service hv the Continental Fast Freight duced a resolution calling u|xm the Sec undertaken in time of peace. He will Line, which operates over the Baltimore retary of War to give all the Information now in his possession relative to the mass four army corps in the Department and Ohio. work at the Cascades, and whether there of Haute Marne. The tin mines discovered in Jalisco, is any information to the effect that the If Parnell decides to send delegates to Mexico, ten months ago are said to lie work will cost more than the former es America, they w ill represent his personal inexhaustible. The mines arc 100 miles timates. The resolution was introduced policy, and the funds they collect will be distant from tHe nearest railroad and on account of the reported statement by subject to his control in furtherance consequently there is great difficulty in Major flanburythat the estimates would thereof. He is being strongly urged by getting the ore to market. have to fie increased for this purpose. The following coulimations have been friends to send such delegations. At Tacoma Indian Agent Eels has marie: Lieutenant-Colonel A. K. Arnold A dispatch from Massowah says a body to tie Colonel of cavalry ; George Stone- swore on I a warrant for the arrest of of Italian friendlies under Captain l’i- man, Lieutenant-Colonel (retired), to Is- Robert Alland, propricter of a rail nelli in res'enge for a raid on the Italian Colonel of infantry; Edmund Wells, road lodging house, charged with frontier surprised ami attacked 600 Sou- Associate ___ _ Justice _ of the Supreme Court s“lling liquor to Indians. This is a test danese near Buri, and routed them in I 0 ‘j“Arizona” ease. Since Judge Hanford’*decision in two battles, killing 200 , including tire The wages of the workmen of the Illi the United States Court, that Indians leading chiefs. nois Steel Comnany at Chicago will lie might drink in their own houses, similar eases have lieen dismissed. Agent Eels There is reason to believe that, with governed by tlie price of steel rails. will endeavor to prosecute under the When the price goes up the wages of tlie the completion of the railroad line from State law and will carry the case to the Jaffa to Jerusalem, anil with the con- men will lie increased, and when the Washington Supreme Court if necessary. price goes down the wages will lie de «■tructicn of other new lines, Palestine will attract far greater multitudes of pil creased correspondingly. Tacoma lumber men are again devis The Indian depredation bill goes to ing measures to maintain uniform rates grims than have lieen seen there since the Conference Committee. It is of and prevent the disastrous cutting in the time of the Crusades. grent importance to California and the prices which has lieen going on for some An official dispatch to the Chilian le- parifit. Northwest, as it contemplates time [Hist. At a meeting held at the Ta gatian at Ixindon states that the révolu- speedy settlement of all claims coma Hotel most of the mills in the city I tion in Chili is confined to the r*bel against the Government, some of which were represented. A plan which seemed squadron and the troops at Tarapaca. |iave |,ecn pending for vears, on account to find lavor was to pool the output and i The greater part of the country is quiet of Indian - engage a manager to make a fair distri raids and encroachments. and the regular troops and the national Senator Jones of Nevada stated before bution of orders and sales on the basis guard are supporting the government. the Silver Pool Committee that he was of production. This question, however, stood in the way of immediate action, English brewers give as a reason for not personally interested in silver specu and it was referred to a special eommit- preparing to take an active share in the la t io n during the present Congress, and next general election that candidates for knew nothing whatever of any silver j tee to prepare a plan and report, combination or organization. He I , Parliament court the favor of teetotalers 1 S pool, 2 * well acquainted with the silver men ! N< T '* J'»*M show a .hsaster lieraiise the latter are so well organized. and was quite sure if there had lieen anv itri-.iler tli.in was .i po i Brewers now intend to show that they ,, 1 i j u -« . ;$ * non net! in the ncnoo hfniw*« are j ^ n - t naked, and neighboring farmers are more of a power than the teetotalers. pool he would have known .t. The opponents of »lie Pacific cable stib- have used up all their «applies of food, King Otto the crazy monarch of Ba- sidy scheme have a new weajion to use | The county now takes charge of their varia, is said to be appro«« hing death, i . - j . tight against the subsidy act. I immediate' necessities. A stream 10 - King Otto’s uncle. Prince Luitpold, who | Another company u flows through has * appeared Luinh which I I’ feet l lm wide i. hv 18 fe« The tithes bill has passed to its second reading in the British House of Lords. Vienna is to have a 150-mile electric Y . M . C. A. — D evotional s erv ices every S u n road that will make eighty miles an hour. day ev en ing . Y o u n g men earn estly requested The sewerage system is attracting con to atten d. siderable attention in London and Berlin. I. O .O . F . Sessio ns held S atu rd ay ev en ing j The plot to put Celman in power in in the rooms o v e r M oore’s D rug sto re. the Argentine lias been nipped in the Y . W . C. T . IT. B u sin ess m ee tin g th e second bud. Satu rd ay in ev ery month. The Paris police have removed the (*. A. It. S essio n s held llrst and third T h u rs statue of Marat from the park in which day ev en ing in each month. it stood. W . C. T . U. B u sin ess m eetin g held the third An outbreak of malignant fever has S a tu rd a y aftern oon in each m onth. caused a terrible mortality among the European population on the west coast of Africa. i m m i __________~ I m . . » . .... k i «, .......» . . * .i ....... . F. L. P o s s o n Sc S o n , 209 2d St., Portland. Or. > M iik t Bro*. CMtsUsfve P w . Tl>e Meal Market. The market is steady. Beef—Live, 3Lj(3 4c; dressed, 7c. Mutton—Live, 4l 4 (34,¿c; dressed, 8 < Hogs— Live, 4 , 2 (34 3 4 c ; dressed, 6 :. Veal—5(a8o per pound. hMOKKI) MEATS AND LARD. Quote: Hams, 10c; Breakfast Bacon, 9(3lie ; Hides, 9(al0c; lArd, 9j£c per pound. “ FROM cannon. The irun can lie lowr-eff to any ! revival of the charter granted to it by . . . . . . Liebreich'* new method of treating 000 by the Hawaiian government as tuberculosis was deaeri lied by the dis- Boon as the cable waa laid. The rapital- •overer the other day. The sutistance ista did not see a su fficient and speedv used is cantliaridate of potash, which is : return for their money, the scheme fell administered in solution by svstemati through and the eharter I spaed. Marino injections nnder the skin. Clinical ex now- represents to Congress that the periments seen« to prove it is re medial company is ready to go ahead without in tuberculosis and other diseases. Lie- a-v subsidy if the charter is revived. breieh says he is still carrying on inves Opposition to the subsidy idea is very tunemnent is made I strong, and to defeat it an extension of tigations. and the 1 the old company's charter will be urged. prcmeDircl v $ s'ated, hardly noticed The Pontiff, it the Duchess wb n she visited the Vali ran, and accorili li her such scant cotir- tesy that she ha : lieen buried in morti- fieation ever iince. It was the object of to influence the I’ope to the Duch tnrn fror his attitude of friendliness to «ani t ’ti French Republie, luit she wa not givet rn an opportunity to say a word, the Pop e immediately passing on to the other vl attori. out etern al s il e n c e .» From out eternal silence do wo com e, Into eternal silence do v.e fro; F o r was there not a t i ’j ■. and sw ift or «low Mnst com e njrain, w I dmi nil t lii.i world's loud hum Waa naught t«> us. and shall n r-tin grow dumb Through nil eternity i Between tw o low, Dark, stony portals, with much em pty show Of tinkling bra; ; mid Komidhitf .¡fe and drum, The endiesH caravan o f life moves on; Or whence or whither, to what destiny, Bu t lie who d# el la L y o n d the farthest dawn Knows, yet reveals not, everm ore even l ie In silence wrapt, fo r all the t! Ander's roll, Save fo r His deaf hie mcaemro to our soul! —b tu art btem o in The Century. W a lk in g S t i c k * . Nowadays there is hardly any limit to the kinds of material used in walking •ticks. Formerly only a few native woods and some foreign species were used. Innovations in the style of walk ing sticks and umbrellas have lieen con stantly introduced during the last forty years nritil their manufacture has be come quite an art anil a business of con siderable importance. Natural sticks, that is, saplings of tr. es and climbing plants, whose roots will form handles or knots, are moot used. They ure some times mounted with precious metals, onyx, jaj-iier, marble, precious atones, ivory and horns of ull kinds.—Youth's Comparison. Ill#» ... . . _ eoplewil Experim ent were made two weeks ; company propose« to bnild to SiiHiitrhai, ,,f the ol'l site in the aprinit. Three livei ago in Lake Como with a Buhmarine 6,500 miles, ami asks for nothing hilt a ; have lieen lost. Trees, Bulbs, Fertilizers, etc. Bee Keepers’ Supplies. We want Y< 1 U for a customer. Give ua a trial order. liM R II*H O > K A TEN : $1 30 75 90 M u lm e r ip U o n P r l r e P a y a b l e a b ly in A d v a n c e . at A d vertisin g B ill» C oilecied M onthly* m m M • »ne Y e a r . ¿ix M onths T hree M onths. V rtfir’i .H M h m K Clam Morrl«. in «peaking of actors an«l acting recently, said: “The really great actor must lie capable of doing something more than to merely touch the biggest fuel of the aadiei.ee. He must make his audience a l e e . lately forgetful of Itself and lie himself the dir -ct mid not the Indirect ean-e of the emotional state Into which it Is thrown. To do this the actor must tie himself a person of Intense feeling and must for the time at least experience the emotion tie is seeking to portray. Really great acting is a matter of feeling rather th.St of reasoning Intelligence, and I | doubt whether an n e to r who studies and puzzles over the subtleties of the author’s meaning Is not In danger of checking the manifestations of his ow n histrionic sense. No amount of art can make up the want of one real touch of nature."—New York Herald. NO. 11. A n E n tfD O u t T o w n . On the occasion of the visit of Presi dent Harrison to Topeka, Kan., the ho tels, restaurants and hoarding houses were overrun by the great crowd. Peo ple clamored for food as the crowd claui- •rs to get into a circus, and guards were placed at the dining room doors to keep hack those who could not lie at once ac commodated. A gentleman who had tried every public place found at a late hour in the afternoon a restaurant iu an out of the way place. He went in and asked if he could lie fed. Tito proprietor said he had lieen eaten out. " I ’ll give you a dollar for a glass of milk and piece of pie,” said the stran ger. “Ain’t got no milk and ain’t got no pie," replied the hungry proprietor. “ What’s that in that showcase—isn’t that pie?" asked the stranger, pointing out a pumpkin pie. The proprietor look ed at it in a languid manner and an swered: “That’s all we have left for my family. If I sell that they won’t get anything.” " I ’ll give yon a dollar for the pie," •aid the hungry stranger, growing des perate. 'i ne proprietor took out the pie and was in the act of handing it over when his jaw opened and about half the pie disappeared, the other half being handed over to the stranger, who refused it. “Sell it for a quarter," said the pie man, realizing now that his chance was growing smaller. But the stranger re fused the rugged moiety and went nway sorrowful and ns hungry as when he came.—Chicago Tribune. In v a r i A ddress, G r a p h ic , Newbersf, Oregon. CALIFORNIA GRAPES. T H E Y ARE GROWN IN NEARLY EVERY PART OF T H E STATE. T h ere In Y k iiea net la an A rea of In t h e U n it e d 4 0 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 4 0 0 ,0 0 0 A o rea la S ta te s —T h e P ro d - G a llo n s of W in e a iu l 3 2 0 , 0 0 0 T o n s o f T a b l e G r a p e s . “I hare no doubt that it will surprise even gra[io and wine growers themselves to kuow that there are invested iu vine yards and wine cellars in the United States over $ 155,000,000,” said Col. H. Gardner, special agent of the census offico for tho collection of statistics re lating to viticulture, a branch of agri culture« which has never before received any official attention in this country. “ I find by statistics, which are now col lected for tho first time," said Col. Gard ner, “ that there ure in round munbers 400,006 acres of land in this country planted to vineyards. “This is tut increase of 230,000 acres in vineyard area during the past ten years, and an increase ot over #10.060.060 a year in tho capital invested. Of the area ot bearing vines in tho country California n'oue lias loO.OOO acres, inr lulling 2.1,000 acres of raisin grapes. That state also has of the total investment of capital nearly $78,000,000. Between 30,000,000 and 40,000,600 gallons of wine are made iu tho United States in a year, of which California produces more than half. Seven-eighths of the grapes of California go to the wine press. Four-fifths of the grapes grown in all tho rost of the United Slates are for table use. Cali fo r S c h o o l C h ild r e n . We all know how much greater is the fornia alono grows tho raisin grape. “I spent three months in California need of children for sleep than of grown persons, and how necessary for their giving official attention to its viticultural good it is to he able fully to satisfy this interests. Although every county in the need, hut how great it is generally at state produces graites, the principal any particular ago of the child is very counties of tho vine are Napa, Sonoma, hard to define exactly. The amount Frt :no, Santa Clara, San Diego. San varies under different climatic condi Bnrnardina and Los Angeles, although tions. In Sweden we consider a sleep of there are many others of more or less eleven or twelve hours necessary for the importance. The counties of Fresno, younger school children and of at least Sen Barnardino, San Diego and Tulare eight or nino hours for the older ones. coiuprise the great raisin district, and Yet the investigations have shown that cure 2,000,000 boxes a year, a product this requirement lacks much of being worth at least $3,000,000. The grapes met in all tho classes through the whole grown for raisins are the Muscat of school. Boys in the higher classes get Alexandria and the Muscat del Gardo These counties grow large but little more than seven hours in lied, Blanco. and as that is the average it is easy to quantities of wine grapes also, and the perceive that many of them must con sweet wines of California come princi pally from that district. Fresno county tent themselves with still less sleep. It is also evident from the investiga lias 2.’i,000 acres of vineyards, Sonoma tions that the sleeping time is diminished 21.000 and Napa 16,000. "Tho grapes grown in California to with the increase of the working hours from class to class, so that pupils of the day include every variety that has game ago enjoy less according as they made tho vineyards of Europe famous are higher in their classes. It thus ap The cultivation of the grape in Califor pears constantly that in schools of rela nia dates back to the days of tho old tively longer hours of work the sleeping Spanish friars, (lie Franciscan fathers, time of the pupils is correspondingly who brought with them from their na shorter. In short, the prolongation ot tive land cuttings of a grape popular tho working hours takes jilaco for the there. Just what the (rue name of the most part at the cost of the time for grape was nobody seems to know now, sleep.—Professor Axel Key in Popular and very few care, for while there are in bearing today some of the vineyards Science. our L> Uio Franc (scans ’,"1 / or r i n c N u m b e r R o lli D o o r*. a century or more ago, the grape is not The golden rule, “Do nnto others as in high esteem nowadays. It has al yon would have them do unto you," is ways been known as tho mission grape violated in a is-tty fashion in New York “The old mission vineyard supplied which is intensely irritating. Many peo- graiies for the table and the wine press plo when finishing their houses neglect in California until a comparatively short to put the numbers on properly, with . time ago. Then a Hungarian grape the result that strangers in search of a known as the Zinfaudel wus introduced. particular residence wander up and This newcomer was handsome, proved down the semi-lighted street cursing to be a generous producer, and took the volubly. This absolute neglect of the popular heart. law, however, is not as irritating as the ■‘It proved to lie an unfortunate one, practice of painting the name on the for it seemed so easy to grow the Zinfan- outer door and omitting it over the inner del that everybody planted vineyards. door. Until 10 o'clock the greater num When they began to ltear they bore with ber of storm doors stand open. a vengeance. The markets became The light from the hall chandelier choked with grapes, and prices went illuminates the inner transom, tint the down to disastrous figures. It became outer one is a dull blank, on which noth apparent that tho Zinfaudel was an in ing can bo read. You stare at what yon ferior grape after all, and to cap the cli know are figures, finding yourself utterly max the phylloxera canto down on the enable to distinguish them, and you are Hungarian importation and bore it away, reduced to the ignominious course of vineyard after vineyard. ringing tho bell and asking what the | “No new vineyards were replanted number is, which invariably produces with the Zinfaudel, and the vino is l>e- on the face of the servant whtf appears ing replaced with the choicest and hardi an expression of a conviction not flatter est varieties of wine grapes from the fa ing to your sobriety. Good Christians mous districts of Europe, including Cab there lie who put the number on Isith ernet Bauvignon, Carbanet Franc, Mal- transoms—may their homes lie exalted I bock, Tarnat, Merlot and St Laurent and their examples imitated!—New York grapes from the Bordeaux districts; Telegram. Mutaros grapes from Dalos; Semilion* nml Sauvignous from Sauterne; Pinot Tli«» S w l« * r r e s l d e n t . Under tho Hwiss system the president and Petito Sirrah grajies from the Bur •f the confederacy has no more author gundy districts; Johannishergers, Tra- ity than a member of tho cabinet. The miners and Franken Rieslings from ths head of the government is a council storied Rhino; Chasselos grapes from elected by the parliament. This council Alsace-Lorraine, and the rich Burgers selects u chairman from its members, from Moselle. It is from these grapes who thus becomes president of the re- that the wines of California are pressed. "The famous Challose and Folle pnhlic. and assumes a cabinet portfolio, ttsttally that of foreign affairs. He is Blanche, cognac grapes, are also largely clothed with no powers of appointment gr«wn, the wine from them being made to office. His co-members of the cabi into brandy. Then there are the rich net, even the judges of the supreme Sjionish Muscats uud the favorite Hun conrt, are all elected. He can servo hut garian table grajm, the Flaming Tokay. a single yenr; hence his time and tal In no other vino region in tho world are ents, instead of being devoted to filling all thc-o splendid grapes fonnd growing offices and seeking a re-election, are side by sid and they make of California given to the service of his country. He the wonderland of the vine. “California has the largest vineyard is helped in his efforts for pure and eco nomical government by a corjia of trained in the world and the most extensive wine statesmen.—S. H. M. Byers in Harper's. cellar. The vineyard is in Tehama county, on Senator Lelaud Stanford’s famous 56,000 acre farm. It contains fltiftln e n s . The scholar is always ready to pick np 4.000 acres. “Among the curiosities of the Califor a thonght, and a horn man of business nia grajio region is a vineyard that may is ever on the lookout for a trade. A good naturod coachman overtook a well lie called the smallest iu the world tired looking (icddler, and offered him a as regards flto number of vines, for it lift to the next town. At the end of the has but one vino. That is a most re ride tho peddler, by way of emphasizing markable one, however, for its branches his thanks, offered the coachman the extend over a space of 12,000 feet, the pick of his wares, but the proffer was de cane being a foot in diameter. This ex traordinary vine is over seventy years old, clined. was grown from an old mission cut “ Well, then,? insisted the enterprising and ting liy n Mexican woman. It has borne pack carrier, “if you won’t take a pres grapes every year since it was two years rut don't you want to buy something?"— old, and is good now they claim for six Exchange. tons of grat a a year. I was told that clusters weighing seven ponnds had been A l u m i n u m In S#»Hrrh o f a N am «. picked from this ancient relic of the To end the long dispute which has mission days. been waged with reference to the right “The phylloxera, which during the designation of the metal which is now past few years played great havoc with California vineyards, is being gradually assuming such importance, it is nrged The inferior that the largest preslncera in the world but surely overcome. of ( -apes upon which the pest favor the form aluminmn, which ah' varieties feeds are V ing r o u te d out, and the has the advantage of greater brevity, choice frtreif t varieties, which are sub and that therefore foreign scientific ject to it, are prot*-cted against it by journals and scientific men shonld fol grafting on i.ative wild varieties, kBowu low the example of American journals as resistant vines, or vines which the and call it once for all aluminum.—Nsw phylloxera does not affect."--New York Bun. York Commercial Advertiser. I