The Yamhill County reporter. (McMinnville, Or.) 1886-1904, August 26, 1898, Image 5

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    SPAIN MIGHT
“Save her honor” and still lose Cuba, but what
will you save it you lose your teeth by neglect
(and abuse? To those of my patients w ho have
frequent dental examinations, I can assure
preservation of their teeth and small dental
bills. Not only Crown and Bridge work, but
every department of the dental art is made a
specialty. You arc invited to call.
DR. J.EROY LEWIS, Dentist.
McMinnville.
PHYSICIANS
£ALBREATH & GOUCHER,
Physicians
and Surgeons.
*
(Office over Braly’a Bank.)
•
McMiNNVH.Lt
O regon .
•
•
£00K & CABLE,
Physicians
and Surgeons.
Rooms in Jacobson Block,
O regon .
M c M innville ,
MEAT MARKETS
p STREET MEAT MARKET,
Reynolds & Branham, Prop's.
Fresh and salt meats and sausages of all
kinds constantly in stock.
Cash paid for
hides. Highest market price paid for all kinds
of fat stock.
jy^ATTHIES & BOOTH,
Proprietors of
CITY MARKET.
Choice, Fresh Meats, All Kinds
South side Third St. between B and C.
PRODUCE MARKET.
p STREET PRODUCE MARKET,
L. E. Walker, Prop.
Cash paid for Poultry and Country Produce.
Hides and Tallow bought. Hay, Oats, Millfeed.
Oil Meal, Flaxseed and Bee Supplies of all
kinds kept on hand.
BARBERS.
yy
ii. logan ,
BARBER.
I am located opposite Burns & Daniels and aim
to give all customers good treatment for little
money. Bath rooms in connection. Your pat­
ronage solicited.
HARNESS
jh.SIA WRIGHT,
Manufactures and Deals In
HARNESS,
SADDLES, BRIDLES,
SPURS,
„nd brushes, and sells them cheaper than they
■can be boughtanywhereel.se in the Willamette
Valley, our all home made sets of harness are
pronounced unsurpassed by those who buy them.
yy
J. STRONG,
Dealer in and Manufacturer of
HARNESS,
SADDLES,
BRIDLES,
SPURS, Etc.
COLLARS,
WHIPS,
All work guaranteed as represented. Repairing
of all kinds promptly done. Located at corner
of Third and B Streets.
LIVERYMEN.
(JITY STABLES,
Third St., between £ and F.
Wilson & Henderson, Props.
Everything tirst-cl.HS. Hor.es boarded by
day, week or month. Commercial travelers
conveyed to all points at most reasonable rates.
Give us a call.
DRAYMEN
ß
E. COULTER.
McfllNNVlLLE
Truck and Dray Co.
Goods of all descriptions moved, and careful
handling guaranteed. Collections will be made
monthly. Hauling of all kjuds done cheap.
WOOD WORKER.
ßD HOFF,
WOOD WORKER
will repair vour Buggies and W agons, manufae-
■ure Office Furniture. Book cases, Wardrobes,
Brackets, Whatnots and all kinds of wood work.
Two Doors East of City Stables.
BANKING
NO
38ST
THE MclflimiLI.E
National Bank
-—McMinn ville, Oregon.—
latiti up C'apithl, $50,000
Surplus $10,000.
Transacts a General Banking BuaineM.
Office Hours 9 a. m. to 4 p. m.
LEE LAl/OHLIN, President.
J. L. ROVERS. Vice-President.
E. C. APPERSON, Cashier.
IV. S. LIVK, Assistant Cashier.
Oils, oils, oils, oils, machine oils, paint
pils anti oils of all kinds at Hodson's.
LOCAL NEWS.
-------------
G. S. Wright, dentist.
Chas. Griasen has been spending the
week at Jones’ mill.
A new residence lia« been built on the
Owens farm southwest of the city.
Bettman & Warieu will receive a new
stock of crockery iu a few days.
Jones Howell was iu the city over
Sunday with his wife and daughter.
Hay forks, straw forks, barley forks,
hop forks and knives and forks, all styles
and prices at Hodson’s.
Dr. and Mrs. Leroy Lewis attended
the Pacific congress of dentists at Port­
land the past week.
New wagons, buggies, hacks, Garden
City and Morrison plows, etc., for sale
by C. D. Johnson, B street.
20-tf
Mrs. Ida Fuller of Portland was the
guest of Miss Ella Hendrick the past
week.
All roads lead to the Racket Store,
and they are getting dust from the heavy
travel.
34-3
F. W. Spencer has a carload of Moni­
tor Seeders and Drills on the road.
Everyone knows the Monitor—there is
none equal.
Levi Davis has erected a new fruit
dryer on his farm, with a capacity of
200 bushels per day. The country needs
more of them.
Sam Laughlin is on his way back to
Dawson City with a stock of meichan-
diee, which Campbell Hendrick expects
to sell after it gets there
Parties wishing to be hauled to the
Morrison hop yards are notified to meet
at the Galloway place on B street next
Wednesday morning at 6 o’clock.
All persons knowing themselves in­
debted to me for dental work, will please
call at once and settle the same, at the
clerk’s office.
J. H. N elson .
Rev. Joseph Hoberg very acceptably
filled the pulpit of the Methodist church
in Amity Sunday morning, in the ab­
sence of the pastor, Rev. Zimmerman.
The annual county convention of
Christian Endeavorers will be held in
the Cutnb. Presbyterian church of thia
city, beginning October 15th and hold­
ing over two days.
M. U. Gortner has begun operations
on u new residence between the Catholic
church and the Weed property, and ex­
pects to have it completed in time for
occupancy October 1st.
I am able to furnish loans on first-class
farm security, from $2,01X1 upward, at 7
per cent interest; loans to ran from 3 to
5 years. Parties wishing to borrow mon­
ey, call and see me.
R. L. C onner .
John R. Stewartson, late of Linn
county, has purchased the residence and
grocery store of Wm. Black, and now
occupies the same. Mr. Black will make
his future home at Vancouver.
F. Dielschneider, the boot and shoe
man, has recently enlarged his place of
business, and is much better prepared to
please his large list of customers. He
tells you about it in his ad. this week.
Mrs. B. F. Clubine has been in the
city this week looking after the final re­
moval of their household effects. They
have located in Centralia, Wash., where
Mr. Clubine will be employed in flouring
mills.
Hon. D. R. Nelson and wife of Knox­
ville, Tenn., arrived here Wednesday
evening, and are guests of Judge Magers’
family. Mrs. Nelson and Mrs. Magers
are sisters. Mr. Nelson is a leading law­
yer of his state.
Commencing August 20th the South­
ern Pacific placed on sale a round trip
ticket to Newport, good for three days,
going Saturday and returning Monday,
for $3.90. On the same date they made
a rate from McMinnville to Portland and
return, good going Saturday and return­
ing Monday morning, for $2.40.
Mrs. Cook, who was reelected as a
teacher in the primary department of
the public schools, has tendered her res­
ignation. Mrs. Cook is regarded as one
ol the best primary teachers among the
many excellent ones the city schools
have employed, and her resignation,
which is induced by health considera­
tions, is to be regretted.
Winnifred Hopkins is back from the
Klondike country and tells his friends
that he sold his claim near Dawson City
for $30,000. His father arrived at Daw­
son just before the son left, and the lat­
ter expects to go back in the near future.
Thoee who have made something in that
country seem to be the ones who got in
early, and they seem to have made their
money selling their chances to others
rather than by digging gold.
The McMinnville Emergency Corps
last week sent by registered letter to
Capt. Heath, Cavite, P. I., the enm of
$20, to be used as he thonght best for the
good of Co. A. 2d Oregon volunteers.
While not a munificent sum, it in con­
nection with the sums previously ex-
|«n<led for bands, caps, gowns and vari­
ous other supplies for our gallant boys,
has depleted the corps treasury to such
an extent, that to have an emergency
fund on hand the ladies will serve ice
cream at the old Jacobson stand, tomor­
row afternoon and evening. The war ie
over, bnt the probabilities are that our
boys «ill not be home for some months
yet, and the Ind es would urge that the
generous public aid thvm io their worthy
undertaking by patronizing them liber­
ally.
*
G. S. Wright, dentist.
Judge Magers and family returned
from the seaside Monday.
A new line of tobacco and cigars just
received at Bettman & Warren’s.
Mrs. M. M. Hodson and sister, Mrs.
Underwood, returned frum Newport
Wednesday.
Ice cream and cake will be served by
the Emergency corps in the Jacobson
building tomorrow.
Rev C. M. Lane, who held a series of
meetings here last winter in the C. P.
church, has joined the Christian church
at Eugene.
I want to exchange some property in
Sodaville or Lebanon for property iu or
near McMinnville. Address P. O. box
100, McMinnville, Ore
Corvallis is having the houses of the
entire city numbered, which makes a
needed and great convenience in a city
of that size
Dr. Arthur S. Cooper, after a visit with
his uncle at Independence, attended the
Astoria regatta, and later the dental
congress in Portland , and is now at Wil­
hoit springs.
The court has ordered the state treas­
urer to cash the warrant for the payment
of 020 acres of land in eastern Oregon,
on which the branch insane asylum
is to be located.
The Astoria regatta dragon, which
was advertised to be 300 feet in length,
proved to be just half that. Notwith­
standing this, it was said to have been
an interesting sight.
A machine is said to have been made
in town last week designed to blow the
tin out of Mr. Ensley’s mine on the
North Yamhill. Newt. Baker and J. B.
Gardner were the designers.
Mr. Geo. Barnum and wife were called
to Middleton last Saturday to visit John
Chapman, a son-in-law, and wife, who
had received the sad information from
the commandant of the Mare island
navy yard that their son, Roy G., a grad­
uate of Newberg college and aged 20
years, had died August 8th, and was
buried with the honors dne him. Roy
enlisted last Mav, after the close of
school at Newberg. The body has been
exhumed, and is on its way to Salem,
where it will be given final burial today.
F. J. Miller, the hop man, says the
crop in Yamhill will be about 30 per
cent below that of last year. The quality
will be excellent. There are no lice in
the hops. Present quotations are nomi­
nal, Scents. Oregon hops are two cents
lower than the market on account of the
bad quality of last year’s crop, which
makes buyers afraid. He thinks, with
the quality assured, the new crop will
bring a fair price. Mr. Miller is hand­
ling 100 acres this year anti is probably
the most extensive grower in the state.
A. H. Thomas of Forest Grove, who
has just purchased the II. Hilton shoe
stock, will offer goods a few days before
moving the stock at exactly the first cost
at the shoe factory east, nothing added
for freight. Mr. Thomas’ profit will be
only what Mr. Hilton sacrificed in order
to move back east. First to call will get
first choice. Remember, goods cannot
be retailed the year round at w holesale
prices; now is a good chance to get a
supply for the winter at a bargain. Here
is the cost mark Mr. Hilton used and
will be found on all the goods:
bcdefghlja
1234567890
so you can see just what the goods cost.
The town of Fossil, in Gilliam county,
is to have water works. A spring in the
hills, 80 feet above the town and three
miles away, is to be tapped with a pipe
line and the water carried to a reservoir.
^|ie route is easy, most of the ditch to
lay the pipe can be made with plows.
The spring flows 55,000 gallons of water
every 24 hours, which is ample to meet
Fossil's present needs. The quality of
the water ie excellent.
The town has
nearly enough money in the treasury to
build the water works. The town has
never been allowed to get in debt, with
the result that it has never sapped its
strength paying interest. The works
will cost from $5,000 to $6,000. Some­
thing closely allied to this is possible
and probable for McMinnville at some
future time, and the sooner we exchange
the sluggish, muddy liquid of the Yam­
hill for sparkling H2O of the mountains,
the better, both from a sanitary and
pecuniary standpoint.
The Manila Guards returned home
Tuesday evening from the Astoria re­
gatta. tired, but highly pleased with the
treatment received.
It was another
Honolulu—nothing was too good for the
Guards, everything was free, and if any­
one had been caught taking money from
them they would have been blacklisted.
They proved to be the cynosure of the
occasion, almost to the extent of losing
sight of the queen, who had to be |
crowned a couple of times to accord her
dne prominence.
F. E. Rogers, who
was present, says that whenever the
Guards took position on the street to
drill, it was the signal for the people to .
tumble over each other, anti thousands
of people would close up about them in |
a moment's time. The theatrical man
at the Marquam was quick to catch on j
toa popular thing, and advertised that
the Guards would attend hie play on
their return, when they didn't expect to
be there. There is one danger in ail
this popularity, and that is that it may .
turn the girls’ heads. We hope not, >
however.
Dr. Lowe leaves Monday.
Hop gloves at the Racket store. 36-2
Wanted—A ton of baled clover hay.
Inquire at this office.
A daughter was born on Aug. 22d, to
the wife of Walter Wade. Weight 12*^
pounds.
Place your order early with F. W.
Spencer for Monitor Drills.
Remember your eyes and Wm. F.
Dielschneider ff they need glasses.
The R eporter and Weekly Oregonian
one year for $2, strictly in advance.
A NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE
Many students spend a year at flc-
riinnville college for $ too and pay all
expenses. Send for catalogue.
Miss Agnes Sweet of Portland returned
home Tuesday after a two weeks visit at
M. Underwood’s, during which time
she made herself very useful, the oppor­
tunity being afforded by a misfortune
befalling the good lady of the house.
Mrs. Underwood, while engaged in
pouring hot water from a teakettle,
slipped, anti the water entered her shoe,
forming a hot compress that resulted in
an extremely painful sore.
Died.—In this city, at 3 a. tn. Monday,
August 22d, after an illness of about two
weeks, from peritonitis, Harvey Bene­
dict, aged 18 years. The funeral was
conducted by Rev. Summerville at the
Methodist church, Tuesday, at 1 p. m.
Harvey was a good boy, and his sudden
death is a deep sorrow for his worthy
parents, and many young friends and
schoolmates. Rumor has it that his ill­
ness was due to an injury received in
gymnastic exercises, but as to the truth
of this we know not.
The new county court has inaugurated
an excellent reform,in the matter of hav­
ing bills properly made out and certified
before presentation for allowance. Here­
tofore bills have come up in all kinds of
shape, sometimes written u[>on a small
scrap of paper, often without date or in­
telligible form. The county now fur­
nishes a printed billhead, of uniform
shape and size, with necessary blanks
for recording the action of the court, date
of filing, etc. The change will go a good
way toward systemizing the work.
The Manila Guards already have strong
invitations to attend the state fair and
the Portland exposition.
Commander
Cooper says he don’t know about that.
A good thing might be overdone. He
should at least exact a purse that would
make it profitable for everyone con­
cerned. The state fair and the Portland
exposition are the biggest sorts of hogs,
and should get nothing without paying
roundly for it. When summed up, the
so-called state fair is Salem’s fair, and
the exposition, on the plea of advertising
our resources and attracting immigra­
tion, gets our money and makes a show
of our products, and heads off the immi­
gration, too, when it comes. We
have the beet county in the state, and
when we learn to foster our own inter­
ests, dieblay onr own resources and do
our own advertising, we will forge ahead
in every respect. We should have fairs
and expositions of our own, or at least
get paid for assisting in others.
Altout ono month ago my child, which
is fifteen months old, had an attack of
diarrho-a, accompanied by vomiting. I
gave it such remidies as are usually given
in such cases, but as nothing gave relief,
we sent for a physician and it was under
his care for a week. At this time the
child had been sick for about ten days
and was having about twenty-five oper­
ations of the bowels every twelve hours,
and we were convinced that unless it
soon obtained relief it would not
live. Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea remedy was recommended,
and I decided to try it. I soon noticed a
change for the better; by its continued
use a complete cure was brought about
and is now perfectly healthy.—C. L.
B oggs , Stumptown, Gilmer Co., W. Va.
For eale by 8. Howorth & Co.
Means peace and happiness in the family. It does not get out ot repair. Is easy
to operate, has all the attachments and sella for less than other standard tna
chine«. #25 upward. Emerson Pianos, Kimball and Cottage Organs, Violins,
Guitars, Banjos, Wall Paper, Stationery.
CHAS. ORISSEN, McMinnville, Oregon
j MORE ROOM!
X
S
LARGER STOCK 1
Z
S
LOWER PRICES ! <
l have enlarged my Btore quarters to make room for my increased 41
Stock, and the people of Yamhill County will find me right to the front
this Fall and Winter as usual, with the Largest anil Best Assortment of 4
Footwear in McMinnville. They can feel assured 1 will sustain my rep- a
utation, gained in Twenty Years bnniness in McMinnville, of giving the
best value for the money and carrying the Latest Styles.
41
t
:
Sign of the Big Boot.
F. DIE ü SCHNEIÖER.
Boots and Shoes.
First Impression.
Our newly-formed business relations with our
patrons have been very pleasant to us, and wetrust
that it has been satisfactory to our customers as
well.
Our motto is to DO WELL our part, treat
everybody white and regard our patrons’ interests
together with our own.
We invite all the grain growers in Yamhill
County, near any of the points where we do busi­
ness, to give us a trial and then choose your deal­
er.
Respectfully,
I
CHRISTENSON & SAWYER.
I.lvery Business for Sale.
The City livery and feed stables are
offered for sale. The equipment is first-
class and is doing a paying business.
All kinds of Fine,
Terms reasonable.
Difficult and
W ilson & H enderson .
old Watches re­
paired and made
For Sale.
to run as good
A house and two lots in Saylor's addi­
as new at
tion for sale cheap.
34-4
S hell H awley .
Places Wanted for Girls.
I have applications from <a number of
girls who desire places in families in
McMinnville where they may work for
their board and go to school during the
coming college year. If such help is
wanted, please apply to the undersigned
at once.
36-4
H. L. B oardman .
D. C. FLETCHER & CO.
General Blacksmithing and Repairing.
Dn
First tlaie borwaboelng. Track or mad •hoeing
done in the Leet style of the art. Farm and
Tbrettbing machinery repaired.
Shop Opposite Hotel Yamhill.
D. A. SMITH'S
—NEW—
Jemelry Store
NEXT DOOR TO ROITOrflCt.
All kind, of Watches, Clock)
and Jewelry for aaleat
hard time, price«.