Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Oregon register. (Lafayette, Yamhill County, Or.) 18??-1889 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 3, 1888)
I . ‘‘f1 - . 3*1. •4 “ A GOVERNMENT OF THE PEOPLE, FOR THE PEOPLE, AND BY THE PEOPLE.” OL. VII. LAFAYETTE, YAMHILL COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3,1888. L0 Oregon. Register O. B. WIILIAMS, ’’ published every F riday - at - L 1 ’ vette , • - B. B. HIBBS. -^Williams and Hibbs.^- OREGON - MERCHANT TAILOR8. -BY- HARDING.' S. , ’ * gUBSCRIPTIOt^irES. . |2 00 .. 1 00 per year. In advance.. ir.slx months in ad race The Only First Class Tailoring Establishment in the County. JDSP’Good work and low prices, jp® M’MINNVILLE, Ju I, 22-87, - • ired at the postoffice in Lafayette. m second clam matter. OREGON. StaTole. official directory . UNITID BTAT18. ................... Grover Cleveland J. J. HEMBREE, Proprietor. . .Thoa. F. Itoyard Lry of State........... Ohaa. 8. Fairchild« i au prepared to give good accomn odation [u,, of Treaiury .. .,. L. y. I?. JLaroar -• short —*■ — • • Lri of the Interior, notice, to persona wishing ..Wm C. Hndleott teaniH or conveyance. uryol War............. ....W.C. Whitney Charges Reasonable. » L,y of NSVY ......... W. F. Vilas peter General..... CErMv hacks connects with the daily trains . . .A. H. Garland to carry nasaeugers to and iroin the depot. «y General............ Morrison R. Waite □Lattee....... *...... co»u.re«o8AL H MitehtU .... ....................................... )J. N. Dolph iMaMiva .. ......... Binger Hermann THE COUNTY SELT —WILL NOT— Go to NEWBERG _ ..................SylveaterPenncyer , This year, but ™ ......................... Geo* VV. McBride / 8TATK. ........................................... G. W. Webb MOORE BROS* DRUG STORE Is there with a fall line of ln,“r.......... ( W. W. Thayer, ..................... ■! Wm. P. Lord, 1 R. B. bUahan. Fresh, Clean and Pure Drugs, And Family Medicine«. Also TOILET ARTICLES. DISTRICT. ..........................R. P. Robe A full line of Machine Oila of all Grades and ........................... «eo. W. Belt ........................W. L. Uradabaw Prices to suit the times. - COUNTY. Paints and Oils ---------- - ----------- - ............ L. Longbary Cannot be obtained cheaper outside of Portland Geo. W. Briedweil tbah we sell for. Give us a call. ............ T. J. Barria 6 52tf MOORE BROS. ........ W. W. Nelson .......... Wyatt Harris ............J. D. Fenton J George Dorsey its .................... ••• 8. Hibba -A.i’r’iuETOisrs’ TOWS. + * id..,’.......... [ John Thompson ; Thomas Huston .. > M J JUmaey | Henry Hopkins [Z E Perkins .........E. Carpenter ................ B W Dm.u ........ W. W. Nelson rmt law or NzwarAt-rKS. __3.fe.cri ere who do not give express no- 11. the contrary are considered as wishing wino, their aubecriptionB. -ILeeha-riber« order the discontinuance of k periodical, the publisher, may continue to iihru until all errenra are paid. -U lub-crihera neg'.eet to or refnee to take It periodic»I. from tie office Io whlcbthey «been direeled, they are held reapon.ihle they bare ecttied their bill an** ordered Ir neper discontinued -lfeulwrihera move to other plaeea with- >,forming the publiaher. and the papers are t Io the former direction, they are bed pswiblr. —s- - -Th-courts have decided that refusing to l periodical, from the office or removing luring tlieni uncalled fop is prime facie leace of intention. 1 fraud • -The poeimaster who ueglecta to give the il notice of the neglect of a pereon to take a the office the paper addressed to him, is lealao to the publiaher tor the eubecription Cyclopædia of American Biography. / THE ONLY NATIONAL STANDARD. « ------- Containing Over Twenty Tliou- HHiid Articles on Promin ent People. This standard work is the only National Cyclopædia of Biography in this country, and is worthy to rank with the great na tional works of its kind in the Old World, now being tuiblished in England, Ger many, and Belgium. No name eminent in literature, art, music, science or intention will be omitt ed. Sold only by subscription. W. W. BECK Soliciting Agent. CBUMCH NOTICE, lerricre will be held at the following t me, I places by the M. H. pastor I d charge of the layette circuit: Lt Bunday—11 a. m. West Cbehalem; 3 p. [Dundee; Id Snnday—lAfayette, morning and evening, to Sundav—11 a. m. Pike school hoase; 8at- uyeveufng previous, at Anderson’s school ithSunday—11 a. m. Carlton; 3 p. m.-------- iOp.m. Lafayette. Preacher in charge. PRESBYTERIAN SERVICES. MviuS services wi’l be conducted by Rev. rde, of the 1’resbvterian church, as follows: kt Sabbath of each month at. Lafayette. Id and 4th Sabbaths at Zena. to ^abbath at McCoy. All cordially invited, > J. Burt Moore, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Oregon. G ebe ^’ l M e ^ haedise —W eat Chehalem, Oregon,— — ;o:— Wishes to inform the people of West Chehalem, and vicinity, that he keeps on hand, a com plete stock of DRY GOODS, GROCERIES. HATS. CAPS. DR.J. C. MICHAUX, LAFAYETTE, OREGON- Mer an active experience of nine years era bis services to the people ol Lafayette 4 surrounding country. tai, «I,’87. T. c. Stepiieiie, PRACTICAL fatchmaker and Jeweler, Latfaiyette, Oreg’oxx. Keep« a firstclaM stock of watebee, clocks, •airy and tpectacles and sells at unprecedent lew prims. Hcbes, Clocks and Jewelry repairing «-Spec ialty—All work warranted. «Ire me a call. T. C. STEPHENS. BOOTS & SHOES aud TINWARE. In fact every thing usually found in a country store; which he proposes to sell as cheap as can be bought in Yamhill County. B®>Highest market price paid for produce. He has also twe farm« for sale, on reason able term., alien stock of good" and buildings, also 1 acre of ground. For farther particulars call on the nndersignad at his store. J. D. C asts ", West Chehalem, Yamhill County, Oregon. Lafayette Laundry. Fong Wong & Sing Gee Prop«. Washing and Ironing done in a First Class manner. Triose cheaper than any laundry tn Yamhill county. WGIve ns a call.-®» 13 ly •. • . • ‘ *-■ . NO. 26. .... v » Scotchman is the only man ever so adozen men) had taken advantage honored by 4he land of blue grass, of their official positions to thwàrt (From onr Regular Correspondent.) fair women, old Bourbon and fine the will of two-thirds of the repre sentatives of sixty million people. W ashington , Jan. 13, 1888. horsdB. Mr. Beck is esteemed for What is the secret of this bitter The retirement of Mr. Lamar his abilities and liked for his genial opposition? I asked a leading from the great office whioh he has nature. He is regarded as quite an southern democrat, a member of so ably and satisfactorily filled for authority On questions relating to the house. “The habit of opposition ; theseieaders on our side tor twenty nearly three years, was the occasion finance and the tariff. years have been opposero, and have of many sincere expressions of re There are two factions of local thus formed the habit of obstructi gret. Especially regretful were- 'republicans in Washington, and, as ionists.” What of the “constitution- , • those who have been - associated heretofore, they are all torn up over al objection?” I asked. “That in with the southern statesman in the the result of the recent primary most cases is only an excuse,” he discharge of public duties, for it is meeting, whose duty is to select two replied. The best lawyers in the senate declare it to be constitution the unanimous testimony of all who delegates to the Chicago national al. If it is constitutional for con have had personal contact with him convention. There is likely to be a gress to give land at a dollar and a "•-.-•.I that he is one of the most affable, contest. quarter an acre for schools in thè - states, as they have done, how is it generous and kind-hearted of men. unconstitutional to give the dollar This feeling was manifested while and a quarter in money? the employes of the interior depart "FOR GOD ARD HOME AND NATIVE If “national aid,” as the objectors HAND." ment were thronging in-hundreds to urge, would “destroy the spirit of say farewell to the ex-secretary. M ob . F A. .M orris , Press Superintendent self-help ih education in the states,” Newberg, Oregon. why does not state aid demoralize, There were many misty eye’s and instead of building up, as it has, sorrowful countenances. THE SURPLUS IN THE TREASURY. the district school; and why has The nominations of Messrs. Vilas WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH IT? not free education pauperised in and Dickinson for secretary of the stead of making, as it has, achiev Norfolk Gazette, Hyde Park, Mana. (Continued from last week. ing mqp and women. This object interior and postmaster-general, re spectively, will boubtless be con The disbursement- and expendi ion'1'Applied would do away with firmed at the first executive sessiou ture of such sums would have been schorlarahips in our colleges, and the educational funds that have of the senate. Political malice has made by the various local school i helped poor students struggle into been unable to raise any sort of is authorites, and not by “federal * dfe- the self made manhood that is the tation,” as has been-falsely charged. pride of our land. These tradition sue in the case of either. It was for the purpose of reliev- Schpols now open but a few days or al objections faded as the members j been of the -house studied the subject ing the situation as affected by weeks per annum would have been •w”1 get it wheraE cûulibû __ rvoU>d on scnooi these pending nominations, that enlarged and held the full scl. year, with better teachers, and new Mr.- Lamar magnanimously re In the interest of belated meas signed one office before he was as schools where there are now none ures the huuse has retained for sured of another. Whatever chanocs would have started, and all this many years a rule that, “during the last six days of congress, any mem there were to take he preferred io with its consequent results would ber may, if recognized by the speak have gone on for ten years. Thus take alone,-without involving others er, move to suspend the rules and in the compltewtion. The post in a decade, through tho education pass a billxl’^ TJ1.!8 w*8 the forlorn master general has reframed from of opr otherwise neglected children, hope of many'a measure In thé'Tâtè' " ~ ' making at least two important ap $78,000,000 (not Hie overplus of one congress. Speaker Carlisle insisted upon being informed in advance pointments in his department on year) would have been returned to what bill any member proposed to their normal channels, the currency account of the impending change. thus call up, and if he did not ap Much anxiety is felt among the of the people, leaving immeasurable prove the bill he did not recognize ' republican employes of the interior riches in their transit, for the virtue the'“member, even if, as in thè department because they know that that is born of intelligence is a case of the education bill, two- thirds of the house wanted to con- a new secretary must provide a priceless wealth; without it> repub aider it. few places for his friends. If I had lic must perish. Whenever, during t)ie last fateftil ~ Ignorance and the'"' saloon are days, from fifty to a hundred mem the ear of Mr. Vilas I would *give him at least one hint in this direct natural allies. That many-sided ■ bers sprang at once to their feet, ion. There is a certain republican, society, the W. C. T. U., not un rushed into the spatte before the speaker’s desk, with upturned faces chief of a division in thi$ depart mindful of the ration of all this to and uplifted arms, waving bills in the reform they advocate, have act ment, who has been drawing a sal the air, Beseechingly shouted^ ary of two thousand dollars a year ively espoused this cause. Through “Mr. Speakerl Mr. Speaker!” The for fifteen years, and still he is not the efforts of the “educational de- fortunato man, “witlTa bill which speaker approved, was recog~- ; tired. This man’s duties are few partment of that society in the the nized. Thus a few measures be thirty-three states and territories and simple, and the place is not in law, but not the education compulsory temperance education came the, classified service. bill. It ’ is only biding its time. The congressional mill is grind laws are now in force. In many One of its worst enemies in thé ing slowly but not very finely, al portions of the remaining states tjie house said, “The tide has risen so for it here that if the session though since the reassembling of common school itself must be first high had been a little longer it would started before temperance or any congress, more than nine hundred have passed in spite of us. I sup new bills have been introduced. thing else can there be taught. pose it will go in the next congress Some surprise is expressed that the Therefore these Christian women if you folks keep at it.” He wàs right; the stifling process great state of New York is not re agitated, gathered up and pbured could not succeed in a long session; into the late congress the people ’ s presented on the ways and means and we shall keep at it. This ¡great committee, an omission which has petition for the passage of the Blair nation from its surplus wealth bill, providing national aid for com should provide education for its probably not occured in the whole history of the country. The fram mon schools. The bill passed the otherwise neglected children. The ing of a new tariff bill, to be pre senate, and in response to this patriotic, child-loving, God-fearing womanhood of America has es sented to the house by this commit home pressure the coolly critical at poused the efthse and they know ho titude of the lower house changed tee, is progressing rapidly and sat defeat. Their campaign for it in the last congress, in arousing pub isfactorily, and it is believed will be to one of active interest. Why then did it not pass? In lic sentiment, in clearing away the ready for consideration within the answer to this question a prominent mist of mistaken ideas and in re next two weeks. congressman said, “In adopting moving prejudice, was victory at The invalid pension committee every step—essential to the cul rules that control the business of minating act of triumph in the fif probably learned a valuable lesson from its experience at the last ses this house the forty-ninth congress tieth .congress. unwittingly walked into a close A W. C. T. U. O bserver . sion. If so it will not again present box, shut down its cover with a an absurd bill like that vetoed by spring lock, and left the key with a WIVES! MOTHERS! DAUGHTERS! the president, but instead, a meas few bosses outside, who let us out your own physician! A lade with ure allowing something like the or keep us in as they will. On the for Be years differed from distressing female sum of eight dollars a month to school bill they won’t let us out.” complaints, weaknesses, etc., so common Three ' times, more ■ than two- to her sex, and had despaired of a cure, friendless soldiers. thirds, of the house expressed by finally found remedies which completely Senator Beck, of Kentucky, who their votes their wish to consider cured her. Any sufferer c.tn use them and thus cure Iterself, without the has beeen for the past four years this measure, and by every recourse aid of a physician. From . feelings of one of the staunchest democratic possible under these arbitrary rules gratitude She will send two prescriptions which cured .her—and an illustrate'! leaders in the senate, was the re tried in vain to get it before them — Sntited “The Stepping-Stone to for action. The obstructionists said Elmphlet ealth,” and full instructions, sealed. cipient of many hearty con the “bill would pass if it should Address (with 2-<ent stamp), M bs . W. C. gratulations this week, on his third come to a vote.” This was virtually H ouses , 1158 Broadway, N. Y. (Name 13-ly election to the senate. This brawny admitting that they (less than half his {taper.) WASHINGTON LETTER. I 4. W, cTTrircOUTHM, I « I L d ‘ I A Î < . f ■lì i t A... I 0 t| -4 i |w 1 i 1 I I 4 * 4» ■tftBMMNMMMMiM 4 ■ ;