Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Yamhill County reporter. (McMinnville, Or.) 1886-1904 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1894)
Entered at the Poatoffice in McMinnville, as Second-class matter. XXI \ M’MINNVILLE, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER LIVERY STABLE. GATES & HENRY, Props. Loe.;t<-d at Sheridan, Yamhill County. Oregon, are just now offering bargains in re:il c-tute that can't be duplicated in the Willamette valley. Lands that have been held in large tracts are now being subdivided into tracts t<> suit purchaser, and at prices that defy competition. People with mill means and desiring homes on the installment plan, will find it to their interest to call upon or address this company. Sheridan is in a fa vored fruit district of Oregon, out of range of the cofilin moth and other in i" t pc-1:. We also have some fine business openings and mill properties for sal<« or exchange for other property. Trades of all kinds negotiated. Coriv-pondence solicited. Descriptive circular and price list will be for warded on demand. Below we give a few farms we are offering for sale: NO 1. 4Ss acres, 400 in cultivation, large two-story house, large barn, two large bearing orchards, nice stream of water running through the pasture, furnish ing abundance of water at all times of year, situated on county road and railroad, 2'._. miles from Amity. This will be sold at a great sacrifice and divided to suit purchaser. NO. 2. 18.1 acres, 8t) acres in crop, balance easy cleared, situated on county road Smiles front Sheridan, mile from school, splendid hop, grain or fruit land ; price $15 per acre. NO. 3. 200 acres, 50 acres cleared, balance young oak and fir land, nice stream water, a splendid stock ranch, situated 3 miles from Sheridan; price $7 per acre. Nt >. 4. lftO acres all in cultivation, adjoining the city limits of Sheridan, fine bop land ; price $35 i>er acre. NO. 5. 30 acres, 15 acres clear, all lays fine to cultivate when clear, miles from Siu ri< 1 tn ; price $12.50 per acre. Matthies Brothers, PROPRIETORS FRESH MEATS OF ALL KINDS. CHOICEST IN THE MARKET. » South j*i<lc Third Si. between It and C. CITY BATHS — TO VM>I£ IA L P A K LORS, SHERIDAN LAND COMPANY, Sheridan, Oregon. ISAAC DAUGHERTY, Manager. Logan & Kuich, Prop's. For a Clean Shave or Fashionable Hair Cut Give Us a Call. Baths are new and first-class in every re spect. I.a<ii<‘s’ Barbs and shampooing a apeeial- ty. Employ none but first-class men. Don’t forget the place. Three doors west of Hotel Yamhill. Track and Dray Go B. E. COULTER. Prop. ELSIA WRIGHT, Goods of all descriptions moved nn<l careful handline guaranteed. Collections will bo made monthly. Hauling of all kinds done cheap. Manufactures and Deals in * Si ’IHOVx. M c M í NNVIU ü E SADDLES, BRIDLES, SPURS, Brnshea and selltt them cheaper than they t ail l>e bought anywliere else in the Willamette Valley. Our ail home mule net« of harness are. pronounced unsurpassable by those who buy them W. L. D ouglas Cf ISTHEBSST. WiJL’Ll NOSaUEAKINC. $5. CORDOVAN, the Circuit Court of the State of County. I N W. Yamhill 1« FRASER, Plaintiff | FRENCH& ENAMELLED CALE 4 3.®PP0LICE,3S oles . «0SO2W0RKINGH-.. National Bank **■* , EDCTRA FINE. ^2.’I?-5 B oys 'S cotl S hoes . -LADIES- —(McMinnville, Oregon.— SEND FOR CATALOGUE Paid up Capital, $3O,4»OO r W-L’DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MA53. You enn miivc nmnrv by purcbasiug W. L. l>onul;is Slioea« Transacts a Geueral Bankiug Business. President, - Cice President, - Cvdiier, - Cashier - Because, we are the largest manufacturers of advertised shoes in the world, and guarantee the value by stamping the name and price on the bottom, which protects you against high prices and the middleman’«; profits. Our shoes equal custom work in style, easy fitting and w -ring qualities. We have them sold every where at lower prices for the value given than i iiv other make. Take no substitute. If your dealer cannot supply you, we can. Sold by - J. IV COWLS. LEL LAUGHLIN. E. C. d PPERSO.X - - LINK Board of Directors: J. W. COWLES, LEE I.AI'GHLIN. A. J. Al'PERSoN, WM. CAMPBELL, J. L ROGERS. R. JACOGSOH, MCMINNVILLE SI ÎI.TION8. JOHN F. DERBY TILE FACTORY, Situateli at the Southwest corner of the Fair Grounds. All size« of flrat-class Drain Tile kept constantly on hand at lowest living prices. M c M innville . OREGON E. J. Qualey & Co QUINCY, MASS., Wholesale and Ketuil Dealers in GRANITE MONUMENTS AND ALL KINDS OF CEMETERY FURNISHINGS Ail work fully guaranteed to give perfect satis faction. Refers I.* pwmmion to Win. Me Chris man. Mrs. L. E. Bewley, Mrs. E. D. Fellows. t N the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Yambill County. HETTIE L. TOLSON, Plaintiff,) vs. L C. P. TOLSON, Defendant. ) To <*. P. Tolson the above named defendant: In the name of the state of Oregon, vou are hereby militied anti required lo appear and answer the complaint filed against yon in the above named court by the first dav of the term followiug the expiration of the time prescribed in the order lor the publication ol this summons, to wit: Monday. September, 21th, A. It. ls'.tl, and it you fail so t<> appear or nuswer, for want there of. the plaintiff will apply to the court for relief played for in the complaint herein, to wit: A dc- eree dissolving the marriage contract now exist ing tietween the plaintitl ami the defendant amt eoanging the name tiftbe plaintiff to her maiden name, to wit, Hattie Lawson, and for such other and further relief as may lie meet in the premises. This suninions is served by the publication thereof tor six weeks, by order of Hon. Geo. H. Burnett, judge of said court, made August »th, A. D. 1WI. J no . J. S cencek . Attorney for Plaintiff. I SUMMONS. Sell Sight Exchange ami Telegraphic Trans fers on New York, San Frunuisco ami Portland. Deposits received subject to check. Interest paid on Time Deposits. Loans money on approved Beenrity. Collections made on all accessible points. Proprietor of The McMinnville Oregon for MAGGIE FRASER. Defendant.) To Maggie Fraser, the above named defendant: In the name of the state of Oregon, you are here by notified and required to appear anil answer the complaint tiled against von in the altove named court, by the first day of the term follow ing the expiration of the time preserifad in file order for the publication of this summons, to-wit: Monday. Septemlier 24th, A. D. ISOL and if von fail so lo appear or answer, for want thereof'the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed lor in the complaint herein, to-wit: A 'leeree dissolving tile marriage contract now ex isting between the plaintiff and the defendant, and for such other and further relict as may Ire me< t in the premises. This summons is served by publication thereof for six week.«, by order of lion T A. Stephens. Judge of the < iretiit court for the 4th judicial dis trict. made August »th, A. D. IS'.H. JNO. J. SPENCER, Attorney for Plaintiff. i4.l3.'i.oFlNECALf;&KANGAP0a I In the circuit court of the state of Oregon for ■ the county of Yamhill. Henrietta Mabel Bush, ] Plaintiff, | vs. !• Department No. 2. Marston Bush, j Defendant. J r po Marston Bush, the above named defendant: COPYRIGHTS I In the name of the state of Oregon you are CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT? Fora hereby r< quired to appear and answer the com- prompt, answer and an honest opinion, write to I plaint iilr«i against you in the above entitled suit KI I N N A < who have had nearly fifty vears’ in the above named court on or before Monday, experience in the patent business. Communica- tions strictly confidential. A I l:m<lbook of In- I the 24th day of September, 1894, the same being format ion concerning Patent* and how to ob | the first day of the next regular term of said court tain them sent tree. Also a catalogue of mechaii- following six weeks publication ot this summons, ical and scientific books sent tree. ! ami you will take notice that if you fail so to ap- Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive | )M-ar and answer said complaint the plaintiff Will » • « i.il notice in i he Scientific American, and apnly to the court for the relief prayed for in the taus ar© brought, widely before the public with complaint, to-wit; out c<k.t to the inventor. This splendid paper, issued weekly, elegant ly illustrated, has by far the b'or a decree dissolving the marriage contract Jar/est circulation of any scientific work in the now existingbetween plaintiff and defendant and world. S3 a year. Sample copies sent free. for care and custody of Edmund Bush. Lula Building Coition, monthly, year. Single Bush and Frederick Bush, minor children of copies, 2•> cents. Every number contains beau plaintiff and defendant, and for such oilier re tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new lief as the plaintiff* may be entitled to in equitv houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the designs and secure contracts. Address and good conscience, and for costs. MUNN & CO., N ew Y ork , 301 B roadway . This summons is served by publication in the Yamhill Reporter, a newspaper published in said «•ouiitv and state by six weeks’ publication there- | of by order of Hon. H. H. Hewitt, judge of the BICYCLE RIDERS, aforesaid court, ma<le in the city of Albany, coun ty of Linn, state of Oregon, the 9th day of August Agr*»ntw and Dealer« 1894. Are your eyes open? Are you keeping E. E. SELPII, Att’y for Pl’ff. ¿hr -ast of the times? Are you aware of the fact that cemented tires have gone with the “ordinary” and the solid an<l cushion tiros? Are you aware also that the “Rambler” clincher tires are being* purchased and use 1 by the lending I Third St. 1 door W. makers of the world ? That the “Rambler” is the light ' of Burna & Daniels est, strongest, fustest and handsomest bicycle made on earth ? That it received Jive awards at the world’s lair? Examine the ten leadiug points that are on Best ?5cMeal in City. no other machine but the “Humbler” and you are convinced. Choice Fruits, Confections, Nuts and Cisars. “Cycles” with clincher tires from $45 to $85. “Rambler” roadsters, ^85 to $90. Light roadsters. $105. ‘‘Scorchfirs” (24, 25 and 27 pounds). $125. (Eastern list nrices: no high Lemonade, Soda Fop, Etc. list with a big discount.) Catalogues and circular free for the ¡.suing. We want live Board by the Day or Week. agents and dealers everywhere in Oregon, Washington and Idaho. Write us at once. F red . T. M errill C ycle C o ., lì EST <31114 UEfl. 327 Washington street, Portland, Or. Wholes ne ami retail representatives Pa- Alfie Northwest. The threshing is about over in this Guarantees made good in Portlaud, WHITE’S— estaurant MEALS AT ALL HOURS ICE CREAM! part of the county. Grain is not turning out so well as was expected NOTICE OF SHERIFF S SALE. Holl’s Old Jowelry Stand, 3d Street. earlier in the season, owing to the "OTI€Eis hereby given that the undersigned hot weather and the aphis. I. ». CALBBEATH. I. K. UOl'fHKB. \ us sheriff of Yamhill county, stale of Ore gon, by virtue of a writ of execution issued out F. J. Deach, former pedagogue in of the circuit court of the stale of Oregon, lor Calnreatn & Goucher. Yamhill county, m that certain suit wherein Van West Chehalem, has been hardening B. DeLashmuti and Luctma K. Oatman, as exec utrix of the last will and testament of H. B. Oat his muscles with Johnson's threshing PHYSICIANS AND SÜROEONS. man. deceased, were plaintiff', ami John Grant ami his wife Mary Grant, ami W. T. Caples were crew, preparatory to a term of school MoMtSNVit ti .... O bboob defendants, and to enforce the decree of fore- j closure ami order of sale made by said court in on the lake. (Office over Braly’s bank.) Naid suit, decreeing that said plaintiffs recover Hop-picking has commenced in I ft out the defendant John Grant in United States I gold coin, the sum of til st os, with interest earnest in the yards of Win. Woods thereon from the 2f»th day of March, A. 1». ism, I ¡it the rate of eight fu r cent per annum, ami the and W. W. Walker. We hear that further sum of frloO.OO attorneys’ fees, ami the SHERIFFS SALE. costs and disbursements taxed at ^3.15, said de- there are a few of the smaller yards I cree having been given on the 26th day of OTICE is hereby given that the under-igned I March, ls'.'l, and ordering the sale of the foliow that will not be gathered on account kA rr 'ic ritf of Yamhill county, slate of Ore ing described real property, to-wit: gon. by virtue of a writ of execution issued out I Situate in Yamhill county, state of Oregon, of the low price. of the circuit court of said Yamhill county, Ore i ami beginning al the southwest corner of the E. G. D. Vinton is now managing the gon. in that certain suit wherein Sidney A. Bur G. Edson donation land claim No. 58, Notification nett was plaintiff .and Daniel Otis. Filancy Otis, 12tiu. in tow iisliip four [I] south, range four [4] his wife, and L. II. Baker and Mary Shuck were wc’t of the Willamette meridian in said county farm of A. H. Pape, the popular in defendants, and to enforce the decree of fore- i am! state; thence north on the west line of said ch »sure and order of sale made by san I court in claim (variation 21 degrees east) twenty-nine surance agent of McMinnville. said suit, decreeing that the said plaintiff recover ‘ [29] chains to the northwest corner ot tract from Mr. Van Orsdel has erected a from the defendants Daniel Otis and Filancy : which an oak 3 inches in diameter bears north Otis, in United States gold coin, the Mini of one I 70 degrees ami 40 minutes east 81.50 links: thence hundred and seventy dollars and eighty-six | the following bearings and directions, to-wit: large barn the past summer. cents, <$170.861 w ith interest on said sum at the Thence south G8 degrees east 5.93 chains; thence Mrs. Doty, accompanied by her rate of eight per cent per annum from the 28th : south 61 degrees east 9.89 chains: thence south day of March. 1894, and the further sum of $25.00 ' 23 degreesand 30 minutes east 6.73 chains; thence as attorneys’fees, and the costs aud disburse south 15 degrees east .’>.05 chains: thence south 55 family, left Monday for Redding, Cal. ments taxed at $1905, said decree having l»een degrees ami minutes west 5.92 chains; thence given on the 28rh <iay of 'larch, and order south 1 degree ami 30 minutes west 5.44 chains; They make the trip overland. ing the sale of the following described real thence south 15 degrees west 4.82)^chains: thence Quite an interesting Sunday school property, towit: north 72 degrees west 10.40 chains: thence south Lots No. Two, (2) Seven (7) and Eight in m ) degrees ami «>•• minutes west 2 4»>chains to the block No. Four 14» in Mrs. p. W. Chandler’' Sec place of beginning, containing 40.13 acres of land is being conducted on the lake with ond Addition to the City of McMinnville, in i as per county surve, No. 1132. as made by C. E. Mr. Rounds as superintendent. Yamhill county, state of Oregon, per the duly Branson, county .surveyor of said Yamhill coun recorded plat thereof now of record in the coun ty. and as recorded it ¡¡age 19_‘ of Book “E’’ of Quite a delegation from the Che ty recorder’s office ot said county. the records of survey' for said Yamhill county. Said writ of execution being dated August 6th, Now therefore, by virtue of said execution, halem hill are picking hops in the iStM, and to enforce said writ and by virtue there judgment and order of sale, and in pursuance of of. 1 will, on Saturday, the 8th day of September, the commands of said writ. I will, on Saturday, Pike neighborhood. C iieiialis . 18^4. at the hour of eleven o’clock a. m. of said the >(h day of September, 1894, at the hour of one day. at the court house door in McMinnville, in said county and state, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in U. 8. gold coin, the above described real property to satisfy said exe cution. costs and accruing costs. Dated this the "th day of August, 18*.*4. W. G. HENDERSON, Sheriff of Yamhill County, Oregon. i o’clock j». m. of said day, at the court house door in McMinnville, Yamhill countv. Oregon, sell at Tn Printers. public auction to the highesi bidder for cash in | hand, the above dewribed real proj>ertv. to satis- The cylinder press upon which Ify said execution, costs and accruing costs. Dated this the 7th day of August. 1894 R eporter is now printed is offered W «;. HENDERSON. Sheriff of said Yamhill County. sale. It will be sold at a bargain. NO. 36 MOW TO BEAD ANI» WRITE IN CIPHER. |—¡ ome 3 eekers ,/\ ttention ¡ E Street, north of Thi-<1. Everything N«-w and First-cla". Conveyance of <’omnjiTi-ial Travel er« a 'pt" j . !ly. Board and -tabling • y the «lay or month. W<- olirit a fair Hliare of the local pat ronage. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE S2.00 PER YEAR. One Dollar if paid in advance, Single numbers five cents. the for ing its natural order in the English servation that the purple style of alphabet to represent the one he painting rarely wins favor among Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report. — should have used in ordinary writ- women.— Harper’* Weekly. It is neither so difficult to read ord | ing, thus: a is represented by b. b by inary cipher-writing without a key c, c by d, etc.; and simply substitut FKOÌI THE COUNTY PRESS, nor to w-rite in cipher so that what I ing for the letters in the paragraph North Yauihill Record. is so written cannot be read without those that follow them in a b c order, Some of our exchanges report a key, as is generally supposed. For we read as follows: wheat on the raise. The only way example, we have before us the fol “M y own B essie : I we have noticed it raising around lowing paragraph from the column ".Meet me in the church at 7 I of personals in one of our great dailj’ o'clock p. m. the 17th of this month. here is by grinding it into flour and newspapers of recent date: Don't let your uncle Col. C. Moore coaxing it with a little yeast or “Nz pxo Cfttjf: suspect anything, I fear he leads a I | baking powder. “Nffu nf jo uif divsdi bu 7 p dmpdl double life, and is anything but' A destructive tire occurred at the QN. uif 17ui pg uijt npoui. Epou what he seems to be. Our pastor jiarm °f ^r- Nelson, in Moore's cor must have been one of the largest quent wheat consumption. The re mfu zpvs vodmf Dpm. D, Nppsf will unite us, and a few friends will valley, last Monday. It is supposed cities of the world, if not the largest. sult is lower prices. This year shows to have originated by some one step tvtqfdu bozuijoh; J gfbs if mfbet b be present. “Your ping on matches. The barn, a new Temples, palaces and edifices of the wheat market at the lowest epvcmf mjgf boe jt bozuijoh evu yibu “Tom.” threshing machine belonging to Mr. vast size in a fine state of preserva level it has been since railways if tffnt upef. Pvs qbtups xjmm vojuf Thompson, and all the grain except tion lie scattered over a wide terri equalized prices at primary points vt boe b gfx gsjfoet xjmm cf qsftfou. about fifty bushels of oats, were de tory, intermingling with mounds all over the United States, and the “Zpvs At the summer meeting of the and masses of crumbling stone and news from Siberia seems to indicate stroyed. “Upn.” American Society for the Extension brick. Large forest trees are grow that a still lower level is a possibility The majority of readers, it is safe of University Teaching recently held Little Mabie Fairchiles, daughter ing upon the debris and in the courts —nay, even a probability.— Toledo to presume, gathered but little in in Philadelphia, the lecturer on aes of Mr. and Mrs. Segjl Fairchiles, of of palace and temple. Little is Iliad,. formation from this queer-looking thetics announced a theory of color Fairdale, has been suffering for the known of the history of Ancor, notice; but we will see what it is all which has features of rather startling past week from a wound on her though it is stated that it could send OREGON NEWS AND NOTES. about. In order to do this it will be significance. He called attention to right limb just above the knee, by a forth a million or more lighting men. necessary to take into consideration the analogy between color and tone. colt kicking her. The limb is swol The portions of the walls still stand James Ball has been confirmed as len considerably and bruised quite several peculiarities of the English Both tone and color are the result ing are cyclopean. How it should collector of customs at the port of language. It will be found in the of vibration. A cord vibrating slow badly. She is unable to use it and have fallen into such complete des Yaquina. first place, that certain words occur ly makes a sound; if it vibrates with it is feared the bone is fractured. Charles Mooney, for a long time uetude it is difficult to conjecture. oftener than others; as, for instance, sufficient rapidity it makes light. A the oldest man in Oregon, died at Newberg Graphic. the articles a, an and the, and the wire swinging at the rate of 25G The Highest North American Oregon City on the 31st, aged 107 Mountain Peak.. conjunctions but and and. Also that times a second gives the tone mid The Yamhill Fruit Union loaded a years. in spelling words certain letters are dle C; one going twice as fast its oc big refrigerator car with some of Until within a few months geogra Miss Lizzie Tongue, daughter of more frequently used than others. tave. When it reaches 50,000 vibra-' Newberg's finest fruit this week for phers have assigned to the peak of Hon. T. H. Tongue of Washington the Montreal market. Newberg It is, indeed, surprising to discover tions a second its sound is so shrill Orizaba, or Citlaltepetl, its Aztec county, met with a very painful acci how far this holds good. Whatever as to be inaudible. Now if the wire , may feel proud of the fact that this title, and Mount St. Elias, the for dent in camp at Netarts by upsetting is the first car of green fruit that the subject in a general way, or the be of platinum, an electric current mer in Mexico, the latter in A laska. a bucket of scalding water on her was ever shipped from the county, manner of treating it, some words may be passed through it and it may the honors of supreme elevation in feet. and all the letters preserve their be heated—that is, its molecules may but not the last. North America. Orizaba measures The yield of wheat this year in Marcus Blair is having the pre eighteen thousand three hundred relative frequency of occurrence be made to vibrate with great speed, with little variation. It has been and give off ether waves precisely liminary survey made looking toward feet, and St. Elias rises to the height Wasco county is considered the best ascertained that the proportionate like those of sound, only much short- irrigating his farm. He already has of eighteen thousand two hundred in its history. The season has been number of letters in a composition of er. When the wire reaches a i about a quarter of an acre of black feet. But Mr. Russel has discovered favorable, and farmers better under any considerable length in the Eng temperature of 540 centigrade it has berries irrigated and is so well and measured 1 he altitude of a new stand the nature of the soil than they did a few years ago. Some farms in lish language is about as follows: a vibratory speed of 395 trillions of ! pleased that he intends to use his mountain in Alaska, which he calls whole farm alike. Prof. Jessup and E-1000 1-475 M-140 V-60 Mount Logan, giving it a height of Sherman county will produce forty waves a second. At. this point it be T-G65 H-355 F-130 K-20 Ira Hall are doing the surveying. nineteen thousand and five hundred bushels to the acre. The county gins to emit light, and if this light N-505 1.-270 P-130 Q-8 feet, thirteen hundred feet in excess will harvest about two millions and be analyzed it will be found tobe red. S-495 C-260 W-130 J-7 Lafayette Ledger. a quarter bushels of grain this sea A-490 R-200 Y-100 Y-« As the temperature is further raised J. W. Martin has sold his interest of St. Elias, and twelve hundred feet son. 0-480 U-185 G-85 X-5 the red gives place to orange, orange in the Lafayette stables to his part higher than the Mexican Orizaba. D-185 B-60 The methods employed for determin In the Tillamook county school to yellow, that to green, and so on ner Frank Gildner. The most cursory glance at the till purple passes through violet and ing these altitudes are sufficiently superintendency contest the Head Professors Bowman and Bittie are scientific, but many determinations light says the decision of Judge cipher reveals the fact that the letter faint lilac into white. The solar f occurs much more frequently than spectrum seems to be a sort of octave hard at work this week cleaning up of like character have been proved Burnett is in effect that the con any other in the paragraph before of color. Certainly red may be lik the seminary campus and papering, faulty. Aconcagua, for example, stitution does not permit a woman us. Referring to our table we find ened to a low musical tone, purple to plastering and painting the inside of being given twenty-three thousand to hold the office, and Mr. Handley the building. They have made the nine hundred feet by one survey, and still holds possession unless the mat the letter e at the head of the list, a high one. old building quite “presentable.” and so set down f as representing e. twenty-two thousand four hundred ter is carried to the supreme court Now for the astonishing meaning The next oftenest used is u, aud wc of these facts. It is impossible not to ¡ feet by another; Chimborazo varying and decided differently. Which is Sheridan Sun accordingly experiment with it as believe that both tone and color are doubtful. In fact it is not probable John Veach, postmaster at Grand fourteen hundred feet, Illampu three that Mrs. May will go to the expense standing for t (the letter that follows present everywhere, thousand feet, and other of the Ibere is a dif- Ronde, has moved to Willamina and e on the table); now having ascer ference in tint between a violin's world's great elevations lying under of appealing the case, as there is not tained, in all probability, the value sounding A string and its E. There will run the hotel. Ches. Ellis will similar, or even more excessive di enough salary connected with the office to warrant it, even if she were of two of the ciphers, we next seek is a difference of sound between remove the office to the store and vergences of survey. ultimately successful. to find in the paragraph a word, per crimson and orange. It is no fancy, officiate as Nasby. The Ladd & Reed farm near Amity, THIS MARECHAL MEL KOSE. haps repeated more than once, of it is a literal fact that a concerto is From Oregon City comes the three letters, in which that which also a picture, and a painting a containing 4000 acres is to be sub How It Was Named by (lie Empress cheering word that the resumption stands for t is first, and that which symphony. It is no fancy that the divided into 40 acre tracts. H. S. of work at the woolen mill places all Eugenia« represents e is last, knowing that revolving spheres make music. The Maloney has been invited to bid up There is a pretty little history in the factories in operation. Two such a word could not well be any world is filled with color and har- ■ on the job of subdivision. connection with the naming of the hundred hands are employed in the thing other than the. Yes, here w’e mony; with keener eyes we should A Portland hunter who gave $250 fashionable Marechai Niel rose, woolen mill; the paper and pulp have it twice in first line, ‘ !uif,”so that see it. Ordinarily, the human ear for a high-bred English setter, has which, as generally known, is named mills have 250 men, and 150 are u equals t, i equals h and f equals e. cannot hear a tone made by less than come to the conclusion that the ani- after the famous general of the Fran working on the new electric plant. Looking over the paragraph a lit sixteen vibrations, nor by more than mal was too high bred. The first co-Austrian war. "When Niel was re The latter two run night and day. tle more carefully, we find, setting than 50,000 a second. Some people . trial proved it. The fool dog chased turning from the scene of his vic Two new mercantile establishments aside the letters already ascertained, cannot hear crickets; many are deaf a buzzard for three hours until ex torious war,” writes an eminent will begin business there September that o occurs oftenest; and we conse to a bat's cry; singing mice sing but hausted, running over several flocks florist, “one of the peasant women 1st. There are evidences that the quently set it down, according to the to few. Likewise, few can see color of fat Yamhill Chinas. along the line of march presented turning point in the business depres order given in our table, as n. This made by more than 800 trillions of him with a beautiful basket of yellow sion has been passed. More building Yamhill Independent. letter it is to be remembered, is vibrations a second. Pres. Newlin left last Friday roses. One of these flowers still had than usual is being done this year. found in the conjunction “and"; and An Oregon girl in an exchange It is a fact which all will remember morning for Oskaloosa, Iowa, to at its roots clinging to it, and on his if we can discover a word of three at this point that the ability to hear tend a national conference of educa arrival in Paris, Niel planted the says in a very sound kind of way. letters with o as the middle letter high tones is cultivable. Is it not tors of the Friends church. He will flower in his garden. The rose "Why do the young men do so much representing n, especially if the word possible likewise to cultivate a sensi probably be absent about three thrived and finally grew to a bush loafing? Go to work! Push ahead! occurs more than once, we may know bility to the higher colors? weeks, and will attend the annual covered with blossoms. The general 1 am nothing but a young girl; I have almost certainly that it must be There is little doubt that it is pos meeting of the Friends church of then presented the plant as a gift to clothed myself and got money in the “and” and that its other letters rep sible. Something like it has already Empress Eugenie. She was delighted hank, and only sixteen years old. I Iowa before returning home. resent a and d. Such a word does taken place. The human race is ¡ In the county news will be found with the beauty and fragrance of the UP more money every year than occur in the last and next to the last gradually ascending the color scale. any boy or young man within a flower, and, on learning that the j sentences in the notice and gives us Civilization has distinctly refined our an item regarding a fig tree at Mc- radius of three miles of my home. rose had no name said significantly: the additional letters; b equals a, sensitiveness to the higher tints. i Minnville in which it is stated that When they get a dollar they go to a Mr. Calhoun, the owner, knows of ‘Then I will give it one. I christen ! and e equals d. Savages love red; uncultured and in but one other tree in the county. it the Marechai Niel,’ and at the j dance and go home a dollar out. My In the midst of the second sentence ferior races are notoriously devoted same time she bestowed upon the i father is able to support me but I occurs a capital J, which, unlike the to yellow; blue has no following There are two or three in this vi amazed general the jeweled emblem choose to support myself. 1 advise capital D in the same sentence, is not among them; some early peoples of cinity, one of which, belonging to that betokened his promotion to the all girls to cut clear of loafing boys. followed by a punctuation mark, so considerable but not of modern re David Everest, has borne fruit the exalted office of marechai of France.” Give them a wide berth, and never cannot be the initial of a proper finement thought well of purple, but past two years. marry a man unless he is able to sup name; and, indeed, cannot be any it was a red purple. The more deli Newberg will shortly have a new port j’ou. And never put your arm STILL CHEAPER W HEAT. other than the pronoun I, for no cate tints have waited till now for industry to add to her growing list. through the handle of a rum jug.” other capital letter without a stop appreciation—violet, lilac and lavan- Mr. Phineas Roberts is arranging to It is rather depressing news to the j A new sort of barley has been start a tannery here. He is an ex American farmers who make wheat after it is used in the midst of an der are quite modern colors. propagated in North Dakota that English sentence. We now have the These considerations justify the perienced tanner, having worked at their chief crop, to learn that a new promises to fill a long felt want. In equivalents to seven ciphers: b method of the illuminist. Thought the business in the east for years. ' and formidable competitor will soon that state the average yield has equals a, e equals d, f equals e, i ful men have all along been unwil The business will be carried on at, be in the field. Consul General Jonas, been from 30 to 40 bushels per acre. equals h, j equals i, o equals n, and ling to believe that so general an his place on Wynooski street, and stationed at St. Petersburg, reports . It is both beardless and is without a he hopes to begin work very soon. 1 to the department of state that the j u equals t. agreement as exists among modern hull, which results have been ob Applying this partial key to the painters that they see purple every We see no reason why the business i completion of the new Siberian rail-1 tained «after years of scientific ex first senteuce in the body of the let where can be entirely the result of a cannot be made to pay, considering 1 road will bring an enormous volume i periments in cross fertilization. A ter, and marking the unknown let subjective notion, or that the paint the good price of leather and the of Siberian wheat into the world’s j sample of this new variety was ters as x, we read; “xeet xe in the ing in violets is altogether a fad. Is very low price of hides. markets. grown at the experiment station xhxxxh at 7 x, etc.” The popular idea that Siberia is a here during the present season and not one warranted in believing that Amity Blade. It is now easy to guess that the the illuminist school is’ the product A branch from a silver prune tree a rocky, frozen waste is incorrect. Prof. French hopes to have it gen first two words are “meet me,” and of generations of artistic scrutiny of ¡n Amity nursery orchard, brought The southern portion of this enor-, erally introduced throughout the the word following, a word of six nature, and that its adherents, with to this office on Tuesday, was about mous area is remarkably fertile, the state within a few years. As it con letters with h as the second and last keener eyes, do detect in shadows, 12 inches long and contained 24 soil a deep, black loam, and the cli-' tains more nearly the composition of letters, can be no other than upon waters, in all grays, clouds, prunes as large as hens’ eggs. The matic conditions perfect for the corn than any other grain grown, “church.” Furthermore as the let mists, smoke-drifts, and snow ex tree is born to the ground on all growth of grain. With a surplus of its introduction into this state will ter now reads, “meet me at the panses, those tints of high pitch, in sides from the enormous weight of 30,000,000 bushels in 1889, and the be a boon to Oregon farmers.— Cor church at,” the figure and the words visible to common sight, as shrill the fruit. Mr. Gilbaugh who lives cultivation of wheat stimulated by I vallis Gazette. immediately following, “7 pdmpdl,” tones are inaudible to untrained on the place this year, had his turn the building of the railroad, an The ancient scheme of hauling or using the letter we have ascer ears? with fire on Monday. While he was enormous addition will be made to freight by team has broken out in a tained, “7 x’ exxex,” it is easy to Color-blindness among Indians is ; eating- dinner the dryer caught fire the volume of wheat seeking an Eu new quarter. Yesterday, Corvallis see, may most probably be rendered very low—perhaps less than one per ! an(j before he was able to quench it ropean market. merchants received Portland freight “7 o’clock.” That this is not a mere guess, bj- steamer Eugene to Independence, cent. About four per cent of civil- ^|le wooj work was burned quite A thorough analysis of the crypto ized men are color-blind; and by the J badly. but a statement of cold truth, is and from the latter place by team. gram and an application of the law expression “color-blind” we mean : ----- - >•« —----- proved by the fact that Russia is The consignees pay the expense of Great Ruined city, of proportion assisted by the identi blind to red. Color-blind persons building a railway line from a point : teaming, which is 23 cents per hun fication of certain words as shown, fail to see only the low colors; they A party of scientists have recent- on the Siberian road to the port of dred. By rail, including transfer cannot fail to translate the para have no difficulty with the other end ly explored the ruins of the great Archangel on the White Sea, thus charges at Independence the same graph into plain English. This of the spectrum. Civilization, then, city Ancor, or Angor, situated in openitg an export line to ship grain service would cost them 30 cents per The spectacle convicts would, indeed, be the usual way of seems to be exterminating red. That what are now the almost inaccessible to all the wheat-buying countries of hundred. the Southern Pacific of villainous proceeding but a certain suspicion is to say, ^hile the race is gaining forests of Cambodia. As may be re Western Europe. ' discrimination,and the railroad com- that seized us as soon as the first power to see high colors, it is losing membered these ruins were discov- The great increase of wheat pro 1 mission that suffered raise in rates, word of the paragraph was dis- the power to see the low ones. ; cred only a short time ago, compara- duction all over the world and the of a betrayal of the people. It ought ciphered is amply confirmed by what The fact that the percentage of red tively, though rumors of the exist opening up of new traffic lines bring to show those in charge of the Wil lamette that there is reason to make follows, and it makes our task an blindness among women is about the ence of such a place have long been ing this grain into the world s mark an effort to clear the channel for easy one. The writer has evidently same as among Indians is in accord i current in the country. The ruins ets, has more than kept pace with low water navigation.— Corvallit taken the letter immediately follow- w’ith the Philadelphia lecturer's ob- _ as described would indicate that An- the increase of population and conse- Times. «•