Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Oregon register. (Lafayette, Yamhill County, Or.) 18??-1889 | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1888)
THUS PAH. 'MAN OVERBOARD” ALL AROUND THE HOUSE. , THC PLEASURES OF RANCHING. , z !■ th« Cattle Country—Cloud« Mu»qaltoee~Ia a Bala. «$ STRANGE SIGHTS IN *5S*«-* Priosltlw Cn«tomt prllse Nnrthamer«—MAlfiat , •■E.vryUnng Io..,. ,.rtl.-ulnr|, pain or bUnkota. and a tarpauUn or Mnall M.xiuo M tb. iinran Um.- Ward, ot Ang.iM, wbo ** nsooriMwA dually, »wo or thro, .loop to- Cathar. Cyan in Juno tbo aighu ora gMer Uen> on on. of th. •wULuU tnm»" ally oool and ploaaani, and it 1« ohilly in tbo do thine» w diff.nmtly dow. «arly niorumg.; allbougb tbi. 1» not alway. way, from what w. do, that tbinJZT' ao, and whan th. wmthor rtayn hot and mu. quaor to an Amerinin. «eem» qnlton an pUnty, tho houn of darkn"», now Mt yoa to thinking.' “In all th» Cittm town, —, avan in midxumru«-, ««npalnfully long. In the Bail Lan>ia proper w.Jhw not often both line, et jack train, loading vad r«7 wnouely by thee, winged pert», thw notwith.tan.li ng the railro^l. aa they uall their at reel car li.»/^?* but in the low bottoms of the Big Missouri, and boride many of tbo reedy ponds and ar. tb. regular care drawn b, m„i?*! great riougtes out on th« prairie, they are • extend through a town and outL perfect «oourge- During the very hot night*, country Mean, eight and u|„ J* "SHE DECLINE OF POLITENESS. oiilM right through the countr, " when they ore especially active, tbe bed Good Home Mad. Apple Batter. clothes make a man feel absolutely smoth yond other town., iKimetim» Homo made a|,.le butter uasl to bo a part Deplarabla Chaag« Golag Oa la th« Mow- oral in a chain. You may ri.i. of every country family's provision for tbe ered, and yet bis only chance for sleep is to tone on one of thna firn cU*” affl/ > aglish Society. .winter. Mrs. 8. D. Power tells Jun bow this wosip himself tightly up, bead and all, and one-half real, or aix and oue-hafi 2? The signal deterioration of manners that *>roe their way in. article is made aa excellent aa it ought al way. •ven then Nome of tbe bus for some tun# been going oa in what is At minuet 1 have seen tbo musquitoes rife a aeooud claa. car you pay b»lf to ba on a third claa. half of that atata* called good society is every year becoming Tbo basis is sweet cider, which is to ba up from th« land like a dense cloud, to make run the three kind, of car. «TnL more glaring and more deplorable. The deli- tbe hot, stifling night on* long torture; tbe track. boiled down to one-half its original quantity, < | rate and subtle d«*fereu«-e which every gen- when three-fourths as much, by measure, of horses would neither lie doqrti, uor grille, t 'teman us«d to pay to «very woman, because “lb. City of Mexico haa not ham a. traveling restleewly to and fro CTTT-daybreak, apples, pared and ent small, are to be added * she was a woman and for no other reason for 800 year», and an Ohio couinj, 2 and boiled to a pulp. Good care is required their bodies streaked and bloody, and the in taken a ountract to do IK whatever, is already old fashioned, and _______,___________ _____ _ in to hare everything clean, to skim tbe cider sects settling on them so as to make them all the drainage haa run into a laketbul promises shortly to become obsolete. No one color, a uniform gray; while tbe men, woman now thinks of expecting from any their mad triumph. Every sailor knoris all well and keep it fmin worthing by too hot a after a few hours* tearing about in the vaiu it all back again, and you lift unu, j man the polite homage which once on a time thia, whenever be goes aloft or pursues his Are after it boils, and when the apples begin attempt to sleep, rose, built a fire of damp sidewalks in that city and yo.3" was the privilege of one sex and tbe honor of calling in any part of the ship, and so be is to cock tho Whole must lie watched and sage brush, and thus endured the misery as that nearly knocks you over. Thu* *' careful and alert, and trie« for safety all tbe stirred constantly with a long wooden bat, 1__ tbe other. Men come iuto a room full of oue elevator In the City of Meiim k having a scraper eight inches long and throe best they could until it was light enough to only been recently put in. Evw, ladies with as much indifference and sans time. ’________________ -T"’. But when tbe running ship, towering on wide fixed *t right angles to the handle. work. But if tho weather is fine, a man will great crowds stand around with en>2 facon as though they were entering tbe morn never sleep better nor more pleasantly thau ing room of their club, and quit it with pre the crest of a lofty wave, dashes suddenly Thia stirr«* scrapes tbe Isiltom of the kettle in the open air after a hard day’s work on eye. to Me It work. They never tow cisely the same want of ceremony and self onward and down, burying her bead booms at ouch motion, and keeps tb.< mass from the round up; nor will an ordinary shower nor a place for one In any of the mZ.' fa rqin to the whole in one constraint. While in tbe society of women In the boihnx sea. and tears them cut again scorching, t>r k'i• -f wind disturb him in the least, for you are sometimes quite they lol), lean, and almost lie at their vase, as with a terrible strain, as was the case on this moment. With tho apples are added cinnor be simply draws the tarpaulin over his head They light you upstairs with . m L? Q though they were in the bosom of their own occasion, no living thing can hold on, and so mon and clove# tied in cheese cloth and sus die, nixl each guest must furuk* to and goes on sleeping. family—indeed, with a free and «asy grace- our poor shipmate was dashed into the sea. pended in the kettle by a long string; also But now and then we have a wind storm towel and soap. Itesness that a generation ago no gentleman was struck and (tasked over by the ship and one-fourth the weight of the apples in sugar, “Going along the street, of Maitoi that might bettor be called a whirlwind, and would have permitted himself among his was never seen more by any living man. It or leas if they are sweet. It takes two days has to be met very differently; and two or one day 1 saw a young man occurred instantly and was over in a second to finish one boiling of apple butter, boiling most intimate relatives. In th« first ap three days or nights of rain insure the wet fingers grotesquely, aa though atoto proaches of members of one sex to members It was seen and tbe cry raised: “Man over down the cider and paring the fruit the first ting of tho blanket*, and, therefore, shiver imaginary tattoo in the air. I uS of tbe other, there is no longer any suavity, board." Sai lore must act promptly at all <i»y; the next, stewing the whole, which is ing discomfort on the part of the would-be around but couldn’t ace anything Th any hesitation, any well bred reserve; men times. In lees time than I can write about it then turned into Arkins for keeping. It needs sleeper For two or three hours all goes day 1 saw him at It ae-dn and women who scarcely know each other life buoys were thrown o\w, the ship hove to I 1» • sealing. well, and it is rather soothing to listen to the all the time I went int< the hotel ¿J and a boat was overboard panned, by deter Prime apple butter, like mince pie and rich act as though they were hail-fellow-well-met, steady patter o/ the great rain drops on the of my friends asked me J 1 bad mt had been in the playground together, and mined men. resolute to* reocue a shipmate if fruit cake, should bo six weeks old before canvas. But then it will be found that a young fellow who was courting lk1t - possible. Tbe effort w&yain; the boat re using, to attain its full flavor. been acquainted all their lives. corner has been left open through which the girl. . 1 fell all at once, and lookta, .1 Tbe demeanor of women, nowadays, to turned, was hoisted aghin with difficulty ayd water can get in, or else the tarpaulin will saw a girl in a third story wind«|L An Expert*« Te»t for Flour. men is on a par with tbe male, behavior we we proceeded on our course one man leas.— begin to leak somewhere, or perhaps the out at him and doing the tattoo m Forest and Stream. ' ________ have described. Far from resenting tbe un An expert advises as an easy modo of tost« water will have collected in a hollow under Said my friend: ceremoniousness with which they are treated ing the purity of flour to squeeze it in the “ ‘This business haa been going oat» neath and have begun to soak through. Soon Mr. Depew*« Correspondence. by men who are in reality utter strangers to hand The cohesiveness of flour is very years, and neither of them ha> ms. It was late in the afternoon, and yet a great, and tbe lump so squeezed in the haud a little stream trickles in, and every effort to wont’ ” them, they go to meet it half way, and per remedy matters merely result* in a change mit themselves to be on a foot of familiarity ntass of corresponc^nce remained upon Mr. will be a longer time before it breaks and “It was so. They were eonrtla. n for the worse. To move out of the way in Drpew's desk. 1 was never more strongly —as far as manner is concerned—with the falls apart if of wbeaten flour than if adul sores getting wet in a fresh spot, and the best the way they do it down thorClt a firet comer, provided ho seems to be one of convinced that great men occasionally have terated. Plaster of pari», dust of burned course is to lie still and accept the evils that flirtation, long protracted, but ’* J their “own set,” that could not be greater if to work. bones and potato flour, sometimes used in adul pantomime was translatable Into I.»—, “Why can’t people write letters on one terating, are much heavier than wheaten have come with what fortitude one can. ' their acquaintance had existed for years. Even thusxfhe first night a man can sleep am unable to say."—San Fraatau ’he same “don’t-care-a-hang” conduct ir per page/” ho exclaimed with a pleasant assump flour and may be detected by their weight. aminer. pretty well; but if tbe rain continues, a ceptible in tbe conduct of visitors and guests tion of wrath, as he held up the bulky re A sack that will contain a certain weight of sult of some correspondent’s efforts. “I never wheaton flour will hold half as much more, second night, when the blankets are already ■i‘ to their host and h<*te^s. The Nobility In Germaay, damp, and when the water comes through« The notion that people are to be specially saw anything in my life' which couldn't be by weight, of potato flour. Tho manners of people of high rank 1» more easily, is apt to bo most unpleasant.— honored in their own houses has gone quite condensed to fit a sheet of good sized letter many are amusing to a stranger. Theodore Hoosevrit in Tho Century.— out of fashion. No one nowadays is so an- paper." in the world are “dukes an*duebeaai The Decline of the Pillow Sham. \ ------------------------- ------- The rapidity with which Mr. Depew went tiqbated in his ideas as to suppose that hos Pillow shams are going out of style and rich ” so unpretentious as here. In tbe I Burnie»« “Pickled Tea." pitality is to be regarded as a favor conferred through his pile of letters—reserving some use. Long narrow pillows are much used on The Indian Forester publishes the diary of ■ where 1 am stopping there are several™ on the person to whom it is extended. On and banding otners to an assistant—was truly beds made up with spreads that are brought of note who are waiting an iniprowoMat tbe contrary, it is the guest who confers an surprising. He has evidently acquired tbe up over tbe pillows so as to entirely cover an expedition which, recently ascended the the emperor’s condition before retui Chindwin river, in Upper Burmah. The ’ obligation by paying a call, accepting an in ait of getting at “the meat" of a story in tbe them. writer describes a village called Kawya, on home. Soldiers guard the entrance» of vitation to dinner, or paying a country visit, shortest possible time. To see him do it gives the river, where the people are wholly do i hotels in their honor, but that i* tbe be and who has a perfect right to indulge in one a sensation similar to that produced by Tollette Table in French Style. ning and end of al) ceremony. Tbe D r frank and free censure to his neighl>ors in the wonder!ui feats of a juggler. You can toilette tftbln represented in the cut is voted to the cultivation of tea, and which ! Saxe-Meiningen, a tall, amiable looking case he does not find everything to his liking not help admiring the. perfect control of the of French origin and its light, graceful char may ba considered as the southern limit of I with a big gray beard, and the Dub#' the tea plunt in this region. Before planting i in the establishment be cmidescends to dis faculties necessary to such celerity. acter makej it particularly suitable for bed ’ ---------- *»• but >—* I Horsmar, who is blonde and dyspeptic, rgdof all undergrowth, 'tThis’l must read myself;” “Comply with rooms. It can be fitted with drawers under tho ground is clears- tinguish by his presence. In a word, gu«sts lose of the densest foliage. high trees, even th< . _ . derunconcernedly about, followed byd uowadays treat hosts and hostesses as men this request;" “Put that with other papers neath, if preferred. r are left standing. The seedlings, which are of menjn magnificent uniform W treat women—that is to say, as persons whom relating to the case," he said, almost with usually raised indooi*s, are planted out in they go people rise and .remain ttan it is very good and amiable of thorn to no out a pause. His assistant retired with both rows at the beginning of .the rains, and the the men of title have seated the tice at ail. And where people really know hands full of papera Then Mr. Depew turned first pickings take place when the plant is 8 Then there is a general sinking into a «ach other intimately, tho behavior of men to his visitors. Two were newspaper men or 4 years old. When it grows too large it is covert looks toward the great men. to women, and vice versa, is such as would who had come to ask him what be thought cut down, auu uuiuunu, and three luiCTJui or four luui new bujuia stems buuui shoot , When the princesses . .. —of whom . there —- - have appalled th« least ceremonious of our of the strike 1 have never seen any tiling out iron, the stool The loaves are plucked , *“ fathers. Women call men by their surname, neater than tbe way in which he refused to blonde beads to dine in the public d say a word, and at the same time put tbe and immediately steeped in boiling water for without the prefix of Mr., or even by their Afterward, a short time; they. are then ¿taken out, room, an enormous sensation is cn Christian uames, abbreviated to suit the cur journalists in good humor. strained, thoroughly kneaded with the bands, People have to t»ob up and down ropes, rent taste for slang. And-it4s not shop girls when it came my turn, be had not the same and pressed into bamboo baskets, when they when^hey enter, and all the officers tin or gi-oc«n»’ young men who ok this, but la* reason to keep silent on the subject about are ready for market, and fetch locally four princesses’ hands with the most revere dies and gentlemen in good society.—London which 1 wished to question him, and he dis and impressive homage. It’s funny to cussed clearly and concisely.—New York rupees j>er 100 pounds. Standard. x, , [ «E5 Cor. Globe-Democrat. 4 This“pickled tea," as it is called by Euro the princesses turn their faces and watch Mr. W. W. Corcoran*« Bu«lne«« Methods. peans, lepoV'"bein^ the Bdrtiiese name, is kissing. They feel about the asm» iota Mr? Hyde, the white haired, gray whis floated down the river in Itaskets or hollow in it as a cow does when she turns in Carelena People of Indi*. I kered, rosy faced, blue eyed gentleman who bamboos, which are carefully kept below tbe and looks contemplatively at tbe maid i Our farmers need never fear Indja for good has for forty years acted as the late Mr. W. surface of the water to preserve the quality is milling her. "The officer» are dandiai wheat Then* people are too slovenly in tbeir W. Corcoran’s private secretary, tells me that manner*of cleaning it ever to send a good of their contents. Lepet is a favorite among and out They never attempt to concri Mr. Corcoran’s last business act was th« article to England, and, as the commissioner the Burmese, who mix salt, sesamum oil and They wear stays, and when they tab signing of a real estate transfer. He say* (governor) of this district told me, they will other ingredients with it. To the ordinary their helmets and caps in the big mtn bis mind was perfectly clear up to within a not change tbeir hAbita They hand weed European its taste is as bad as its smell, and hotels they lean over the tabla few days of bis death, and that his business the fields, so that no foreign seeds mix with which is saying a good deal. Tbe soil along calmly arrange their hair with little « faculties were nevermore acute. “He had,” the wheat, but they clean it in thé ground, the Chindwin is eminently suitable for tea and brushes carried in the coattail pot »aid he. “a wonderful mind and very quick and the middlemen throw in dirt and coarse cultivation; tbe plant grows wild on all the This takes a long time as a rule The i perceptive faculties. He decided instantly sand to increase the weight 1 have examined hills and attains enormous dimensions. One tators evince a respectful interest foil,I on any matter which came before him, and quite a quantity here in bags in the bazaar, tree which was found neglected in a corner when it is at length completed there ii though be sometimes made mistakes be sel and found it shamefully dirty. One seller measured eighteen inches in girth at one foot general sigh of relief and satisfaction, I officers bow to one another politely, and I dom doubted his judgment at the tima He wanted me to buy 1 told him 1 was from from the ground, and was fully twenty feet world rolls on again upon its ax»-Bib This table is of wood, painted white and high.—Chicago Times. bail not good business habits as regarded tbe Chicago in America. He innocently assured Hall's Berlin letter in New York Son. and well varnished. The table top is covered *u~ nare of his own books. He kept the books of me tie would make bis bags tight so that I with red flannel, over which is ecru colored others all right, but not bis own." could take it home with me. By the way, 1 Indebtedness of European Nations. I here looked at some of Mr. Hyde’s meth- will explain that io hand weeding fields etamine edged with knitted thread lace. The PemiM*« Divorce Lawn. The wonderful increase of the public debt —B ode, and they were interesting as showing everything is saved; what is pulled up is drapery consists of Turkey red calico upon In Persia, as in Turkey, if a husband wk ' which are applied, with chain stitch, designs of European states within the last few years how a fortune of millions has been managed. necessary food tbr cattle. a divorce from his wife all be has todob 1 of flowers or birds cut out of cretonne. If it suggests the question, “Whither will this ten Not a scrap of business paper is allowed to Another thing will ultimately tell against order her out of tbe bouse. As a check I go to waste, and all of Mr. Corcoran’s checks India as a wheat country. Manure is care is desired to make the table handsome, the dency lead themf* In 1870 the total indebted the too free use of this arbitrary pruned and receipts for years back have been num I fully picked up and dried for fueL Tbe land drapery can be of more costly material with ness was $15,000,000,000. This has been in however, the Persians have constituted a creased to the amount of $23,000,000,000 in bered. His private secretary gave a receipt needs it and cannot get it Trees are scarce; i hand painted or embroil red ornaments. 1880. In sixteen years, therefore, the public curious and ingenious custom. While while I was present, and I noted that its leaves, coarse grass, and excrement of cattle debt has increased $8,000,000,000. During Mohammedan laws make it so easy for» uunilwr was in the twenty-seven thousands. Rose Scent Jar. keep the natives in fuel These people are this period the reduction of interest has been band to put away his wife, it secures » I was shown check books that ran up in poor beyond any others I have ever seen, and A potpourri or rose scent jar consists of all her own property. Under so Uieir numbers to over 25,000, and Mr. Corco- will not become well enough off to become a stock of rose leaves, to which are added va going on just as it has done in the United sideration can the busband deprive the jan, after he hod u.4ed up one check book, land improver* They are not lazy—they 1 rious odoriferous substances and essences. States. England is now arranging to reduce of her owu property. As a pnak did not begin a new number with the new work hard, but keep themselves poor by the The rose petals are gathered in the morning, her interest from 8 to 2% per cent, and the against divorce, then, tbe husband n> books, but went on until the numbers have ceremonies which their ve®y religion seems | and after drying them off for an hour are other European governments are attempting marriage contract is usually require) to reduce the rate of interest from 5 and 0 to 4, now reached tho tens of thousands. These to make necessary when their children put into a dish with layers of. salt; they are 8, 4, and 4>$ per cent promise a considerable sum of money receipts and checks are carefully labeled in marry. This hardly seems credible, but 1 i stirred every morning and allowed to stand The immense reduction of interest, how wedding gift to his brida This rnon^l packages of 100 and laid away in such ar am informed by intelligent people that they ! ten days. Fresh leaves can be added every ever, does not seem to benefit tbe peoplej for forthcoming at the wedding -nor expe manner that they can 1« referred to in an save almost exclusively for this purpose, and 1 morning until there are enough. Then put the government« take advantage of it to in but it is placed to the wife’s credit ret instant. It is tbe some with the other books; cover themselves with debt and mortgages : into a jar with two ounces coarsely ground crease their total indebtedness. Here we are owed to her by tbe husband. As to 1$ all are thoroughly systematized. Mr. Corco when savings prove inadequate.—Carter ' a’¿spice and the same of broken stick cinna- paying off the debt and reducing the interest divorce this money wot^fi have to to ran not long ago came into his office here Harrison in Chicago Mail. i mon. Let it stand closely covered for six at tbe same time; in Europe they are reduc over, tbe amount is usually mad® » and said: “I want very much to know whom j weeks. Mix together one ounce each of ing tbe rate of interest but are increasing that it is virtually beyond the ba I ordered some wine of in France about five I coarsely ground allspice, cloves, cinnamon the nominal capital of the debt so that no means. In that case divorce to him Queer Siam Post« for 8treeta. years ago.” His private secretory, with this Formerly all tbe streets in Merida were ' and mace, one ounco bruised orris root, some reduction of taxes cab take placet The total mean financial ruin, and as a n indefinite request, at once turned to his book I lavender flowers or any sweet scented dried pocket is the most susceptible pert labeled “Wine,” ran down a few pages and distinguished in a manner peculiar to Yuca ' flowers or herbs obtainable, and put into annual interest upon European indebtednea him, it follows that there u no d came to the date and found the purchase. It tan by images of birds or beasts set up at the your permanent rose jar in alternate layers is about $1,07U,OUO,(KD, while the total annual Owing to this ingenious arranf was the same with other matters, and Mr. corners, and many still retain the ancient i with the rose stock; add a few drops of oil of expenditures of the war and navy depart Corcoran had in this way a perfect business sign; for example, the street upon which we ■ rose geranium or violet and pour over the ments of the same government reaches the although a mere angry order to legal divorce, there are fewer dn<*» diary kept for him.—-Frank G. Carpeuter in are living is called I a Calle del Flamingo, ! whole a quarter of a pint of good colpgne. enormous sum of $906,000,000. The European because of a huge red flamingo painted on powers are all of them troubled with financial Persia than in the United Statea— New York World. the corner bouse. Another is known as tbe i Add from time to time orange flower water difficulties. They are Immensely in debt; Stevens in New York bun. street of tbe Elephant, and tbe representa i or the like and every season a few fresh rose yet tbe political situation is such as to re Household Ulate. tion of It is an exagerated animal, with [ petals. Every morning after putting the quire increased armaments. They cannot — Clean rinc with kerosene. ___ :_____ Bright Literary Prtep®«*- curved trunk and a body as big as a barrel. ; room in order, leave the cover off the jar for go to war because they have not the financial Friend (to young writer>"'yhJ1<1 Painted chamois skin tidies now decorate There is the street of the Old Womah, and a few minutes. credit to extend their indebtedness; and the fi€ar from tho Every Other 1WMP chairs and sofas. on its corner is the caricature of an aged The Old Hrether*« Prayer. question now is: “How can this intricate zine, Charley, in regard to your Mo Silver continues to be the rage for every female, with huge spectacles astride her A college student was invited one Sunday Situation be relievedP—Cincinnati Tinwa. Young Writer—It came back to ^description of costly toilet articles; noea The street of tbe Two Faces has a to occupy the pulpit m a„ little country Star. or two ago with “many thanks « “Save cold'tea for the vinegar barrel,” double faced human head; and there are church' After what 4he considered a mas itors for my kindness in giving •ays a housewife. “It sours easily and gives others equally striking. The reason for this terly effort on the «inject of ** J .azarus and The head nuree of the Children’s hospital kindergarten sort of nomenclature was be tne Kirn Man,** be called on a good old in London say, that the six general qualifi privilege of seeing it." color and flavor.” the thanks of a single editor, cause when tbe streets were named the great nrotber to pray and «as somewhat electri- To soften water for dish washing and laun mass of inhabitants were Indians who could cations for a good nurse aro “presence of of every one of ’em on the dry purposes thoroughly dissolve one tea- not read, and tberfore printed signs would fiwl to near tlie following “Oh. I »rd! we mind, gentleness, accuracy, memory, obser there may be a dozen, for all Ik* • ■poonful of granulated lye in four gallons of have been no use to them, but the picture of thank tbee that we are not like this poor, vation and forrthougbt.” She finds it “a you, Ous, that was a great artic* water. a bull, a flamingo or i|u elephant they could ■Wpi-Rtri tieggar I Jizarus, who we ve jest ben popular female delusion ’ that every woman going to send them something * « hsteniu to?'— Bostou Journal. fa hstm * , nut mistake. dava”—Tho Epoch. For bedding, aacb man has two or three t