NEWBERG GRAPHIC NEWBERG GRAPHIC. A D V r .R T IM I^ U NEWBERG GRAPHIC. I K 4 T F .* : .Twenty Do’lars Ten Dollar« ....... une liollar One Column.......... H alf Column — Professional Cards Ml U M K I P T I O . Ì R A T K M s One Y e a r .......................................... ........... $1 50 8ix Months Three Months. A a b e e r lp t lo n P r ic e P a y a b le a b ly In A d v a n c e . Heading X otirea v» III be Inaerted at the rate o f T en ren ts |>er lain«. DR. HAROLD CLARK, C H U R C H NOTICES. Dentist, r iK IE N h S ’ C liC R C H .—SERVICE*» E\ EKY r Suuday at 11 a . m and a r. m . and Thursday at 10 a . m Sabbath school every Suuday » t 9:45 a m . Monthly meeting at 7 P. M. the first 1 ues lay tit each mouth. Quarterly meeting the second Saturday aud Sunday iu February, May, August and November. N K W I lB I t G , OK. I CHURCH SERVICES FIRST. SEC ami third Sundays of the mouth at 11 ' 1 "> . ond aud 7:30 i*. . Suuday school every Suuday SAMUEL HOBSON, — a . m Dentist, Gold filling a specialty. Gas or vita'ized air given in extracting teeth. All work warranted. Office— Near postofflce, on First street. V ANGELICAL ASSOCIATION — PREACHING second and fourth Sunday at 7:30 f . m . » AP 1ST NEWBERG. Y A M H I L L CO., OREGON, FRIDAY. MARCH 2, 1894. VOL. 0. Advertising B ill« Collected Monthly4 E m at 10 a . m . Prayer meeting Wednesday eveuiug j at 7:30 o clock. REV. M A R K NOBLE, pastor. Photographer, )RK8BYT£R1AN CHURCH -BBRV1CK8 I V 1 ery Sunday at 11 a . m . aud 7:30 P. bath school every Sunday at 10 a . m . m Sab­ N E W K K I U L OK. / T H R IS T IA N CHURCH.—SERVICES EVERY C second aud fourth Suuday at 10 a . m . aud d v e n t s t c h u r c h — p r a y e r m e e t i n g every Wednesday eveuiug. Sabbath school every Saturday at 10 a . m ., services following. A Portrait and Landscape Artist. Portraits enlarged to life size and fiuished in Crayon, India Ink or Water Colors. Studio—Upstairs iu Hoskins building. .MIEK MEIHOD1S1. — PR A Y E R M K K llN d ' every Thursday at 7:30 F. M. Sabbath school every Sunday at 10 a . m . 1 l . < MURI H 8KRVH 18 EVERY SUNDAY , at 11 4. M. and 7:80 p. M. Sabbath School at 10 a . M. Kpworth League at 6 30 p. m . Pu.ver meeting every Thursday evening at 7:30 o’eloek. M E A S T AND SO U TH A. X. Mei’ART, Pastor. SO C IE T Y NOTICES. A \ r OF THE W — NEWBERG CAMP, No. 113, y M # meets every Monday evening. \ y C. r. U. BUSIN 188 MEETING 1 il E BBC \ y , ond and fourth Wednesday iu each The Shasta Route month. -O F T H E - O. O. F — SESSIONS HELD ON THURSDAY evenings in Bauk of Newberg building. J n IT . A. R SESSIONS H E L D FIRST A N D T H I R D Saturday evening iu each mouth. 7 R. C.—MEETS FIRST AND TH IR D SAT AV SOUTHERN PACIFIC CO. urday afternoon in each month. U OK V .-M E E TS EVE RY SATURDAY EVEN S. A K. A A. M .-M E ETS EVERY SATURDAY night in Bank of Newberg building. A O. U. W -M E E T S EVERY TUESDAY EVEN .* iug at 7:30 p. m . iu I. O. O. F. Hall. O F F IC IA L D IR E C T O R Y . City o f N e w b e r g . Mayor...... .................................G. W. McConnell Recorder........................................ F. H. Howard Marshal................... ........................... F. C. Mills Treasurer........................................Moses Yotaw Street Commissioner.......................... Enos Ellis Surveyor.......................................... Miles Reece COUNCILMEN. ~ . ... . 1 Paul Macy First Ward...................................... ¡Jos. Wilson tJesse Edwards Secoud Ward... fS. M. ('alkius i H. F. I.ashier Third Ward... ■" } M. J. Joues Trains leave and are due to arrive at Portland LKAVR. FROM AUGUST 16, 1893. ARRI VK. O v e r la n d K x press . ■Salem, Albany, Eug­ ene, Hoseb’g Grant’s Pass, Medford Ash­ *6:15 p. m land, Sacramento,Og­ *8:20 A. M. den, San Fraudavo, Mojave, Los Angeles, El Paso,New Orleans, and East.................. *S;30 a m . Koseberg & way station * *1:30 T M Tri-w eekly (V ia Woodburn for T ri-weekly between between J Alt. Angel, Silverton, Wood burn i \ West 8cio. Browns- Wood burn and Natron j (v ille and Coburg..... |and Natron t Between Po r 1 1 a nd t form of government prevailed. A steamship line will probably be It is last, he murdered his wife, Caroline said negotiations are now in progress established between Galveston and Den­ Hansen, while she was engaged in pick­ between the United States and Great mark for the purpose of transporting im ­ ing raspberries at their home in Clatsop Britain and Germany for a modification migrants from Norway, Sweden and county. The deed was committed with of the Berlin treaty, bat it is not known Northern Europe direct to Texas. a stick about a yard in length, with a what the proposed changes are. Presi­ Mrs. Ciiaska (form erly Cora Bell F el­ knot on the end. The blow was upon dent Cleveland took occasion in his an­ lows) has lieen deserted by her Santee the head. It occurred about 4 p. m. nual message to note his disapproval of Indian husband, who lias taken up with Hansen made a confession on the follow­ tlie existing tripartite. Great Britain a young squaw on tlie reservation. Mrs. ing Saturday to Sheriff H. A. Smith and and Germany are alike dissatisfied, and F. I. Dunbar. His wife died almost would probably like a change as much Ciiaska proposes to obtain a divorce. instantly, and after remaining by tier as this government, and the unfortunate Jim Mitchell, a drunkard and desper­ side for about an hour Hansen went to natives are even more anxious for an­ ate character, was remonstrated with for a neighbor’ s place ami told him what he other form of government than any boisteroils conduct while at the Grand had done. During the evening he other of the parties concerned. Central Depot at Houston, Tex., when burned the stick in a stove in his homp. Mr. Chickering of New York has in­ lie pulled out his pistol and opened fire He was indicted and convicted of the troduced in tlie House a bill to amend on the crowd, killing three men, one lit­ crime of murder in the first degree. A | the act of July, 1892, to enforce recip­ tle child and wounding one woman. motion for a new trial was overruled by rocal relations between the United States The Kansas Popnlists propose in the Judge T. A. McBride, and Hansen was and Canada. Tlie hill provides in addi­ sentenced to lie hanged. The defendant’s tion to the present powers that when­ coming political campaign to organize a theatrical company of young people of counsel contended that in the confession ever tlie President shall lie satisfied that made in the presence of the Sheriff every­ there is any discrimination in the use of the requisite talent as an adjunct to the thing shows that Hansen was insane, tlie Welland canal, the St. I.*wrence State campaign and send them over the and that the subsequent confession was river canal, the Chatnhly canal or the State, giving plavs depicting the woes made after recovering from the effects of new Canadian Sault canal detrimental and ills which afflict the workingclasses. liquor Judge Moore, in the opinion, to tlie United States it shall lie his duty The Secretary of the Interior in a savs the statute requires the accused, to suspend the transportation across the Montana case holds that each twenty- when insanity is pleaded as a defense, United State« in bond of goods imported acre trai t of any placer claim mnst show to establish tiie fact lieyond a reason­ or exported from any foreign countries the discovery of minerals in order toob- able doubt. It is not iu the province of from or to the British Dominions in tain a mineral patent. Whether the court to question the policy of law or No-th America. In case of the suspen­ ! claim is surveyed or unsurveyed makes sav that the rule established in cases is sion tolls are to Is- levied and collected no difference in the rights of locators. inhuman, or if the accused can offer suf­ on freight of whatever kind or deecrip- Accordingly the location made on a ficient evidence to raise in the minds of i tion at $2 per ton and on passengers at larger amount of land is void except for jurors a reasonable doubt of lire sanity, n((, m„ rp ¿ ft, twenty acres immediately surrounding it. then th e -ta te must establish this fact, ^ ohsnxe.1 or eollf»-««^ „pon freight Edward F. Searles, who by the death like all others, lieyond reasonable doubt. or passengers carried to ami landed at of his wife inherited Mark Hopkins’ From facts and circumstances of the case ( »/-lensburg, N. Y., or any port west of the jury were at libertv, and it was theirs Ogdensbnrg and south of a line drawn millions, lias given to the town of Great to say by their verdict whether the from the northern boundary of the State Barrington, Mass., a beautiful tract of design to kill was formed arid matured of New York through the St. f-awrence seventeen acres of forest and grass land in cold blood ami not hastily upon oc­ river, theOreat Lakes and their connect­ on the side of a mountain near by, to be casion, and having so fonnd under ing channels to the northern boundary held forever as a public park. He has proper instruction from the court, the of the State of Minnesota. The bill waa also given Mansfield Lake aqueduct, which supplies water to Kell.>gg Terrace. judgment is affirmed. The opinion cov­ referred to the Committee oo Foreign The onlv proviso is that the Terrace shall ers fifteen pages of type-written copy. Affairs. be supplied free. i NO. 14. T IO N A I. ok M idwinter In v a r i­ Address. G r a p h ic , Newberg. Oregon. AGRICULTURAL. THE MIDWINTER EXPOSITION. C alifo rnia 75 50 I ntrbna - ) E jJ N lS IT lO N — D lF A R T I U N T - P urlk W t and P r o m o t io n . .W * « k ly C ircu la r L a t te r —Mo. IS.) j ' An incident occurred in connection with the Midwinter International Expo­ sition a few days ago which furnished an interesting commentary on its interna­ tional character, and whloh established in an unmistakable manner the fact that this great fair follows, in many respects, the lines laid down by it* illustrious predecessor on the shores o f Lake Michi­ gan, and that at the same time, it pós­ eseos an individuality which will give it a prominent place in the future history of the expositions of the world. One of the most prominent concess­ ional features of the exposition ha* lieen the W ild Animal Arena where Colonel E. Daniel Boone has lieen givin g per­ formance« with lions and other animals, which is said by those who have seen both to surpass the famous show given by Hngenbeck on the Midway in Chi­ cago. Boone had an assistant in this work in the person of Carlo Thieman, a | brave, bold tamer of lions, who was only less fam iliar and less foolhardy, if jone may use that word, than Boone ! himself, in his associations with these big beasts. But, one night last week, j Thieman entered the den o f the lions to prepare them for their nsual appearanee in the Arena, when suddenly the lights went out. Parnell, the biggest of the lions, fearful perhaps o f some danger which he could not see, made a savage j attack on the keeper. The other lions fell to with him and poor Thieman waa at their mercy in a moment. Boone, the master of the tleasts, forced his way into the cage with a crowbar and lieat the j angry lions back, but not until Thieman had sustained such injuries that his death followed on the morrow. It was Thieman’s funeral that fnr- j niahed the commentary at the opening o f this letter. It was certainly a most impressive scene. Poor Thieman did j not have a relative in ail this great America, but his employer, Boone, was fiis warm personal friend, and all who worked with him admired his courage and his personality. Tims it came about | that the funeral o f the lion tamer was I so notable. It took place in the animal 1 Arena. A ’sertion of the great iron cage which shuts off the performing space | from that reserved for visitors, had been removed, and through this opening the coffin waa carried. A bier had lieen made of some o f the material which is nsed for the lions to do their acts upon, anil here laid the dead tamer in tlie midst of a gronp of his associates, while the solemn burial eervice was read by a local clergyman. Every seat in the vast arena was occu­ pied, and there were hundreds who wanted to get in bnt could not. On the back row o f Heats, stretching almost around the auditorium ware Indians from the Sioux exhibit. Each warrior was in paint and feathers, but their bows were unstrung, and all carried themselves with the quiet diguitv which Domestic Animals Often Suf­ fer From Bad Teeth. WHY WHEAT YIELD IS POOR A L e s se r Q u an tity o f Seed S o w n on a P ro p e rly Prep ared Seed B ed Gives B e tte r Returns. Long experience in some places has | impressed upon certain of the most in­ telligent wheat farmers the fact that a lesser quantity ol seed sown upon a 1 properly prepared seed bed wilt give (letter returns than a much larger quan­ tity of seed sown lipon land not scientif­ ically fitted for its reception. In a word, most American » lieat growers plant too much set* 1, and do not properly prepare the ground. A very common practice throughout a large part of the cereal 1 areas of tlie United States is to sow a | bushel and a half of seed per acre. Iu at least 90 per cent of cases this is en­ tirely too lunch. In some large sections five pecks is the standard amount for sowing an acre of land. This also is too great a quantity if tlie conditions lead­ ing to tiie best success in wheat-growing are nearly fulfilled. Careful and pro­ longed experiment lias shown that under easily secured conditions wheat plants w ill stool into ten or twelve culms, each of »liic h will carry twenty to Bixty grains. This would indicate a yield sev­ eral times as great as that ordinarily ob­ tain!«! and even greater than that ever reached on a large scale. From this we must infer that a great part of the seed usually planted does not germinate at all, or fails to mature a grain-bearing plant. W ith a possible yield of several hundred fold, it is scarcely creditable to American farmers that they go along year after year contentedly reaping a tenfold or twelvefold crop of 75-cent wheat. In some sections of the North­ west certain advanced »lie a t gro»-ers have reduced the amount of seed sown, and have lieen surprised at tlie result. In fact, it has been shown that on prop­ erly prepared ground a half bushel of tlie liest seed wheat brings a lietter aver­ age yield than two or three times as much seed sown in tlie ordinary manner. Tlie writer once knew a progressive farmer in Michigan who made experi­ ments and profited by them. From the usual Hix pecks of seed wheat per acre he gradually cut down the amount each year, noting carefully tlie effects of his slight, reduction. He found that by put­ ting his ground in condition to receive anil bring forth a large proportion of the seed planted three pecks would uniformly bring a larger harvest than double the quantity sown. AN IMAOINABV DISEASE. A correspondent of the Texas Farm ami Ranch writes: “'T h e so-called lam- pas ¡ h an imaginary trouble, and only exists in the fertile brain of the owner, and is a relic of barbarism handed down from the dark ages, to which man’s most faithful servant is forced to submit, be­ always marks an Indian when a cere­ cause he is in man’s power and cannot mony is being performed. Neartotheae help himself. If you compare the mouths were the Indiana from the hanks of the of colts or horses of similar age, you will Yaqni river, and a delegation from the find that their general appearance agrees almost exactly, and that in all young an­ Esquimau village. Half a dozen of the imals the gums are down on the teeth, Turkish dancers hail come across the and as age advances tlie gums recede by South Drive to mingle with the crowd a natural shrinkage and absorption. at the funeral. A company of South Tliis change takes place in tlie mouths Sea Islanders were there, ami a quartette of all animals that are supplied with o f native Hawaiian singers furnished teeth— man as well as tlie rest, yet the the music for the occasion, singing in horse alone is singled out from all the their native tongue words set to old, fa­ rest of tlie animal kingdom that nature miliar hymns. A big Cossack stood in her wisdom lias supplied witli teeth, down in front with his shaggy head tczislnce food to a fit Htate for assimila­ tion to nourish tlie system, ami implant­ overtopping all his neighbors. Swarthy ed them in the gums, a suitable soil to Mexicans from the '49 Mining Camp sat. grow and nourish them, that man in his sombrero in hand, and head* I*.wed ignorance will cruelly lance, or take his down, and dark-eyed senoritasshed tears liest friend to the nearest blacksmith o f sympathy aa they sat among the shop and ruthlessly with a red-hot iron mourners. Ii waa an interesting com­ destroy for all time to come the liars and pany o f people and such an one as had gums which nature lias placed there for probably never before assembled on s a special purpose. If your horse is off It is appetite, it is due to some other causa similar occasion. than what is commonly called lampa*. A band of 50 pieces occupied n posi­ When tlie colt is changing its temporary tion out o f sight of tlie audience aud its teeth for the permanent ones there is ill music came to tlie ears of those present some cases a slight inflammation sur­ in a somewhat muffled tone. But there rounds tlie roots of tlie teeth undergoing were other unified tones that fell upon replacement. This naturally passes off the ears of this funeral gatliering during in a few days without any attention, the the exercises, which were neither so same as in tlie child. Our advice is to sweet nor so pleasing, hilt which brought let lampas alone in all cases.” I t is a terrible reminder of what liad caused sometimes advisable to lance tlie gum, tins polyglot assemblage. The cages of as witli children in teething. Feed soft feed. Washing the mouth with alum tlie animals are located under the raised four drams, water one pint, three or four seats o f tlie amphitheatre, and the beasts times a day is beneficial. became restiras as tlie hour for their T K K T fl o r DOMESTIC A N IM A L ». nsual performance passed by and they The American Farmer says: Not every were not summoned to play their part. The big lion whose paw had dealt the one remembers that domestic animals often suffer from bad teetti. It is prob­ fatal blow to poor Thieman, growled able that the unthrifty condition of many ami roared at intervals all during the animals that are pretty well foil is dim clergyman's address, and when the to some trouble with their teeth, which mui)ic of the band suggested to these makes it impossible for them to prop­ knowing creature« that there was a erly masticate their food. Sometimes crowd in the Arena, they seemed to the real cause of the trouble is not sus­ unite in a chorus of protest and disap pected. Changes are made in the diet, proval. Strong men shuddered at the and |ierhaps medicines are g iv e n ; hut, suggestion conveyed by these loud of course, no improvement results. Na­ ture may effect a cure of a diseased or mouthing*. Women shell tears and injured tooth, Imt it is likely to take a some of them were so overcome with long time and keep the animal for months fear and emotion that they passed hur­ in a poor condition. Then there are riedly out o f the auditorium. It was a eases, as those of very old horses, in scene that w ill never lie forgotten liy which tlie difficulty is principally me­ chanical. Here nature instead of giving those present. Then carne a procrasion through the relief constantly tends to make matters grounds. A cordon of guards occupied worse. As the age of the horse advances the right o f line. Rack of them marched the crowns of the front teeth increase in length and prevent the !>ack teeth or the hand, playing a funeral march. I "g rin d e rs ” from closing upon each Keeping step to this slow rythm walked other. Where this trouble appears the Indians, the Turks, the Month Se» ! shortening of the front teeth is the only Islanders, and all the representative* of adequate remedy. Tlie more promptly the different eouee«aioiui, who hail I this work is done the less will be the in- turned out to honor the memory of the ! jury to the horse, and the greater will he dead lion tamer. The hearse was cov­ the saving effected by the owner. When ered with floral offerings. Hundreds animals ense in this direction may he the means dust was te tie returned to dust. of preventing a good ileal o f suffering to Y et this was tint an incident. The the animals and a considerable loss to next day th « lions roared in the Arses their owner. again, and happy crowds of man, woman sunflo w er * roa kowls . and children rapturously applauded It Few poultry raisers really appreciate was only a drop in the great sea of the true worth of the sunflower. It is events on which ths California Mid win very easilv grown, and produce« food of ter International Exposition in sailing, a rich and nutritious qnality. When fed and it has been givaa prom i nenes simply properly to fowls it promotes laying, and as on« of ths characteristic (saturas at produces a luster upon the plumage and otherwise benefits the bird. th » fair.