Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Yamhill County reporter. (McMinnville, Or.) 1886-1904 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 31, 1894)
Yamhill County Reporter. NOT THE POINT. popnlation is greater comparatively We are not particularly stuck on the in the older portion of the country. new tariff bill, but we find occasionally, j Nevertheless, it remains true, what F M BAHN ma RT. tome other things a- little to be admired ever the explanation may be, that PUBLISH E It AND PROPRIETOR. For instance, those newspaper editors the ratio of popular intelligence is who are telling their readers what a ter greater in the west than in the east. J. E< K.HAN, Issociate Editor. rible burden the democrats have im This condition will become more posed upon them by changing the sugar marked and effective in the next ten ADVERTISING R a TTS schedule. There it only a small fraction of \ years. The west attracts intelli Baadlng not -‘ in local column» 10 cents per line 6» tint vet. ja; '> ■•>■ it» per line thereafter, a cent per pound between the new bill, gence and enterprise by reason of fiemlay adverti»e-.ent’ annual ratet, one inch per month 81 ; each additional inch 50 cents per and be McKinley bill, and not one man 1 the inducements that it offers over mónti*. in five hundred will ever be able to de Ohttuar. and soar .tace notice* not exceeding sections that have utilized all of lr> due p'-’v-hv’ »r . if turni»hod in tira» to tect the difference in the course of a t> > current -e* a. Addlt.onal ¡natter 10 Com- per year's pOT'-narae of sugar. In the name their resources ar.d absorbed all of itne. of common sense let up on this now and the opportunities of ordinary am talk about something of interest to the bition. It is yet a land of magnifi FRIDAY, AUG. 31, INI. cent possibilities in all the activities people.—Yamhill Independent. We submit that the brother does of life, and its progress is sure to be The principal profit of the new not compass the real point, and that attended by a steady lessening of the tariff law will be represented by he is in’error on the point he does proportion of citizens who lack the what people save on their income make. This question is of the deep advantage of education. tax. When we come to take separate est interest to the people, because it »♦« account of the foreign-born element both effects their pocketbooks and T he New York Advert iter says because the trust legislation just en in this relation, we are confronted there are $50,000.000 of foreign goods acted is the most gigantic and open be the melancholy fact that its illit io that city. That is not an encour robbery in high places that the eracy is increasing instead of dimin aging fact to American workers and country has seen in modern j ishing. The rate of 1880 was lower manufacturers. times. We submit that legislat-; than 1890. and there is good reason ing forty million dollars into the' to believe that the present situation The defeat of the last surviving hands of a trust controlling the trade | is still worse. This is the result of member of Jeff Davis’ cabinet in a in one of the most staple articles of! our indifference with regard to the Texas democratic convention may household use, necessary to the pal-, extent and character of the immigra be accepted as p. o if that the war is ate of the rich and the poor alike, is tion to our shores from foreign finally and completely over. We have allowed the open robbery of the people, and ask countries. lowest classes of Europe—ignorant I nscribe it on the democra tic ban "in the name of common sense” if and degraded Italians. Huns. Poles the people and the editors are to “ let ners. Free wool, free hides, and and Bohemians—to flock here in free lumber; taxed sugar, protected up” on so important a subject, where large numbers and to become a part the country will end up? Forty citrus fruits, and favors to the of our fixed population, without any millions, mind you, is the direct profit whisky trust. Such are the orders. on the value of the raw article al inquiry as to their fitness for citizen ship or an}’ discrimination in T he worst part of the whole tariff ready stored, besides which there the interest of public safety and scandal, according to Congressman will be a monthly profit, estimated prosperity. The effects of this care John Allen, of Mississippi, the Dem by those who have studied the ques less hospitality have been vividly tion and are reasonably presumed to ocratic humorist, is that all the seen in our labor troubles, in riot sugar trust money was spent at the know, of two millions per month, or and bloodshed and menaces of an at the least calculation of six to eight senate end of the capitol. archy. We are told by these census millions per year more than the i ----------------- statistics why terrible strikes occur, T he pension appropriation bill profit made under the McKinley act. and troops have to be called out to this season shows a decrease of $14,-. Admitting that the profit under this protect life and property. The illit act was too great, isn ’ t it a question 949,780, but the Indians were given erate foreign element furnishes the of moment when a party pledged to $1,475,408 more than two years ago. material for such disturbances. It and boasting of economy and reform, The Indian is worth more in the is the Inflammable stuff that is easily mind of the democratic congress increases instead of diminishes the turned into a flame by reckless and evil? There is some justification, too, than the veteran.—Blade. irresponsible leaders. Where such a for the McKinley act. It was con mass of ignorance exists and in ceived with the honest purpose of T he short corn crop throughout creases, there must be constant encouraging the home industry in the central portion of the country, that has sent the price up to an sugar, and needed only to stand so danger to the peace and welfare of equality with wheat, means a short loug a6 it did this. But in the new society; and there is nothing else so crop of wheat a few months hence. ; bill we have the unparalleled effront much needed in our statesmanship Oregon farmers will do well to hold ery of avowed legislation in favor of to-day as a full realization of this back their forty-cent wheat and put rnonojioly, Mr. Wilson admitting the peril and a proper course of action forty million profit on the floor of to restrict and control it. it into pork. the house. The Income lax. “How can we face the people after On the point our contemporary indulging in such outrageous viola makes, that not one in five hundred The very general disposition to tions of principle?” Cleveland asked will be able to detect the difference smite any candidate that attempts to the democrats in his letter denounc in the yearly cost of his sugar, he is defend the democratic surrenders ing the tariff bill which they after in error, and forgets that everybody and desertions of pledges and princi While this ples in Washington will severely tax wards passed. The answer of this ’ has a “sweet tooth. pertinent and significant interroga point is subordinate to the forego the astute leadership and splendid tory w 11 promote the gayety of the ing, it is not so inconsequential as to organization of Tammany, the sheet pending campaign. be ignored. We have in mind a anchor and mainstay of democratic family of nine whose annual con hopes in the northern states. B y allowing the tariff bill to be- ; sumption of sugar does not fall a Particularly heavy will be the come a law without his indorsement, whit below twelve hundred pounds. burden of defending the odious and Mr. Cleveland virtually reiterates j All good judges unite in the assertion un-democratic income tax. Defend the sentimont expressed in his letter that the new tariff will be the means ing it, did we say? What New York to Wilson, that it is the embodiment of adding from one to one and one- democrat will undertake that hope of perfidy and dishonor. Mr. Cleve half cents to every pound. Taking less task? land, however, stands alone as a the lowest estimate, the head of the The homely phrase used by John president lacking the courage to veto aforesaid house will pay twelve dol Bunyan, “Out of the frying pan into a measure that he confessedly re lars more per year than formerly for the fire” would fitly describe the folly garded as infamous. his sugar. The amount for a smaller cf attempting a defensive campaign or larger family can easily be figured. on the income-tax issue. The income G overnor F lower said at Chau-j Such increases in family expenses tax will figure in the canvass, but tauqua the other da_v that it things these times, brought about by a all that New York democrats can do keep ou as they have been going government established to exert is to hang their heads and be silent. there will be no need for a democrat-; every influence to ameliorate the Defense or apology will cost the ic candidate for president in 1896. condition of its subjects, are ques democracy more votes than silence The need for another national demo-1 tions of moment as well as and confession. — New York Sun. cratic platform has already depart wrongs to be righted, and their dis NEWS OF THE WEEK. ed. The last one denounced protec cussion should never be "let up” on tion and made no reference to an in- ■ till the task is accomplished. The interstate fair opened at Taco- come tax, which fixed the value of a ! ma, Wednesday. POPULAR intelligence ;. democratic platform. The fastest pacing race ever won T he glittering prospect before the, The latest census bulletin, relating was by Robert J.at Chicago the 24th. workingman is more money for sugar to illiteracy, is one of the most inter The average of three mile-heats was and ten to twenty percent reduction esting and instructive that has yet 2:06. The populists of Nebraska nomi in wages. Rent, fuel, bread and been issued. It shows, generally meat will not be cheaper, and his speaking, that in 1890 there were nated Judge Silas A. Holcomb for purchasing power will be loss. Keep 6,324,702 persons iu the United governor. He is a recent convert tab, now, till 1896, and compare the States over 10 years of age, or more from the democratic ranks. state of affairs with the condition in than 13 per cent of the total popula News has been received that 10,- 1891 and 1892. Every intelligent tion, who could not read or write. 000 Chinese troops are about to ad citizen has the opportunity to prove This looks to be a remarkably large vance ou Seoul. The news from the for himself whether this free trade number, considering the abundant war is both unsatisfactory and unre- contention is not a snare and de educational facilities cf the country, i liable. and it certainly is larger than it lusion. General Antonio Ezeta and his ought to be; but there are certain j fellow refugees from San Salvador B ob I ngersoll is nothing without mitigating features in the case. The ; were prisoners in the U. S. district he is creating a sensation and doing statistics include the,colored people court at San Francisco on the 24th. barm in the world. He has published and the foreign-born whites, among The case was continued till Septem a letter in the New York JV'orW in whom the greatest part of the illiter ber 3d for important evidence. which be justifies suicide. In fact acy exists. That is to say, the per A company of ex-employes of Pull considers it a proper thing when a centage of colored illiterates is 57, man is a failure here. In very flow and of foreign illiterates 13, while man. backed by capitalists, has been ery language, wonderful flowers in ■ the proportion of native white illit organized to build car and manufac turing shops at Hiawatha, Kan. fact, more flowers than wheat, he erates is only a little over 7 per cent. Brown county citizens have taken The showing is an improvement upon presents his reasons, colored by ex-i 890.000 iu stock, and Chicago capi 1880 in the sense that the general aggcration, seasoned by misrepre talists $200,000. Louis Meyers, pres- sentation, yet capturing some by percentage is reduced 1 per cent. i ident, and G. O. Allen, secretary, se Ins wonderful language. It has been Singularly enough the colored peo lected the 6ite Tuesday. Allen is ple have done better in this respect followed by answers and is raising the inventor of a new palace sleep than either the native or foreign- quite a literary storm. born whites, which goes to prove ing car, for which Pullman offered him $65.000, and a New York com Caseno, the murderer of President that they are taking advantage of pany $80,000 and a royalty. The Carnot, of France was executed in the schools in a very creditable de company will be managed on the co Lyons at 5 o’clock on the morning of gree, and that the next generation operative plan, each workman to re August 16th, and full accounts of the is likely to closely approach the na ceive a share of the profits, though tive white standard, at least in the affair were published by the morning the capitalists are guaranteed 6 per papers of San Francisco the same states where they are principally lo cent on their in vestment before the cated, for white as well as colored day. Thus in these days of. rapid laborer comes iu for his share. The transmission of intelligence, an event illiteracy is most plentiful in the company has control of five patents, transpired in France and full ac south. and is to manufacture all kinds of It will surprise many people to counts of it were in print in San railroad equipment learn that the lowest rate of illitera- Francisco, nearly 7.000 miles away, In prorogueing parliament on the before the cl • k here indicated the cy is not in New England, where we might expect to find it. but in what 24th Queen Victoria among other hour at which the guillotine knife is derisively termed ’ the wild and i things said: "My lords aud gentle was to sever the assassin s head from his body. We live in a wonderful woolly west.” The states lying west men: It affords me sensible gratifi age, and if we progressed as rapidly of the Mississippi river ail surpass cation to be able to dismiss you at in material and spiritual well being these upon the Atlantic coast and . the end of a session which has been as in the subjugation of natural the intermediate region. Nebraska little less than a prolongation of the forces, we should soon be a race of stands at the head of the list with . previous one. aud it gives me pleas saintly and perfectly contented be only 3 per cent of illiterates, and ure to reflect that your labors, if ings. Then there would be no Case- Kansas, Iowa the Dakotas and Mis they have been exhausting, have also rios, no Debses, no Prendergasts and souri range from that to 7 per cent. been fruitful. I am confident that no poverty.—California Fruit Grower. This is attributable in a considerable you share in the joy with which I measure, of course, to the fact that and my people have welcomed the Representative Wilson has be»n the New England and middle states birth of an heir in the third genera renominated in his district have contributed largely to the set tion to my throne, an event not tlement and development of these merely propitious, but unprecedent Congress adjourned Tuesday. newer states, and the foreign-born ed in the history of our country. Mv relation« with the foreign powers! continue friendly and peaceful. It is, however, a matter cf regret that a variety of questions relating to Africa, between my government and the French republic still remain ! unsettled. It is my wish that these be arranged without unnecessary delay, and I am engaged in friendly negotiations looking thereto. Ir. concert with the president of the United States, I have taken step: necessary to put into effect the i award of the tribunal of arbitration i on.the question of the seal fisheries in the Behring sea, and have assent-1 ed to an act of parliament for this purpose, simi'3'.- to an act wh’ch has been passed by the congress of the United States. The governments of the two countries are also in com munication with the principal foreign powers with a view to obtaining' their adhesion to regulations pre scribed by the award. I regret to! state that war has broken out be-; tween the empires of China and Jap an. After endeavoring in concer1. with Russia and other powers, to prevent the outbreak of hostilities. I have taken steps to preserve a strict neutrality between the con-1 tending parties I have concluded a | treaty with the emperor of Japan for the regulation of commercial inter course between that country and the United Kingdom.” h F >■ r h “Soldiers had strange premonitions of death before going into battle during the war, ” said an old soldier. "I could not tell you how many times I have seen my comrades foretell their death. They Eeemed to feel it was coming and went into battle fully prepared to meet their end. So common was thie, and scr regu larly did death follow when foretold, that I often heard officers upbraiding their tnen for speaking of death, remarking: ’A man never speaks of a fear of death without death following shortly after. It's like the smallpox; the one that dreads it most is sure to be the first vic tim. ’ But the officers were reasoning backward. In all the cases I saw the pre diction of deaih was caused by ax* in ward feeling, telling that hia end was near. “It wasn’t fear, for 1 remember ‘Boss’ McKellar, as we used to call him, who came from Eutler county. He had been a brave soldier, serving his full three years, never once failing in his duty, j The day before his three years were up ho went into the battle of the Wilder ness. He was so pale and careworn and lacked so much the usual vigor with which he entered battle that some of his friends remarked how changed he was. He looked like a ghost and was j trembling all ever. They asked him what was the matter. Why,’ he re plied, 'my throe years are up tomorrow, but I’ll never see my service out. I will i be killed in this battle—that I know. ’ "His friends tried to cheer him up, betting him that it was only a morbid fancy, but no amount cf talk could en liven him. He went into the battle and was among the first to fall, being hit squarely in th6 forehead. 1 also remem ber John Dunbar sitting eating crackers with an officer before a campfire on tha eve of battle. He had a 6ad expression when he turned, and breaking the cracker in his fingeis said in a contem plative manner, ‘Well, boys, tliia is my last night on earth. ’ In the dim fire light I saw the big tears well up as the officer inquired what he meant. ‘I’ll be shot tomorrow sure. ’ The officer, see ing how deeply the man was affected, placed his hand upon his shoulder and said: ‘Brace up, John. Don’t be fool ish. Men of Ohio don’t talk like that ’ But this only made the soldier break down. In the battle next day he was killed among the first. I could give you an indefinite number of such instances, wh*ch show that soldiers really had death foretold to them, but these are sufficient. To me it was a most solemn moment when I heard a man ray he was going to be killed. It invariably turned out that way.’’—Exchange. FRENCH ART OF TODAY. Only the Genius of tho People Keeps It From Hopele&s D<ba^eiueQt. For years all the art roads have led to Pariu ' It is today the center of the art world, a model of taste, skill and knowl edge as well as a hotbed of eccentrici ties, mannerisms, stilted affectations and small trickeries. It takes in the world, takes credit for all its virtues and is saddled with all its vices. It is ruled by the quips and cranks of what at times eeems outrageous fortune; it is magnified and belittled; it is over praised and underpraised; it seems to be rising to lofty heights at times and then again to be sinking into the mire* It is at once the best and the worst art cen ter in the world, a crucible where all elements mix, all become alloyed, and yet all average up a respectable grade of amalgam. That which keeps it from hopeless debasement is the art genius of the French people Has that art genius ever reached is apogee? Has it fulfilled its mission and voiced the finer feelings, of France, as painting once did in Italy and Spain? Did we accept the exhibit at the World’s fair as a criterion we might think her day was about finished, that her artists had said all there was for them to say, but the representation was inadequate. Tha French stand sponsor for all the academic emptiness displayed there, fcr all the stud.», recitation, all the exag gerated realism, all the tawdry senti ment, and yet at heart they have little sympathy with them. The academia was foisted upon them early in life by the example of Italy and the misdirect ed energy of royalty. Poussin or Lebrun was no more French in thought or meth od than Corneille. The monarchy up held the academic because it smacked cf heroism and the empire because it fostered the military spirit, but the re public has barely tolerated it, and the radicals have always hated it. It is the bete noir of French art, against which fher9 has been a long seriea of revolu- i "I eH«- Mrs* David Stgaei' F » Chills and Fever Debs not in it ! Lett ma emaciated with distressing cough, no appetl.e, pain l.i chest shoulder, baci: and sfornaci. lor ■ utiles oí Hood's Sci sa parlila gave streu,-- ■ a cod appetir ' a.- i liealtb M bs . D avid L igoli ., W*lcux, Ntbruslia APPERSON has Struck on the Price of Blankets. Hood’s P‘i!o via new triends d-.i 5 tions. W by if not rhat it fails to repre sent tha french' They are fond enougu of talking about such loyalists as Pou= sin, David, Ingres and Cabanel, but the men they love are the rebels. Watteau Fragonard, Delacroix, Millet Corot, Courbet. The vivacious, the decorative the emotional therantimenttl. the post tire—all these they love because they are national characteristics, but the mock heroic, the grandiloquent, eho bombastic, have been more the result cu foreign imitation than the cutcrop of French feeling.—John C. Van Dyke it* Deafne»« Cannot Ke Cured by local applications an thej’cannot reach Century. the diseased portion of the ear. There is Photographs cf “Up Speech/' only one wav to cure deafness, and that What is regarded as the greatest tri is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the umph cf the photographer was the re mucous lining of the Eustachian tube. cent successful experiment by Professor When this tube is inflamed you have a Dameny of Berlin in taking photo rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, graphs of "lip speech.” By making and when it is entirely closed, deafness successive negatives of the movements is the result, and unless the inflamma tion can be taken out and this tube re of the lips of a rapid talker he managed stored to its normal condition, hearing to arrange ph olographs printed from will be destroyed forever; nine cases out them in such a manner that deal mutes of ten are caused by catarrh, which is who were familiar with "lip speech" nothing but an inflamed condition of the could plainly interpret every word tnac mucous surfaces. the speaker uttered.—St. Louie Repuc We will give One Hundred Dollars for lie. any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Sympathy. Cure. Send for circulars, free. .dauae—I m in an awful fix. 1 am m F. J. C heney & Co., Toledo, O. love with a young man who is poor i-cr-' old by Druggists, 7&c. Eelle—Aud he won’t marry you’-r Truth. PREMONITIONS OF DEATH. Soldiers Who Have Gone Into Certain Bat- ties Perfectly Conscious of Their F&te» ANOTHER STRIKE DECLARED ! 1. Dormets From 75c to $1.50. All Wool Blankets S2.75 to $10 per Pair. Harvest Gloves From 75c to SI 75 per Pair. SHE HAD HER WEIGHT. It (Vu a Posthumous Trluiaph, but It Wiu Hers All th*? Same. "When a woman makes her m.nd up to tmythmg, ” said ths man with the ginger betrd, "they ain’t noway of pre ventin her from reachin the end she aims at ” “Thouten she dies, of comae.” re marked the grocer. "It does lock tome,’’said the man with the ginger beard to the rash in terrupter, “like you have the most nat ural gift of tellin what you don’t know every time you open your mouth of any man 1 ever knowed. I will admit,” continued the man with the ginger beard as the grocer assumed a humbled expression, "that you are all right in the grocery business. Fact is, a man would have to be pretty smooth to make a livin cut of the kind o’ stock you keep. New, the time you explained the hair bein in the butter because the but ter wasu t strong enough to hold itself together without it was plumb gccd. I Howsomever, it looks like ram, an I! cau’t waste no more time ou you. Now, i this here woman '—— “Which woman?’’ “This here woman I was thinkin of when I spoke v. a. i_:t like all the rest of ’em. When her mind was sot, it was sot. Pore thing, one had to di6 to git her own way, but she got it ” "Love affair?’’ asked tha man from Potato creek, who had a romantic streak in his mental composition. ‘‘Love affair nothin! She wae marrit to her third husband. They hadn’t been marrit fer more’n a week, I guess, be fore the old man begins twittin her cause she was so thin an wonderin why the Lord couldn’t ’a’ cecn fit to make her weigh as muoh as his first wife. ‘How much did the dear angel weigh’’' she asked him kinder sarcasticlike one ! dav when they had been jawin a little : more than common. " ‘Jist exactly 155 pounds, ’ says he. “ ‘Well,’ says the, ‘I'm a-gein tc : git to that weight if it takes me a boa-1 died years. ’ “Howsomever, ’s*cad cf gettm any, fatter she gits thinner an thinner right along till at last the upe an dies. - ‘Well, ’ says the old man, 'seems like she didn’t git to that there weight she started fer after „IL I guesa ehe weighed nearer 65 than 155.' But that's all he knowed about it About two rears afrai there was a boom in real estate, ar* the i old grave-yard turuin out to be pretty | good town lots the folks had tc move, this here woman among tho rest WLur. they come to dig her up, she had patri- fled.” “Petrified, leuppc-seyoumean.” sale tbs scboolteache r. "Anyhow, I mean she had turned tc jock. An just fer curiosity thej weighed her. i uany thing too. She como exactly to that there 155 pounds she alles said she’d ^it, an they won’t never nobody treks me believe that the didn’t know whac sho was doin all the Drue. ’ ’—Indianapolis Journal. SHÛ WANTED HCR PACKAGE. Aud SLe Goc it, Zoo, After Soin« EiupLitui Explanations. Judging from something that took place in one of the express offices, I am satisfied that all women don’t require the faculty for scolding after they are married. A young woman who lives s long way cut ou Jc-ffcrson street came into cue cf ths express company’s office; with a postal card she had received iron, the company stating that a package wm there for her. She presented the card1 and asked for the package. Then the trouble began. The agent first asked hei where she expected the package from. “Most anywhere,” she replied. "But that isn’t satisfactory,” said the agent. "Is there any place in par ticular you expect a package to be tent from?” "Yes..a goed many places in particu lar, ” she answered very sharply. "Well, what is it you expect?” asked the agent. "I expect a good many things,” she retorted, banging the point cf her um brella down on tha fleer very sharply, "and, what’s mere if there is a package here for me I want it. ” "Excuse me,” eaid the agent, witl* tantalizing coolness, "but cur rule- must be observed, and the rules arc- that persons unknown to us must be identi fied, and you must oe iueiitiucu oefore we can give you the package that this card calls lor. ” The girl’s eyes snapped. She choked a few times, and then, punctuating every word with a sharp rap of her gloved fist on the desk, she said: “Look here! My — name — is----- ——. I’m—goffig—to—-be—mamed— Gloves tor Hop Picking From 55c to 75c per Pair. Less our usual ten per cent discount for Cash. ha rs Are going’ fast at our reduced prices « BURNS & DANIELS N Realizing the Closeness of the Times are mak ing Prices on ALL KINDS OF FURNITURE TC CORRESPOND S pecial prices ij Gn Outfits for New Housekeeper?. . . . The Reporter ------- IS ONLY------- ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR next—week—and—this—package—is— a—wedding—present. I—expect—many —more — but — I —want—this—one— and—I' m—going—to—have—it I” The agent looked as though some strong man had struck him behind the ear. “Yes, ma’am, you can have it,” he said. ‘ ‘ Sign your name right here, ’ ’ and he pushed the big book toward her with out another word. He brought the pack age and handed it to her. She snatched it away from him spitefully and walked cut as though she weighed more than the soldiers' monument. —Buffalo News. A CsxcfiU EaXber "Lock here,” said the parent to the schoolteacher, "I see that erne of the lines in my boy’s copybook is. ‘Less haste, more speed ’ 1 ’ “Yes.” "And here’s another that reads, 'The longest way round is the shortest way home ’ ” "Yea ” "Well, I want it stopped. I don't want those moldy proverbs festoonea around hia intellect. I’m educating him for business, not the United States sen ate ’’—Washington Star In the Militia. Captain—Have you ever been drilled? Private (who had seen serviceThey called it drillin, but it was bcrin to me. —Detroit Free Press. A Wann Weather in-ick. Here is a recipe for soda water jww- ders, which are considered excellent for allaying thirst in warm weather. Have put in blue paper 30 grainaof carbonate of soda, in white paper 25 grains of tar taric acid. Dissolve the sc*da powder in half a glass of water and stir into it the acid and ¿rink while effervescing. 1.’ you desire sirup, make it out of sugir boiled in water and flavor as you like. Dissolve the soda in the sirup.—Wash ington Star. NOTICE OF SHERIFFS .’.ALE ’OTICE ir beret-.’given tiist tha ’'.nder-ign* «sheriff *.f YurnblU couav nat- ,t * gon, unde: end b -Tiru.: cf t writ cf .-aecut .* I iF’ued out of the circuit court of tne rt»te nt or ' egon, for "eiubLl county beunng date of Au? :»t 2c. ... I' 189a, upon »nd tr. enforce the ;u4gu* n: i ntid order of scie made b" rsid coin n the : ■ "* davof Much, 1H9* *u that certain acticn vh;-r*' j In Frtnk Era- Co ’ as piciutiff and *LOt- > j Geldard v.*u defondaut in wbici* .t-vaj aljuj, t | '.bat the raid pluiutid Fimk Pro- Cc. re". Horn the defendant Tboman Geldard. in f . I gold coin, the principal sue * of i4-, and ic< -. I est tbereon at the rate of ten r r cent per ann-.n !rom the Sltir day of Marfil. and toe s<nr,. Kt 1. attorneys'tee'and itc posts and disbe;. -’ uieuts taxed at Sfi.id, nr.d for n-rrning coils. ordering the cale cf tho hereinafter dicer:’ I real property attached iu .aid action on tbe l-!i. day of March 1E94, to obtr.ir. f it* !' to pa- severa! acmé oi money abe ■ s»*i ■ ana *.c . - ing costs. And wherea*. on the YHb dav ct .-firct, * -t W. I-, Warren, tbe duty quaUnea and ac. sheriff of Yanbill county, Oregon, at that U duly levied upon and attached iu ’aid action the following described real pror-ert" belong*. to the defendant Tbcrnar G< 1-fard. to-w it The south hall of tbe nc.tihea’t quarter and t *- .’.cutbeast quarter of the northwest quarter ot tlon tbree[31 township two [2J t-.nth snre ni. [•] west of ifie Willamette meridian in lambili ■ "tint-, state nf u:> . ,.*. and intuningltlOseros • Also the northwest quarter ot tbe nortbw.. quarter of section three [3i township two . scuth range MX [C¡ west of tbe Willamette m. r laian, containing 4 j acres in 'iamh.il count* state of Oregou Low therefore, 07 • irtuo of sud execut* 1 Judgment and order of rsle. and in pursuance ■■ the commands of said writ, I will, on Satu : the ctb day of September, 1D1 at tbe hour ci .- J o'clock p m of said dav at tho court housed. - 1 in McMinnville, 7amb*.J county Oreyon, : -! I subject to redemption, at public auction, to tin , highest bidder for cam in band, tbe shore ■ I scribed real property, to satl.'.f, 1 ,;d judgment cotte and accruing cost: Dated this the ,’tb day of A uznst W G HEX'DEBM>X', Lberlff of said Yamhill County. NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALL VyOIICE it hereby fiven tbet tbe unacrsiBuc i a N »s sberin ot raiublll i.i-.untv. ctate of i>-. , gen. under aud by virtue of a writ of exe-ut 1 issued out of tbe circuit court of tbe state of Gr Quickly A* timged. egou for Yamtill county, beannr date f A- Foreign terms are apt to occasion con I ust 2d, A. D. ItWi upon and to enforce the ju<ik- ; end order of sale inaoe bv i-ajd court ** fusion in the minds of those who are went March. *i9t. in thet certain .. ignorant of their meaning, because, as tb«2?tbdavor tion wherein the .'lorwvg.sn Pi .w Ccmpeu'- a, was plaintiff, ».nd P. 11 ed aud Vi one old lady who thought mirabile corporation, Hem Hall were defendant- u* wblcb it .rai . meant a “rough, noisy crowd o’ folks,” : judged that tbe ¿aid plaintiff, the 2.arweg*.in Flow Company, a corporation, recover lrou. tu-- said, "They don’t scussly ever stand fer ’ defendants R Reed ^nd WUUaxn Hall m r what they’d otter, jedging by the gold coin, tbe principal e iui of »99.41 '»nd Itit.-r- sound!” eat thereon from Marcb il th. 1894, at tbe rate • , 10 per cent per annum, ami the further rm* i A western man wished to file a paper I as 00 attorneys’ fee» and the costs and di-bu: for his partner and himself in the cir njenta taxed at 857.05. and for at cruing ec-t- m . u tbe tale oi tbe hereinafter dt-scrib .. cuit court and affixed to the firm signa ordering real property, attached iu -aid Bellon on the 1 ture the words “per se. ” day ot March, lv9l, to <-l'ta*i* fund- to M) 1. several suuis of money above etated and accru “I reckon that won’t do,” said the ■ ing coats partner, whose education was somewhat And wbereas, on the 15tb dav of llar-b lf ' i L Warren, the duly qualified and act,- more extensive “ ‘Per se’ is ein’gler W abt riff cf Yambill count ur< got* at that tin. and means je»t you, and ther's two of duly levL.-d upon and attached, in eaid actl , tbe following described real property belong,: KB.” to the defendant R. Reed, towit "Oh, all right! I can fix that easy- An undivided one-1*». 1 itileriat in the foil.’, . - ing Commencing at the southwest corner of tbi enough,” responded the ether easily. | north half of the northwest quarter ot section tv.- > "Gimme the eraser ’’ (2j in township three ¿ south, range five 'v : of the wiUam.tte merid.ur. ruuna.g thei The article in question was passed to north thirty ¿nirode, tnen. e eart thirty X, rt .- aim, and after some scratching and re j thence south twenty-one (21) rods and tber, : twenty-four (21) rods to the place of be*. ■ writing he shoved the document over to 1 west uing, containing four acres more or less, and he- his partner with a smile of triumph. It ; . ing a part ot the homestead claim of Wm. Hell was signed, “Green & Wilson, per 2 I and situate in Yamhill countv, ste'e of Oiegoc 1 Also the following described real property c’s. ”—Youth’s Companion fotiglng to the defendant Wilham Hall. to’. Tbe north half of the northwest matter ot r tlon two 12] township three 13’. south of rar . The Abbe de Marcllee, in one of his five (5J west ot the Willamette' meridian, ex* latest works, calculated that he had ! therefrom four acres deeded to Annie Reed In , t ol. 24, page 2», records of Yamhill countv printed 133,124 verses, and yet the pub egon. containing 73.62 acres. l.’ow therefore, by virtue of sa*d execution lics had not sense enough to appreciate I Judgment aud order of sa.e, and m pur-ueuc- aim as a poet. the commands ot said writ I will, on tjaturd ; the 8th day of September, 1391. s- tbe boa.-of < d ,Le C0lul b0U5« 0 ■ • Spain has over 400 islands in the east- 1 1 in McMinnville, “A Yamhill cc-untv Or. .m irn seas, mostly comprised in the Philip : subject to redemption at public iuctlor to • I highest bidder for cesb in hand th*- »bore . pines and Moluccas. 1 scribed real property, to satisfy .-aid judgment cost» and ac cruing costs. Dated thl" the "ti*dsv of Augu--, 1ST4 Monuments to Women. i W. G. HENDERSOb Sheriff of said Yamhill Count . Hitherto in France Joan of Arc has been almost the only woman tc mount *pon a marble pedestal, but the privi- ege is being extended. At Vitres a stat - le is being raised to Mme. de Sevignc, *nd at Valenciennes a similar honor is n store for Mlle. Duchenois. Apropos these facts a French writer observes, Woman being, even in marble, so nuch more decorative than ourselves, ! one can only rejoice over ths advent of I isminine statues." Notic? cf Final Settlement. V"0TICE * betebj given that W 8 Hatch tl t »N executor of toe estate *.f tberman Ila; deceased, has filed b*s final account as such ex ■- utcrintbe county court for Yamhill coun v Oregun, and said court has ret eatuiday . , temper 8tb, 1694, at tbe hour of 10 o cioc«; ‘ a n* asthet.meto hear aid final account aud of objections thereto and to the settlement there Dated August 7th 1391 W. 8. HATCH. 1 Executor,