The Telephone=register. (McMinnville, Or.) 1889-1953, October 16, 1890, Image 2

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    BLANKETS COMFORTS COMFORTS BLANKETS
OREGON BLANKETS FROM S3.00 UP.
Great Bargains in Overcoats, Chinchilla Coats and Vests, Rubber Coats, Umbrellas, etc, at KAY & TODD’S.
SPECIAL BARGAINS IN CLOTHING
THE TELEPHONE-REGISTER.
HARDING & HEATH, Publishers.
Take the item of glass; plain, com-
mon window glass, such as you use in
the building of your new house. What
is the tariff you pay upon it under the
McKinley bill? It is:
JERUSALEM THE GOLDEN
DR. TALMAGE’S THIRD SERMON ON
HIS TOUR IN PALESTINE.
Measuring not exceeding
1'ixl.-, inches surface.
ll.-> 41 js-r et. Tlie Famous Brooklyn Divine Describes
not exceeding
the Scene of Christ's Crucifixion—Over­
16x24 inches square .
li. to per et,
One Copy, per year, in advance............... $2 00
exceeding
powering Emotion While on Calvary's
One Copy, aix months in advance............. 100
16x24 iuclies square
135 31 per ct
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
Yes! that is just what it is, if calcu-
Entered at the postoffice at McMinnville lated' ad valorem. That is the tax imj
Oregon, as second-class matter.
posed upon you for daylight in your
new farm house.
T he
R ates of T he T ele ­
are liberal, taking in
consideration the circulation. Single
inch. $1.00; each subsequent inch, $.75.
Special inducements for yearly or scini-
yearly contracts.
advertising
phone -R egister
Does the farmer really understand
what a 135.34 duty means? Suppose
you contemplate building a new house
and you require 200 panes of window
J ob W ork N eatly A nd Q uickly E xecuted glass, and suppose still farther that the
at reasonable rates Our facilities are
the best in Yamhill county and as good duty on glass had to lie paid in kind, or
as any in the state. A complete steam in window glass, yon would have to
plant insures quick work.
buy 470 pau<*s of window glass which
* * *
rx
I
R esolutions of C ondolence and all O rit - would be divided thus: 200 panes
uary Poetry will be charged for at regular would go into your house, the United
advertising rates.
States treasury would get the remain­
A ll C ommunications M ust B e S igned B y ing 270 panes. But as you do not have
the person who sends them, not for pub­
lication. unless unaccompanied by a “non to pay taxes in "kind” the McKinley
dephinie,” but for a guarantee of good bill makes the thing much easier for
faith. No publications will he published you. It makes you pay for 470 panes
unless so signed.
and delivers you 200 panes. The price
A ddress A ll C ommunications . E ither F or of the other 270 panes of glass goes, not
the editorial or business departments, to
T he T elephone -R egister . McMinnville, to the treasury of the United States,
Oregon.
but into the pockets of the window
S ample C opies O f T he T elephone -R egis ­ glass trust, the formation and existence
ter will be mailed to any person in the of which lias l>een almost the daily
United States or Europe, who desires one, reading in the newspapers for the last
free of charge
six months. Of course without this
» * ♦
,p
,r
W e I nvite You To C ompare I iif . T ele ­ shameful tariff" no window trust could
phone -R egister with any other paper
or would exist. Yet, on the floor of the
published in Yamhill county.
senate, it was solemnly declared by­
All 9ubicribcr9 who do not receive their grave senators that tariff ditties should
paper regularly will confer a favor by ini’ and would I m * abolished wherever a
mediately reporting the wwr to thi< other. trust or combination is concerned.
Sacred Hill.
B booklyn , Oct. 12.—This morning Dr 6
Talmage delivered his third sermon on his
recent tour in Palestine in the Academy of
Music in this city. The large building was
crowded and numbers went away disap­
pointed. This was the more significant
because it had been publicly announced
that the same sermon would be preached
in the evening at. the New York academy,
which The Christian Herald bad rented
for that purpose. In spite ot this fact, un­
precedented since the days of Chalmers,
both buildings were crowded to excess,
and many were turned away from the
doors, both morning and evening. Dr.
Talmage must have preached today to
10,000 different persons. The doctor spoke
as follows from the text: “If I forget thee,
O Jerusalem. let my right hand forget her
cunning.”—Psalm cxxxvii, 5.
Paralysis of his best hand, the withering
of its muscles and ncSves, is here invoked
if ths author allows to pass out of mind
the grandeurs of the Holy City where once
he dwelt. Jeremiah, seated by the river
Euphrates, wrote this psalm, and not Da­
vid. Afraid I am of anything that ap­
proaches Imprecation, and yet I can under­
stand how any one who has ever been at
Jerusalem should in enthusiasm of soul
cry out, whether ho bo sitting by the
Euphrates, or the Hudson, or the Thames.
"If I forget thee. O Jerusalem, let my
right hand forget her cunning!” You see
it is a city unlike all others for topography,
for history, for significance, for style of
population, for water works, for ruins, for
towers, for domes, for ramparts, for liter­
ature, for tragedies, for memorable birth­
places, for sepulchers, for conflagrations
and famines, for victories and defeats.
IN JERUSALEM.
1 am here at last in this very Jerusalem,
Thursday, Octolier 16, 1890.
INNOVATIONS.
And yet there is a trust, and window and on a housetop, just after tho dawn of
glass, this indispensible and necessary the morning of December 3, with an old
inhabitant to point out the salient features
article is taxed 135.34 per cent.
of the scenery. “Now,” I said, “where is
This is not the only necessity which Mount Zion?” “Here at your right.”
has been taxed. There is apparently “Where is Mount Olivet.?’’ “In front of
two sides to this tariff bill. Money where you stand.” “Where is the Garden
ot Gethsemane?"
“In yonder valley.”
makes the mare go you know. We “Where is Mount Calvary?” Before he
will segregate the two sides. There is answered I saw it. No unprejudiced
the rich man’s side and tbe jxxir man’s mind can have a moment's doubt as to
side. The rich man’s side of the tariff where it is. Yonder I see a hill in the
shape of a human skull, and tho Bible says
bill is as follows:
that Calvary was the “place of a skull.”
In another column on this page our
renders who so desin* can read tbe ser­
mon delivered by Rev DeWitt Talmage
in New York on Sunday last. This is
a new departure for us. as the matter is
of the same class furnished the great
rich max ' s situ:.
Not only is it skull shaped, but just be­
daily papers. AU the writings of this! Finest cassaniere advanced
25 per ct. neath the forehead of the hill is .i cavern
Broadcloth advanced.................
.20 per ct. that looks like eyeless sockets. Within
eminent divine are copyrighted and Seal skin sacque-» reduced......... 33 per ct. the grotto under it is the shape of the in­
laces advanced
25 per ct. side of a skull. Then tho Bible says that
controlled by a syndicate, who sells Silk
Silk velvet no advance.
Christ was crucified outside the gate, and
them to the newspapers.
The Silk linings no advance,
this is outside the gate, while the site for­
Black «ilk no advance.
merly selected wns inside the gate.
Be
matter is costly and is only found in
FOOR max ’ s sn,L.
I
Imitation seal sacques advanced 130 jierct. sides that, this skull hill was for ages the
substantial newspapers. We are also Cotton
cordurov advanced
114 per ct. place where malefactors were put to death,
negotiating for three columns weekly Cotton laces advanced
50 |KT Ct. and Christ was slain as a malefactor.
Woolens advanced.
The Saviour’s assassination took place
10 per ct.
for a Woman’s Department. This will Cotton velvet advance, I
tOO per ct. beside a thoroughfare along which people
Cotton linings advanced .
2S*.
per
ct,
went
“wagging their heads,” and there is
comprise weekly letters by Marion Har­ Black alpaca advanced
06 per ct. the ancient thoroughfare. I saw at Cairo,
land, Mrs. Frank Leslie, Kate Upson
Egypt, a clay mould of that skull hill,
Clark, Emma Moffett Tyng, Anna Is-, And still the republican leaders who made by tbe late Gen. Gordon, tbe arbiter
of nations. While Empress Helena, 80
:ibel Willis, Lillie Devereaux Blake, have money* by the millions and make years of age, and imposed npon by having
sure of the rich man’s side of the tariff i three crosses exhumed before her dim eyes,
Emma V. Sheridan. (Mrs. Fry) Eliza­
bill, say that tariff is not a tax. Their as though they were the three crosses of
beth Cady Stanton, Marquise Lanza, side is certainly a less tax on them Bible story, selected another site aa Cal­
< »live Thorne Miller, and many other than the poor mau's side is on him. vary, all recent travelers agree that the
one I point out to you was without doubt
noted writers on “Woman” subjects. Not only on the above articles does the the scene of the most terrific and over­
tragedy this planet ever wit­
The latest Paris fashions and many two sides of this bill appear but on va­ whelming
rious others. On coarse linen goods it nessed.
CALVARY.
other features too numerous to mention
places a duty of 50 per cent. These There were a thousand things we wanted
will he produced during the year for goods are tbe ones used by the poorer to see that third day of December, and onr
the benefit of our readers. This de}>art- class of people. On the liner grades of dragoman proposed this and that and the
other journey, bnt I said: ‘Tirst of all
inent will be illustrated Ait h suitable linen goods, those used by the wealth­ show us Calvary. Something might hap­
ier
classes,
a
duty
of
35
per
cent
is
fixed.
pen if we went elsewhere, and sickness or
engravings, and altogether it will be an
This makes a person who is poor and accident might hinder our seeing the
enjoyable department for our lady read­ wants to purchase an imported linen of sacred mount. If we see nothing else we
ers. From those who read it, and are a coarse grade pay 15 per cent more for must see that, and see it this morning.”
Some of us in carriage and some on mule
interested in the subject, we request that privilege than the wealthy man back, we were soon on the way to the most
spot that tbe world has ever seen or
correspondence for publication on all who wants a fine imported linen grade. sacred
ever will see. Coming to the base of the
the matters interesting to the sex.
hill we first went inside tho skull of rocks.
This is protection. Is it fair? Do you
is called Jeremiah’s grotto, for there the
Ladies, watch for this department, as i like the idea of paying more in propor­ It
prophet wrote his book of Lamentations.
it is something you do not see outside tion for a poor article because you an* a The grotto Is thirty-five feet high, and its
and side are malachite, green, brown,
the large Sunday editions of the big poor man than the rich man pays for a top
black, white, red and gray.
metropolitan dailies. With the help of fine article because he is a rich man. Coming forth from those pictured sub­
You are both created equal. One is terraneous passages we begin to climb the
our lady readers we intend to make
asgrxxl as the other, but tin* tariff steep sides of Calvary. As we go up we
see cracks and crevices in the rocks, which
this department of very great interest. makes a difference.
clinched fists at him. Here the -avalry
horses champ their bits and paw the earth
and snort at the smell of the carnage.
Yonder a group of gamblers are pitching
up as to who shall have the coat of the dy­
ing Saviour. There are women almost
dead with grief among the crowd—his
mother and his aunt, and somo whose sor­
rows ho had comforted and whose guilt he
had pardoned. Here a man dips a sponge
into sour wine, and by a stick lifts it to
the hot and cracked lips. The hemorrhage
of the five wounds has done its work.
“IT IS FINISHED.”
The atmospheric conditions are such as
the world saw never before or since. It
was not a solar eclipse, such as astrono­
mers record or we ourselves have seen. It
was a bereavement of the heavens! Dark­
er! until the towers of the temple were
no longer visible. Darker! until tho sur­
rounding hills disappeared. Darker! until
the inscription above the middle cross be­
comes illegible. Darker! until the chin
of the dying Lord falls npon the breast,
and ho sighed with this last sigh the words,
“It is finished!”
As we sat there a silence took possession
of ns, and we thought, this is tho center
from which continents have been touched,
and all the world shall yet bo moved. To­
ward this bill the prophets pointed forward.
Toward this hill the apostles and martyrs
pointed backward. To thia all heaven point­
ed downward. To this with foaming exe­
crations perdition pointed upward. Round
It circles all history, all time, all eternity,
and with this scene painters have covered
the mightiest canvas, and sculptors cut
the richest marble, and orchestras rolled
their grandest oratorios and churches
lifted tlieir greatest doxologies and heaven
bnilt its lugbeet thrones.
THE CAUDEX OF OLIVES.
Unable longer to endure the pressure of
this scene we moved on and into a garden
of olives, a garden which in the right sea­
son is full of flowers, and here is tho re­
puted tomb of Christ. You know the Book
says, "In the midst of tho garden was a
sepulcher.” I think this was the garden
and this the sepulcher. It is shattered of
course. About four steps down we went
into this, which seemed a family tomb.
There is room in it for about five bodies.
We measured it anil found it about eight
feet high, and nine feet wide and fourteen
feet long. The crypt where I think
our Lord slept was seven feet long.
I think that there once lay the king
wrapped in his last slumber. On some
of these reeks the Roman government
set its seal. At tho gate of this mausoleum
on the first Easter morning tbe angels
rolled the stone thundering down the hill.
Up these steps walked the lacerated feet
of the conqueror, and from these heights
he looked off upon the city that had cast
him out, and upon the world he had come
to redeem, and at the heavens through
which he would soon ascend.
But we must hasten back to the city.
There are stones in the wall which Solo­
mon had lifted. Stop here and see a start­
ling proof of the truth of prophecy. In
Jeremiah, thirty-first chapter and fortieth
verse, it is said that Jerusalem shall be
built through the ashes. What ashes,
people have been asking.
Were those
ashes jnst put into the prophecy to fill up?
No! The meaning has been recently dis­
covered. Jerusalem is now being bnilt
out in a certain direction where t he ground
has been submitted to chemical analysis,
and it has been found to Ire the ashes cast
out from the sacrifices ot the ancient tem­
ple—ashes of wood and ashes of bones of
animals. There are great mounds ot ashes,
accumulation of centuries of sacrifices. It
has taken all these thousands of years to
discover what Jeremiah meant when he
said. “Behold the days shall come, saith
tho Lord, that tbs city shall be built to tbe
Lord from tho tower of Hananeel unto tbe
gate of the corner, and the whole valley of
tho dead bodies and of the ashes.” The
people of Jerusalem are at this very time
fulfilling that prophecy. One handful of
that ashes on which they are building is
enough to prove the divinity of the Script­
ures! Pass by tho place where the corner
stone of the ancient temple was laid three
thousand years ago by Solomon.
Explorers have been digging, and they
found that corner stone seventy-five feet
beneath the surface. It is fourteen feet
long, and three feet eight inches high, and
beautifully cut and shaped, cud near it. was
an earthen jar that was supposed to have
contained the oil ot consecration used at
thoceremony of laying the cornerstone.
Yonder, from a dept hot forty feet, a signet
ring has been brought, up inscribed with
tbe words “Haggai.theSonof Shebnaiah,”
showing it belonged to the Prophet Hag-
gai. and to that seal ring he refers in his
prophecy, saying, “I will make thee as a
signet.” I walk further on fa- under
ground, and I find myself in Solomon's
stables, and see the places worn in tbe
•tone pillars by the halters of some of his
twelve thousand horses. Further on. look
at the pillars on which Mount Moriah was
built. Yon know that the mountain was
too small for the temple, aud so they built
the mountain out on pillars, and I saw
eight ot those pillars, each one strong
enough to hold a mountain.
splendor that shall eclipse lorever all that
David or Solomon saw.
FROM A HOUSETOP.
But I must get back to tbe housetop
where I stood early this morning, and be­
fore the sun sets, that I may catch a wider
vision of what the city now is and once
was. Standing here on tho housetop I
see that the city was bnilt for military
safety. Some old warrior, I warrant, se­
lected the spot. It stands on a hill 2,600
feet 3bovo the level of the sea, and deep
ravines on three sides do the work of mili­
tary trenches. Compact as no other city
was compact. Only three miles journey
round, and the three ancient towers, Hip-
picus, Phasaelus, Mariamne, frowning
death upon the approach of all enemies.
As I stood there on the housetop in the
midst of the citv I ¡said, “O Lord, reveal to
me this metropmis of the world that I may
see it as it once appeared.” No one was
with me, for there are some things yon can
see more vividly with no one but God and
yourself present. Immediately the mosque
of Omar, which has stood for ages on
Mount Moriah, the site of the ancient tem­
ple, disappeared, and the most honored
structure ot all the ages lifted itself in the
light, and I saw it—the temple, theaneient
temple! Not Solomon’s temple, but some­
thing grander than that. Not Zerubbabel’s
temple, but something more gorgeous than
that. It was Herod’s temple, built for the
oue purpose of eclipsing all its architect­
ural predecessors.
There it stood, covering nineteen acres,
and ten thousand workmen had been forty-
six years in building it. Blaze of magnifi­
cence! Bewildering range ot porticos and
ten gateways anil double arches and Cor­
inthian capitals chiseled into lilies and
acanthus. Masonry beveled and grooved
into such delicate forms that it seemed to
tremble in the light. Cloisters with two
rows of Corinthian columns, royal arches,
marble steps pure as though mode out of
frozen snow, carving t hat seemed like a
panel of the door of heaven let down and
set in, the facade of the building on shoul­
ders at each end lifting the glory higher
and higher, and walls wherein gold put
out the silver, and the carbuncle put out
the gold, and the jasper put out the car­
buncle, until in the changing light they
would all seem to come back again into a
chorus of harmonious color. The temple!
The temple! Doxology in stone! Anthems
soaring iu rafters ot Lebanon cedar! From
side to side anil from foundation to gilded
pinnacle the frozen prayer of all ages!
THE CITY OF GOD.
From this housetop on tho December af-
ternoon we look out f: another direction,
and I see the king’s palace, covering a hun-
dred and sixty thousand square feet, three
rows of windows illumining the in­
side brilliance, the hallway wainscoted
with .-.11 styles of colored marbles sur­
mounted by aralxtsque, vermilion and
gold, looking »¡own on mosaics, music of
waterfalls in the garden outside answering
the music of the harps thrummed by deft
fingers inside; I enisters over which princes
and princesses leaned, and talked to kings
and queens ascending the stairway. O
Jerusalem, Jerusalem! Mountain city!
City of God! Joy of tbe whole earth!
Stronger than Gibraltar and Sebastopol,
surely it. never could have been captured!
But while standing there on the house­
top that December afternoon I hear tbe
crash ot the twenty-three mighty sieges
which have come against Jerusalem in the
ages post. Yonder is the pool of Hezekiah
and Siloam, but again and again were
those waters reddened with human gore.
Yonder are the towers, but again andagain
they fell. Yonder are the high walla, but
again and again they were leveled. To rob
the treasures from her temple and palace
and dethrone this queen city of the earth
all nations plotted. David taking the
throue at Ilebron decides that he must
have Jerusalem for his capital, and coming
up from the south at the head of two hun­
dred and eighty thousand troops he capt­
ures it. Look, here comes another siege of
Jerusalem!
The Assyrians tinder Sennacherib, en­
slaved nations at his chariot wheel, having
taken two hundred thousand captives in
his one campaign; Phoenician cities kneel­
ing at his feet, Egypt trembling at the
flash of his sword, comes npon Jerusalem.
Look, another siege! The armies ot Baby­
lon under Nebuchadnezzar come down anil
take a plunder from Jcrsusalem such as no
other city ever had to yield, and ten thou­
sand of hercitiz.etts trudge off into Baby­
lonian bondage. Ixtok, another siege! and
Nebuchadnezzar and his hosts by night go
through a breach of tho Jerusalem wall,
and the morning finds some of them seat­
ed triumphant in the temple, and what
they could not take away liecause too
heavy they break up—the brazen sea, and
the t wo wreathed pillars Jachin and Boaz.
THE SIEGES OF JERUSALEM.
Another siege of Jerusalem, and Pvmpev
with the battering rams which a hundred
men would roll buck, and then, at full run
forward, would bung against the wall of
the city, and catapults hurling the rocks
upon the people, left twelve thousand dead
and the city in tbe clutch of the Roman
war eagle. Look, a more desperate siege
of Jerusalem! Titus with his tenth legion
iw Mount of Olives, ami ballista arranged
on the principle of the pendulum to swing
great bowlders against the walls and tow­
ers, and miners digging under the city
making galleries of beams underground
which, set on fire, tumbled great masses of
houses and human beings into destruction
and death. All is taken now but the tem­
ple, and Titns, the conqueror, wants to
save that unharmed, 'out a soldier, contra­
ry to orders, hurls a torch into the temple
anil it is consumed. Many strangers were
in the city at the time and ninety-seven
thousand captives were taken, and Jo­
sephus says one million one hundred thou­
sand lay dead.
Jerusalem, hearing or the slcxness or Ring
Richard, his chief enemy, sends him his
own physician, and from the wails of Je­
rusalem, seeing King Richard afoot, sends
him a horse. With all the world looking
on the armiesof Europe come within sight
of Jerusalem.
At the first glimpse of the city they fall
on their faces in reverence and then lift an­
thems of praise. Feuds and hatreds
among themselves were given up, and
Raymond and Tancred, the bitterest rivals,
embraced while the armies looked on.
Then the battering rams rolled, and the
catapults swung, and the swords thrust,
and the carnage raged. Godfrey of Bouil­
lon is tbe first to mount the wall, and the
Crusaders, a cross on every shoulder or
breast, having taken the city, march bare­
headed and barefooted to what they sup­
pose to be the Holy Sepulcher, and kiss
the tomb. Jerusalem the possession of
Christendom. But Saladin retook the
city, and for the last four hundred years it
has been in possession of cruel and pollut­
ed Mohammedanism!
An Especially Fine Line of
Over Coats, Clothing,
A CRUSADE NEEDED NOW.
Anot her crusade is needed to start for
Jerusalem, a crusade in this Nineteenth
Century greater than all those of the past
centuries put together.
A crusade in
which you and I will march. A crusade
without weapons of death, but only the
sword of the Spirit. A crusade that will
make not a single wound, nor start one
tear of distress, nor incendiarizeone home­
stead. A crusade of Gospel Peace! And
the Cross again be lifted on Calvary, not
as once an instrumentof pain, but a signal
of invitation, and tbe mosque of Omar
shall give place to a church of Christ, and
Mount Zion become the dwelling place not
of David, but ot David’s Lord, and Jerusa­
lem, purified of all its idolatries, and tak­
ing back the Christ she once cast out,
shall be made a worthy type of that heav­
enly city which Paul styled “the mother of
us all,” and which St. John saw, “the holy
Jerusalem descending out of heaven from
God.” Through its gates may we all en­
ter when our work is done, and in its tem­
ple, greater than all the earthly temples
piled in one, may we worship.
Russian pilgrims lined all the roads
around tho Jerusalem we visited last win­
ter. They had walked hundreds of miles,
and their feet bled on the way to Jerusa­
lem. Many of them had spent their last
farthing to get there, and they had left
some of those who started with them dy­
ing or dead by the roadside. An aged wo­
man. exhausted with the long way, begged
her fellow pilgrims not to let her die until
she bad seen the Holy City. As she came
to the gate of the city she could not take
another step, but she was carried in, and
then said, "Now hold my head up till I
can look upon Jerusalem,” and her head
lifted, she took one look, and said: “Now
I die content; I have seen it! I have seen
it !” Some of us before we reach the heaven­
ly Jerusalem may be as tired as that, but
angels of mercy will help us in, and one
glimpse of the temple of God and the
Lamb, and one good look at the “king in
his beauty,” will more than compensate
for all the toils and tears and heartbreaks
of the pilgrimage. Hallelujah! Amen!
BOOTS AND SHOES,
w m n ■■ nt
DRESS AND SEASONABLE
I
Is now Displayed and Offered to the Inspec­
tion of th(‘ Public.
A Comparison of the Goods and Prices
wil Convince the Most Skepti­
cal that we Carry the Best
and Most Complete
Stock to Select from.
And our terms arc1 (njualiy or more favor­
able than others when quality is considered.
We do not claim to sell cheaper than any
one else, for those are a lot of auction and
inferior goods, which we do not try to com­
pete with.
Standing of Churches In the Unlta-t States.
The standing of the churches in the
United States at the present time is repre­
sented as follows by The New York Inde­
pendent:
Churches. Ministers. Co”«“nF
Methodists................. 54,711
Roman Catholics... rjhi
Baptists.................
Presbyteriaus........
Lutherans..............
Congregational ists.
Episcopalians........
48,371
13,610
7,911
5,ar
31.765
8.8Á»
3’2,843
9,974
1.0’2
4,640
4,100
4.980,240
4.(576,292
4.292.291
1,229,012
1,086.048
491,985
480.17«
Pittsburg is a cjty of bridges. No less
than fourteen of these structures, it is said,
span the Monongahela and Allegheny riv-
era within tho city limits, and three more
are projected.
GOODS
A. J. APPERSON.
,
i
'
i
I A neut, unadorned marble cross has been
! erected over the remains of Wilkie Collins,
in the northern isirt of Kensal Green ceme-
I tery.
Professor Charles F. Holder has written
a life of Charles Darwin. It is to be the
Í first of a series on the leaders in science.
Men who cannot pay the ordinary ex­
penses of their households have no right to
belong to high cost clubs.
THE YAQUINA ROUTE,
FARMERS SOW WHEAT.
2,000
POUNDS
BLUE
STONE
DEVELOPMENT COM­
OREGON
PANY’S STEAMSHIP LINE.
I think were made by the convulsions of
nature when Jcetis died. On tho hill lay a
FARMERS ARE YOU PLEASED9
Tlie T elepho N'K-B egister wauts limestone rock, white, but tinged with
The McKinley bill is now in effect I equal rights to all. If we are to be tax­ crimson, the white so suggestive of purity
and tbe crimson of sacrifice that I said,
225 Miles Shorter—20 hours less
and the farmers of this section can, in ■ ed let us all be taxed alike. There is no “That stone would be beautifully appro­
time than by any other route.
reason
why
the
farmer
should
lx*
taxed
a little while, see whether or no, they
priate for a memorial wall in my church,
THE
MOSQUE
OF
OMAK.
KO" First claa« through passenger and freight
are protected, as the republican party! in excess of the manufacturer. Ifwej now building in America; and the stone
line from Portland and all pointe in the Wil-
Here we cuter the mosque of Omar, a
now being brought on camel's hack from
»ays they are by this most monstrous ; are to receive protection let the farmer Sinai
lnnu tte valley to and from San Fiancieco.
across the desert, when put under it, throne of Mohammedanism, where we are
imposition called the McKinley bill. receive the same protection as the man- ’ how significant of the law and tbe gospel! met at the door by officials who bring
Time Schedule (except Sundays).
The fanners are the rock upon which : ufacturer. There is no justice in protec-' And these lips of stone will continue to slippers that we must put on before wc
Leave Albany. .1:30 pm;Leave Yaqnina 6:45 a:n
this government stands and their pro-i tion unless we are all protected. If the I speak of justice and mercy long after all take a step further, lest our feet pollute
LeaveCorva
11181:40 pm'LeaveCorvallM0:35 3m
living lips have uttered their last the sacred places. A man attempting to
Arrive Yaquina5:30 pm| Ar.dve Albany 11:10 an:
ductions are the necessities of life. Ifj protective tariff is a good idea protect, our
go in without these slippers would be
message.”
O.
A
C.
train»
connectât Albany and Cor­
anyone should 1» protected they are! us so that not one single solitary pro-' So I rolled it down the hill and trans­ struck dead on the spot. These awkward
vallis.
duction
of
foreign
countries
can
lie
sold
I
sandals
adjusted
ns
well
ns
we
could,
we
The above trains connect at Y aquina with
ported it. When t hat day comes for which
the ones. But does this bill protect,
the Oregon Developeinont ('o’s. Line of Steam­
led to where wc see a l-ock with an
them? Is protection the ideal way ol: in our markets. The .American people ' many of you have prayed—the dedication are
ships between Yaquina and San Francisco.
opening in it, through which, no doubt,
of
tbe
Brooklyn
Tabernacle,
the
third
im
­
N. B.—Passengers from Portland and all Wil-
increasing the prosperity ot this coun­ will then tight it out amongst them-1 mense structure we have reared in this the blood of sacrifice in the ancient temple
amette Valley Points can make close connec­
try? Does it make progress? A few selves and there will be a survival of city, and that makes It somewhat difficult, rolled down ami away. At vast expense
tion with the trains of the Y aquina R oute at
questions like the above should be con­ the fittest. Americans will »símpete being the third structure, a work such as tbe mosque has been built, but so somber
Albany or Corvallis, and if destined to San
is the place I am glad to get through it,
no
other
church
was
ever
called
on
to
un
­
Francisco.-should arrange to arrive at Yaqnina
against
Americans
and
the
ix*st
man
!
sidered fully and the prices of goods
THE
SIEGE
OF
THE
CELSADEBS.
the evening before date of sailing.
dertake—we invite yon in tho main en­ and take off the cumbrous slippers and
purchased under the old tariff should will win.
Bnt
looking
from
this
house
top,
the
step
into
the
clear
air.
trance of that building to look upon a me­
Sailing Dates.
<-
«
«
siege
that
most
absorbs
us
is
that
of
the
Yonder
is
a
curve
of
stone
which
is
i>art
lie noted and those under the new. The
morial wall containing the most suggest­
Tlie;Stcamer Willamette Valley will sail
The only difference Ix-tweeu absolute ! ive and solemn and tremendous antiquities of a bridge which once reached from crusaders. England and France and all
farmers of Yamhill county still sells
FROM YAQUINA.
FROM 8AN FRANCISCO
protection and absolute free trade with ; ever brought together—this, rent with the Mount Moriah to Mount Zion, and over it Christendom wanted to capture the Holy
Ills wheat in the Liverpool market-
4th,
October 13th,
all the tuitions is, that uniter absolute earthquake at the giving of the law at David walked or rtxie to prayers in the Sepulcher and Jerusalem, then in posses I October
October 22nd,
He pays the freight bill in every in­
Here is the walling place ot the sion of the Mohammedans, under the com­ October 18th,
October 27th.
protection the American nation will Sinai, the other rent at. the crnsAfixion on temple.
October 31st.
Jews, where for centuries, almost perpetu­ mand of one of the loveliest, bravestand
Calvary.
stance to ship owners who send their
i
trade with itself and it will lie practic­
ally, during the »laytime whole genera­ mightiest men that ever lived; for justice
WHERE THE CROSS OF CHRIST STOOD.
Passenger and freight rates always tbe low­
ships here in ballast for a cargo of
ally free trade in America. With abso­ It is impossible for you to realize what tions of the Jews have stood putting their must be done him though he was a Mo­ est. For infoimarion, apply to Messrs HUL-
wheat. They can not bring in foreign lute free trade the nations of tlie earth our emotions were as we gathered, a group head or lips against the svall of what was hammedan — glorious Saladin! Against MANifcCO., Freight and Ticket Agents, 200
products in exchange for the wheat ow­
men and women, all saved by tbe blood I ouce Solomon's temple. It was one of the him came the armies of Europe, under and 202 Front street, Portland, Oregon; A>r to
will trade with each other anil will re­ of
C. C. HOGUE, 9
of the Lamb, on a bluff of Calvary, just saddest and most solemn and impressive Richard Cceur de Lion, king of England;
ing to the excessive duty, so come here
I ever witnessed to see scores of Philip Augustus, king of France; Tancred, Acting Gen’l. Frt. A Pass. Agt., Oregon Pacific
in ballast and the fanner pays the! ceive for the goods the actual cost of I wide enough to contain three crosses. I scenes
R.
M
Co
,
Corval'is,
Oregon.
production plus a small profit. The , said to my family and friends: “I think these descendants of Abraham, with tears Ravmond. G-jdfrev and other valiant men. 6
C. H. HASWELL, Jr.,
freight on his wheat from Liverpool human race will be as one family. The here is where stood the cross of the impeni­ rolling down their cheeks and lips trem­ marching ou through fevers and plagues - Gen
’l. Frt. A P jss . Agt., Oregon Development
here, from here to Liverpool. He must |
tent burglar, and there the cross of the bling with emotion, a book of psalms open and battle charges and sufferings as in­
(> . 'lontgomery street, San Francisco. CaJ.
same relation will exist between Amer-1 miscreant, and here between, I think, stood before them, bewailing the l-uin of the an­ tense as the world ever saw. Saladin in
do this; vessel owners will not send a ‘
ica and France that now exists Ix,*tween the cross on which all our hopes depend.” cient temple and the captivity of their
ship from England to Portland fora!
As I opened the nineteenth chapter of John race, and crying to God for the restoration
cargo one way. Do you think that | Polk and Yamhill counties. Each pro­ to read a chill blast struck the hill and a of the temple in all its original splendor.
ducer will receive proportionately the I cloud hovered, the natural solemnity im­ Most affecting scene! And such a prayer
the owners of vessels would charge as!
same gain. As it is now under the pres­ pressing the spiritual solemnity. I read a as that, century after century, I am sure
much for freighting wheat if their ves-i
x.iC:
ent system of tariff no one nianufuctur-1 little, but broke down. I defy any emo­ God will answer, anil in some way the de­
«els came here loaded? No.
parted grandeur will return, or something
„
w
I | er or producer receives the same eom- j tional Christian man sitting upon Gol­ better.
ir ..
1
looked
over
the
shoulders
of
gotha to read aloud and with unbroken
If the protective tariff' protects, you! peusation for his labor. The tariff' as it ! voice, or with any voice at all, the whole somo of them and saw that they were read­
exists
makes
a
hlliy
country
of
a
vast
1
of that account in Luke and John, of which ing from the mournful psalm1! of David,
want it to protect you, do you not?
these sentences are a fragment; "They took while I have been told that this is th?
is unequal.
Docs it? That is the question for you' plain. Everything
■
Jesus and led him away, and he, bearing litany which some chant:
W
W
W
to decide yourself, and whichever way
For tbe temple that ties desolate.
in order that we all be treated alike his cross, went forth into a place called the
We sit in solitude and mourn;
1
you decide let your votes be cast in the i wc say give us alwolute free trade or ab-! place of a skull, where they crucified him
For tho palace that is destroyed,
,
«lection of 1892. The democratic party solute protection. With absolute pro-: and two others with him, on either side
U*e
sit
in
solitude
sad
mourn
;
;
one, and Jesus in the midst;” "Behold thy
is pronounced in its warfare against the1
For
the
walls
that
are
overthrown,
tection we will only receive tbe produc-; mother!” “I thirst,” ‘ This day shalt thou
We sit in solitude anil mourn •
tariff and its battle cry is tariff seform. i tions and advantages of the United be with me in Paradise,” "Father, forgive
!
For our majesty that is departe»l,
them, they know not wliat they do;” “If it
We sit in solitude and mourn:
For our great nren that lie dead.
To illustrate the workings of the new States, with absolute free trade we will' be possible, let this cup pass from me ”
What sighs, what sobs, what tears, what
We sit in solitude and mourn:
tariff framed by McKinley, let us call have the productions of the earth to tempests
For priests who have stumbled.
of
sorrow,
what
surging
oceans
sort
over
and
wc
can
choose
the
fittest.
your attention to several little items
We sit in solitude and mourn.
of agony in those utterances!
which effect you. farmers, every one of We will have the best of all things. Of While we sat there the whole scene came I think at that prayer Jerusalem will
the two idea“ absolute free trade is tlie , before us. All around the top and the come again to more than its ancient mag­
you.
I
sides and the foot of the hill a mob raged. nificence; it may not be precious stones
best.
ville, Oreg’on..
Jhev gnash their teeth ami shake their ; and architectural majestv. bnt in a moral
This Immense Quantity of
VITROIL was Purchased at
the very Lowest Price for Cash.
IT MUST BE SOLD!
Farmers should call and get
their supply at the McMinn­
ville Pharmacy, where
MONEY CAN BE SAVED.
S. HOWORTH & CO..
E’iia.rma.centica.l O12.ezn.ists.
SCHOOL « BOOKS e P ortlands G reat I ndustrial E xposition I
AND SCH OL SUPPLIES.
THE LARGEST STOCK IN THE COUNTY
AT THE LOWEST PRICES; AT
HEWITT BROS’ BOOK STORE,
OPENS SEPT. 25.
1890
CLOSES OCT. 25.
Signor Liberati’x Millitary Band of Fifty Selected Musician» will furnish the
music. Six and one half acres of floor since filled to overflowing with the won-
dera of this wonderful age. A world of Mechanics in Miniature. Not to visit
this Great Exposition and view its wonders in every department of art and sci­
ence will be to miss an opportunity such as ha« never hern presented to the peo-
pie of thl coast before.
THE FAT AND DOMESTIC STOCK DEPARTMENT
W ill open Sept. 25th and close Oct. 2d. $5,500 is offered in cash premiums in
this department. Stock department open to visitors from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Ex­
position from 1 p. m. to until 10 p. m. One admission ticket admits to both.
Price, adults, 50 ct«; children 25 c-ts. Reduced rates on all transportation line«
leading to Portland.
For information address.
E. W. ALLEN. SujM. and Sec.