THE TELEPHONE-REGISTER THE AMERICAN LOCOMOTIVE. Twenty-seven locomotives have just 11»ecn completed at the Baldwin Loco STRONG DISCOURSE PREACHED BY ! motive works, Philadelphia, and they REV. T. DE WITT TALMAGE. are to be shipped to New South Wales, | Australia. This is one of the largest Baleful Amusements th© Subject — A SUBSCRIPTION BATES. foreign orders ever filled by the Bald­ Great Concours® Present—The Speak­ one Copy, per year. Inadvance........ 00 ‘ >r:e Copy, aix months in advance.... 1 00 win works, and coming from an Aus­ er Specifies Amusements That Are tralian province under tho dominion of Harmful and Thos*' That Are Not. (¡real Britain, is very significant. These N ew Y ork , March 15.—The series of ser­ Entered at the pootoflke nt McMinnville twenty-seven locomotives will be used mons Dr. Talmage is preaching in this city | Oregon, as second-class matter. on a railroad owned and operated by and Brooklyn on “The Plagues of the the government. Heretofore the Eng- Cities” is attracting general attention. At ths morning service in Brooklyn and 1^- gf’vernmcnt roads were mainly «at Tmt AltvrKTieiNO It.TCH or T.m the evening services held under the riiosr-ltKoisTKR are liberal, taking in supplied with English locomotives. auspices of The Christian Herald, in this consideration the < irculation. Single The contract for the iron monsters city, the number of persons who come to inch. $1.00- each sub-o.|iient inch. $.7.\ Special inducements for yearly or *ei:ii- was made last fall and the last one was hear the sermons is far larger than either the buildings can accommodate. The j early contracts. finished in February. Ten of them are of sermon to-day, which is the fourth of the J ob W ork N eatly A xi . ki . y lixr.* t ted passenger locomotives built on the or­ series, is on “Baleful Amusements.” The at reasonable rates Onr facilities are dinary American plan, and are espec­ text was II Samuel, ii, 14: “Let the young the lrest in Yamhill county ant) as good mon now arise and play before us.” a« any in the state A .iiniptet'* -team ially designed for runs on heavy grades There are two armies encamped by the plant insures quick work. and over sharply curved tracks. The pool of Gibeon. The time hangs heavily « ■> - * * English locomotive is not so well adap ­ on their hands. One army proposes a game K h - o L vtios * or ( oxdoi .::-.. t *.xn, .ij. Ouir- uary Poetry will bo charged for at regular ted for mountain-climbing and curve­ of sword fencing. Nothing could be more advertising rates. turning as are the one* made at the healthful and innocent. The other army accepts the challenge. Twelve men against A ll C ommvxicatioxh M i st 1! e S iic . fi > B y Baldwin works. These fen passenger twelve men, the sport opens. But some­ the person who semis them, not for pul>- engines will each weigh about thirty thing went adversely. Perhaps one of the licalion. unless unaccompanied by a "non swordsmen got an unlucky clip, or in some tie plume,” but for a guarantee of good tons, exclusive of the tender, which, way had his ire aroused, and that which faith. No publications will be published loaded, will weigh the same. The opened in sportfulness ended in violence, unless so signed. freight locomotives are of the heaviest each one taking his contestant by the hair, . * . Ai'i>Hi>s A ll Coji'ifsit atiox -. B ithex F or and strongest build, and, with tender and then with the sword thrusting him in the editorial or business departments, to attached, will each weigh from eighty the side, so that that which opened in in­ T he TEi.ErnoxE-BccisTEr.. McMinnville, fun ended in the massacre of all the to eighty-five tons. The cost of the nocent Oregon. twenty-four sportsmen. AVas there ever a American made locomotive is from letter illustration of what was true then, S ample C otíes Or Tin: T eleciioxe -R eois - $K000 to $12,000, Those destined for and is true now, that that which is inno­ ri:r. will be mailed to any person ill the Uniteti States or Europe, who ili-sire* one, ’ Australia will I m * sold to the govern­ cent may be made destructive? AV bat of a worldly nature is more im­ free of charge ment there for about *10,000 apiece, the portant and strengthening and innocent * W e I nvite Y ou T o C ompare T he T ele ­ sale aggregating over *250,000. There than amusement, and yet what has count­ phone -R egister with any other paper has been a lively competition among ed more victims? I have no sympathy with published in Yamhill county. straitjacket religion. This is a very English ship-owners to secure a bright world to me, and I propose to do all the contract for carrying this valuable I can to make it bright for others. All euhecribere who do not receive their cargo from Philadelphia to New South YOrTH’S SPORTIVENESS SHOULD NOT BE SUP­ paper regularly will confer a favor by im­ PRESSED. mediately reporting the tame to tliit ofiice. Wales. A big 5000 ton steamer has | I never could keep step to a «lead march. come to take the locomotives to tlicir A book years ago issued says t hat a Chris­ place of usefulness. A member of the tian man has a right to some amusements. Baldwin firm said about the contract: For instance, if he comes home at night Thursday. March “This is a large order for a foreign coun­ weary from his work, and feeling in need recreation, puts on his slippers, and try, but we send locomotives to ail parts of goes into his garret and walks lively The difficulty which New Jersey is of the glolw using railroads to any ex­ round the floor several times there can be having in convicting her murderers tent. We have them in Australia now, no harm in it. I believe the church of suggests that it would l>e almost a« safe God has made a tremendous mistake in a Held of operation for Jack th« Ripper but mainly on roads owned by private trying to suppress the sportfulness of corporations. We have had contracts youth and drive out from men their love a« the heart of Txmdoii. i to build IO) for a company in this coun- of amusement. If God ever implanted in us he implanted this desire. Lodge is put down among the “pret­ j try. We turn out three complete loco­ anything But instead of providing for this demand ty” men of the late congress. But like motives a day, having made this year of our nature, the church of God has, for sime more of these political Adonises, over 900.” the main part, ignored it. As in a riot, the mayor plants a battery at the end of the under tlie test of “handsome is as hand­ street, and has it fired off so that every­ It makes us smile to sec the Italian some does,” he becnm* as ugly II« a thing is cut down that happens to stand in papers of the I'nitcd States threaten mud fence. range, the good as well as the bad, so war liecause the people of New < »¡leans the there are men in the church who plant The their batteries of condemnation and fire Mr. Blaine is the proud possessor of a kil’eal eleven Italian a.*sas*ins testimonial endorsing the reciprocity people killed were a disgrace to any away indiscriminately. Everything is con­ But my bible commends those treaty with Brazil and hoping that country, and Italy should feel pleased demned. who use the world without abusing it, and similar ones may lie negotiated with that the disgusting job was done by in the natural world God has done every­ other South American countries, which someone liesides herself. This class of thing to please aud amuse us. In poetic figure we sometimes speak of natural ob­ is signed by more than 20D New York people are a dishonor to any country, jects as being in pain, but it is a mere merchantsand importer*. representing and if Italy demand-reparation lieeause fancy. Poets say the clouds weep, but of their Mng citizen* of that country, an invested capital of more than siíü, - they never yet shed a tear; and the winds she simply publishes ta the world that sigh, but they never did have any trouble; iMio.ono. i her citizens are below the average, and that the storm howls, but it never lost its temper. The world is a rose, «and the llenry Watterson is rejMirted a« kiv - morally. WarJ with Italy would be universe a garland. ing that Gg>-. Hilll is “a good organiz­ «imble pastime for the I'nited State«, And I am glad to know that in all our er” and “a bright, level headed man," and if Italy care« for the live« of her cities there are plenty of places where we but that“lieis not an orator or bebater." citizens she had better let th" matter may find elevated, moral entertainment. But all honest men and good women will Major McKinley and hi- «'accessor in drop. People must obe our laws or agree with me in the statement that one erf sutler the consequence«, In this case the worst plagues of these cities is corrupt eongress, Mr. Warwick, do not agree witli Mr. Watterson. The democrats they did not, and through a corrupt amusement. Multitudes have gone down the blasting influence never to rise. will not have in the next senate a read­ jury they were discharged and the under If we may judge of what is going on in ier or more effective debater than Davi.l people rose ami saw that justiiv was many of the places of amusement by the done through lynch law. B. Hill. Sodomic pictures on board fences and in HARDING & HEATH. Publishers. An English naturalist who put in two years at a boarding house, spent the next five in tracing the liedbug back to his native lair. He found per­ fectly authentic information to prove that the insect existed and was full of business in the year 120 II. ('. He was even found in the eamps of the army, and no war fleet was deemed lilted out without a lilwral sprinkling. Superficial persons hasten to (li.-covcr a parallel between the killing of the Ma fia murderers in New Orleans and the Rock Springs ma<-acrc of Chinese. They have nothing in common. The victims of the Rock Springs massacre were not criminals. They wen» inof­ fensive, law-abiding citizens, assailed by persons belonging to much the same social order as the Alalia thugs them­ selves. That outrage was condemned and disavowed not only by the govern­ ment, but by all good citizens. It is probable that the only persons who de­ fended it are now found denouncing the extirpation of the Alalia as an iin- justifiable outrage.— Oregonian. show anew" comer ' thing that could make her happy; and Oh, no, nd. They went back from the then, as though hounded by an evil spirit, house of God, and that night, though their Still farther. Those amusemuats are he would go out to the enflaming cup and victim lay in Oakwood cemetery, I was wrong which lead you into expenditure be­ the house of shame, like a fool to the cor­ told that they blasphemed, and they drank, and they gambled, and there was not one yond your means. Money spent in recrea­ rect ion of the stocks. less customer in all the houses of iniquity. A DEATHBED ECENK. tion is not thrown away. It is all folly for I was summoned to his deathbed. 1 This destroyed man was a Samson in phys us to come from a place of amusement feel­ ing that we have wasted our money and hastened. I entered the room I found ical strength, but Delilah sheared him, and time. You may by it hare made an in him, to my surprise, lying in full everyday the Philistines of evil companionship dug vestment worth more than the transaction dress on the top of the couch. I put out ¡ 1 his eye* out and threw him into the prison that yielded you hundreds or thousands of my hand. He grasped it excitedly and of evi? habite. But in the hour of his death dollars. But how many properties have said, “Sit down, Mr. Talmage, right there.” he rose up and took hold of the two pil­ I sat down. IT« said: “Last night I saw lared curses of God against drunkenness been riddled by costly amusements. The first time I ever saw the city—it was my mother, who has been dead twenty and uncleanness, and threw himself tar­ the city of Philadelphia—I was a mere lad. years, and she sat just where you sit now. i ward, until down upon him and his com­ I stopped at a hotel, and I remember in-t he It was no dream. I was wide awake. | panions there came the thunders of an eventide one of these men plied me with There was no delusion in the matter. 1 eternal catastrophe. his infernal art. He saw I was green. He saw her just as plainly as T see you. Wife , Again, any amusement that gives you a wanted to show me the sights of the town. I wish you would take the»e strings off of ( disteste for domestic life is bad. How He painted the path of sin until it looked me. There are strings spun all around my [ many bright domestic circles have been like emerald; but I was afraid of him. I body. I wish yon would take them off* of i broken up by sinful amusemente! The father went off. the mother went off, the shoved back from the basilisk—I made up me.” I saw it was delirium. “Oh,” replied his wife, “my dear, there child went off. There are today the frag my mind he was a basilisk. I rememlier ments before me of blasted households. Oh, is nothing 1 here, there is nothing there. ” how hQ wheeled his chair round in front of me, and with a concentrated and diabolical He went on, and said: “Just where you sit, if you have wandered away, I would like to effort attempted to destroy my soul; but Mr. Talmage, my mother sat. She said to charm you back by the sound of that one there were good angels in the air that me, ‘Henry. I do wish you would do bet­ word, “home.” Do you not know that night. It was no good resolution on my ter.’ I got out of bed, put my arms around you have but little more time to give to do­ part, but it was the all encompassing grace her, and said: ‘Mother, I want to do bet­ mestic welfare? Do you not see, father, of a good God that delivered me. Beware! ter. I have lieen trying to do better. that your children are soon to go out into beware! oh, young man. “There i 4 a way Won’t you help me to do better? You the world, and all the influence for good that seemeth right unto a man, but the end used to help me.’ No mistake about it, no you are to have over them you must have delusion I saw her—the cap, and the now? Ik'ath will break in on your conjn- thereof is death.” The table has been robbed to pay the apron, and the spectacles, just as she used gal relations, and alas! if you have to club. The champagne has cheated the to look twenty years ago; but Ido wish you stand over the grave of one who perished children's wardrobe. The carousing party would take these strings away. They from your neglect! AT HIS WIFE’S DEATHBED. has burned up tho boy’s primer. The anno}- mu so. I can hardly talk. Won’t tablecloth of the corner saloon is in debt to you take them awax?” I knelt down and I saw a wayward husband standing at the wife's faded dress. Excursions that in prayed, conscious of the fact that he did , the deathbed of his Christian wife, and I a day mako a tour around a whole month’s not realize what I was saying. I got up. 1- saw her point to a ring on her finger and wages; ladies whose lifetime business it is said, “Good by; I hope you will be better heard her say to her husband, “Do you see to “go shopping;” large bets on horses soon.” He said, “Good-by, good-by.” that ring?” He replied, “Yes, I see it.” That night his soul went to the God who “Well,” said she, “do you remember who have their counterparts in uneducated children, bankruptcies that shock the gave it. Arrangements were made for the , put it there?” “Yes,” said he, “I put it money market and appal the church, and obsequies. Some said, “Don’t bring him there,” and all the past seemed to rush that send drunkenness staggering across in the church; he was too dissolute.” j upon him. By the memory of that day the richly figured carpet of the mansion “Oh,” I said, “bring him. He was a good I when, in the presence of men and angels, and dashing into the mirror and drowning friend of mine while he was alive, and I j von promised to be faithful in joy and sor­ out the carol of music with the whooping shall stand by him now that he is dead. ! row, aud in sickness and in health; by the of bloated sons conic home to break their Bring him to the church.” memory of those pleasant hours when you LAST SCENE OF ALL. old mother’s heart. sat together in your new home talking of Xs 1 sat in the pulpit and .saw bis body a bright future; by the cradle and the joy­ A SAD STOUT. I saw a beautiful home, where the bell coming up through the aisle I felt as if I ful hour when one life was spared and an­ rang violently late at night. The son had could weep tears of blood. I told the i»eo other given; by that sick bed, wheu the been off in sinful indulgences. Jlis com­ pie that day: “This man had his virtues, little one lifted up the hands and called for rades were bringing him home. They car­ and a good many of them. He liad bis help, and you knew he must die, and be ried him to the door. They rang the bell faults, and a good many of them, but if put one arm around each of your necksand at 1 o’clock in the morning. Father and there is any man in this audience who is brought you very near together in that mother came down. They were waiting without sin let him cast the first stone at dying kiss; by the little grave in Green­ for the wanderiiug son, and then the com­ this coflin lid.” On one side the pulpit sai wood that you never think of without a rades, as soon as the door was opened, that little child, rosy, sweet faced, as beau­ rush of tears; by the family Bible, where, threw the prodigal headlong into the door­ tiful as any little child that sat at you- amidst stories of heavenly love, is the brief way, crying: “There he is, drunk as a fool! table this morning, I warrant you. She but expressive record of births and deaths; Ila, ha!” When men go into amusements looked up wistfully, not knowing the full bj’ the neglects of the past, and by th& they cannot afford they first borrow what sorrows of an orphan child. Oh, her coun­ agonies of the future; by a judgment day, they cannot earn, and then they steal what tenance haunts me today like some sweet when husbands and wives, parents and they cannot borrow. First they go into em­ fate looking upon us through a horrid children, in immortal groups, will stand to barrassment, and then into lying, and then dream. On the other side of the pulpit be caught up in shining array or to shrink into theft; and when a man gets far on were the men who had destroyed him. down iuto darkness; by all that, 1 beg you as that he does not stop short of the peni­ i There they sat, hard visaged, some of them give to home your best affections. Ah, my friends, there ¡3 an hour coming tentiary. There is not a prison in the land pale from exhausting disease, some of where there arc not victims of unsanctified them flushed until it seemed as if the fires when ou«- past, life will probably pass be of iniquity flamed through the cheeks and fore us in review. It will be our last hour. amusements. Merchant of Brooklyn or New York, is crackled the lips. They were the men who If from our death pillow we have to look there a disarrangement iu your accounts? had done the work. They were the men back «and see a life spent in sinful amuse­ Is their a leakage in your money drawer? who had bound him hand and foot. They ment there will be a dart that will strike Did not the cash account come out right hod kindled the fires. They had poured the through our soul sharper than the dagger last night? I will tell you. There is a wormwood and gall into that orphan’s cup. with which Virginias slew his child. The young man iu your store wandering off Did they weep? No. Did they sigh re- ! memory of the past will make us quake into bad amusements. The salary you pentingly? No. Did they say, “What a ; like Macbeth. The iniquities and rioting give liim may meet lawful expenditures, pity thai sack a brave man should be : through which we have passed will come but not the sinful indulgences in which he slain?” No, no; not one bloated hand was 1 upon us, weird and skeleton as Meg Mer- has entered, and he takes by theft that i lifted to wijH- a tear from a bloated cheek. | rilies. Death, the old Shylock, will de­ which yon do not give him in lawful • They sat an.I looked at the coflin like vul­ mand and take the remaining pound of tures gazing at the carcass of a lamb whose I flesh, and the remaining drop of blood, salary. How brightly the path of unrestrained I heart they bad ripped out! I cried in their | and upon our last opportunity for repent­ amusement opens. The young man says: ears as plainly as I could, “There is a God ,_______ ance and ___ our ____ last ______ chance for heaven the “Now I am off for a good time. Never and a judgmeDt da? ! ’ Did they tremble? curtaiu will forever drop. mind economy. I’ll get money somehow. What a fine road! What a beautiful day fora ride! Crack the whip, and over the I turnpike! Come, boys, fill high your! glasses. Drink! Izmg life, health, plenty of rides just like this!’’ Hard working men hear the clatter of the hoofs and look j up and say: “Why, I wonder where those fellows get their money from! We have to | toil and drudge. They do nothing.” T.» i these gay men life is a thrill and an excite I meat. They stare at other people, and in turn are stared at. The watch chain | jingles. The cup foams. The cheeks : Who have seen the New Goods now on Display- flush. The eyes flash. The midnight bears their guffaw. They swagger. They jostle1 decent men off the sidewalk. They take the name of God in vain. They parody the hymn they learned at tlicir mother’s knee: All agree that they are of Finest Finish, the Most Handsome De- and to all pictures of coming disaster they cry out, “Who cares!” and to the counsel signs and Colors—the Cheapest ar.!—I . S. Signal Service. tip from the depths of their soul in billow after billow of reverberating laughter. picked up two dice, and throwing 1'he autumn and winter month«, up seem as if nature had built them by down a quarter, -aid: “1 will «hoot j to February 1st, were warmer and drier They contract and made a bungling job of it. two bits for you.” The bet was taken , than usual. February wa« eonsidera- But, blessed be God, there are people in and he ran the quarter up to ?8U. He , bly colder than usual, and about the the world who have bright faces, and l>et the *80, and the same man took the .average amount of precipitation occur­ whose life is a song, an ar them, a paean of of victory. Even their troubles arc like bet. The shooter lost, and the winner red. The snow-fall in Eastern Oregon the vines that crawl up the side of a great discovered that lie had risked M >0.75 was es)ieeially heavy. Marell, so far, tower, on the top of which the sunlight sits, and the soft airs of summer hold per­ to win a quarter. lias been cool anil not quite ail average petual carnival. They are the people yon precipitation. < 'i'.inook winds have oc­ like to have come to your house; they are Ex-Speaker Reed—welcome to the curred in Eastern Oregon within the the people I like to have come to ray house. “ex”—likens himself to Warren Hast­ you lint touch the heui of their gar­ past ten days, melting the snow rapid­ If ments yon are healed. ings in being “amazed at his own mod­ ly, the water principally soaking into Now it is these exhilarant and sympa­ eration” In the last house, considering the earth. In Western Oregon the soil thetic ami warm hearted people that are how much power he had. The people, is very wet. Spring plowing and seed- most tempted to pernicious amusements. too, when they view the extravagant« In proportion as a ship is swift it wants a ing and seeding have been delayed, strong helmsman; in proportion as a borso and jobliery of the second session of Frost* have l»ecn frequent, but owing is gay, it want« a stout driver; and these this disgraceful congress, ace amazed at to the latent state of vegetation, no scr- people of exuberant nature will do well to their moderation last fall in returning look at the reaction of all their amuse­ i ious damage has liecu done. 87 republicans out of 381 members. ment«. If an amusement sends you home Winter wheat is in excellent tondi- at night nervous so that yon cannot «leep. They wouldn't leave a corporal's guard tion'. There has lieen little freezing out; and you rise up in the morning, not lie- if the election were to lie held now. it has a good color, is well rooted and cause you are slept out, but because, your duty drag« you from your slumbers, you Queer packages are constantly Mug the stool is w ell filled. The snow grad­ have lieen where you ought not to have ually melting on the wheat fields give* lieen. There an- amusements that send a received at the government depart­ man next- day to his work bloodshot, yawn­ ments, but a queerer or more gruesome promise of unusually good wheat pros- ing, stupid, nauseated; and they are wrong one than that containing what pur- peets throughout Eastern Oregon. (Gen­ kinds of amusement. They are entertain­ ported to be the ashes of a I'nion sol- eral reports indicate that at present the ments that give a man disgust with the dier, some scraps of blanket, bra* Imt- conditions were never more favorable drudgery of life, with tools iiecan.se they not swords, with working aprons be­ tons of the uniform ahd a buttered bul- for an abundant liarvest. The acreage are cause they are not rolies, with cattle be­ of fall sown wheat is not an average; let, which several days ag< i came cause they are not infuriated bulls of the through the mail from Vicksburg, owing to the dry autumn the acreage arena. intended to lie sow n could not lie; the If any amusement sends you home long­ Miss., is not remembered. It was sent ing for a life of romance and thrilling ad­ to the war department under the mis­ backward spring retard* spring sowing. venture, lore that takes poison and shoots taken impression that the sender xvonld The snow is now nearly off of the itself, moonlight adventures and hair­ wheat districts of Eastern Oregon. In breadth escapes, yon may depend upon it lie entitle«! to a reward of $25. Western Oregon the soil i* too wet, ex­ that you are the sacrificed victim of un­ cept on the upland«, for any spring sanctified pleasure. Our recreations are A wool hat trust is one of the latest intended to build up, and it they pull us plowing or seeding. Bright, warm, i dowu as to our moral or as to our physical devices of greed to extort money from sunny days are generally wished for. strength you may come to the conclusion the masses. If its baleful influence The acreage of fruit trees has been large­ that they are obnoxious. should reach Kansas and compel hon­ ly increased ami they appear to ail lie There is nothing more depraving than est agriculturists, who scorn to wear upon amusements that are full in good condition. Fruit bud* are. attendance of innuendo ami low suggestion. The young socks and collars, to go into silk tiles swelling and there is an occasional re-1 enters. At first he sits far back, with I the result will be at once grotesque and p«*rt of blossoms. The snow in the man his hat on and his coat collar up, fearful pitiful. The farmer-politicians have mountains of Eastern Oregon i- unus­ that somebody there may know him. Sev­ one resource, however. They can re­ ually deep; in Grant county bi feet are eral nights pass on. Ke takes oS his hat turn to the braided oat straw hat of reported to have fallen during the win-1 earlier and puts his coat collar down. The blush that first came into his cheek wheu their fathers, tie them securely under ter. Stock wintered well and are in anything indecent was enacted comes no their chin« with buckskin strings anti to his cheek. Farewell, young man! I good condition. Few winters have ‘ more You have probably started on the long road lie happy. been more favorable to stock than the which ends in consummate destruction. one just closed. The stars of hope will go out one by one. So we are glad to see Sookie** Jerry The health of the people is good; a until you will be left in utter darkness. Simpson appear ujion the scene, anti in you not the rush of the maelstrom, in few sections have cases of measles and Hear whose outer circle your boat now dances, bis speech before the people lay a plain mumps,but no serious epidemics or un­ making merry with the whirling waters’ ease of facts before them. He calls for But you are being drawn in, and the gen- the cutting oil’of thousands of useless usual health conditions exi*t. tle motion will liecorue terrific agitation. B. S. P aoi l , You cry for help. In vain! You pull at offices, tho abolishment of the army I '. S. Signal Observer. the oar to put back, but the struggle will and navy and the removal of compli­ not avail! You will be tossed ami dashed Miles’ Nervine Liver Fill*. cation which increase and multiply and shipwrecked and swallowed in the unproductive avocations. This is a bl on a new principle—regulating whirlpool that has already crushed in its liver, stomach ami Isiwt I- through wrath ten thousand bulks. «alve which will have a good effect on nerve*. A new discovery. Dr. Mile’.- YOCXG MAX BE OX YOU: Gl'ABD. hard times, and if given proper atten­ speedily cure billmusncss. I.atl taste. t< Young men who have just come from tion by the people an immense burden liver, piles, constipation. 1 neqiialcd country residence to city residence will do men. women ami children. Smallest, i can lie removed from tliir slioultlers by I cst. surest! 50 do«es,'Ai et- Samples well to be on guard and let no one induce you to places of improper amusement. It nt Boger* Bros. Its application.— Enel Oregonian. 1» miehtUR«djirto^ xvbcn a yonfig man H3 CD > CD CD 3 o LX! o Ü u ►"S CP CD CD go *-2 CP Ü CO 3C 72 ►"5 GO 5 < IS THE UNIVERSAL VERDICT « AITERSON’S IN BLACKS UFWITT RRÌÌQ f]LVVlll DnUu. ALWAYS KEEP ON HAND A COMPLETE LINE OF IN PLAIDS The display of White and other Wash Goods is very Fine and Stylish. LIFE AL EARNEST THING. Also a Fine Line of Dress Goods, 1 go further, and say those are unchris­ PLAIN, PLAIDS. AND STIPES, tian amusements which become the chief Direct from the Broadhead Worsted Mills. Sole agent for these business of a man’s life. Life is an earnest | thing. Whether we were born in a pal­ goods in this County. There is nothing made that will Wear ebual to ace or hovel, whether we are affluent or | these goods. They are warranted not to Crock or Cockle. Just the pinched, we have to work. If you do not I sweat with toil, you will sweat, with dis­ thing for all who wrnt a Good Servicable Dress for every day wear at a ease. You have a soul that is to be trans- ’ Moderate cost, these cannot l>c beat. figured amid the pomp of a judgment (lay; and after tho sea has sung its last chant and the mountain shall have come down in an avalanche of a rock, you will It is our aim to keep such as will match with the goods we carry. live and think and act, high on a throne i where seraphs sing, or deep in a dungeon The GIMP BRAIDS and CORDS are being extensively used this season, where demons howl. In a world wiser»? Also Taylor and all Covered Buttons. there is so much to do fur yourselves, anti bo much to do for others. Gori pity that man who has nothing to do. Your sports are merely means to an end. They are alleviations and helps. The arm We bought largely direct from tho best Manufacturers. Our stock is of toil is the only arm strong enough to Large ar.d as our room is too small, we are offering a special discotint bring up the bucket out of tho deep well of pleasure. Amusement is only the bower of from 10 to 20 jx-r cent, off from our regular prices in order to reduce where business and philanthropy rest while our stock of Clothing, Hats and Caps. We may conclude to close these on their way to stirring achievements. lines out entirely. As our goods are marked in plain figures every cus­ Amusement*are merely t he vine« that grow Some Lots will be 10 off about the anvil of toi 1 and the blossoming f tomer will see just what discount he is given. the hammers. Alas for the man who spends { and Sene 20 off. his life in laboriously doing nothing, his days in hunting up lounging places and loungers, his nights in seeking out some gas lighted foolery! The man who always has ou his sporting jacket, ready to hui^t for game in the mountain or fish in the brook, with no time to pray or work or In all these departments you will find specially good bargains. Our read, is not so well off as the greyhound that runs by his side, or the fly bait with space in this paper will not admit of our naming all—no not even a small portion—of the Goods carried in stock. Customers calling and not see­ which he whips the stream. A man who does not work does not know ing on display what they want will please ask one of the clerks to show how to play. If God had intended us to you. Our room is so small we are compelled to pile goods away in do nothing but laugh he would not have given us shoulders with which to lift, and drawers, on top of shelves, on and tinder counters as well in order to house We hope if we are to continue in business here much longer hands with which to work, and brains with the stock. which to think. The amusements of life some enterprising citizen owning sufficient ground will construct a suit­ are merely the orchestra playing while the able building, one large enough to display a General Merchandise Stock great tragedy of life plunges through its five acts—infancy, childhood, manhood, old in. I am not able to carry the stock and building too as one or the age and death. Then exit the last earthly other would not be paid for, and there is not enough profit in the busi­ opportunity. Enter the overwhelming real ness to justify borrowing money to build or buy goods with for any very ities of an eternal world! I go further, and say that all those great length of time. amusements are wrong which lead into bad company. If you go to any place' where you have to associate with the in temperate, with the unclean, with the abandoned, however well they may be dressed, in the name of God quit it. They will despoil your nature. They will un­ dermine your moral character. They will Will make the Season of 181)1 drop you when you are destroyed. They will give not one cent to support your chil­ dren when you are dead. They will weep not one tear at your burial. They will chuckle over your damnation. I had a friend at the west—a rare friend. He was one of t he first to welcome me to 1 ■ (Due at the time of Service) my new home. To fine personal appear­ ance he added a generosity, frankness and (Due July 1,1901,) ardor of nature that made me love him Season. like a brother. But I saw evil people gath­ (Due when mare is know to be with foal,) ering around him. They came up from the saloons, from the gambling bells. DESCBIPITON -A.KTTD FEDIGFEE: They plied him with a thousand arts. Young Ilnmbletonian. dapple bay; stands 1GJ hands high and They seized upon his social nature, and hc^ could not stand the charm. They drove weighs 1350 pounds; sired by Ilambletonian Mambrino (5241) now him on the rocks, like a ship full winged, shivering on the breakers. I used to ad­ standing at $200; sire of Jane I. 2:19£; Fred Ilambletonian, 1:20; Kitty monish him. I would say, “Now I wish Ham, 2:26}; Susie S, 2:264: Laddie, double team record 2:38; Hamlin, you would quit these bad habits and be­ double team record at 3 years old 2: 38 and the dam of Lady Beach, come a Christian.” “Oh,” he would reply, 2:264; dam by Milton son of Royal George, half brother to Old Kate, “I would like to, 1 would like to, but I Lave gone so far I don’t think there is any mother of Fantasie; 2d dam by Oregon Pathfinder (10981). Young Ilambletonian is very stylish, and notwithstanding he has way back.” In his moments of repentance be would go home and take his little girl; never been trained, shows much speed. of S years, and embrace her convulsively,, J. W. GII.E. Proprietor. and cover her with adornment^ and strew C has W oods , ?«Ianager. McMinnville. around her piculs aitd ¡N DRESS TRIMMINGS OUR CLOTHING DEP’T WHY WILL YOU PAY RENT! I Offer You Lands in Large or Small Tracts, or City Lots at Low Prices and Easy Terms ii CHEHALEM ORCHARD HOMES ” Is just the place for a Small Farm; only three-fourths mile from Railroad station and one and one-half miles from Steamboat landing. I have foul’ lots as fine as can be found in Chand­ ler's addition. Cheap. NO EXCUSE FOR YOUR NOT HAVING A HOME ! !a.ll ar.cl See T. S hvhtleff We also Carry a Full line of Ladies' and Gents' Fur­ nishing Goods, Boots. Shoes. Groceries and Queensware. General Real Estate, Insurance and Loan Broker. Collections Promptly Attended to. Office Cor. Third and E Sts.. McMinnville, Oregon A. «J. APPERTON. At the McMinnville Fair Grounds. Single Service. Insurance. $10.00 15.00 20.00 BE STILL A MINUTE AND LISTEN I Great Bargains in Every Grade! And an Immense Stock to Choose from. Ladies and Misses, Old and Young, Large and Small Feet, Infants’ and Big Babies’ Feel. Be sure and bring your feet along if you want to be fitted with Tli.e St-jrles cf Slxcee I Which has Just Arrived at the Opposition Boot and Shoe Store F. DIELSCHNEIDER. HORSE BILLS