Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Yamhill County reporter. (McMinnville, Or.) 1886-1904 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 31, 1900)
•'7- « Yamhill County Reporter:;;; I». I. ViUltl, BdItor A I’ropr. J !■'.<’K JI.H, A«saciate Editor. Subscription $1.00 Per Year. advertising k vteb . fUj.dhiKiiotieei.in local column. 10 cent, per line for first wc-k and 5 eents per line itwreatier. Display advertisements annual rates, one Ir on per muiitli II; each additional inch 50 cent, per month. Obituary and marriage notices not exceeding 10 linen published free. if furnished in time to be current new a Additional matter 10 cent« per line. __________ FRIDAY, AUG. 31, 1900. While a member of congress Bryan said in a speech in the house: “Speaking for myself, it is immateri al whether the sheep-grower receives any benefit from the tariff or not. There are many men in the west who are not indifferent on the subject, and they can remember the lime when sheep were almost valueless as a result of the tariff law Bryan helped to pass. Senator Hanna of Ohio is not a candidate for any office, yet from the way the opposition press is making faces at him one would imagine that he was a candidate for every office within the gift of the people. Not being able to successfully attack the record of President McKinley, they take out their spite on poor old Hanna. ---- -• .--- - The Salem Journal thinks the cow is the coming queen of agriculture. The Journal is behind time. The cow is now and has been for many years the empress dowager presiding with dignity over the realm of agri culture. The only trouble in this country iB that our people are slow about finding out this fact.—Eugene Register...........It’is to be hoped the empress dowager will not abdicate the throne. eigjg? Med article» hack. It will develop into its rightful greatness ish fleet und theoccdpation of Manila. A military expert say#, ill Har As Major McKinley won his military pers Weekly, that the number of honors during the civil war, just in wagons and animals required to sup that spirit did Col. Koosevelt win his before, and during the Spanish war. ply an army increases in geometric ratio with each day s march from the Arizona has offered the govern base. The statement makes it easier ment eight companies fully equipped, to understand why forces can be and three troops of rough riders for moved so much more rapidly in the the Chinese war. The American offices of sensational newspapers than people have all the characteristics of in the field. a people able to take care of an em Among the amazing things in the pire if they desire one. political maze this year is the action A Corvallis grower has received a of Henry Watterson of the Louisville letter from Portland dealers offering Courier Journal in supporting Bryan, three, three and a half and four cents and professing to believe that his for dried prunes, according to the election would be for the good of the size. The offer was not accepted. country. Mr. Brvan has certainly With a shortened crop in California, given no public evidence of change local growers expect better figures. of character since his characteriza tion by Mr. Watterson in 189f>, as Mr. Watterson does not like anti follows: “He is a dishonest dodger. imperialism, opposes free silver aNd He is a daring adventurer. Ho is a is dead against denouncing the su- political fakir. He is not of the ma preme court. These are only a few terial of which the people of the Uni minor points, of course. On all of ted States have ever made a presi the rest of the platform he stands dent. Nor is he of the material of with his unimpeachable party, says which any party has ever before the New York Press. made a candidate.” Pomologists, who have just held the sixth annual meeting of the National Apple Growers’' Associa tion, report that this is to be the greatest, apple growing year in the history of the country. The crop is estimated at more than sixty million barrels. One propagator has suc ceeded in producing a seedless apple which is said to be superior in flavor to the ordinary kinds. The hop yards are just now fur nishing a brief summer's outing to a host of thrifty folk who have learned to combine profit with a season of pleasure. These people, not having the wage scale of a labor union to meet, do not expect to make, in the few weeks of the hop harvest, enough to permit them to remain in idleness during the balance of the year; neith er do they expect to enjoy a perfect holiday in the hopfields, making in the meantime from $1.50 to $2.25 a day. They do expect, however, by using their fingers nimbly during the working hours of the day, to make good wages at relatively light work, and not find themselves too tired in the evening for the social enjoyment incidental to camp life. The honest farmer with his industrious family, the thrifty villager with his wife, and the sturdy lads and lasses gen erally, combine pleasure with money getting, and find in the camp or cot tage in which they have improvised temporary homes all the enjoyment that is to be found in like places of summer sojourn upon the beach or in the mountains, carrying home at the close of the season a substantial sum toward the winter's supply of school books, clothing and family stores, or perhaps the interest fund that will leave the mortgage on farm or home undisturbed for another year. The White Maii‘5 BuMeu ♦ ♦ ♦ can be named in the single word- dys pepsia. It is the one disease, which more than any other, affects the American people. It is common to all classes and all condi tions. It makes life miserable. It mars family happiness. It interferes with busi ness and pleasure alike, and it discounts a man’s usefulness just as much as it discounts his happi ness. There’s a remedy for dyspepsia. Dr. Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery has lifted this burden from the bodies of hundreds of thou sands. It cures ninety-eight out of every hundred who give it a fair and faithful trial. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦ ♦ ♦ , ♦44*4<ü’**«** •-*<' &»<t> SATISFACTION Furnishings & Hat Dep’t They comprise all the latest styles, at popular prices. Our 25c aud 50c Neckwear can not be equaled. Our slaughter prices on CLOTHING still hold good. You can’t afford to let this sale pass without taking advantage of it. Our motto: “Good goods at Low Prices.” “I used ten bottles of Dr Pierce'sGolden Medi cal Discovery and several vials of his ‘ Pleasant Pellets’ a year ago thii# spring, and have had no trouble with indigestion since,” writes sjr w, T. Thompson, of Town send, Broadwater Co., Montana. "Words fail to tell how thankful I am for the relief, as I had suffered so much and it seemed that the doctors could do me uo good. 1 got down in weight to 115 pounds, and was not able to work at ail. Now I weigh nearly 160 and can do a day’s work on the farm. I have recommended your medicine to several, and shall always have a good word to say for Dr. Pierce and his medicines.” Âamblin, THE CLOTHIER, Union Block, McMinnville. Free. Dr. Pierce’s Medical Adviser is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. It con tains 1008 pages and over 700 illustra tions. Sena 21 one-cent stamps for the book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for cloth binding to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. “Meet l!s On the Midway" The Event of the Tinies. Great Street Fair and Carnival ! It Has Arrived ! I Editor Hearst of the New York Journal, Chicago American and San Francisco Examiner thinks this country ought to spend several mill Our large Vail Stock of ion dollars chasing ignorance from Shoes for both ladies and gen amongst its people. This can be tlemen. done successfully by using the first Come in and see them. installment of those millions in oblit The loyalty of the people of a farm erating the yellow journals of which Our footwear fits correctly, ing section to their river as a means the Journal, American and Examin and wears well, because it is of transportation is proverbial, there er are the worst living examples. selected by a practical boot fore the expression of joy by the citi and shoemaker of 30 years’ zens of McMinnville and of Yamhill England has undertaken to supply' experience. county generally, because of the near an honorary title to every man who completion of the locks at the rapids is not a laborer. The postal authori of the Yamhill, is quite in the usual ties are directed to address all such order. As long as water freight with “Esq.” after their names. Just I rates can be made lower than rail as the people of' the United States road rates upon the staple products have shown their good sense by of agriculture, the people of a farm dropping that meaningless title in ing community will cherish their addressing men who have no other, waterways. The agricultural bug it seems strange that England should bear, extortionate freight charges, pick it up. They do not need our I'rohate Court. is robbed of half its menace in any worn out playthings. Estate of J. A. Sutherland. House furming section that is drained by a hold furniture amounting to ordered Charles W. Fenwick, a soldier in navigable river. Hence the affection set apart to widow. Petition for allow ance of $200 for support of widow dur of the citizens of Yamhill for the the Philippines, has written home to ing administration filed and allowed. his father at Herndon, Saline coun small but beautiful stream which we Final account filed and set for bearing ■ Il sura nee Company H cluse« to Pay dignify by the name of “river and ty, Missouri, and declares that the Hlok on l.leuleiiHiil l.eary. Who Oct. 3d, at I p ni. Estate of Martha Shadden. Petition which the federal government is now election of Bryan is the one hope of lias Kilted ill the Philippine«. to sell personal property of estate at pri about to make navigable as far upas the followers of Aguinaldo. The let Mrs. Maud Geary, widow of the late vate sale for cash and to pay over to McMinnville, a distance of some tif ter says there is no telling how much Captain Woodbridge Geary, has begun Rasmus Nelson, guardian of Riley Shad den, not to exceed the sum of $250, ap teen or twenty miles from its junc loi.ger the bushwhacking warfare suit in the Benton county circuit court proved. tion with the Willamette. We feel will last if the encouragement to the against the Provident Savings Life As Guardianship of Riley Shadden. Pe proud of our river,and after alternat natives from the United States is to surance Society of New York, for the re tition to sell grain not belonging to the estate for cash at private sale allowed. ing between hope and fear for sever be kept up. He further expresses covery of the sum of $5000. The amount represents the policy held with the com CASTORIA al years, the people are getting very contemptuously the wish that pany by Captain Geary at the time he Bears the signature of C has . H. F letcher . ready to hold a fitting celebration Bryan himself might have them to was killed in the Philippines. The pol Iu use for more than thirty years, and upon the completion of the govern deal with, for if he hud he would icy was made payable to Mrs. Geary The Kind Fo« Have Always Bought. “ change his tune." This is in line ment locks. within 60 days after proof of death. The with the last letter on the subject by company has been furnished with the The office of Odell A Wood has lieen In this age of the world the people the late General Lawton. proof of death, but refuses to pay. The repapered and otherwise improved dur ing the week. admire a tighter. One who is ag grounds for the refusal are the following Dexter Howell of Elk Rock is visiting gressive, and has the mental capaci The effort to beat the republican clause in the printed policy, to which , ty to plan, will receive the respect party for re-election this fall is based Captain Geary subscribed when taking in the city. Wm. Campbell and Prof. Story and due him. Recognizing and deplor on the feeble assumption that the out the policy: . wife have returned from Newport. ing this fact, the Bryan press has economic cost of the Philippine an "That I will not personally engage in Mrs. Brnmback left yesterday for Phil military or naval service in time of war undertaken the herculean task of nexation will be disapproved by the adelphia, in response to n telegram an , without first obtaining in each and every shading the military glory of Col. people This assumption is absurd. Roosevelt with the thin veil of ridi In ordinary “hard times'’ we resent case the written consent of the society.” nouncing the serious illne-< of her father. In her complaint Mrs. Geary alleges cule. But, more than any other man needless public extravagance, but in that the above stipulation cannot be in the country, Roosevelt is the per- war time, when the ting of the nation pleaded by the defendant company, as a Thousands Have Kidney Trouble Bonification of the war spirit and of is stiffly upheld by the president, we ! bar to her proceedings, because, when and Don't Know it. an aggressive expansion policy. never count the cost. No party that making application for the policy, Janu How To Find Out. Fill a bottle or common glass with your Prompt in action, bold in speech, fought to a successful conclusión a ary 8, 1S96, Captain Geary, then second hours; a und courageous to a fault, Col. domestic or foreign war was ever | lieutenant, explained to the agent of de water and let it stand twenty-four sediment or set- Roosevelt by common consent stood yet defeated at the polls in America, fendant that he was engaged in active tling indicates an 2*---- .unhealthy condl- in the crisis of the nation us the and it is safe to presume that the military service, and was liable at any hen of the kid- spokesman of the young men of the American "people are with McKinley i moment to be called into the field; and neys; if it stains that the agent of defendant gave the ap country. So far as the army is con in his policy of expansion and Philip your linen It is plicant written consent to engage at all evidence of kid cerned, he has been the most jiopuhir pine annexation. ney trouble; too times m active military service. This military hero of the war with Spain. frequent desire to written consent, however, together with pass it or pain in The Spokesman Review isadvocat- | the plaintiff's copy of the policy, was de He was not judged by his achieve the back is also inents alone, but bv his spirit and I ing the establishment of a shoe fac- stroyed by a tire which happened in Cor convincing proof that the kidneys and blad by bis willingness to accept what I tory at Spokane, and eites as one of vallis. July qth. 1&48, in which the Geary der are out of order. What to Do. ever duty came to him, and by his 1 the inducements, for the location residence and large part of the coutents There Is comfort in the knowledge so energy in performing it. Roosevelt ¡thereof the enterprise, that fixing were destroyed. often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- was an original war man. From the the average price at $2 per pair; the As a further reason. Mrs. Geary alleges Root. the great kidney remedy fulfills every in curing rheumatism, pain in the time the Maine was destroyed in annual drain of money from a limited ■ that the premiums on the policy have wish back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part been regularly paid, and have always area of the Pacific northwest is$biH>, Havana harbor, be made no secret of the urinary passage. It corrects inability .of hie belief that war was inevitable i (XXI per annum for shoes. And this been accepted by defendant, with the to hold water and scalding pain in passing latter It, or bad effects following use of liquor, ssiid that it was the duty of this I is not the only drain on our wealth full knowledge on the part of the that Captain Geary was in the field, wtne or beer an t overcomes that unpleasant jforernment to prepare for lit He for articles that should be manufac- When her husband went to Cuba, early necessity cf being compelled to go often tie ' lured on the coast. Nearly all of our m the Spanish-American war, the com- during the day. and to get up many times was then assistant secretary during the night. The mild and the extra <»i v *ud so strong was bis convie Wearing apparel, our agricultural im- panv was at once notified. When he ordinär- nary effect cf * ** Swamp-Root ■" “ * is soon Use Ahat war would come that, in so ' pi.wvBis mining and milling ma- went, later, to the Philippines, similar reell; lied. It stands the highest for its wen- cures of the most distressing ; eases, t nearly every class notification was given defendant. July derful far iw it lay in hi” power, the navy ; chinery, iu If you need a medicine you should h: lave the we consume, H, I898, plaintiff paid and defendant ac best. Sold by druggists in50c, andSl. sizes. was put «»« a *1/ looting. He issuixl ’ of mauufactuted You may have a sample bottle of this the orders and uiik»«: after the de is shipped from east of |j|e Mississip cepted the regular semi-annual premium wonderful discovery tails of supervision zXat enabled pi river, whereas it should be w<bU on the policy. January 8. 1S99. the and a book that tells (Msmium was again paid and accepted. ' more about it. both sent Commodore Dewey to sail for Manila ready for use here. When the Pa as it al»» " July 8. 1899. On the j free by mail, with his fleet ready for battle At cific coast ceases sending its raw ma- tttli of October, foCnsii^g »he last pay- . absolutely address Dr. Kilmer & or '«wr-i. «* i teriai« across the continent to be wan Roosevelt who issued the order ment. Captain Geary was killed m bat- j Co.. Binghamton, N. Y. When writing men- I uon reading this generous offer ui this paper. I to sail and it was Roosevelt who sup- i manufactured and shipping the fin- I tie in the Philippines. Occupying many solid blocks, taking in an entire street from curb to curb. Portland, Oregon, September 4 to 15,1900. Under the auspices of the Portland Elks, surpassing in magnitude and gran deur anything of the kind ever attempted on the Pacific coast. Something to re member up to the date of your heart failure. Tiie Streets of Cairo, The Oriental Theater, The German Village. The Dancing Girls, An Arabian Pageant, Crowning the Queen Rex. King of the Carnival, at tended by his Magnificent Court, The Great Parade of the Elks and other Orders, The Italian Park and Fountain, The magnificent Triumphal Arch and Grand Midway filled with wonderful attractions, Mining, Mercantile, Agriculture, Horticulture and other industrial exhibits, The Women’s Pavilion, designed by women, built by women and decorated by women f«»r the exhibit of women’s in dustrial work, The Grain Palace, built of Oregon and Washington grains and grasses. Music, gaiety and fun. Night turned into day. Lowest rail and water rates ever given to Portland from all parts of the Pacific Northwest. __ A q -J Oregon State Fair F. Dielschneider, <^_Salem, Oregon, September 17 to 22,1900. Bigger and better than ever before. Grounds greatly improved, buildings repaired and renovated, all stock buildings thoroughly dis infected, everything in first-class condition for the largest and best Live Stock Show and Agricultural Exposition ever held on the coast Shoe Dealer. K ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ That is what we are giving every buyer at Ï our store. We want to call your attention to our $20,000 in Premiums and Purses ! Good racing every afternoon—music and fun at night Auction sale of live stock will be made a leading feature, All live stock ami other exhibits hauled FREE over the Southern Pacific Railroad, Reduced passenger rates on all railroads, premium list and other information, address W. H. WEHRUNG, D WISDOM, Hillsboro. Oregon. Portland, Oregon. 8 J acob W ortman , Pres. J ohn W ortman , Cashier. E d H endricks , Vice Pres. A rthur M c P hilmps , Asst. Cashier The First National Bank Of McMinnville, Oregon. The Oldest Bank in Yamhill County. Established in 1885. Capital and Surplus, $90,000. Buys and sells exchange on all the principal cities of the United States, and draws direct on all the principal points in Europe. 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