Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Yamhill County reporter. (McMinnville, Or.) 1886-1904 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1900)
FACTS The Turn of Life ' This Is a critical period In the life of every woman and no mistakes should be made. The one recognized and reliable help for women who are approaching and passing through this wonderful change is Lydia E. Pinkham'« Vegetable Compound 77iaf the utmost reliance can be placed upon this great medicine Is testi fied to by • an army ot grateful women who have been helped by It, Mrs, Pinkham, who has the greatest and most successful experience In the world to qualify her, will advise you free of charge, Her address Is Lynn, Mass, Write to her. Greatest Single Kneiny. President Swensson, of Bethany col-' lege, Kansas, says, in the Sheldon edition of the Topeka Capital: “The American saloon, open by law and license, is our greatest single enemy of decency, morality and religion. Our prohibition laws close that saloon •nd kill that foe. What greater praise could we utter?” 1 Try Alien’ll Foot. Fane, A powder to be shaken into the shoes. At this season your feet feel swollen, nervous • nd hot, and get tired easily. If you have smarting feet or tight shoes, try Allen’s Foot-Ease. Il cools the feet and makes walking easy. Cures ingrowing nails. • woolen and sweating feet, blisters and callous spots. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain and gives rest and comfort. We have 30,000 testimonials. Try it today. Hold bv al I druggists and shoe dealers for 25c. Trial package FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmstead, LeRov. N. Y. ▲ BOLT WOOD I’ilKSKKVATIVK. fence Po»t Impregnated With Ave«- ariaa (arbolineuia Endure« Tw*w ty N the great Chicago Are ot 1871 the i daily newspaper buildings burued were those occupied by the Tribune, Times, Journal. Republican, Staats Zei- tung and Post, Mail aud Union aud the Volks Zeitung. In addition to these tuere were nineteen foreign weekly pa | pers, fifteen juvenile publications, two ! agricultural Journals, eighteen relig.ous papers, eighteen monthly magazines, twenty-two business periodicals, and twenty-eight miscellaneous publica tions. making In all 128 publications . left wiuiout a home by the fire. By Wednesday morning the dally pa pers were out with issues that sounded like tocsins to call every man tn Chi cago to his duty. At 3 o'clock Monday afternoon, while 15,000 buildings were burning throughout eight wards of the city, when the business center of Chi cago was swept away, while the terror- stricken people were shrinking along the margin of the lake, or swarmed far out on the desolate prairies, the Even ing Journal, true to the spirit of Chi cago Journalism, came out with a small extra, containing quite a clear but very- brief account of the fire. The page Is 8x10 Inches, three columns wide. Three- quarters of a column is devoted to the "scare head," another half to the ad vertisement of the Board of Trade, and the remainder of the space to the fire. It is headed "The (treat Calamity of the Age.” Some printers on the Evening Post milled at a Job printing office on the West Side and got out a Post for the emergency. The Tribune resumed on Wednesday, the Mail Thursday, the Republican Sunday, and the Times Oct. 18. The tiles of the Chicago Evening Journal were rescued by Mr. Frank Gil bert, then associate editor of that pa per. Being the oldest newspaper In the city, its tiles go back further, and are more valuable than any other. Mr. Gilbert says: "Hurrying to the Jour nal office the first thing attempted was to close the iron shutters. The build ing stood on Dearborn street, directly opposite the Tremont House. 'Could those Iron shutters In the rear and on B the editor. That garnering never hap peued In the Times office, for the force was driven away by the flames before the grand report was commenced. At the Tribune it was otherwise. That paper rejoiced in a ■flre-proof’ building. aud Sam Medll, city editor, was deter- mined to have a seven-column descrip tion of the grand fire In the morning whether there was any town left to read It or not. So he mapped out tlie 'magnum opus' of the year. One after another of the reporters came In with- out the usual jocularity, took their places In the local room tn the top story and commenced their desperate task. One or two were set to watch from the roof the progress of the de vastation. Walls were toppling around them, flames mounting above them, the ground shaking like an earthquake be neath them, the red fire glaring In at the windows and crackling, hissing and roaring In their ears, but still they wrote on. The buildings at the north across the street were all mowed dowu like grass, and still they wrote on. The ‘fire-proof postofflee went, ami still they wrote on. The limit was readied at last-of time, not of matter—and the brave compositors had placed the record In type by the light of the In candescent atmosphere, for me gas had ceased to flow through the Jets. In that lurid light, and in the twofold heat of the tire, without the building and the fire within tbeir own breasts, these artisans completed their last 'take' and consigned their 'turtles' to the pressmen far below. These fel lows alone proved unequal to the emer gency; and pleading a lack of water for steam to run their engines (which may have been true), they fled, leaving the forms upon the large press, and the candles, suddenly obtained, glim mered uselessly.” Carter’s Little Liver Pills. Soaad« Tn an age when wild, *xagge rated state ments of the efficiency of all kind* of articles, from patent medicines to patent plowshare*, fill the column* of the pre*«, for advertising purposes only, it 1» pleas- Ing to write about a household specific whose usefulness has been proved beyond th* power of detractors to injur« or lmi- tators to compete with. Such la Avenarius Carbolineum. the celebrated German wood preservative of ths 19th century, whose fame is destined to outlast the 20th. It Is not only ths greatest preparation known for arresting the decay of any kind of woodwork, above or below ground, from the ravages of climate, fungus or vermin, but it may bs truthfully described as the only preserva- tlvs whose utility has been practically tested and not found wanting. EMnce the discovery of Avenarius Carbolineum near- iy thirty years ago. it has been constantly employed foi the treatment of wood used In ships, bridges, pavements, ties, tele graph poles, fence posts, house supports and hundred* of other constructions, and in not a single case out of thousand* has it failed to render articles impregnated Immune against rot and decay, whether the attacking enemies were climate, soil, fresh or salt water, teredo®«, ants, boring worms or other hostile*, singly or In com bination, when properly applied. The value of such a specific on a farm, where almost all the constructive work, from houses and barns to vine pole* and fence posts, is chiefly or entirely wood, cannot be overestimated. No farmer who Appreciates practical economy can afford to do without It. As additional incentive* for the use of Avenarius Carbolineum it nay be stated that the preparation Is in expensive, and a few gallons go a long way. while application 1* as easy and sim ple as that of common house paint. A few strokes of the brush doe* the work, and the article treated i* Insured against decay and death. As an illustration of the efficiency of Avenarius Carbolineum we publish the following photographic reproduction of two pieces of wood which stood side by • ide partly In and partly out of the ground, together with a sworn statement concerning the same attached, as seen in th* picture. > ’ That is th* way many serious : rouble* begin. The stomach gets a little out of order, is neglected, and chronic dyspepsia follow«. The blood becomes a little im pure, as occasional pimples testify, and in time a long array of blood diseases attack the system. It is safest to cure these trou- I bles at once bv thoroughly purifying th* ' blood with H« hm F b Karsaparilla. It maiu- i tains the heulth and cures disease. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is America’s Greatest Mediciue. Frio* 11 The planting of waste (and to trees for timber is receiving more attention than formerly. Farmers who planted trees 20 years ago now find that they then made good investments. It is claimed that cherry and hickory tree* require txjut 30 years before they are valuable for timber; maple trees 20 years and black walnut 15 years. A black walnut tree is said to attain from “Oh, yes; the fvrnace has done it« 12 to 15 inches iu diameter in 15 years from the seed. Nuts are also a source part; but the fires that I have been of profit with some growers of timber. able to build iu it have failed entirely to communicate any warmth to tbe Carter*« Ink I m Used by th* greatest. railway svstems of the United house.”—Boston Transcript. , Menl« l’ark. San Mateo County. Cal.. ' I with its new buildings, newly furnished and complete laboratories, beautiful sur- I roundings and home induences. is cue of i the best equipped schools tor the training of iroys and voting men on the coast. It is in charge of Dr. IraG. Hoitt ami i* ac-j credited at the universities. Send for cat alog. Tenth year begins August H, 1900. i Hick«—“Has yonr furnace worked | l ail right the past winter?” Wicks— States. They would not use it if it wasn’T Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever l he best. used tor all affections of the throat and , ! lungs.—W m . 0. E ndsi . ey , Vanburen, Ind., I The way iu which an Arnericun wo j I sb 10. moo. man often lets hetHelf slip out of the Louise Froebel, widow of Friedrich Froebel, touuder of the kindergarten system, died iu Hamburg al the age of 85. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought I * 1 A\'egctable Prepnrationfor As similating the Food andRegula ting the Stomachs and Dowels of Piece of board, perfectly sound, after twenty years’ exposure, on account of be- ng Impregnated with " Carbol lneuoj kvenariu*.” lives of her daughters as they are grow- iug into womanhood is a loss to both sides which cau never be made up m after life.—Housewife. CASTORIA 'QWJirm Promotes Digcslion.Cheerrul- ness and Rest Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. Bears the Signature N ot N arcotic . gffuirsAMuapmiaR J\unfJiui Seul" t Alx.fannn * 1 liorkoLU Salts - I Anise Seed * I Fence post, completely decayed, after five years’ exposure, on account of not being treated with Carbolineum Aven arius. Alx la ChapeJle, January 12. 1*99. We confirm that this pleoe of wood is a part of a fence board, w’hlch has been exposed to the weather for nearly twenty years. This fence was impregnated with T’arbolineum Avenarius, and hae always stood in very damp, mouldy ground (hu mus). around our warehouse. Not a sin gle piece of wood in this fence has de cayed during the time, as shown by above board, which stood partly In and partly out of the ground. The fence post shown above was NOT Impregr ftted with Carbolineum Avenar! and we placed It five years ago along*! of the board, and removed both togethi In their above condition. 81EBENECK A COUMONT. RUINS OF THE TRIBUNE BUILDING. Just a UtUo Out of Sorts HOITT'S SCHOOL. When John Law Boomed It. the side alley be closed, the building a sum which, converted Into our cur might be saved.' 1 reasoned. But they j rency. represents nearly £5,000,000. No han not been shut for years, ami the , class of the community escaped the ill hinges of some broke off anil let the faction. Two of the ablest scholars in shutters down. Seeing the futility of I France are reported to have deplored trying to save the building. I set about the maduess of the times at one Inter saving the office books aud tiles. The i view, only to find themselves at their first thing was to go to such open-all- I next meeting bidding for share* with nlglit places near by as were likely to the greatest excitement. The scene of have any of the printers that I knew, ; operations was a narrow street called | and I knew every jovial compositor in Quincampolx, and tile demand for ac ' those days. We soon rallied quite a ' coin modal Inn mny lie Judged from the ' force, from six to ten, I should say. fact that a bouse whlcli before yielded Across the street was a livery stable. ' about £40 a year now brought In more ; We went over there and helped our than £800 a month. A cobbler made selves to buggies and a crowbar. To about £10 a day by letting out a few take out the office Iwsiks aud papers not in the safe and then roll the safe chairs In bls stall, and a linm-hliaek. to the sidewalk was a short job. Tbe who Is celebrated In the prints of the next thing was to bring down tbe time, acquired In a few days more than files. By ihat time the fire lighted the i £7.000 by lotting out his hump to the editorial room, back of which the flies I street brokers as a writing desk.- From were kept, and we had no trouble In 1 Prof. Nicholson's Money and Monetary Genuine finding our way. but it took a good Problems. while to get them all down. My orders Ism Angeles' Sew*<e. were to pile them Into buggies and take Although Ix-.s Angelos has a »on out them on the North Side. let for It* sewer*, its method of dis “I was the last to leave the building, posing of sewage may lie suggestive so as to be sure that every file was to Inland communities troubled with taken, and started north with the last the sewerage problem. The California buggy By the time we reached the [city sells Its sewage, getting a respec Rush street bridge I saw that ft was a I table Income thereby. At present It Is Must Bear Signature of mistake to go north, or. rather. 1 met a furnishing fertility to 4,000 acres at an friend. Frank Boutwell. He was just annual profit of alsmt $4.5«*». The crossing from the North Side, and with "lay" of the land facilitates this dis an enthusiasm wbk'b «-arried convic posal of sewage, as It can nil be dis tion. declared that the whole North tributed by gravity, and three times A m Fac-Siail. Wr*pp*r BSlw. Side was going to h 1. We wheeled ‘ the area now supplied can Is- irrigated about and went up Michigan avenue. aa the suiqily of sewage increases with Mr. Charles I.. Wllaon. editor aud pro the city’s growth. Result* hate demon prietor of th* Journal, lived just almve strafed that the fertilising material In FO* ÌLAIACML 12th street, on Michigan, aud that last the sewage I* an Important item. Ex FOI OiniNEtt. batch of files ««« soon in his personal hanated ground* thus treated product FOR ilUSIISIEM. custody. Those who went north cross Isiunteou* crops yearly, and tbe farm ed west on Chicago avenue, and then er* baring Irrigation contracts with the FOI TORR* LIVER. by a loug detour got to 18th str--ct city have no fear of drought*. The FOR CONSTIPATION. bridge, thence to Mlchlgau. and finally soil seem* to gain more from tbe sew- FOI UURW OUI. to Mr. Wilson's residence. age than is taken from It in tbe crops, FOI TNECOMPtUION "When the storm struck the offices awl there I* no need of following the •f tbe newspapers that night, they were rule* of rotation In planting.—New ; busy hives. Tbe city editor and bi* re- York Evening Po*t. i porter* ro*e to the emergency. Super CURE RICK HEADACHC. . numerary reporters were called In and You can't Invent anything so silly given order* in quick, nervou* tone*. that It won't go with some people. i They »ped away and reaped a barvest of horrors much more quickly than tbsy It Is pitiful to see sny os» cry. except could bind them for the garnering of a silly warnsn who cries far effect. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Still A milliner happened to come to Paris about a lawsuit. She was successful and invested (lie proceeds In specula tion, aud she amassed in a few mouths A woman should remember that with the average man the quality of her voice counts more than what she says. —Chicago Democrat. Viennese Steak. Years and Ona quart of strawberries, half a cupful of ccld water, one cupful of sugar, one third box of gelatine, juice of one lemon, whites of three egg*. Soak the gelatine two hours, or until it is melted. Mash the berries through a sieve. Mix the suga- with the juice, add the letnuu aud gelatin« and stir until all are dissolved. Stand in a pan of ice water, and when it begins to thicken fold iu the stiffiy beaten whites, stirring uutil the mixture begins to thicken. Turn into a mold aud set ou the ice until stiff. Serve with sugar and cream.—N. Y. Tribune. I nfan ishildki . n Look T1 red Today. Perhaps you can't sleep or uneasy slumber don't rest you. A t'asearet t’andy t athartic at bedtime guarantees- refreshing sleep. Drug gists, We. Me. This is very easily made by taking rump or fillet steak, free from skin, sinew, etc., and mincing it very finely. It is then dusted with Hour, pepi»er and salt, with, if liked, a very little minced parsley or chives, shaped into flat cakes, and fried, or saute, in hot fat, carefully turned to brownit equally on loth sides, and then served with clear gravy or demi-glace, oi with sour cream. — Philadelphia Press. Strawberry Spong*. FARMERS REMARK ARIE IWORN STATEMENT According to Mr. Wu Tung Fang, the Chinese minister, the proper name of the organization referred to as “Boxers” is Yee Ho (Chuan, which, in the vocabulary of the Middle Kingdom, means “righteousness, harmony aud fists.” B.w.r. of Ointment, for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, As mercury will surely destroy the settee oi smell aud completely derange the whole st «- pm when entering it through the mucous shr- Paces. Such articles should never be used ex- i eept on prescriptions from reputable phvsi- 1 cisns.es the damage they will do is ten fold tn the good you .-art possibly derive from tlteut Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. j. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is'taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. Il is taken internally, and made In Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney <4 Co. Testi monials free. Sold by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle, Hall'a Family Pills are the best. FCR fteuW.lhev- In Use For Over Thirty Years I Aperfed Remedy ForConstipn lion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss of S leep . Fae Sunile Signature of NEW YORK. iu,<»n‘H(i> old -, I NIS DttSJ S LL The above testimonial was signed be fore the Royal Notary In Alx la Cbapelle. and M rears Siabeneck & Coumont ac knowledge it as their free and true act. r- ... , ■ --------- ... , ------ -4 The above Is only one out of hundreds of indorsements that Avenarius Carbn- llneum has received from leading engi neers, chemists, contractors, shipbuilders and others all over the world. It is pub lished as an established truth, coming as It does from a country where affidavits are regarded as sacred, and a breach of veracity is reg;irded a* a religious as well a* a civil crim*. J EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. hWi .x - - Trt*^ «1 i ---- — (The Famous CASTORIA THE CINTAUR COMMAMT. NCW YORK CITY. German Wood Preserver) ..AVENARfUS CARBOUNEUM.e .IxpHII Aoxlou. Japan 1* alarmed over th. «migration of many of her resident* to this country w ho are lured here hy misrepresentation. This ii like the misrepresentation which dehid« I people into iiebeving that any other med* me is equal to Hostetter’s Stomaeii Bitters ; for stomach disorders. It will cure indi gestion, constipation and dyspepsia. The land for late potatoes should be plowed deep and harrowed fine. The land should never be allowed to form a crust before the plants are up. Run a harrow over the field, lioth before and after the potatoes are up. The seed may lie planted about five inches deeT> and given level «nllure instead of hilling. Clover sod land is excellent for potatoes, and to avoid disease it is best not to plant potatoes on the same land twice in succession. Frequent and shallow cultivation rather than deep should be given. I s j ' ■ ' WHICH l’KKMINK\TI.V DKSIHOYH ..CHICKEN LICE AND VERMIN.. fW“One application is all that is required. It lasts for years. If your dealer cannot supply you, write for circulars and information to th« following distributing agents: Perfection Pile Preserving Co., Seattle, Wash.; Fisher, Thorsen & Co., Portland, Oregon.; Whittier, Cobtrn ds Co., San Francisco, Cal. CHAMPION BI1NIDER .. Best On Earth... Eccentric Sprocket Wheel, chain puli« on the long spokes when doing the hardest work, which is compressing the bundle, ty ing the knot and discharging the bundle. We guarantee a gain of power of 16 2-J per cent at this time. Mothers will find Mr*. Winslow's Sooth ing Hvrup the best remedy to use for th»>r tbildren during the teething period. Some notion of the coming deluge of l>ook* on the South African war may be Force Feed Elevator, warranted had from the fact that an American to waste less grain than any other. publisher now in London was within a week of hi* arrival offered the Ameri Send for Catalogue. can rights in 25 war books. MITCHELL. LEWIS « STAYER CO. First and Taylor Streets, Portland, Oregon Sour Stomach Branches: Salem, McMinnville, La Grande, Medford, Seattle, Spo kane. HARD WORKING WOMEN CARTERS CANO / CATHARTIC LWwwWSw*¥ riMDI M>»M I ('•n find qnlck snd permanent relief for »ertou« sii'l destroying trouble« iu Moore’s Revealed Remedy SURE CURE FOR PILES ITCHING Plies produce motature and raii«e lt< h(n*. This form, a* w*il sa Blind, Bierdlt)« «»r Protruding Pile« are rnrrdbr Dr.Boaanko'a Pll* R*m*dy. Stop« Itrhlii* and bleedin*. Aheorba tutnor«. IMA; a Jar at druRgHta or «ent by mall. Treat Ur free. Wrfui me about your case. DR. BGSANKO. I’b lada. Pa. IP CLAIMANTS FOR D P IU Q I ZX ThoUMsnd* hsv* u«ed It siol thounsnd* now prslae it. 1: cures permanently. |1 j»* r bottle at your dtuggiat’a. IL Writ IsNA'MAN r* EL IW O I V W ■ I BICKFORD. Wsthinqton 0 C.. they will ra il reive qniek replies H. 5th N. H. vol*. StaM 2l»th Corps Prosecuting claims since IH7A Can’t Afford to Miss It. . h >H n r<N'i.I., i • >< , «• t. can give you th* bent bargains in geii*ral inachinery, engines, boilers, tanks, pumps, piows, belts and windtnilln. Th* new steel I X 1 j windmill, sold by him, is uii - •quailed. •••IS’VBEO You ran t afford tn netleut the Maw ( olumbiso flr* <rat«* It has < latin* on every hon«ehohl, for it dors thfr a* no other «rate has ever «vosi pllwhed. All the h**at <«»ea into the rotini instead of up the chimney, hut no «moke at all, for the new «seleni *>f tira us hl« niahe« perfect mnib'iMhin and a 'clear whit* flame Mavra y«m liai r your furl bill« Por particulars, alacramw and full rlpCioti. ap pit toT*« K JOH -• HAKKKIT O».. First •Iraat, Portland brsrss. M. p. n . P. Me. «fl WHBM writing to ad«*rtis*rs rucnlioa this paper. lavo. plsas*