The Yamhill County reporter. (McMinnville, Or.) 1886-1904, December 14, 1894, Image 2

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    Yamhill County Reporter.
r. H. BARNHART, Editor A Propr.
J. fi. ECKM AN, A.kociate Editor.
THE
CARLISLE CURRENCY
SCHEME.
0» L« S i’*
The next meeting will be held at the
residence of A. J. Apperson, Wednesday,
evening Dec. 19, 1894. The following is
the program: Reading from Shakespeare
Miss Frances-Mann; “Growth of the
Euxlish Nation”, Miss Emma Greene;
Paper—“Joan of Arc” in I, Henry VI,
Mias Ina Cooper; Paper—“Jack Cave”
in II, Henry VI, Miss Lasira Apperson;
■Europein the 19th Century”, E. C
Apperson ; “The World’s debt to Astron­
omy” and “Some contemporary English
Novelists,” Miss Ida Scofield; “Art”
Miss Etta Palmer; Character Impersona­
tions, Misses Luella Lynch, Ida Pagen-
kopb and Clara Irvine. Table talk—
Favorite English Novelists, and why.
The Springbrook Frieuds have incor­
porated their organization.
OBECOS JEW« AND NOTES.
A Female Enoch Arden Turn* I p
in Chicago.
Astoria is said to be the largest
city in the United States without a
Mrs. Percis Anna Hartsig disap­ railroad.
The Rusco & Swift Uncle Tom’s
peared in Detroit eight years ago,
and a body picked up on the railroad I Cabin company is doing the valley,
tracks near that place, horribly This piece w ill never grow old.
mangled, was identified by Mrs.
Petitions asking the legislature to
Hartsig’s relatives, and buried by re-enact the law permitting deduc­
them. A week ago last Wednesday tions of indebtedness are in circula­
the real Mrs. Hartsig walked into tion.
the office of her son, E. A. Hartsig,
Rev. Gilman Parker of Oregon
in the Security building.
City has been made state missionary
The story told by Lewis W. Hart­ of the Baptist church, entering upon
sig, a son of the missing woman, and the work December 1st.
living at No. 1308 West Adams street There is sometimes something in a
is a very romantic one. He says name. A new law firm in Portland
his mother, together with his father will be known as Carey, Webster,
and six children, lived together at Mays, Johnson and Idleman. The
No. 336 East High street, Detroit, Johnson is W. Carey Johnson of
eight years ago, and that his mother Oregon City, and Mr. Idleman is at­
was mentally deranged on account of torney-general elect.
ill health. The family decided to
Twenty-five Bohemian families ar­
send her to the Pontiac Lunatic Asy­
rived over the Union Pacific from
lum, and from this place she escaped
Nebraska last week, and will locate
twice in two months. Mrs. Hartsig
in Benton county. This is a fore­
was not a dangerous lunatic, but the
runner of the large number of im­
family thought it best to return her
migrants who are coming to Oregon
to the asylum, as the physician had
in the hope of gaining riches from
hopes that they might finally restore
the wealth of its soil.
her reason. Her son Lewis arranged
to have her returned, but Mrs. Hart­ Some years ago a boy named Oscar
sig discovered what was about to Schellberg wAs arrested in Washing­
take place, and on the night before ton county for burglary, but on ex­
her contemplated removal she escap­ amination was sent to the asylum.
ed, and this was the last seen of her When he was released the officers
by any member of her family until a deferred taking him into custody,
and he disappeared, but now writes
week ago last Wednesday.
from
Corea, saying he is a lieutenant
The family of Mrs. Hartsig notified
in
the
Japanese army.
the Detroit police of her disappear­
The
Salem Statesman tells a story
ance, and the following day the body
of
a
woman
named Margaret Brunk,
of a woman was discovered dead on
who
has
been
very ill for years, and
the tracks of Detroit and Michigan
Road twenty miles from Detroit. whose father, although worth over
The body was in a mangled condition, •20,000, and several brothers and
and the clothing was literally torn sisters, all well-to-do, refuses to sup­
from the woman’s form. The Hart­ port or take care of her. The county
sig family were notified, and they court has issued a citation to the
identified the body as that of their father to appear and show cause why
mother. A Detroit dentist also iden­ he should not be compelled to sup­
tified the gold-plated false teeth port his daughter.
Forest Grove has a man who can
which were in the mouth of the dead
woman as those sold to Mrs. Hartsig. tell which way the wind is by
The body was taken in charge by the the feeling of his feet. He served
Hartsigs and given a decent burial in the war and contracted rheuma­
at Elmwood cemetery, Detroit.
, tism. He says soberly that if the
Mrs. Hartsig owned the property wind is southerly one foot hurts, and
at No. 338 East High street, Detroit, if northerly the other, and that he
which is valued at $5000, and her can lie in bed and tell when it
will was duly probated and the rents changes. If he could only tell a few
of the property have since been col­ days ahead, he would have no trouble
lected by James E. Hartsig, husband getting a job as government “weath­
er forecast official.”— Times.
of Mrs. Hartsig.
Mrs. Hartsig, in telling her story
Mr. Ramsby, a Clackamas county
to her family after their happy reun­ citizen, lost his barn in a peculiar
ion, said she traveled by rail to Ben­ manner. He was feeding in the
ton Harbor, Mich., after leaving her evening, and had set his lantern, as
home in Detroit, and was taken in usual, in the wagon seat. An owl
charge by the Benton Harbor police was in the barn which flew about,
on her arrival at that place, on ac­ striking various objects and finally
count of her strange actions. The came in contact with the lantern, up­
authorities placed her in a sanitarium setting it, the oil ignitiug and lick­
at Benton Harbor, and there she ing upwards, catching the over­
remained for twelve months and was hanging straws of a 16-ton hay mow.
then pronounced cured. But Mrs. Before one could think twice the
Hartsig during her last attack of barn was enveloped in flames. In
insanity had forgotten her name. trying to whip out the fire Ramsby
The nearest she could come to her burnt his hands and beard. It was
correct name was Anna Hartman. with much difficulty that he saved
She did not even know that she had his horses.
come from Detroit, and there was
A curiosity in the way of acountrj’
nothing about her clothing or jewel­ schoolmaster is Prof. John D. Woods,
ry by which she could identify her­ respectable and respected. He has
self. She had no place in particular probably taught more terms of dis­
to go, and decided to come to Chicago. trict school than any man in Amer­
She secured a situation as nurse in ica. His career as a pedagogue be­
Evanston about seven years ago, and gan when he was seventeen years
has remained in Evanston ever since old in the Henlrle mill school house
and has amassed a small fortune in on Mary’s river, Benton county, in
that city.
1854. That was over forty years
Mrs. Hartsig was reading a news­ ago, and Prof. Woods, without ris­
paper a week ago last Wednesday, ing above the dignity of a country
her son says, and happened to see schoolmaster, has followed the busi­
the name of E. A. Hartsig, which ness ever since, winding up his last
was the name of her son. Hartsig school in Douglas county last Fri­
has been indicted on charge of forg­ day. He has taught only in coun­
ery. Mrs. Hartsig at once became ties of the Willamette valley and he
possessed of all her faculties. She lacks only ten months of having
recognized the name as hers and the taught 100 terms of school of three
initials as those of her son. She months each. He is anxious to se­
went at once to the criminal court cure another school, so that he may
and found that E. A. Hartsig had complete his 100 terms. He is a
been released on bail. She secured bachelor and 57 years of age. More
his address and went at once to room than $9,000 has been paid him for
1107 Security building, and walked his services as schoolmaster, the
into the office, where she found her most of it has gone to pay debts for
son and also her daughter, Rose, who indigent and unfortunate relatives.
recognized the mother immediately. His last course of study was taken in
BRAND THE CLAIM AS FALSE.
While in the office, another son, Philomath, when he was 36 years of
Lewis
H., who is employed in the age.— Corvallis Times.
World’s Fair Officials Expose a
Capt. O. D. Crane, publisher of
wholesale
hardware store of Messrs.
Pretender to an Award.
Hodge & Homer, on West Randolph the Arcadia (Neb.) Courier, has
C hicago , III.----- One of the odd street, entered, and, as he said, be located temporarily at The Dalles
results of the World’s Fair is the I could scarcely believe it was his for the purpose of publishing an im­
claim now made to awards by some mother, whom he had not seen for migration paper. He says there are
forty families on the road headed for
who were not even exhibitors. Offi­ ! eight years.
cials of the Exposition have not as
There was still another person to Oregon, and that 400 or 500 families
yet taken final action in the matter, whom the strange reappearance will soon start from this section to
believing the quick wit of the people came as a surprise, and this was Mr. find homes in the northwest. These
will detect the spurious claims. But Hartsig, the husband, He is 50 people are tired of the uncertainties
to the case of a New York baking years old, and thinking his wife dead of farm life in Nebraska, and say
powder, that has been widely adver­ had married again in Detroit. He they want to find a place where crops
tising an award, the attention of the has also one child by the second mar­ can be grown without irrigation,
Chief of Awards for Agriculture, has riage, and a very complicated state and they don’t care how much it
rains at the next place they locate.
been directed. He brands the claim of affairs exists in his household.
of this pretender as false, declaring
Mrs. Hartsig, her son Lewis says, The railroad companies are encourag­
“Neither the records of this depart­ has stated that she would apply for ing the emigration and rendering all
ment, nor the official catalogue of the a divorce, so as to cause no emharass­ possible assistance to the people
World’s Columbian Exposition, show ment to the young wife with whom who have made up their minds to
move further west. This large emi­
that this New York Company was Mr. Hartaig is now living.
gration
from Nebraska is regarded
an exhibitor; consequently it could
Mrs. Hartsig, together with her
not receive an award at the World’s daughter, Rose, is now on a visit to with a great deal of satisfaction by
Fair.”
her aged mother, Mrs. Dowe, who is those interested in securing immi­
Those who fairly won their honors very wealthy and lives in Savanna, gration to Oregon, and they propose
at the Fair seem disposed to treat Ill., and Mrs. Hartsig thinks she will to use every effort to induce the
this fraud as any other fraud should take up her residence at that place. people to locate in the Willamette
be treated. The Price Baking Pow­ Mrs. Dowe could never believe her valley. Captain Crane is willing to
der Company, of Chicago, having re­ daughter was dead, and there has furnish any information possible to
ceived the highest award,
say been a reward of 11000 out for the those who will address him either at
they are convinced their claims, and
The Dalles or to the Arcadian Courier.
those of all other holders of rightful past eight years for information con­
Governor Lord and wife returned
honors, will be fully vindicated by cerning the missing woman.
Mrs. Hartsig’s two daughters, from their eastern visit Saturday.
the public.
Jenny and Rose, live with their bro­ During the visit Mrs. Lord took
The jurymen in the case of Bunco ther, E. A. Hartsig, at the Mecca great interest in studying the rela­
Kelly, did what a good many juries Hotel, while the two other sons, tion of Oregon to eastern states,
have done before, eased their con­ Benjamin F. and Samuel, live in De­ says the Statesman. “She noted the
sciences by bringing in a verdict of troit The father, with his newly fact that Oregon's misfortunes are a
murder in the second degree. If it married wife, lives at Coblentz street great gain to the manufacturing and
was murder at all, it was of the most and Western avenue.— Inter Ocean x laboring classes in the east. The
low price of wheat gives them a
coldblooded, premeditated type, and
there was no evidence to support a M. Murphy of North Yamhill c’nt off double-sized loaf at the same price,
verdict short of murder in the first one of his toes chopping wood Wednes­ consequently it is necessary for the
wheat farmers of Oregon to turn
day.
degree.
The chief features of Secretary
Carlisle’s highly complicated and in­
volved scheme of currency reform
Subscription $1.00 Per Year. may be outlined thus: It allows na­
tional banks to issue circulating
ADVERTISING BATES.
Reading notices in local columns 10 cents per notes to an amount equal to 75 per­
line fcr first weeZ and 5 eentt per line thereafter
Display advertisements, annual rates, one inch cent of the paid up and unimpaired
per montu *1; each additional inch 50 cents prr
capital, upon a guarantee fund of
month.
Obituary and marriage notices not exceeding greenbacks or Sherman currency
10 lines published free, if furnished in time to
be current newa Additions: matter lucent'per equaling 30 per cent of the circula-
line.
1 tion, these notes to constitute a first
lien on all the assets of the bank.
FRIDAY, DEC. 14, 1894.
Two taxes are to be imposed by the
_
government on each bank—one of
T he populists are boasting that half of j
cent
We
they cast more votes this year than haif yearly> on it6 average circula.
ever before, which is a good deal like
pay for prInting of noteSi
a hunter exulting over the increased ■ official &upervisionand like expenses,
°J.ShLOtS he had £red With°Ut aad the other ux- whith
a!so ™
bitting anything.
circulation, but of a rate not stated,
is to provide a safety fund for note
G out is usually attributed to high : redemption, the tax to cease when
living. While the president suffers the fund reaches 5 per cent of the
from the pain in his heel, he can ' circulation outstanding. Each bank
rest his conscience in the reflection | is to redeem its own notes. When a
that the people are in no danger of | bank fails, the guarantee fund is to
catching the disease.
I be added to the safety fund and used
■ in note redemption, but if this is
R epublicans are not denying the
I not sufficient, pro rata assessments
need of currency reform. So far they
on the basis of circulation on the
are with Messrs. Cleveland and Car­
other banks for the sum required
lisle. But they are not in favor of
will be made, the contributing banks
rehabiliating the old democratic state
to hold a first lien for the amount on
bank system, or creating anything
the assets of the wrecked bank.
but a currency as sound and stable
This is the part of the scheme
as the nation itself. The work of
which relates to national banks.
reforming the government finances
Another feature of it permits state
will doubtless fall to the republicans
banks to issue circulation on nearly
of the next congress, and they will
the same terms as the national banks
be equal to the task.
after complying with somewhat sim­
ilar requirements, their notes to be
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
exempt from the national tax which
was imposed on state bank circula­
J. B. Morin and J. B. Ford are tion thirty years ago. All notes of
now business manager and editor the same denomination under the na­
respectively of the Independence tional plan are to be similar in ap­
Enterprise.
pearance, but state bank notes are
The Southern Oregon Monitor is to be different in looks both from the
the name of a new paper at Medford. national bank currency and from the
It is bright and newsy. Charles E. greenbacks and Sherman notes.
Walcott is publisher.
Another feature of the system pro­
The legislature of South Carolina vides for the redemption and retire­
has drafted a bill making a reduction ment of greenbacks and Sherman
in all salaries of state officers to fit notes at the discretion of the secre­
the 5-cents-a-pound cotton situation. tary of the treasury, the surplus rev­
It makes a reduction of over 20 per enue, when there is any, being used
cent, leaving the governor’s salary at for that purpose, the retired notes
not to exceed 70 per cent of the new
•2200.
Soundings recently taken at Taco­ circulation, national and state, pro­
ma show that the falling of the rail­ vided by this scheme. The state
road wharves a fortnight ago, was bank notes are, of course, designated
not caused by a slide, but that to furnish the “local currency”
about twenty acres of the bottom of which the enemies of the national
the Sound have made a vertical drop banking system have been for so
of 24 to 60 feet. Water is 60 feet many years demanding. It is easy
deeper at the shore line than it was to see that the country will not take
before the catastrophe. What caused kindly to the Carlisle scheme. In
providing two new sorts of money it
the subsidence no one can tell.
makes a needless addition to our
J. H. Coblentz, warden of the state
already embarrassingly variegated
penitentiary of Washington, com­
and diversified circulating medium.
mitted suicide on the 8th by shooting
One kind of new currency, to be
himself in the head. He robbed the
sure, we must have, «for the govern­
state in selling grain bags and keep­
ment bond deposit feature will nec­
ing the proceeds. When accused of
essarily have to be absent from that
his dishonesty by the governor and
form of circulation, whatever it may
the directors he admitted that every­
thing was not straight. When the be, which will soon have to be de­
and succeed the
officer called to arrest him, he asked vised to supplant
present
national
bank currency,
permission to finish his dinner, which
circulation, how-
Two
new
sorts
of
being granted, he went into a room
ever, is rather more than the
and killed himself.
country desires at present. The
Ferdinand de Lesseps, builder of absence, too, of a direct govern­
the Suez canal, died in Paris on the mental liability for circulation will
7th. He was born in 1805. He arrouse prejudice against it. Per­
began work on the great canal in haps the safeguards surrounding the
1859 and completed it in ten years. circulation might in actual operation
The luster which this great achieve­ turn out to be ample, but there will
ment gave to his name was dimmed be a popular suspicion that the
by the failure of the Panama scheme scheme is weak in this particular,
which he projected in 1877. Recent­ and this feeling is likely to be fatal
ly, in his extreme age and feebleness to all chances of its adoption. In re­
he was convicted with others of fraud gard to the state bank feature of
in connection with the enterprise the scheme, the wild-cat currency
and sentenced to prison.
advocates will think the secretary
does not go anywhere near far
LAFAYETTE.
enough in his concessions to them,
Several families from other localities while all the rest of the country will
think he goes too far. The proposi­
have moved into town this month.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Martin have so far tion is on the lines laid down in the
recovered from their recent attack of se-called Baltimore currency plan to
the extent that it bases circulation
malarial fever as to be able to be out.
W. W. Smith was doing valley towns on bank capital instead of on bond
deposits, but it is much more com­
this week.
“Uncle” Jim Hembree and wife were plex than that system and much less
satisfactory.— Globe Democrat.
e visiting in Portland last week.
Mrs. W. W. Smith is very sick at her
home in this place.
Billy Lewie was taking in the fair
at Portland this week.
Gus. E. Johnson had the misfortune to
lose a valuable horse last Monday night.
The animal had caught his halter on the
end of a pole in the barn, and in trying
to extricate himself, broke bis neck.
Lafayette Lodge No. 31 A. O. U. W
elected officers last Friday night. The
lodge will be officered the ensuing term
as follows: C. E. Mitchell, M. W.; J. M.
Dixon, Foreman; R. C. Henry .Overseer;
Thad H. Dupuy, Recorder; R. P. Bird,
Fin.; J. J. Hembree, Receiver: J. L.
Hayes, Guide; J. H. Derby, I. W.; A. D.
Hoskins, O. G.; and D. V. Olds. Trustee
G. W. Jones has just finished setting
out 600 prune trees.
Hugh Carey has bought a half interest
in the livery stable here.
Dr. J. L. Hayes spent Monday and
Tuesday in the metropolis.
The 8. K. of S. Lodge is a hummer.
Several candidates every Wednesday
night and still they come.
FICTION OUTDO* E.
SOMETH ING
THE AIR.
Dyspepsia*
Mrs. Judge Peck Tells How
She Was Cured
Sufferers from Dyspepsia should read the fol­
lowing letter from Mrs. H. M. Peck, wife of
Judge Peck, a justice at Tracy, Cal., and a writer
connected with the Associated Press:
<
“By a deep sense of gratitude for the great
benefit I have received from the use of Hood's
Sarsaparilla. I have been led to write the follow­
ing statement for the lienefit of sufferers who
may be similarly afflicted. For 15 years I have
been a great sufferer from dyspepsia and
When editors receive unusual installments of poetry at any other season of
the year than spring, they usually attribute it to some mysterious
influence of the atmosphere.
it has a deeper meaning.
Heart Trouble.
But when a merchant receives poetry,
It can mean nothing else than that
his efforts to please a critical public by securing well-selected
Almost everything I ate would distress me. I
tried different treatments and medieines, but
failed to realize relief. Two years ago a friend
prevailed upon me to try Hood's Sarsaparilla.
The first bottle I noticed helped me, so I con­
tinued taking IL It did me so much good that
my friends spoke of the improvement. I have
received such great benefit from it that
lines of goods, and selling them at figures people know
are reasonable, and in keeping with the times,
have met with appreciation.
Gladly Recommend It.
It also means
I now have an excellent appetite and nothing I
eat ever distresses me. ft also keeps up my
that the spirit of modern and wide-awake
Hood’s^Cures
advertising is contagious. A customer
who has evidently been reading
flesh and strength. I cannot praise Hood’s
Sarsaparilla too much.” M rs . H. M. P ick ,
Tracy, California. Get HOOD’S.
our corner of the paper,
Hood’s Pilis are hand made, and perfect
sends the following
In proportion and appearance. 25c. a box.
Christmas effu-
their attention to other crops. Her
belief is that Oregon cannot secure
very heavy desirable immigration
until it can hold out assurances of
profitable labor in agriculture, and
that the first thing necessary toward
that state of things is to secure man­
ufactories, so that we can keep our
money at home and find a home
market for farm products. She
thinks that the growing of flax may
yet become the important and pay­
ing industry of this state, and she is
now seeking definite information on
this subject. There is now being
tested a process of preparing flax for
the use of its fibre and saving the
seed at the same time, which if suc­
cessful will make the business of flax
culture a most profitable one in this
valley and will be the means of es­
tablishing linen factories and tow
mills on an extensive scale. Mrs.
Lord expects to have definite in­
formation about it in a short time.
Continued form, First Page.
principle. Then, too, there was the
dread that the north might not be
united in the conflict and that the
south would thus be victorious and
the union shattered. Moreover, con­
gress appeared to be fairly represent­
ative of the popular feeling at the
time. Compromise was in the air.
Lincoln, Seward, Wade, Chase and
almost all the other northern leaders
were offering or stood ready to offer
concessions of some sort with hope
of preventing bloodshed. Horace
Greeley asked that the erring sister
states be allowed to depart rather
than provoke a conflict of which no­
body could see the end. Memorials
and petitions were pouring into con­
gress from all parts of the north, ap­
pealing for the adoption of some
measures to prevent disunion. One
petition was received signed by the
mayor, the aidermen and 22,000 oth­
er citizens of Boston, praying for
the adoption of the Crittenden com­
promise.
As is well known, these offers of
concessions and surrenders during
the closing weeks of the thirty-sixth
congress did not appease the dis-
unionists. Indeed, they had the op­
posite effect. While they humiliated
the north they fanned the flame of
the war element in the south by ap­
pearing to indicate that the north
would be too discordant and too
cowardly to fight when the crisis
came. While congress was talking
compromise and the peace convention
was gathering or in session at Wash­
ington, state after state was passing
ordinances of secession. South Car­
olina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama,
Georgia, Louisiana and Texas went
out within a few weeks during the
last session of that congress, and
Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina
and Tennessee joined them a month
or two after Lincoln’s inauguration.
Secession had been decided on by the
southern leaders when Lincoln’s elec­
tion became probable. In fact, in
South Carolina this very outcome
had for years been in contemplation,
and the republican victory was only
a pretext for carrying it into opera­
tion at that time.
“Secession is not the event of a
day; it is not anything produced by
the election of Mr. Lincoln or the
non-execution of the fugitive slave
law. It is an issue which has been
gathering for thirty years.” This
declaration was made in the South
Carolina secession convention in De­
cember, 1860, by Robert Barnwell
Rhett, who had formerly been a con­
gressman from that state. “Most of
us have had this matter under con­
sideration for twenty years or more,”
said John A. Inglis, chairman of the
committee which drew that state’s se­
cession ordinance. “I have been en­
gaged in this movement ever since I
entered public life,” declared Law­
rence M. Keitt, another distinguished
South Carolinian, who had just re­
signed his seat in congress to partic­
ipate in the convention which was to
take his state out of the union. This
was the spirit of the leading dis-
unionists, and entreaties and warn­
ings were alike powerless to prevent
them from rushing on to their doom.
—Charles M. Harvey in Globe-Demo­
crat.
sion.
/
Where You Should Go.
As Christmas is a drawing nigh,
The merriest time of all the year;
Everybody should go to Apperson’s to buy,
For they won’t find presents so “dear.”
Not the “deer” that in the mountains roam,
Nor yet the “dear” of the lovesick men,
But the “dear money” the people have earned,
And that they will be careful how they spend.
At Apperson’s you will always find groceries find dry goods,
Of them he keeps ‘ oceans.”
Also a very large assortment
Of Holiday notions.
The “HOLIDAY NOTIONS,"
Are observable in our show windows and on our
shelves. In hard times like these useful Christmas
presents are the kind that please the most. Our dry
goods stock contains a great variety of beautiful and
useful presents.
«
Let the “dear" people watch this
space for further announcements-if not
poetry.
A. J. A PPERSON
> Frank Roeca,
;
1
TAILOR,
'
HODSON'S CHRISTMAS
( Is busy as a bee making up clothing from J
f new suitings. Try him for a new suit.
<4
PRICES REASONABLE.
W. J. CLARK,D.D.S
Graduate University of Mich.
Has opened an office in Union Block, Room 6,
and is prepared to do all work in the dental line.
CROWN AND BRIDGE WORK A SPECIALTY.
L atcst M ethod
or
Some of the things he has to sell
Kogers Bros’ Plated Ware
Koasting Pans for Tarkegs.
P aih Leas E xtraction .
FARM FOR SALE I
330 ACRES AT $ao PER ACRE.
100 acres in cultivation; good pasture for cattle
two Houses, two bams and two orchards. Will
sell all or a part on easy terms, or will rent on
condition that renter buys team and farming
implements. The above is a fine farm situated
four miles southeast of Dayton. Boat landing
d?sta'mreh°USe Wlth cle<ner8 less lhnn one mile
L. H. BAKER.
Box 106, McMinnville, Or.
ARTHUR J. VIAL, M. D.
Physieian and Surgeon,
ROOMS IN UNION BLOCK
M c M innville , O regon .
Don’t forget that we carry a fine line
of stoves.
HEATERS
Plain and fancy sold reasonably cheap.
Other Holiday Novelties.