Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Telephone=register. (McMinnville, Or.) 1889-1953 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1890)
1800! FIFTH ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE! 1890! Oozxxm.erxeing' on 01 Monday, January 13th, and will continue until close of business on Saturday, March 1st. During this Sale we shall offei' our Entire Stock—$25,000 worth of General Merchandise at greatly Reduced Prices. The only reserve will be some articles in Groceries and General Merchandise—when manufactur ers fix prices that will not admit of cutting. Come early for best selections before stock is badly broken. During this sale it will be our purpose to sell goods low enough to convince the most skeptical that McMinnxrillp pan sell as low as Portland or elsewhere, quality of goods considered. All I Want is Same Terms Extended to Portland Houses-Cash on Delivery of Goods. This Sale Will be conducted as nearly on the CASH PLAN as is possible—No time to keep up book accounts. IT IS TO BE A SLAUGHTER SALS! We must make room for new Stock and want Cash. As we have made arrangememts with new Eastern houses and manufacturers, by which we have Exclusive Sale in this place. It shall be our purpose to close out certain lines entirely. These will be slaughtered at prices that cannot be duplicated when this sale is over. We do not intend to be undersold for same grade of goods here or elsewhere—qualities must be considered, as good goods cannot be bought and sold as low as the trash of auction houses. Darwin says its the survival of the fittest. Your money must talk. A. J. APPERSON. THE TELEPHONE-REGISTER. HARDING II HEATH, Publishers. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Out Copy, per year, inoilrsoce.......... . $2 00 Oso Copy, eix month. In adrare....... > 00 Entered at the postoffice at McMinnville Oregon, as second-class matter. T«a advertising R ates or T he T ele - rwo!«E-REoisTEK are liberal, taking in consideration the ?irculation. Single inch, |1.00; each subsequent inch, $.75. Special inducements for yearly or semi- yearly contracts. A ll C ommunications M ust B e S igned B y the person who sends them., not for pub lication, unless unaccompanied by a "non de plume,” but for a guarantee of good faith. No publications will be published unless so signed. * * * r. J ob W oke N eatly A nd Q uickly E xecuted at reasonable rates Our facilities are the best in Yamhill county and as good as any in the state A complete steam plant insures quicksort. A bdbbss A ll C ommunications . E ither F ob the editorial or business departments, to T hb T blephonk -R eoisteb , McMinnville, Oregon. 3 amble C oties o / the T elethone -R egis - rxa will be mailed to any person in the United States or Europe, who desires one, free of charge W e I nvite Y ou To C ompare T he T ele phone -R egister with any other paper published in Yamhill county. All eubeeribere who do not receive their paper regularly will confer a favor by im mediately reporting the same to thin office. Thursday, January 30, 1890. ONLY A YEARLING. This issue of the T elephone -R egister marks an era in its history, as it is the last number of the first volume. The paper is just one year old, and is a very- slick and fat infant. Praise has been re ceived on all sides, but it does not tend toward giving the infant the big head. No newspaper in the history of Yamhill county has added as many improvements daring a year as has the T elf . phone -R eg - A gentleman inquired the other utkb . day whether the paper would increase and improve as much in the coming year as in the year past. To this question we will answer that the paper will continue to be up to the times and always a little in advance, as heretofore. The proprie tors take pride in saying that the T ele phone -R egister is the best equipped pa per in the valley, outside of the Oregon ian. The mechanical department is a model now 3nd further improvements will soon be added. During the coming year new features are in contemplation which will make this pape r one of the moat agreeable fireside companions im aginable. Our subscribers will soon be rewarded with premiums which will equal any ever offered by the great met ropolitan dailies. The aim as heretofore will be to furnish a readable newspaper. When the advertisng patronage encroach es upon the reading matter, and thus up on the rights of our subscribers, the pa per will be enlarged. As the town and patronage improves, so will the paper, only in a faster degree. We are sorry to say that the large paper announced for next week will not appear, owing to the blockade which re tarded the overland mail. The cuts with which the paper is to be illustrated are missing. We have received some of them and are waiting for the remainder to arrive. As soon as they arrive the paper will be rushed to the press and the largest and best illustrated paper ever issued in this citv will lie mailed to our subscribers. Au army of 40,000 partisans will be let loose on the country in June next by Secretary Noble and Census Commis sioner Porter. These are the enumera tors. They will visit every house in the country. Their term is not a long on?, but the G. O. P., politicians are working the mine of appointments for all it is worth. By it they can pay off a part of the obligations incurred in the campaign of 1888. It is a God send. Old Alien G. Thurman boasted to a New York World reporter that his two elections to the United States senate did not cost him a cent—not even a drink of whiskey. But Allen was elected before “'Senatorial courtesy” was invented for' the protection of boodlers. In those days charges of bribery were investigated, and if proved the boodlers were kicked out. Things have changed since then. Senatorial courtesy, like charity, covers a multitude of sins. à 3Y NO MEANS. ENGLAND IN AFRICA. GLOBE-TROTTERS. The question of subsiding ships has been raised by congress and it is now discussed by the press. We cannot see the advisability of it. Trade would hardly follow the flag, we imagine, if the flag floated over a ship sailing between two barren islands lying ten thousand miles apart. Yet such a vessel, with a mail contract, would be able to earn $80,000 a voyage under the provisions of Senator I’rye’s bill, even though it never carried a letter. No doubt this is an extreme case. Neverthe less it illustrates a principle. When we had a subsidized line to Australia the ships carried very little except the mail bags, according to the statement of an officer in one of them. When wooden sailing vessels held the commerce of the seas we could build ships and sail them in competition with the world. Then we carried three-fourths of all our own im ports and exports and a large share of those of foreign countries, too. We built our own ships and sold many abroad. But a change came in the conditions of the carrying trade. Iron and steel ves sels, driven by steam, began to take the place of wooden vessels propelled by the winds. Our ship-yards could not build these vessels so cheaply as they are built abroad. Other countries saved their merchant marine by granting their citi zens the privilege of buying modern vessels wherever they eonld buy them cheapest. Our country, alone among the maritime nations, chose to pursue the policy which was discredited by the dog in the manger more than two thousand years ago. It has not been succecsful in forcing our people to buy American-built vessels foreign trade at a loss but it has been an eminent success in making the American flag a rare sight in foreign waters. Coercion having fail ed, it is now proposed to try coaxing and bribes. Senator Frye proposes to say to American merchants and sailors, in the name of the government: ‘‘We know that you cannot build American steamers except at a loss. If you will incur this loss we will make it up to you twice over at the expense of the toiling millions of this great country, who have no interest in the carrying trade except to get their merchandise carried as cheap ly as possible. Their necks are accus tomed to the voke, and the additional weight ought not to make any particular difference. Whether it does or not, we have the jrower now, and we will fasten ft u]>on them by contract for five or ten years.” This is statesmanship as it is now understood and practiced by the men in power at Washington. That broad belt of African country ly ing to the west of Mozambique and So- falla, and between Lakes Nvassa and Latigueóla on the north, and the Trans vaal and the Kalahari Desert on the south, has been proved by the researches of successive explorers, particularly Liv ingstone, to be one of unusual fertility and resources. The commerco in live animals ferie naturx, in Bkins, in ivory, in nuts and other commodities, has for centuries been a source of large emolu ment to the Portugese ; and since the at tention of the civilized world has been more pointediv fixed of late on the Dark Continent, its products and its possibili ties, that commerce has expanded rapid ly, and given promise of boundless gain. England, having a keen nose for any thing with commercial promise in it, has for years been edging her way into the interior of that legion, and the couriers of her trade have been pushing their sta tions further and further inland, without any very scrupulous regard to the prior rights of native or previous invaders. England’s intentention now is, with out a doubt, to secure to herself posses sion of the basin of the Zambezi—for the two-fold reason that she may monopo lize, or at least have the lion’s share, of the valuable internal traffic, and above all, that she may be able to lay claim as her own the only navigable waterway of any consequence that remains unappro priated on the eastern coast of the conti nent. The possession of a lew stations in Makolololand may be convenient to put forward as the groundwork of a pre meditated dispute, but it is not the pos session of a portion, or the whole, of Ma kolololand that is at the bottom of Eng land’s hectoring and impracticable atti tude toward Portugal at present. Eng land means to have ar. outlet on the east coast for her growing internal African commerce ; the Zambezi river is the only outlet, and possession of that river Eng land appears to be bent on acquiring and holding, either by hook or by crook. It is hardly astonishing that my Lord of Salisbury should, under the circumstan ces. entertain insurmountable scruples against the reference of the conflicting claims to an unbiased arbiter. Referred to impartial umpireship the claim of England to possession would crumble at a touch ; and Salisbury is wise to stand on the equities of his country’s brute strength, the merits of the question left out of consideration. The fable of the wolf standing upstream from the lamb and blaming the innocent little beast for polluting the water that bis wolfship drinks, affords a parallel to Salisbury’s present attitude toward Portugal’s gov ernment. The first circumnavigator of the globe was Magalhaens, after whom the straits of Magellan were named. He was a Por tuguese and set out on his journey in 1519 with the idea that the world was a flat surface and that in time he would reach the edge and find out what was in the abyss into which a straggler might tnmble if he ventured too near it. The compass was then uninvented and the ship was steered by the stars. Captain Francis Drake, a bold, bad buccaneer, out for what he could find, sailed from England in 1577, passed around Cape Horn and across the Pacific and back to his native land. Captain Cook did it at about the same time, and his chronicle shows that he was three years on the cruise. He touched at Tierra del Fuego (the “Land of Fire”), Tahiti, New Zealand Van Die man’s Land, Australia, the Friendly islands, where they didn't eat you, but just robbed you and turned you loose; New Hebrides, New Caledonia, which lias been for many years the French penal colony; the Sandwich islands, which had not then a king who had learned the seductive game of draw pok er, and western North America. Since Cook’s day the globe-trotters have become an army. The most famous of the American circumnavigators was the late secretary of state, William H. Seward, who wrote his adventures in an 800-page tome. General Grant did it en suite, and Jay Gould and the Vander bilts do it now and then, but Nellie Bly and Miss Bisland nre probably the first women who have undertaken the tour of the globe alone and unprotected. They are certainly the first to attempt it solely for the purpose of seeing how quickly it can be done. THE TARIFF IN THE WAY. Why is it that the great bulk of the trade of the Seutli American countries goes to Europe? It is a simple question to answer. Because of the tax imposed upon .South American products by this country. A statement of the amount of trade the countries south of ns carry on would not be inappropriate in this arti cle. While the latest published rci>orts from Colombia show that the exports to England amounted in value to $2,743,- 366; to France, $1,356,422; to Germany, $643,859, there were sent to the United States in the sam? period, values amount ing to $517,386 only. In 1887 the Argentine Republic im ported from Germany goods to the value of $12,108,456; from Belgium, $10,047,- 955; from France, $22, 743,550; from Ita ly, $7,037,741; from England, $34,779,- 219, and it exported to Germany to the amount of $9,835,754; to Belgium, $12,- 111,537; to France, $24,871,354; to Italy, $3,107,113; to England, $17,095,000. In all $67,010,753; while from the United States the imports amounted to $11,004.- 553, and the exports to $5,938,803. In Chili the total value of imports in i 1387 was $48,530,862, of which $20,463,- 584 from England; Germany, $11,631,- 891; France, $5,500,949; the United States, $34,272,314. In like manner in Paragua 48 per cent, of the imports came from England. South American traders arc not fools by any means. It is easy to see that the value of their goods is increased by the tax imposed by this country and that they must exchange $1.50 worth of goods for $1.00 worth in return. In Europe where the tariff does not exist the pur chasing price ot their goods is the same; they can get an even return for the goods delivered. Tliis trade could l>e stimulated to some extent certainly by having American lines of freighting ships between the two continents, but through the excessive ’ tariff, ship building has become a tiling of the past almost in the United States and other nations own the carriers of the : world. _________________ MAGNETISM OR ADHESION. At frequently recurring intervals the i daily press make announcements of the ■ alleged wonderful “magnetic” qualities j exhibited by certain individuals, who I are able to make various substances ad here to their hands without exerting any mifsenlar pressure upon them. The mis cellaneous nature of the bodies which are embraced in the list of such adher ents, embracing wood, glass, etc., would at once dispel the theory that magne tism, either “personal” or otherwise, had anything to do with the phenomena, but they are so rarely investigated with the object of reaching their true cause that an instanoe of the latter deserves attention. Such an investigation lias, we note, been recently made by Dr. W. Simon, of Baltimore, which proves pretty conclusively that causes other than mag netism must be assigned to the observed facts. The subject examined was able to maintain, by mere contact with the fingers, a weight of 2,500 grams ; but it was shown that this power was exercised only on every smooth or highly polished substances, glass being the most favora ble in this respect. The cause assigned by Dr. Simon to account for the observed facts, and which is probably the correct one, is the well-known adhesion between two bodies brought into such close con tact as to exclude the air between them, the pressure of the atmosphere acting to maintain the bodies in contact. It is, therefore, only a question of the smooth ness of the skin which would appear to tie the qualification necessary to enable any one to manifest “magnetic” proper ties. The Czar of the Russians leads a p.ctt- liar existence. Plots against his life are frequently discovered and several nearly successful ones have been attempted. He is reported as being nearly demented I from the constant strain on his nerves.' But, be will not allow the people of his J empire to have anything like freedom, the key to bis unhappiness. A revolt like the one in Brazil will undoubtedly be the next thing we hear from Russia.i We have been the recipient of numer Absolute monarchs are better dead than | ous acts of kindness, such as reports, alive at any time. etc., forwarded to us by John H. .Mitch THAT Hacking Cough can be so quickly ell, senator. We appreciate them, and cured by Shiloh’s cure. We guarantee it. hope they will continue to come. Sold by Rogers Bros I’ m » A for Infants Children and Omaha, Kansas City, Chicago, SEE THIS! Ayer's Sarsaparilla — dol lar a bottle—worth five dollars ot any man's money. Either as a Tonic or Blood-purifler, Ayer's Sarsaparilla has no equal! .. P.r' Jame’ H. Stone. Tappan. Ohio, says : I snow of no alterative that elves so miich satisfaction as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.” "Caatorta is bo well adapted to children that j Cutoria cures Colle. Constipation, t recommend it as superior to any proscription 8our Stomach, " ■ Diarrhcna, - - Eructation, - —- Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di known lo me.” IL A. Aacsxa, M. D„ gestion. Ill So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, b. Y. Without injurious medication. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, T hb C bntaur C ompany , 77 Murray Street. N. T. ST PAUL. | East, North Prepared by Dr. J. C. Aver & Co.. Lowell. Mass. Price $1; eix bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. - GEO. S. TAYLOR’ Ticket Agt. Lots in the Oak Park Proprietors, fl 00 to $2.00 P er D ay . This Hotel lias been thoroughly reno vated, and is setting the be-'t table in the valley. Meals, 25 and 50 cents Board and lodging. $5.00 per week. Comer First and Oak Sts. From Tumiiial or Interior Points the Nortliei’ii Piirilic Railroad ADDITION F. DIELSCHNEIDER, ARE SELLING FAST! Is It A.nd. Eu.ildin.g' TTp. Is the Line to Take To all Points East & South Soon Lots will be scarce and Command a Higher Price. Svfsr ITZBefoze Too ZLazte . Price Ranges $50 up. For full particulars apply to J. 1. KNIGHT <fc CO.. JAS. FLETCHER <fc CO.. Real Estate Agents, McMinnville I THE INVESTMENT CO., 49 Stark St., Portland, < h’. F. BARNEKOFF A CO.. McMinnville Flouring Mills. TO THE FARMERS ¡Reliable Opposition Boot & Shoe Dealer. (No Change of Cars» I fomposed of DINING CARS RESULT OF A PLOW TEST. M c M innville , O r ., October 9, 1889 Messrs. J. G Ballinger. & Co.. Implement Dealers. Mc Minnville, Oregon G entlemen In accordance with our agreement with you and with Martin & Sanders, we 1 ave made, on our farm near McMinnville, a thorough test of your “Flying Dutch man ’ Riding Gang Plow, and the “Canton Clipper’’ Tricyle Riding Plow, sold by Martin <fc Sanders, of this city We consider the “Flying Dutchman” to be the better plow for the following reasons, viz. (1) runs lighter; (2) docs better work; (3) has better rolling cutters; (4) is more easily adjusted to land; (5) stronger, and, in our opinion, more durable. Yours truly, ir’KI& F. DIELSCIINIEDER. The Celebrated French Sure, I I excessive use of Stimulants, Tobacco or Opium, or through youthful indiscretion, over indulr encc, Ac., such as Loss of Brain Power, Wakefur ness. Bearing down Pains in the Back, Seminal Weakness, Hysteria, Nervous Prostration Nocturn al Emissions. Leucorrhoea, Dizziness, Weak Mem •S'i. ory, Loss of Power and Impotency, which if ne IlC glected often lead to premature old age and insan ity. Price $1.00 a box. G boxes for $5.00 Sent by mail on receipt of price. A WRITTEN GUARANTEE for every $5.00 order, to refund the money if a Permanent cure is not effected. Thousands of testimonials from old and young, of both sexes, permanently cured by A phboditine . Circular free. Address The limit of extravagance in appeals for “protection” before the ways and means committee seemed to have been reached when Colonel Shepard, of Tex as, in behalf of the National Wool Grow Second from Livery Elsia Wright's Building, ers’ Association, asked that the duty’ on corner and Oregon. coarse carpet wool should be made high enough to compel the people to pay for THE APHRO MEDICINE CO. such wool as much as they now pay for WESTERN BRANCH, clothing wool of the finest kind. But BOX 27 PORTLAND, OR. the Colonel is hard pushed by Mr. Gere, Sold by Rogers Bros . sole agents for Mc Minnville. of Syracuse, who asked the committee a few days ago to impose the “moderate duty” of $1,000 per ton on mica. The domestic industry has suffered fearfully, Invest vour money in he says, from competition. But if he will look at the treasury reports, he will discover that the value of all the mica and mica waste imported in the year ending June 30, 1888, was only $21,013. To be Happy you should see that Immense Stock of Fine Table —.V. Y. Timee. The Stagg’s Farm of 120 acres, and Pocket Cutlery Just Received at Happiness is the Cure All ! FAIRLAWN!” 1 —i— has been divided up into HODSON’S Mr. Collis P. Huntington, who is some what sensitive on the subject of jobbery and coruption, advises Mr. Calvin S. It is situated Brice to begin his senatorial career by calling into court the editors of newspa opposite the Yam- pers who have charged him with spend | hill county fair ing vast sums of money to secure a seat ground and is a £-• in the senate. Mr. Brice will not be like desirable location ly to take his friend Huntington's advice. I either for resi- market <J His sole claim to the Ohio senatorship, jdences, and about the only one that his bosom ' gardening or fruit friends urged in his behalf, was that lie ranches, and is one-half had spent more money for the party than within any man in Ohio, and was therefore en mile of this city. and dry with beautiful titled to something. Mr. Brice will not High spring water. This bring his check-book in range of a court property will he of justice, you may depend upon it. 5-ACRE TRACTS. •—■ Knives and Forks from 75 cents per set, up. Pocket Cutlery at low prices. Our stock of A Specially Fine Line in Hardware, Tinware, Stoves, Ranges,; Etc. cannot be Excelled in Quality or Price. -------- I--------- In our shop we make everything that can be made from Tin, Sheet Iron and Galvanized Iron, from a Tin Cup to the most Elaborate and Expensive Galvanized Iron Cornice.! . sold in tracts to Garry's Patent Steel Roofing I suit the purchas I er on from $100 to $150 per acre. This property is fast being pur chased. Stiryour- selves and buy a tract. For further particulars call on or address Wm. Galloway, E. E. Goucher, James Agee, McMinnville, Oregon Job Printing ¥ (Of Latest Equipment,) 1 Best that can lie constructed and in which accommodations are for hol ders of First or Second-cpi«» Tiek- ELEGANT DAY COACHES. A Continuous Line connecting with all lines, affordiug direct and unin terrupted service. Pullman .Sleeper reservations can lie secur ed in advance through auy agent ofthe road Tlirililtfll Til’LuK To and from all Points I" “ llrh,l!'iu AmericA, England and Europe can lie purchased at any ticket office of this conmany. Full information concerning rates, time of trains, routes and other details furnished on application to any agent, or A D CHARLTON. Asst General Passenger Agent, (general Oltlce Of the Company, No, 121 First St., Cor. Wallington. Vortan«!, Or. THE YAQUINA ROUTE. á —AND— OREGON DEVELOPMENT COM- PANTS STEAMSHIP UNE. 225 MilcN Shorter—20 hour« I pmm time than by any other route. >$f"First class through passenger and freight line from Portland and all points in the Wil Lunette valley to and from San Fianetaco. Time Schedule (except Sundays). 1-eave Albany. .1:30 pm]l^ave y.qidna C:45 am I .eave Corvallis 1:40 pm l»eaveCorvallhdO:K am Arrive Yaqoina 5:30 pin Ar-ive Albany 11:10 atr O. & C. train« connect at Alb.ru and Coe vallm. The above train» connect at Y aqcima witl> the Oregon Developement Co'«. Line of Hlrnm- nhip« between Yaquii.a and San Francisco. Sailing Date«. FROM YAQUINA Willamette Valley, Tuesday Oct let Saturday, Oct 12tli Wednesday, Oct 23rd FROM KAN FRANCISCO Willamette Valley, Monday Oct 7th F ridav, Oct 18th Tueaday Oct 29th The company reserve« the right to change tailing date« without notice. N • B.~ Paasongers from Portland and all Wfl aniette Valley Point« can make ck.ee conne. tion with the train« of the Y aquina Horn at Albany or Corvallm, and if deatined to San Francisco, should arrange to arrive at Yaqnina the evening before date of sailing. , .T.l*e Oregon Pacific steamboat», on the Willamette River division will leave Port land. south-bound. Monday. Wednesday and Friday at 6 a in. Arrive at Corvallis Tuesday, Thnrsdav and Saturday at 3 .30 p. tn. Leave Corvallis, north-bound. Monday. Wednesday and Friday at X a m Arrive at Portland Tuesday. Thursday and Satur day at 3:30 p. ni On Monday. Wednesday and Friday both north and south-bound boats lie over night at Salem, leaving there at 6 a m. Passenger and freight rate, always the low- e«t For information, apply to Messrs. HUL- MAN A CO., Freight and Ticket Agents, 200 and 2(lS Front street, Portland, Oregon; or to C. C. HOGUE, Acting Gen'). Frt. A Pass. Agt., Oregon l’aniBe 1!. R. Co , Corvallis, Oregon. < H. _______ HASWELL, . Jr., is acknowledged to be th< Best in the World. Three Car Loads Sold L'i i— and Put on This Season. ington. HODSON is Sole Agent for ¿regon and Wash- Ge(-O': Before placing your order for any tiring in tie above lines, give us a call ! O. O HODSON, Third and C Sts., McMinnville. Eurisko Market. j J Send in your orders for the illustrated issue of this paper devoted to the enter- pr sing city of McMinnville. Third Stable, in F Streets. McMinnville. I Now is Your Chance ! The friends of Senator Edmunds do not seem to recover from their astonish ment at his extraordinary action in con I doning and defending the federal offii cials who are protecting Dudley in Indi ana from the punishment which he so richly deserves for his “blocks-of-five letter.” The course of the senator in this action shows that alter all he is no better than bis party. Even his enemy, Blaine, could not have stooped any lower. (unsurpassed 1 PI LLMAM DR AWING ROOM SUFFERS Stop in and see us whether you wish to trade or not. We want to get acquainted with you. J. G. BALLINGER CO. Door ?» ST. PAUL AND CHICAGO. We desire to announce to tlic farmers of Yam hill county that we have opened up a complete line of Agricultural Implements and Farm Ma chinery. No Goods Misrepresented as to Í Tlieir QixSulity. i a It is the DINING CAR ROUTE. It runs Through VESTIBULED TRAINS Every Day in lhe Year to TOURIST SLEEPING CARS The supply ot black walnut is rapidly becoming exhausted, and there is no satisfactory substitute for it in this coun try. No other tree could approach it in value. It is a rapid grower, and will thrive in almost any soil on this conti FOSITIVELT- I nent. It is a handsome, sturdy, vigorous tree, easily grown, because no animal and only one insect feed upon it. The black walnut has a transcendent value but little known, which is that the fine European walnut grows firmly on it, either stock or top-grafted. The hardier i varieties of this finest of nuts from the north of Europe should succeed top grafted on this hardy stock in the North wtaorreu%ed “APHRODITINE" Is S old on a west. It can be made to yield a fortune POSITIVE by those who cultivate it on a large GUARANTEE scale. In twenty years a grove will to cure any form of nervous more than have paid all expense and in disease, or any disorder of the terest on the investment. In fifty years, generative or at present prices, the trees would be gans of either sex whether ar worth at least $20,000 per acre. BEFORE __ „................................ ising from the AFTER I South. ---- A.T----- COMMERCIAL HOUSE, (Formerly Cook House.) McCALL & HOLMAN, ST. LOUIS. AND ALL POINTS WM. HOLL, HIIIB3, ... Proprietor.. ¿a Fresh Meats of all kinds constantly on JE hand. Highest price paid for Butchcr’i W'j stock Dealer in All Kindt st Watches. Jewslr,. Pitted Were Tttir.p S treit . M c M ixxville , O k . Clocks and Spettaclet. McMINNVILLK OR k Watchmaker £ and Jeweler. á