s Entered at the Poatoffice m McMinnville, as Second-class matter. M’MINNVILLE, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1895. Tbe and —McMinnville, Oregon.— Paid up Capital, #50,000 Transacts a General Banking Business. President, - • J. W COWL8. Vice President, - I.Kt, LAUGHLIN. (Jashier, - E. C. APPERSON - Asst. Cashier - - for Infants and Children IF. 8. LINK HIRT Y year»’observation of Castoria with the patronage of Board of Directors: J W. COWLS, LEE LAUGHLIN, A. J AWEK.SON, WM. CAMPBELL, J. L ROGERS. millions of persons, permit ns to speak of it without g n es sing. It is unquestionably the best remedy for Infants and Children the world has over known. Sell Siaht Exchange »nd Telegraphic Trans­ fer"« on New York, San Francisco and Portland. Deposits received subject to check. Loans mon­ ey on approved security. Collections made on all accessible points. Xt la harmless. Children Ilk« it. It gives them health. It will save their liven. In it Mothers havo something which 1» absolutely safe and practically porfept as a child’» medicine. ELSIA WRIGHT, Castoria destroys Worm. Manufactures and Deals in Castoria allays Feverishness. HARNESS ! Caatoria prevent» vomiting Sour Curd« SADDLES, BRIDLES, SPURS, Brushes and bc II h them cheaper than they can be bought anywhere else in the Willamette Valley. Our ail home made sets of harness are pronounced unsurpassable by those who buy them Castoria relieves Teething Troubles. Cantoria cure» Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Cantoria cures Constipation and Flatulency« Castoria uoutralixos the effects of carbonic acid gas or poisonous air. Castoria does not contain morphine, opium, or other narcotic property. Castoria assimilates the food, ! egulates_ the_ stomach and bowsJ», giviiiR healthy and natnralslcep. CITY BATHS Castoria is put up in nne-siio bottles only. It is not sold in bulk. Don’t allow any one to sell you anything else on the plea or promise —AND— that it is’’just as good ” and “ will answer every purpose.” TOWRIAL PARLOR«, See that yon get C-A-S-T-O-R-I-A. George Kutch, Prop. is on every wrapper. The fac-simile signatureof - For a Clean Shave or Fashionable Hair Cut Give Me a Call. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Baths are new and first-class in every re­ spect. Ladies’ Baths and shampooing a special­ ty. Employ none but first-class men. Don’t forget the place. Three doors west of Hotel Yamhill. THE COMMERCIAL GREAT VALUE WEEKLY NEWS FOR OF THE WORLD LITTLE MONEY. FOR A TRIFLE. LIVERY STABLE. J. M. YOCOm, Prop. (Successor to GATES A HENRY.) THE NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBÜNE, « E Street, north of Third. Everything New and First-class Conveyance of Commercial Travel ers a specialty. Board and stabling by the day or month. We solicit a fair share of the local pat­ ronage. • J. y. CALBRIATH. a Twenty-paw» journal, is tbe leading Republican iamily paper of the United States. It is a NATIONAL FAMILY PAPER, and gives all the general news of the United States. It gives the events of foreign lands in a nutshell. Its AG- RICULTl RAI. department has no superior in the country. Its Marki t Reports are recognized authority. Separate depart­ ments for THE FAMILY CIRCLE,” ‘OUR YOUNG FOLKS, ’ and SCIENCE AND MECHANICS.” Its “HOME AND SOCIETY” columns command the admiration of wives and «laughters. Its general political news, editorials and discussions are comprehensive, brilliant and exhaustive. E. l. QOÜCHKR Calbreath & Goucher. PHYSICIANS AND SÜKGEON8. MoMmsTitLS .... Osinoli (Offlee over Braly’a bank.) M c M innville Track and Dray Co. * « A SPECIAL CONTRACT enables us to offer this splendid journal and the REPORTER for ONE YEAR FOR ONLY $1.25 CASH B. E. COULTER, Prop. IN ADVANCE. (The regular subscription for the two papers is $2.00.) Goods of all descriptions moved and careful handline guaranteed. Collections will be made monthly. Hauling of all kinds done cheap. Matthies Brothers, Subscriptions may begin at any time. Address all orders to THE REPORTER. Write your name and address on a |>ostal card, send it to Geo. W. Best, Room o Tribune Building, New York City, and a sample copy of The New York Weekly Tribune will be mailed to you. PROPRIETORS CITY MARKET FRESH MEATS OF ALL KINDS. CHOICEST IN THE MARKET. G reat • • •• N orthern R ailway THE SHORT ROUTE TO ALL POINTS IN Washington, Idaho, Montana, Dakota, Minnesota and the East. ' LEGAL BLANKS. The New Way East And O. H. A N. Co.'s Leaned 1.1 nei. South side Third St. between B and C. eTbe following general forms are always in stock and for sale at the Reporter offlee : Real Estate Mortgage Warranty Deeds Chattel Mortgage Quit claim Deeds Satisfaction of Mort. Bond for Deed Transfer of Mortgage Farm Lease Notes and Receipts. Bill of Sale We carry al large stock of stationery and are prepared to do > job printing of every sort in the best style of the art and at low figures Through Tickets On Sale j CHICAGO To and From ............... I WASHINGTON ST. LOUIS NEW Y0EK PHILADELPHIA BOSTON And All Points in the United States, Canada and Europe. The GREAT NORTHERN RY. is a new transcontinental line. Runs Buff et-Librarv-Observation cars, palace sleeping and dining cars, family tourist sleep ers and first and second-class coaches. Having a rock ballast track, the GREAT NORTHERN RY. is free from dust, one of the chief annoyances of transcontinen­ tal travel. Roundtrip tickets with stop-over privileges and choice of return routes. For further information call upon or write W. J. CLARK,D.D.S A. H. PAPE, Agent, McMinnville, Oregon. Or C. C. DON AVAN, General AgeDt, 122 Third St., Portland, Ore. 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 atest M ethod or P ainless E itnaction THE INTER OCEAN -------------------------- is THE————— NOTICE OF SHERIFF’« SALE. OTICE is hereby given that the undersigned as Sheriff of Y amhill County, State of Ore­ gon. by virtue of a Writ ot Execution, Judgment and Order of sale, issued out of the Circuit Court of the State ot Oregon for the County of Yambill, on the 7th day of August. A. D. 1895, and bearing said date, upon and to enforce that certain decree rendered by said Court on the 15th day of April, 1S#5, in that certain suit therein pending wherein The First National Bank of Hillsboro, a corpora­ tion, was plaintiff, and Janies A. Campbell and I.ydia J Campbell were defendants, in which It was ordered, adjudged and decreed by said Court that said plaintiff, The First National Bank of Hillsboro, a corporation, have and recover of and from the said defendants, James A. Campbell aud Lydia J. Campbell, the sum of Five Hundred Forty-Three Dollars (8M3.00) with interest thereon from said 15th day of April. 1895. at the rate of ten per cent per annum, and the further sum of Fifteen Dollars (115 00) costs and disbursements, and ordering the sale of the following described ’^BeFng^atrt of the Wayman C. Hembree donation land claim No. 51, in'township three (3) south, range four (I) west of the Willamette neridian. and beginning at the south-west corner of sai.l claim thence east to center of Yamhill river: thence north-westerly, meandering said river to th« west boundary of said claim: thence south on west boundary of said claim to the place of be­ ginning. containing 30 acres more or less in 1 am- hill County. Oregon. Now therefore, by virtue of said Judgment. Decree, Execution and Order of Sale, I will on Saturday the 7th day of September, A. D. 189a, at the hour of 1 o’clock p. m. of said day, at the court house door in McMinnville, Yamhill County, Oregon, sell at public auction, to the highest bid­ der for cash in baud, the above-described real premises 'o obtain funds with which to satisfy aakl Execution, costs and accruing costs. Dated this the 7th day of August. A. D. 1896. W. G. HENDERSON, Sheriff of Yamhill County, Oregon. N Chattanooga National Most Popular Republican Newspaper of the West And Has the Larges^Circulation. DAILY (without Sunday)......................... $6.00 per year DAILY (with Sunday)............................... $8.00 per year ( A The Weekly Inter Ocean (€1.00 ’ T * -------- S A NEWSPAPER THE INTER OCEAN keeps abreast of the times In all respects It spares neither pains nor expense in securing ALL inti PER YEAR............................ 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The sun is rising above the ridges of the eastern uplands like a tarn­ ished shield of gold, for a yellow mist clings about the pines and dims its radiance. There is scarce a breath of wind, and the leaves hang stirless. The cry of a migrating bird, pausing a while to feed upon the last ripe berries, comes like the remnant of a song of the half-forgotten spring. Not yet are the forests garbed in their sorrowful robes of yellow mourning. Not yet is the sky full of the shed foliage of summer, fluttering to the earth to be mingled with the dust which devours all things, and from its decay begets the new life of spring. But there is a hint of mel­ ancholy in the air, a premonition of approaching death. There is a Sab­ bath calm, a pervading sweetness, compelling the soul to introspection and self-search, as if all nature were one grand cathedral where humanity might fitly kneel and pray. But what is that? A deep, bollow, booming sound rolls far along the wooded heights. Not thunder, for there is no hint of storm in this dim, vaporous air. Again! And now the fearful, hateful significance of it is revealed. It is the opening gun of one of the most bloody and terrible contests which ever desecrated the world or darkened the history of mankind,—the engagement between the Union army under Rosecrans and the Confederates under Bragg, fought on September 19 and 20, 1863, and since called the battle of Chicka­ mauga. For a moment, ere the yellow fog rolls down the hills, it is a lovely scene which lies outstretched before the man, in frayed blue coat with a general's stars upon the shoulders, aud a rusty hat with tarnished gilt tassels, who paces the plateau of Snodgrass hill, overlooking miles of country. The picturesque Chicka­ mauga creek winds between the slop­ ing hills, divided into squares of husbandry or pasturage. Here and there a gentle declivity is surmount­ ed by a farmhouse, nestling amidst its barns and outbuildings; in a level bottom a row of hay-ricks stands among the second crop of ripening grass; an orchard makes a darker spot upon the surrounding green. As he gazes the tender glory of the scene is reflected in the man’s face and he smiles; but even as tbe smile crosses his bearded lips it vanishes and a stern look of care and determi­ nation takes its place, for again that deep booming note rolls up the val­ ley. Beneath him, on the declivity, sheltered bv the screen of scrub-oak and tangled blackberry-bushes, a long line of blue coated soldiery trails away out of sight around the curves of the hill. The men are reclining or sitting at ease, though each shining rifle lies ready to its owner’s grasp. With the heedlessness of veterans, some are telling humorous stories, some are playing the boyish game of “pull the peg,” watching the whirl and fall of the pocket-knife with eager interest; some are sleeping upon their folded elbows,—for many, alas! the final slumber in this world. The soldiers, too, hear that far-off cannon-shot and recognize its sig­ nificance. The story is cut short, the knife is left quivering in the turf, the sleepers start up. “Boom! Boom!” Those are the field batteries; you can feel the earth jar beneath your feet with each tre­ mendous explosion. And hark! the opening volleys of musketry as the regiments come into action; now the continuous rattleof the “fire-at-will.” A great battle is in progress there, and here we lie idle and useless. But our turn soon came. On that fear­ ful Saturday, the nineteenth of Sep­ tember, we bore the brunt of the Confederate attack and held our lines, torn and shattered, but still held them. And again, on that awful Sunday, the twentieth, we met Bragg’s troops, as brave fellows as ever wore blue or gray, and beat them bacK seventeen times. I can see General Thomas now, our indomitable leader, as he left his headquarters at the Snodgrass house, a scarcely habitable place according those who to the ideas of comfortable came from roomy, northern farmhouses. It still stands, and to my elderly eyes seems but little changed from what it was on that September day, thirty-two years ago. As I pause before it, trying to recall, in their entirety, the impres­ sions of that hour when, as a stripling lieutenant, I stood there before, a little girl comes to lean over the fence, with wide, curious eyes, while a baby, peering between the cross­ rails, with the audacity of infancy queries, “ Who is ’00? What does 00 want?” Yes, along this path he came, re­ turning my respectful salute with a touch of the rusty hat, pursuing his way quietly, almost abstractedly, to the brow of the knoll. The shells were shrieking through the trees overhead, while the bullets sang among the shrubbery on either hand. NO. 37 heads peered wonderingly at us. I The stream, flowing over the dam, filled the air with a continuous roar. Two or three skiffs were drawn up on the banks, just where, so iny guide i lformed me, the opposing regiments hid crossed and recrossed during I i the battle. ’ There was a deal of I killing done here," he remarked, bsolutely pure i “I saw that little river running red: for the blues and the grays went! I remember a dead soldier lay upon Chattanooga Military Park. It has I back and forth over this scrap of j his face directly in our path. Thomas purchased about six thousand acres water all day long." glanced at him as he passed, and I of land, including the field of Chicka­ Walking onward we came to ai heard him mutter in his beard, “poor mauga, the approaches, and several solitary monument, upon whose | crown was carved the crossed sabres fellow!” detached tracts. Five thousand “A-ree! A-ree!” It was the well- acres of the fighting ground are above a cavalry trumpet. My guide paused and took off his battered4iat. Reader, did you ever take S immons known “rebel yell.” forest, and the rest is mainly made L iver R egulator , the “K ing of “ I have heard," he said, “ that the “They are charging us,” was the up of farms sloping up the foot-hills L iver M edicines ? ’ ’ Every bod v needs cavalry took little or no part in take a liver remedy. It is a sluggish or calm observation of the general as of Missionary Ridge. There are now diseased liver that impairs digestion he turned partly around to address forty miles of graded roads in the this battle. Well, I'm ’specially and causes constipation, when the waste glad I wasn't in front of the Fourth that should be carried off remains in me,—for I was following a few paces park, and the underbrush and new Cavalry chaps when they rode down the body and poisons the whole system. in his rear. timber have been cleared from the the valley just for sport. When that That dull, heavy feeling is due to a “Yes, General, they are at it, band forest, so there is no difficulty in torpid liver. Biliousness, Headache, sort of harmless amusement is going Malaria and Indigestion are all liver to hand.” driving to all points of interest. on you will kindly excuse me! 1 diseases. Keep the liver active by an “Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!” Eight handsome pyramid monu­ dose of Simmons Liver Reg­ happened to see that charge, and a occasional ulator and you’ll get rid of these trou­ At the deep-chested cry his face ments stand on the spots where the finer sight I never witnessed. Why, bles, and give tone to the whole sys­ lighted with a grim smile. eight commanders of brigades were sir, you would have thought the tem. For a laxative Simmons Liver Regulator is better than P ills . It “ We have repulsed them,” he said. killed at Chickamauga. Twenty-four horses were out on a panic; does not gripe, nor weaken, but greatly All that long day our leader never states are represented on the field in and the boys who rode them refreshes and strengthens. lost his quiet of feature and manner marble. Ohio stands first; she had Every package has the Red Z were as jolly as jockeys. But the stamp on the wrapper. J. H. but once, and that was when a more men than any other state in rifles and the batteries made havoc Zeiliii & Co., Philadelphia. mounted aid dashed up on a foam- the battle, and fifty-four monuments with them, horse and man. Few of flecked charger and handed him a do honor to their memory. The aim them came back, and this monument A Conscientious Cattish. dispatch. As he read, his face dark­ has been to retain, as far as possible, is the memorial erected by the sur­ There have been many cases where ened. the aspect of the field at the time of vivors. fish have been caught in whose capa­ “Beaten, by a blunder!” His battle, and one who participated in “Just here," continued the veteran, cious maws were found long missing words seemed to stick in his throat. the fight may easily recognize the “I came upon a most sorrowful ex­ rings, necklaces, baseball masks, and “Rosecrans retreated to Chattanoo­ salient points; where this battery perience. I was appointed to take such like trifles. Once in a while a ga; Crittenden rolled up. We are stood, for example, where that charge of one of the burying-parties, thieving fish is stricken by its con­ left alone, but— I stay here!” charge was made, where the various It was true. A mistake of the regiments held post. The whole re­ consisting of six men besides rayself. science into a desire to make restitu­ We were hunting about among the tion. Such a fish was the giant cat commander-in-chief had opened a gion is historic; for within a radius heaps for the wounded—for we left which lay watching the shores of an wide gap in our center, into which of a few miles «ere fought some of the dead to the last—when it seemed eastern stream all through the month the enemy had poured, crumpling up the bloodiest battles of the war,— to me that I heard a low moan. of April. Many fishermen tried to and driving off the bulk of our army. Missionary Ridge, Tunnel Hill, Chat­ D’ye hear that, Sergeant?’ I said. land him, but he contemptuously We were isolated, nearly surrounded, tanooga, Gordon’s Mill, and Lookout ‘Some chap groaning?’ he asked. refused the most tempting lures, un­ and left entirely to our own resources. Mountain. ‘Just that,’said I. ‘Hunt for him.’ til a tall man of striking personal To add to our anxieties, a yellow fog The dedication of the park, which Dragging away the heaps of blue appearance came one day. The big had settled over the valley, render­ is to take place September 19th and and gray, we came upon a young cat leaped from the water and fell at ing everything doubtful and obscure 20th, will be a national event. Sec­ fellow shot through the shoulder. his feet, without waiting for hook except the movements of the men in retary of War Lamont will direct ‘Don’t mind me,’ says he; ‘take care and line. The tall man was aston­ our immediate front. It was a terri­ the ceremonies, for which congress of my brother.’ We dug out a boy ished. On cutting open the fish ble time; and, youngster though I has voted an appropriation of $20,- in gray with a bayonet wound in his afterward he discovered a gold eagle was, I felt a profound depression of 000. A large numberof both federal internals. Hopeless case; no cure. which he had lost a year before lying spirits. All seemed hopelessly lost; and confederate veterans will be Called myself a consarned fool for in the fish’s stomach. Most wonder­ but our general’s face gave no sign present. my pains, but sat down upon a dead ful of all, there were, besides, sixty of the suffering I knew full well he As I went slowly along a by-path horse and looked on while the blue copper cents—one year's legal inter­ must be undergoing. His manner the figure of a gardener engaged in brother, wounded in the shoulder, est, which the noble fish bad yielded was as calm, his voice as steady, as clipping the grass of a sloping lawn took the gray brother, wounded in up its life in trying to restore. Here if he were merely passing his troops caught my attention. Surely I knew the bowels, in his arms. I found is a mark for other piscatorial pre­ in review. I had respected that that grizzled face, with its small, them there in the morning, in the varicators to work up to.— Ex. iron nature before; now I revered it. shrewd eyes. Suddenly the mist of same position, both cold and rigid; Well did he earn his historic title, time cleared from my memory. and I am not ashamed to say that I Diarrhoea should be stopped promptly. “The Rock of Chickamauga.” “Private Ransom, attention!” had to rub some wet out o’ my eyes.” It soon becomes chronic. DeWitt’s The man straightened up, and in­ Again and again we who were The “regular troop” monuments Colic and Cholera Cure is effective, 6afe watching the ebb and flow of the voluntarily, as it seemed, came to a are of stone, those for the artillery and certain. Hundreds of testimonials mighty struggle saw the gray masses salute. He gazed at me sharply for having upright cannon for pillars. bear witness to the virtue of this great emerge from the vaporous gloom a moment then shook his head. There are eight of these on the field. medicine. It can always be depended “Don’t understand,” he muttered. sweep upward toward us with that Private Ransom laid his hand upon upon, its use saves time and money. blood-chilling cry, “A-ree! A-ree!” “Seemed like old times come back.” my arm as we came opposite a stone Rogers Bros. “Private Ransom, look at me saw our blue lines rise to meet them pedestal supporting a beautiful cast­ Our Foreign Commerce. with fire-blast and thunder-roll, saw again.” ing of a railroad engine. The secretary of agriculture issued, The wrinkles in his hard, brown the gray masses falter, pause and “Fine piece of work, that,” said August 15th, a circulai on the im­ sweep backward out of sight. All face deepened into a smile of recogni­ the old man, observing the monu­ ports and exports of the United about us, on every crest and ridge, tion ment with the air of a connoisseur. States for 1893 and 1894. It shows “ You! Is it you, Lieutenant? ” the dense fog-curtain was rent with “It is, indeed,” I agreed. “One the crimson flashes of the confederate He shook my offered hand heartily. might almost expect to see the steam that, notwithstanding the depression field-batteries. Round shot, shell, “Come to see the old place again’” escape from that dome, and to hear of business, exports from the United States in J894 were valued at $889,- and grape roared, shrieked, aud he asked. “Glad to see you. Was that bell ring a warning peal.” 843,000, against $847,665,194 in 1893. whistled overhead, or ripped up the shot in the hip at Atlanta, and git “Poor chaps!” sighed my friend, Three-fourths of that vast value appointed to a job here. Come along, turf at our feet. On the slopes lav “they were hung. A pretty hard confused heaps of blue and gray,— and I'll show you over the ground.” fate for fellows as brave as they. came from the farms and farmers of this republic. “What is that modern-looking brave men, already stiffening in One side called them ‘raiders,’ the Great Britain and Ireland lead all death, or moaning in the agony of affair yonder?” I asked, pointing to other called them ‘spies’; and it was countries in volume of trade with the an edifice much resembling a seaside torn flesh and shattered bone. as spies they were hung. I’ve heard United States. The English-speak­ caravansary, with its sloping roof, When the shadows of evening drew say there is notning in a name; but ing people of Europe bought of the down over hill and valley, we had turrets, and balconies. “It was not there was a heap in the name of $889,000,000 of American exports beaten back the last desperate charge. here in our time, Ransom.” them Andrews raiders,—seeing that $451,000,000 worth, and, taking the “Hardly,” was the terse reply. they got strung up for the difference But at what cost! Where our regi­ British possessions all together as ments had stood were now only “That is what they call the ‘Chicka­ between a few letters. There were one customer, they took $523,000,000 smoke-grimed,exhausted squads, still mauga Hotel.’ It catches visitors any number of fine jobs done during worth, or nearly sixty per cent of gripping their rifles and peering who come to view the old battle-field. that little unpleasantness of ours; but the whole, during 1894. through the smoke and fog. Where I expect they’ll reap a harvest when there never was a neater trick than The United States imported from the batteries had poured forth their we have the celebration here in the hooking of that steam-engine Great Britain $107,000,000 worth of thunder, now lay wrecks of dis­ September. ” when the gallant boys made a dash her products in 1894, or 16.4 per cent “What are these rows of cannon?" to get off. But luck was against mounted pieces, broken caissons, of our entire imports. Aud from all splintered ammunition-boxss, spoke­ I inquired, as we passed a number them; they got caught.” The vet­ of the British possessions, together less wheels, and heaps of dead ar­ of monuments, a long framework of eran shook his head meditatively. with the United Kingdom, $178,000,- tillerists, many still grasping sponge logs supporting several scores of “I s'pose it don’t make so much 000 worth, more than 27 percent. Al­ or rammer, with theogloom of battle dismounted guns. matter, after all. They got hung most 90 per cent of the total United upon their set features. Here and “They are going to use them for and done with it; and here am I, States exports were to the United there a gun or two yet belched its monuments,” answered my guide. diggin’ out grub at a dollar a day. Kingdom aud British possessions, flame. The few surviving officers “Each of these pieces is supposed to “A park,” continued the veteran, Germany, Canada, France, Nether­ still passed among the men, uttering have done its share on the field, and philosophically, “is mostly looked lands, and Belgium. Of imports, in hoarse and weary voices the Oft- they are to be built into memorial upon as a pleasure-ground, I take it. after the first place held by the repeated “Steady, men!Steady!” groups, each group to mark the site Well, I’ve no objection to folks en­ United Kingdom and British pos­ We had won and we had lost; for of a battery. Those empty shells and joying themselves; but it is sort of sessions, follows Germany, with a though we had repelled Bragg's as- round shot are likewise to be incor- serious to consider that thousands of valuation of $96,000,000; Spanish saults we had to retreat to save our porated into monumental pyramids, human beings gave up their share of West Indies, $82,000,; Brazil and torn fragments from ultimate cap­ nine feet square at the base and the breath of life on these hills and France, $76,000,000 each, and Canada ture. It was not until we had eight feet in height, to show the flats, and that nigh onto every foot $37,000,000. reached Chattanooga, twelve miles places where the general officers fell. of ground hereabouts is a grave, “Yonder stone tower,—what is generally unknown. Yet, after all, distant, and had rejoined the re­ Cholera morbus is a dangerous com­ mainder of the army, that we knew that?” the whole world is the grave of dead plaint, and often is fatal in its results. To avoid this you should use DeWitt’s how fearful the losses on both sides “That is where General Wilder and gone generations of men. had been. History says that of the and his brigade have put up a mark­ “The old fellows who handled rifle Colic & Cholera Cure, as soon as the first federáis was nineteen thousand, and er to show where they did their or pulled lock-string here are grow­ symptoms appear. Rogers Bros. that of the confederates, twenty-one share in the fighting; and they did ing fewer every year; but their fame Comparative Speed. thousand men. But what of the fight, nobody can deny that, For and honor still live, and always will, This table will show the record of hundreds who died long after, of bad­ my part, since lighthouses are in so long as this nation respects brave a bicyclist compared with the best ly healed wounds and of other pauses order, I prefer those iron towers, men.”— J. Clayton Heaton in Sept. speed made by horses: directly due to this struggle? They are more graceful, what I number Demorest's Magazine. 1-4 mile. % mile. % mile. 1 mile. Johnson, bicyclist. 0.21 0.46 1.11 1.35 As I wander over the battle-field, would call more romantic like. But w 1.35 1.11 There is no doubt, no failure, when Salvator, race horse, 0.23 0.47 thirty-two years after those sorrow­ I don’t pretend to be a judge. Flying Jib, pacer, 0.29 0.59 1J8 l.M you take DeWitt ’ s Colic & Cholera Cura. 2 01 1.30 ful and tragic days, everything is so Robert J , pacer. 0.30 1 <» “There was some of the hardest 1.01 2.03 0.30 1.32 familiar to my eyes that I half ex- fighting of the whole battle around It is pleasant, acts promptly, no bad af­ Alix, trotter, ter efiects. Rogers Bros. In distance racing, whether on the pect to see yonder hill suddenly this place,” said my guide as we road or the track, the bicycle rider fringe itself with the flame of rifles, passed the Dyer House, which so far Do you know, if you want to go east or a long line of glittering bayonets as I could see, had undergone no and desire Pullman Tourist Sleeper, that has greatly the advantage of the come sweeping up the valley below. change since that miserable evening you will be detained from 12 to 16 hours . horse, and can beat that, animal at But all is silent and peaceful. Where I had marched by it leading the for­ unless you take the Northern Pacific? I any distance, the farther the distance the blue and the gray ranks stood lorn and tattered fragments of my Remember that the Northern Pacific is 1 the greater the advantage in favor are these white ranks of memorial command, more than a quarter of a the only line running Pullman Tourist of the bicyclist. stones. At an expense of more than century ago. “And this is Craw­ Sleepers through to the east without three-quarters of a million dollars fish Spring,” he continued, as we delay. Time and money saved by this Stomach and bowel complaints are best relieved by the timely use of De­ the government has converted the approached a small, shingle-roofed route. For full information, time cards Witt’s Colic and Cholera cure. Insist maps, etc., call on or address, battle-ground into a park called, building, through whose single win­ on having this preparation. Don’t take C. H. F leming , Agent, formally, the Chickamauga and dow several frowsy, sawdust-covered any other. Rogers Bros. McMinnville, Ore. Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report National Bank SUBSCRIPTION PRICE 82.00 PER YEAR- Ont Dollar if paid in advance. Single numbers five cents. RsXalKS A