Look at the Map. Look at the Map. State of Oregon. Yamhill County. Here you will find the most pro­ ductive section in the World. Land is cheap, ottering special in­ ducements to fruit misers and dairymen. McMinnville, Yaniliill County. Here is the County seat. Here la published THE TELEPHONE­ REGISTER, Monarch of home new.«papers, accorded first place in all the Directories. Look at the Map Look at the Map. Circulation Guaranteed Greater Than That of any Other Paper Published in Yamhill County. MEGISTEH Established August, 1881 ielephone Establish.»une.lase j r , • . . consolidated Feb. I, 1889. 51 ICH AUX A FENTON, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEûNS. LAFAYETTE, OREGON- Jan, 21, ’88. M c M innville , O regon , T hursday , S eptember 7,1893. A -JONAH ON DRY LAND. S Swiff s Specific s s ftfood and Skin s 8 Diseases s s s s s s A Tested Remedy For All CHEMISTHY AND AGRICULTURE. Phosphoric Arid in the Great Fertilizing Klement. Tlie Loss Each Yem*. Strang? Experience in a South (’hemiHtry ha« been of inestimable American Jungle. value to the farmer by determining the VOL. V. NO. 32 TOO VALUABLE TO SELL. A MARMALADE FACTORY. An Industry that Wilt Some »ay Appear In America. j Property That Cannot be Obtained For Love or Money. There are tweaty or thirty great bus­ American fruit growers have begun iness centers in tlie city of Londou to realize that frest fruit, which is not DIELSCHNEIDEIt, A Hunter Awake* anti Find* a Bit Snake where property is of almost equal value salable because tlie market is at tbe and rated exceedingly high. To buy Preparing to Ingurgitate him. Being moment overstocked is not necessarily tbe four acres now^occupied by the worthless, hence tlie establishment of Clad In Buckskin the Traveler la Able Watchmaker A reliable cure for Contagiouz Bank of Englund, Treadneedle and drying, evaporating ¡and canning fac­ Blood Poison, Inherited Scro ­ to Cut hiN Way out. An IntereM(ing and Jeweler. I.othlierry streets anil Bartholomew fula and Skin Cancer. tories. But there is another branch Dealer in All Kinds of Watches, Jewelry. Plated Ware Story. . lane it would be necessary to produce which lias been practically overlooked As a tonic for delicate Women Clocks and Spectacles. McMINNVILLE. OR. nnd Children it has no equal. a well certified check for the snug sum hitherto. Being purely vegetable, is harm­ Tell you something about my South of $4l),600,01X1. Ten million dollars per Although Americans are not so fund J. W.COWLS. LEE LAUGHLIN E. CAPPERSON less in its effects. American experiences? Well, I will, acre is the valuation made not long ago President. Vice President. Cashier of jams and marmalades Jas tlie Eng ­ A treatise on Blood and Skin Dis­ and mind you, if you think I am eases mailed freb on apjjjleatiun. I on a lot in tlio vicinity>f the bank and lish, who consider breakfast incomplete Mruli 1.1 ilMM -EH tile student. Board ran nl~<» I»- bad in pn- piece after piece be glazed over, but you can continue to terial being charged to the owner. Tbe widows anil widowers suffer in com­ to dance the quarter deck to the accom­ .iono wheelmen. vate families at »2.5t Term. Eeglnv Sept. 19. 1333: 3d. Term. Eerlzxs blood flowed so freely. Well, I got out, any way but I ru­ Limetl eggs fried, and used in pud­ population?” asked tbe teacher."Cork” kill them. s. s. s 23. Term 73'srixxs 13. 1S94- The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder.—No Ammon'a; No Alum. nd tar Cataiogtm Addre«« f. G. BROWNSON. President. , ined my buck«kin suit and my hair ding«, etc., are just ns good ns fre«h an«wered the little boy at the foot ef Gn» Small Bile Bean ever» ni«ht for a j the class. . Used in Millions of Homes—40 Years the Standard. arouae Tnrpi»l Liven. 25c. per bottle didn't turn gray, either. egg«. A. J. HUNSAKER, Solicitor and Financial Agent ssssssss THE CITY STAHLES Livery, Feed, Sale ! ELSIA WRIGIIT HARNESS ÏE FACTORY ÍK TRUCK AND DRAY CO., QUALEY & HENDERSON, W. L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE HE COMMERCIAL STABLE ! ivery, Feed and Sale ! w feiPSES J. F. FORD, FRAZER BileBeans Small composition of soils, by ascertaining what elements are withdrawn from tlie soil by vegetable growth, and by dem­ onstrating how tlie fertility of the soil can lie maintained by restoring arti­ ficially tlie elements removed by vege­ tation . So long as agriculture lias been the chief occupation of man, tlie farmer has known, without reason, that tlie continued cultivation of cer­ tain erops UupoverMheti the soil; that the productiveness of various kinds of soil varies according to the crops that are planted, and that worn-out soil can be restored to fertility by tlie use of fertilizers, natural or artifleial. All this lias been part of the craft of farming for centuries, but it has been simply a knowledge of results without any understanding of the cans«'. For centuries farmers strewed their lands with crushed bones and beheld more abundant crops, which they ascribed to the absorption by tlie soil of the gel­ atinous matter in tlie bones, but it was only fifty years ngo that chemistry made known to tbe farmer that phos­ phoric acid was tlie only element of fertilizing val.ue in bones. It was tlie establishment of this fact, after exhaus­ tive experiments by tlie Duke of Rich­ mond, tliat created a value for those minerals consisting of combinations of phosphoric acid witli various bases. It was thia discovery that caused the de­ velopment of tlie present enormous fer­ tilizer manufacturing industry and tlie allied industry of phosphate mining. At first though the amount of phos­ phoric acid taken from cultivated soil by growing crops does not seem to lie an item of much magnitude. Chem­ istry however, makes a revelation that startles us by mere arithmetic. Each 100 pounds of corn takes from the soil 1.56 pounds of mineral element neces­ sary for its growth, nearly one-half (45 per cent) of this amount being phos­ phoric acid. In addition to tills, each 100 pounds of corn stalk takes out of the ground 4.87 pounds of mineral ele­ ments, 12.00 of this kind being phos­ phoric acid. These figures, insignifi­ cant as they appear in tlie abstract, when applied to tbe aggregate of our corn crop, show us that corn, in kernel and stolk, removes from the soil in a single year about 1,025,000 tons of phosphoric acid, in similar manner tbe other cereals deplete the soil of this element, the amount removed by each being about as follows; Wheat, 190,000 tons; oats 105,000 tons; barley 20,000 tons; rye 10,000 tons; buckwheat 0,000 tons; the aggregate being in round numbers, 1,350,000 tons. But tills is only one-half of tlie story, for tlie aver­ age hay crop takes from tlie soil some­ thing like 235,000 tons of phosphoric acid. Thus we find tliat tlie cereal and bay erops roll tlie soil each year of nearly 2,000,000 tons of phosphoric acid. Even these stupendous figures represent the extent to which the soil is depleted by only two classes of agricultural crops— the grains and grasses. No account is taken of cotton, tobacco, rice, potatoes and tlie infinite variety of other pro­ ducts of the soil. What wonder tliat tlie farmer lias needed tlie knowledge of the chemist to show him the way to restore to his soil the elements his crops have withdrawn! The depletion of tlie soil by the growth of vegetation being established, the problem of restoring tlie necessary elements presents itself for solution. Bones, containing a large percentage of phosphoric acid in soluble form, have long served as one means of restoring exhausted soil, but the discovery of ex­ tensive deposits of mineral phosphates in various countries brought into use a new element and developed new indus­ tries of immense extent and importance. The element of value in these mineral phosphates is the combination of phos­ phoric acid and lime—phosphate of lime. Iu its natural condition this phosphate of lime is l»ut slightly solu­ ble by tlie acids of the soil, but by tlie treatment witli sulphuric acid in tlie fertilizer works the phosphate of lime is changed to "acid phosphate" or “su- per-phospliate,” which is quite soluble and therefore able to yield its valuable elements to the soil when used ns a fer­ tilizer.— Edward II. Sanborn, in the Southern State Magazine for August. VCQTIQEDC ■ CIl I IvEHw ¿^X:;L0RD&THOMAS, McMINNVILLE COLLEGE. I w Offers Superior Advantages D’PRICE'S