Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About Yamhill reporter. (McMinnville, Or.) 1883-1886 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 27, 1883)
Tut; R eporter McJCNNVILLE. OEEGON, ESC. 27,1ES3. Happy N ew YeaMc AIH Sl'ItVKY* J. A. P* rkins has bevn appointed N. coining so centralized upon this question of legislation, and since the votes of the good P. lutii a«eu« at Colfax. wen are inadequate to the deruand. to urgf- There are tack-« of wheat and work that the power be placed in the waitiug eaipineut via the Snake river hand of w.nnan to do herself, that which she inw . The boat* have gone into win- is now “ enoompasAiiig sea and land” begging men to do only to b« defeated. tiu quarter». If the temperance people of Oregon woukl Io win a-piito. Miu Flora Bauer, 11 work earnestly and unitedly for the adoption yen * of age, of Walla Walla, construct of the pending amendment now before the ed 166 words out of the two, “ Kitchen people, which gives these earnest women the Gem.” power to sign remonstrances or vote, as well a« toil and pray, we might hope for some A farmer at Beaver Creek one day change. 1 ,st week put. a couple of load» of »ho- Christian men. we appeal to yon ! Now is uto a mule, mistaking it for a coyote, your golden opportunity. If you refuse to it the dark.—Oregon City ¿wtei-priae. use it. let none of you think that your skirts clear of the blood of this terrible evil. Jealousy prompted a soldier named fire Miss Willard on this question says, “No C micron to »h<>ot at a gii 1 a.- she war. Army, thcrigh ever so well disciplined, can ermingoat of the garrition school it hope for vjetory with only half of the sol Walk) Walla. W. T.. on Monday. He diers armed.” A M bmbzb . is in the guard house McMinnville, Dec. 28, 1888. Last Saturday the student- ot Whit man college, at Walla Walla, to tLe 7*» ew To-I)av number of about thirty, tr.raed our and built several hundred frvtof sidewalk- A. M Peery, B' L. Harris, Every week new students arrive—sixty rutering on Monday of this week. What will our .Minnesota and Wis consin friends think, say* the Y’akima h'eeord, when we iuform them that plow* are running through Kittitas at this date, December 13th, and that the ground has not been frozen at any time this fall ar winter so as to impede plow- Ferry Street, lug. Orr^on A highwayman, mounted on a snow- Dayton, - whit-e steed, met Ben Evans, of Gar Dealers in field, a few miles from Poiueroy, on Wednesday and " stood him up” for Drugs, all the inouey he find, $60. Patent Medicines, Wallulu, W. T., is on the boom. A dozen new buildings are now in course Druggists Sundries, of erection, stores are being opened up Tobacco and Cigars, aud in a month the business will be overdone aud the town dead. Perfumery Last week, says the Independent, the ladies of Vancouver, W. T., met in School Books, Marsh's hall and had a jollification Miscellaneous Books, over the fact that they had become vot ers, with the privilege of serving as Stationery. jurors and paving poll tax. Fishing Tackle, Ou Saturday last -says the Oregon City ilwferprw, Mr. Ed. Cease picked Etc., Etc. a box oi Isabella grapes on his farm on the Clackamas. They were ripe, lusci ous, sound and free from mildew—the middle of December, too. Physicians’ Prescriptions There will be close on to 28,000 tons Carefully Compounded. of coal shipped from Tacoma this month, if all of the expected shipping gets in. It far exceeds the total of any GIVE US A CALL. month since the opening of the mines. PEERY i HARRIS. The South prairie mines alone will put out nearly 1000 tons. Dayton. Oregon, Dec. 27, 1883—41tf. Buys The Dalles S um : The country about us has been enjoying a first rate Notice of Final Settlement. niiu for the last twenty -'four hours, aud Notice is hereby given that E. C. Williams makes the grass look fresh and green. This rain will be of great service as it the Executor of the estate of Willamina Wil will all be absorbed, the ground not be liams, deceased, has filed in the County Court ing frozeu. It is now the 21st of De for Yamhill County, Oregon, his final cember,and no snow or ice or bad wea account of said estate, and that Monday, the 7th day of .January, 1884, 8t 11 o’clock in the ther, makes it favorable for sheep. forenoon of said day, at the Court, room of A deal aud dumb wedding took place said Court, at Lafayette, Oregon, has been set at Bummerville, Oregon, in the early by the Judge of said Court for tlie hearing of part of the week. The contracting said final account, at which time and place parties were from the Wallowa valley, any and all persons interested in said estate nut our iuforuiaut was nualde to give who desire.to make any objeciions to said final their names. The union was a very account must appear and make known said E. C. WILLIAMS, quiet one. as neither of the parties had objections. Executor of said estate. anything to say. J. E. M acero . Frank McDonald of Moscow, says the Atty for said estate. 36t5. Pulotise City, \V. T., Booweiaur/, has just returned from Lake Pend <1'01 t ille where, he informs us, he has discover Order Io show < an««*. ed un extitimlv rich quart, ledge. He showed ns some specimens from the In the County Court for the County of ledge which are. to say the least, ex Yamhill, State of Oregon. tremely rich. Mr. McDonald .-avs that the me assays ls silver, and $37.'>O per I n the M atter of the E state | OF }• ton. T ie new discovet v is situated on the bunk of the Peutl d’Oleille lake, M artha A. W ood , Deceased J It appearing to the Judge of said Court, 0, about twenty miles from Katlidrum. Frank is of the opinion that he has the petition of the Administrator of said es- struck it tick, and says that ail ver won’t tale. A. C. Davis, duly presented and filed, be worth six bitsa bushel next spring. that it is necessary to sell the whole of the To preserve the established content of the public laud survey» and to rees tablish those that have been destroyed, is becoming tnoie and utore a vexed questiou. There see ta» to be but few corners that are able to withstand the ravages of time, accident or design. The neglect of the land owners of California to keep up their original coiners until so many of them have been destroyed, is causing an endloss unieunt of trouble and litigation. Lo cal Surveyors tail to give srtlsfaetion and they have petitioned Congress to have a resurvey made by United States Deputy Surveyors undor the direction of the Surveyor General of that State, but Congress bas refused, audit is well that they have, for no Surveyor, clothed with any kind of authority, or wjthauy kind of instrumenta can reestablish cor nets with any degree of accuracy or satisfaction to the owners of the land, if many of the corners are missing, for the reason that the origtual lines and cornels were probably not established with the strict professional care that would be required or practiced by a re survey. The Surveyors General of the sever al States and the Conimissoner of the General Lund Office at Washington front their increasing number of letters received front Local and County Sur veyors, have been greatly taxed to an swer all the problems submitted to them; so much so that the Department of the Interior bus issued a pamphlet tin the government of County and lo cal Surveyors in the reestablishment of lost corners. It gives a synopsis of al) the acts of Congress, relating to the public survey, then says: “From the foregoing legislation it is evident:— 1. That the boundaries of the pub lic lunds established and returned by the duly appointed Government Sur veyors when approved by the .Survey ors General anil accepted by the Gov ernment air uni lianyrahle. 2. That original township section und quarter section corners established by the Government Surveyors, must stand as the true corners which they were intended to represent whether the coiners lie in place or not. The Commissioner then gives specif ic instructions, how to establish cor rection, township, section, quarter sec tion and nteauder coiners, but it is en tirely silent in regard to donation claim boundaries and corners, but we suppose of course that the same gener al rule would apply to Claims Survey.» tut to section township lines. He has well said that “the variation of the needle, us noted, is not to he implicitly relied upon, since the observations tor variation are in many instances crude and rough and nt best afford but Hit ap real property belonging to said estate to pay proximation in such work.” the debts against the said estate and expense- The pamphlet is published merely as Circular from the Francise Department of its administration, and which said real of the W H. T. U. property is described as follows: A tract oi an opinion and not hi« and says: ' No land adjoining McMinnville, Oregon, on the dehrnite rule can be laid down as to | D rib S ihtiuis or tbe W. C. T. U. r—Yon West, and beginning at a stake on the North what shall lie snlticent evidence in re have doubtles» seeu that th« National Wo- line and 35 3-4 rods East from the North-west establishing boundary and corners and ( uiun’a Christian Temperance Union at our corner of the Donation Land Claim of 8. Cozine md wife. Claim No. 56 in T. 4 8., R. 4 W. in min-h must be left to the skill, tidi-lity. reuFiit convention in Detroit passed the fol- Yamhill Coun;v, Oregon ; thence South 32 lowing resolution : and good jndgerucot of the Surveyor and 84-100 rods on the East line and to tin I “ As the strength of the liquor traffic is in ill tin* performance of bis work; wlteu I the Idxv’t protection, und law is the result of Southeast corner of Peter L. Sax’s land; East 30 ami 9-100 rods to a fir tree six this fails to give satisfaction, recource 1 sentiment expressed bv the hullol, we there Lb»:nee inches in diameter an the West line of W. D. fere reoG^nifo it to be the CUnetiau and pat- McDonald’s land : thence North 32 and 84-10(1 must be had Io the courts. duty of women to bend tbeir energies rods to a stake in the North lineot said Claim The Surveyor Generals receive I uotici toward Becurinct the ballot.to the end of or s- s. Cozine and wife, at North-west corner oi many letters in relatiou to the settle tallwiiig then 3. ntnnent uno jd\v Hint shall of slid W. D. McDonald ; thence 30 and 9-IOfl the U oiul from thu c-nerouehmeiit of rods to place ol beginning, containing 6 17-100 ment ot disputed lines that arc cntiie- protect its enemies?' )y foreign to the duties ot their otfice. I bey <dso paired a resolution instrccting acre.-, more or less. Now.tbereforc.it ia ordered by said Cour' mid they give an optuton or j»»ru our general otLoera to memorialize Congress 'bat the heirs of and all other persons inter for me parage of a S.xtumth Amendment merely from courtesy, which ofteo mi-1 to the Constitution of the United Hthtes pro ested in the estate ot said deceased, Martha A. Wood, appear before saitl Judge on tb* 7tb poses ipiite a burden without any com hibiting the States from diafr-.nohisir.G anv «lay of January 1884, at 10 o’clock in the fore »on the ground of nex. pensation. The service« of an expert citizen in order to oarry out '.he purpose of these noon ‘f said dav. at the < ourt room of said at finding loc-t corners and all the evi resolut Jens. I desire tha* ever- woiaer. wbo Court, at Lafayette, Yacubill County, Oregon, believes our cane»1 is just Mi?j intervie V. if to shoM ause.ifany there be. why an order dence« relatiug thereto, senna to l e the granted to said Administrator possible, or write to the Senatoi •;s * a<l L dvre- should not only way out of the difiicult ou’side ¿enuuv< a »n Gorrmn* from In r *< it»*, urging m sell said reai estate ot said deceased, as m of the courts. chat they snpoor: au»; h'.bor for said petition prayed f< r. of such ni: «mb.irnt, in . t;i... M'hen our L LOUGHARY The original evidence» of the public natn n tl oii1 erp ; u Washington with our J. E. M aiers , County Judge. land survey t, m the states of Ohio, In »nenxi.i ! tbc*’ n<ay he ?. h ’ nv the At tv tor said estate. diana. Illincir.. Michigan Wisconsin, ' j.irou't a.or.-d ip »it wki.'h su.cl. interviewt N- . 2n. 1883.-2715. and ktu ra v.nll ixo th» ia with the $Aru»t i-s lown, Mossonn, Arkansas. Misaisaippi, ' and Kcprefieim rives of you ..jvuiai statos. 50 1 ICE. Alabama and Kansas Lave been turned | I do a’so a 1 <| lift that Au men wo love Notice is berebv given that at the end of 14 over to the State authorities and sont • justice ana hb»>r y. ana bruevc hat th* ma • lavs from the final publication of tbit, notice, sh mid rule, and tuat in a government of the legislatures have parsed jority of the p.oplv all tin pet pl a should be- hoard, anlcab a remonstrance against tue same ib booh I er duly tiled, the City Council of the City oi us in laws requiring laud owners to have would Zhao write such »ait-r.( ar.u . that wl. • , fh hci , vu m l.n our due | McMinuviile, Oregon, will pass an ordinance their corner» re-established, and then beowriug in a ¿»av-.•ni’ivxit which dwiar^j mat *• a gov | .equiring the following improvement« to be give rules lor the work, or the lines as ernment den ■ t iis just ¡h /er iron; the oon- made in Mid city: A ditch or drain to be cut unuer the sidewalk® as follow«: Beginning at held shall govern; but until our legisla seat of thx i?» verm»...” Reoognizim; tir t in «¡1 the stru <£jes thro’ the East side of the intersection of D aud ture takes the matter in baud it will be which the nation ha* p i.^ra to s<»c ire the Third streets aud running thence west on botu well for bind owners to keep the cor blessing of civil liberty, the women have sides of Third street to the west side of A born» their part iub»HlshJy » nd un •<-mpbiin- street, thenoe south on west .«ide of A street ners that they have. Peery & Harris, There is a ahiirp competition bet ween two elassi-s of inventors, electricians and eompresHi-d air inventors, for tiic storage of power, anti one philosopher, in watching the race, thinks it will not be long before a man can go to a hard ware store anil buy power enough to do his threshing, saw his wood, run the sewing machine, grindstone, pump, wringer or lock the cradle, for a very few cents. The compressed ail advo cates seem to I m - nean-st success. flu- Sricntiti, American says » Lox contain ing eight cubic feet and weighing not over 190 pounds w ill hold compressed air enough to t un an ordnuiry buggy five hours; one weighing 800 pounds will run a heavily loaded wagon for ten hours. STATI AMD TKRRITDHIII. »ngly, we feel that our request to bo clothed with all the perogaUVMot citizenship ie both right and jus:. Ton are reanectfully urged to have this oiroulnr printed In all your local papers, to the end that it may rt noli the eye of all wo- men who ar» interested. Mas. Z. G. W allacb , Snp’t of bep’t of Fraciw* of the National , , W C. T. Ü. Indianapolis Nov. 20. Mn. H. K. Hines, prcsulent of the Oregon W.C. 1 I .. Hddreesocl the various snlvordi- nate unions in this u* have a coiiort of action, and let it I m * in harmony with th»* ’ National I mon. ” This, rnends. is worthy of our consideration. No organiz ation of work» rs tor any given object can he aMretsful. unlea« they hava iqmdtied plana and push them into execution. I am aware that the plan suggested in the u'W'i'itiuiv 1- a str«»'m . t.m wv mM( reiueialxr that it is a powerful maladv. that ’ will not down” with sngar coated, uninedi caltsi pellets, intemperance is n»»t an ordi nary vine that we can arrest bv prayers, pre ceptw and examples, but is a poweilal evil, entrenched I ehind men-made and men exe outed law*, nd must l»e dealt with in the same n anner as we do munter, theft, or any dangerous e\il that threatens onr peace, pmartv and lives. Christian people, look at this question.— Those who ha»e looked at it from everv r.Uodpoint fave long since seen that legisla tion. with the power of everv available voter *• aaggected. is our only hope of sncceas . but the rank, and tile of Christian people are slow to fall into lin**. thinking that a reform can be brought a I «out by moral per« a udon and ch ri* tian inti a en or without th«« inter ▼etition »if «vil law ; hut we are glad to see Victorin. 1!. ii > nuikuur great pre- piuntioir to receive Hanlen, the rower Black eo«l is now arailed next to sal mon anti in plentif ul in the upper waters of British Columbia. Conservative people think there will lie IlO.IMMt people in the Cieur d'Alstu wiping disUict by the first oi May. '84. that the ohriauao element ot society is bo- with one ditch to the north side of the county road leading west from McMinnville, tbenci* west along the north -ide of said road to the bridge. Said drain tn be at the beginning three feet wide at top ami one foot wide at bottom and two and one-half teet deep and to hove i fall of one foot or more in every 270 feet, running west as needed, and to widen at the ton as the depth increases an as to retain the same proportion as at the commencement The dirt, of said ditch or drain shall be removed under the direction of the Street Commission er of said City. Where there are no sidewalks <>n Thir<l Street, said drain shall be of same dimen^nns and retain the ««nie position as where there are sidewalks. Where there are now no sidewalks on said Third Stree . and where the sidew dks on said street are not over »cur feet wide, new -idewalks of the following dimensions shall be nrde : The same shall Le six feet wide, the plank therein to be not more than eight inches wide and to be inches thick and to have three stringers therounder.tr» be 2xH inches, each of said plank to be nailed io each ot said stringers, with two twenty-peo nv nails. Under all the old sidewalks now on that part of Third Street to be improved which are six feet wide, and under all the new sidewalk« to be made as he re in1*'fore provided there shall be placed acros* -vid ditch or drain joists every eight feet, which shall be 1x6 inches, and as long as sidewalks are wide *■ that th« stringers ol «aid sidewalk« shall rest upon the sam*. All of «aid improvement« to he made at Che expense of the adjoining prop erty owners. 1 This notice published by order of the City Council of McMinnville. Oregon, mad* bee Itith, IMS. A. B BAKER. Recorder of the City of McMinnville- 3DU. FACTS ARE FACTS AND SPE LOUDER THAN WORDS. t AHIf urnr I LUU It ntKt J Sit down and read tins, and common sense will ted you thaï any men-haut vertiges with a spirit of malice, who a,J C?»iimot be Trusted. It 1» “ neuMtise and bumbugging to blow and try to blind people about good goods.’’ I claim to l,aV8 as ooon f s any other storekeeper, and not anv better. They all come from the FACT OlilES, and every merchwit has to keep different'qualities of good« to suit bis tr»de. For instance : H a man wishes to par. chase a suit of clothes for $12 he doesn’t want a suit of clothes for $35, anti so vice versa. Why, it is Ridiculous to say I keep goad goods, and therefore can’t sell them as CHEAP AS MY NEIGHBORS as every child that goes to school knows better than that. ALL GOODS that I advertise in our are Local Paper, the “ Oregon Register’, ami Dayton Free Press,’ Always to be Found in Stock Furthermore, I will say that I am buying my goods Strictly for Cash, at Bedrock Figures, ami Discount my Bills; therefore, I can make a REASONABLE PROFIT and still »ell goods for LESS M( )NEY than ‘hose storekeep ers do that are buviDg on time and leave the wholesale houses and manufacturers wait fr.-m r. to “I months for their money. In the first place, they can’t expect to buy as cheap as the man who buys FOR CASH, and in the second place the wholesale houses will Charge Interet after four or six Mouths whenever the account becomes due. I will add that I devote my II hide t ftteilt¡OH to the Dry Goods and Clothing trade, and everything pertaining to it, and leave all other outside business alone. These are all Facts that I am Willing to Prove. 1 don’t propose ro have my goods lie on the shelves for years, \\ hatever old g"ods remain oxer by the 1st of-January will be thrown into THIRD STREET LAKE, instead oi letting moths get a hold ol them, as has been the case in other »tores, here. Remember that II, Í’ ‘S° keeps a First-Ci ss Dry Goods and Clothing House, anil is receiving goods every day and has always a I* INF. ASSOR I MEN i * ‘b G()f IDS in stock. Farmers of Yamhill County, I am prepared to <lo an Extensive Credit Business this year in my line, and all those that responsible for the debts they contract ssxW em<\ it to their advantage to Iniy their DRY GOODS AND CLOTHING of 11. FISHER, as you wiil S.W E from 25 to -10 percent, in purchasing vour goods. MOSTEY SAVED IS MON’E'T You will find every week my G oods and P rices advertised . Very Respectfully Y ours, HUGO FISHER. What we Believe ! Real Estate Agents o- Warren, Magers £ Frink. M c M innville , B. F. HARTMAN'S yamhill co..0r, Grain, Gì ass and Stock Farms In Vmuliii! mul Folk countie» F®r ’»nlr on KeRNonabie Terni». .a (lie place to boy GOOD GOODS. No htiinhiinijing or blowing about SAW MILLS, best quality of good.» of any kind for less than half what they can be made FLOUR1NG MILLS, for. That is »imply nonsense, and is only done to get you in their stores CITY LOTS AND to find them "just out" of the goods advertised tit let-s than half value, or i l'OWN PKOPERTY. io show you an article too worthless for anv use. with the hope of selling Ptirlit-s deiMriaiq i<» pia rettane aliowld vou their goods at big prices. Talk is cheap, and so are all kinds of goods, cali and «et uw or tirile f or <• i rcular. and when vou want to buy FOR SALE. Good, Durable Goods, A farm of AfiO acres, 7 miles south west of McMinnville. Or.: 20b. acres in cultivation, fiO more easily fitted for the plow; 100 acre« tim ber ami pasture, good buildings, orchard and plenty of small fruits, house and barn supplied by pipes with running water, soil excellent , no waste land ; lies rn county road in an old settled neighlmrhood, with school and church close by. Price .$23.00 per acre. EQ' quire of WARREN. MAGERS A FRINK, Real Estate Agent». McMinnville, Oregon. ^3tf You cannot do better than to buy them of B. F. HARTMAN. Ladies will find all kinds ot Latest style Cioaks, Dolmans, Ulsters and Wraps. Dress Goods. Silk Lace, Mull Bobunett. Darn .Vit Ties. and every thing pertaining to Ladies’ ITardrooe. AL kinds of Dry Goods, and any and everything in Gents’ Furnish- ing Goods. Al.o Groceries, Glass and Que enswaro, Hardware and is SOLE .1GE.VT for jSitMl J. L. ROG EPS. CITY DRUG STORE- Third Street. McMinnville. Akixeci JPaintet, ROGERS the best on the coast. Also, Farmins Implement« <~f all kinds, nil fur the lowe,t prices. Also, remember 10 per cent, discount is riven for cash. IIVII, PROOF. I —Dealers In— Prii»», Chemical», I’alent virdici"^ Perfumery, Fine Toilet Article«» Mmp», Conibs. Hair. Tooth a«*1 Cloth Hrumheff, <ponire*, Trii»*eh ftltoeildor Hraee* and all Sundries. A full line of Notice oi Final Proof. Land Office at Oregon City. Oregon. 1 Nov. 3nt’h, 1883: f Notice ig hereby given that the following named «ettler hae tiied notice of his intent) >n to make final proof in «upport ot Lis claim, and that said proof will I* made before the County Clerk of Tillamook County, at Tilla- tnook, Oregon, on T tie* I ay, January 15, 1**4. viz: Eraatus McKinley, Preemption D. 8. No. 3,878. tor the s 1-2 of N W 1-4. g w 1.4 r 1 X W ,”loi 8 W '‘4 of s<c 2m* He names the following witnesses to prove hia continous re«idence upon and cultivation < t Midland, viz Wealey 8mitto, Lewm Fl* k Z] Tn F°l’,nc *nd Henr* *>' of Hebo, riliamook countv. Oregon. 38U L. T. BABIN, R*Kirt*r «£s TODD. [Biicceisnrs to W. B. Turner,J ( nil and wee him Land Office at Oregon City. Oregon, I Dec.'7, 1883. I Nutice is hereby given that the fotlowing- narned settler has tiled notice of his intention to make final woof in sitpport of hie claim, end that said proof will t»e made before the County Clerk of Yamhill County.at Lafayette, Oregon.on Monday. January 21, ISM. vis: William V. Ishein.Homestead Entry No. 3.830 lor Lou S and 0 of Sec 4. T 0 S. R 3 W Ho names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon an-l cultivation of said land, viz: M B Hendricks. Robert Magness. L C Topper and GC Davidson, all n| Wheatland, Yamhill County. Oreyon. 3915 L. T. BARIN. Register. W- T0DD- Paint», Oils, Vanish»», Brashes »nd Slji Tsois. The . Purest Xiiquors for IWi’dic*®*1 Purposes. The Bust Brands of Cigars Con- • stantly on Hand. 1 The largest and best stork of Fishing TacKle Ever brougnt tn Yamhill County. I M MT.1TIONFRV 1 we shall carry a full line, consisting f»I|-l3< K>K r»f ' P*P* ' . lope* of '*** nf thr hfo<t quality,, Envelope« ol the I* and neat»9t styles, etc. % SPAN OF PONIES, Buggy and Harne«»’ that I w «h to disp>w »i. and will sell Special attention is called tn our Cuttlsry» very cheap. Call on or s<ldre«« T'Zoií'mílí.'’V *”or “t and Photograph and Autograph Album«- s Hill l«l«»<id Angora Huek« thrtt Da PETER TAYLOR. "¿•he* to.li«po»e of. r, ”* head- Phywicitin«’ l»re<€riptinn« and 4Att Amity, Oregon They can >e«eenat bayton. Oregon. ly Reripes Carefully <«»?•••*• A- K WILLC0CX8ON. al all hour«—day or night- XV TYI.I R »«WITH. 91 !>., FORSALE! • iagora fiurl.s for ^ale : PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. Sheridan. - - u-w - Oregon »«• w, V R will ««, |FOM«,tK’A H‘U * D™< *•«’». Pvtoo W» wntiM nw>l s»k « thi, p-ib. <s* yats.nag*. hoping by fo’r *’ »nA for,et nium.on to b<i«in—* '• æ’Illn I Mme. BOGERS * I0CD' '