Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The daily reporter. (McMinnville, Or.) 1886-1887 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1886)
¿2 ■ 6 g Of the group of glaciers at Glacier bay, Alaska, one is three hnndred feet high and is supposed to be submerged C, IHtXANB A CO. rt'BLlSHKBS. about the same number of feet. They McMinnville, Or. - Sept. 7,1886 are about three miles wide and extent along seventy-five miles. These gla HOME NEWS AND NOTES. ciers are the sights qf the world. The pale blue tinge of ice has a fascination The salmon pack this year is only for the eyes. The continual falling o about 450,000 cases. tons of the breaking and cracking Great suffering is reported at Charls- masses causes a roar of deafening ton since lhe earthquake. sound that no artillery could equal. Prince Alexander is at home again. Referring to the anarchists organ in We take no stock in the war rumors. Portland, Frank D. Smith’s Avant- Potatoes they grow small, and they FRONT VIEW harvest tops and all in this valley this Courier, which holds to the view that con- the verdict of the Chicago jury fall, and then they do not get many demning those men to death “is one to the acre. The Albany Bulletin, one. of our of the most outrageous that was ever ablest and best exchanges, barring its placed upon the records of an Ameri patent, will be all printed at home can court," the Salem Statesman next month. Then it will be the best, says: “ We don’t believe in rash things; but we are free to confess it is for certain. our opinion that a man who wouk Sagacious of their quarry from afar, the roughs and toughs are beginning father such incendiary slush as the to gather in Salem in anticipation of above, deserves the same treatment as the Hush times of the state fair. A will be meted out to his Chicago broth series of house breakings have been ers. We have a good deal of idle ter ritory in this state, but there is no reported in that city recently. The rumors of war have caused an room for anarchists in Oregon.” upward tendency in wheat. The far The comparative merits of the daily BACK VIEW. mers of the Pacific northwest, while newspaper and the monthly magazine Attar which oall at A. J. Apperson’» and they regret war, would not object to were well illustrated the other day. A take a look at the goods $1 per bushel for their splendid wheat. New York journal reproduced in ful Conger’s Double Seated Drawers and Chest- Shield Undershirt. There is plenty to feeed vast armies. the entire contents of Miss Cleveland’s By the Way, The alleged fish ladder at Oregon magazine, “even to its illustrations city was the most colossal fraud of the and fac simile of the cover." The re Do you realize the astonishingly low prices at age. It is now a thing of the past. print occupied hut two pages of the The ditch is all that remains, through New York daily, whose average Sun Men's Suits from $6.00 up, and Boys’ Suits which runs a stream of water about as day edition is capable of producing in from $3.50 up. NO SHODDY. large as a garden hose would throw. one issuse an amount of matter equal The Eugene Register wants the Ore to that contained in a year's issue of —OF— gonian, which professes to keep its the magazine. The New York paper readers informed regarding the crop sold for three eents, while the same situation of the world, and especially amount of matter in the magazine fust Received at of our own section of the country, to costs three dollars. The growth of tell people what wheat is worth any <J. SYMONS’ metropolitan journalism probably ac how. iu Portland. counts in a measure of the decadence The Clintons still figure in the ca- of the American magazine. Our nal business in York state. At the monthlies, with hut one or two excep conference in Syracuse, Geo. Clinton tion. have not kept pace with the ma was chosen chairman, and two name terial development of the country. sakes of DeWitt Clinton were among Th» Datiy Reporter. 7 U x M X h ?, * • & 3 « » K d TJ co <D ?» H rd M •p <D a O » <0 co S» Q <u tó Ja h tn <D Q (D < 0 I 0 a o ♦J O u {S 4-» tn tì APPERSON’S. NEW STOCK CLOTHING BISHOP & KAY. The leaders in Clothing. r c* j * a V .2 | 8 Ï I 8 8 ► □ «■ *- i e ? ? £ i J : ? t the vice presidents. The conference is opposed to federal aid. Immigration Commissioners Steven- -on and Starr, of New York, intend to stop the wholesale importation of Mor mon recruits through that port, as far a> justified bv law. This looks like business. The idea of importing out laws is an absurd one. only indulged or tolerated in the United States. Brownsville Woolen Mills Agency, A New Dail). MoMinnville, I I). C. Ireland & Co., of the McMinn ville Repoiter, have just commenced the publication of a daily. Volume I., No. l.of the Daily Reporter, bearing date of Wednesday, September 1st. It is a spruce-looking twelve-column sheet, and presents a very neat typo graphical appearance. Telegram. Oregon. - ■ ST. (HAICLiS HOTEL T. MULTNER. Prop.. Corner Third and B streets, , VICHINNVII.I.l; - . OIIEGO.W New house! New furniture! Unsurpassed in the country. Rates—$1 to $2 per day ao- oording to room. Single meals 25 cents. Lodging, 25 to 50 cents according to room. Board and Lodging. $4 to *i>, per week. Two Fine Sample Rooms for oommeroial men Give me a call and see for yonraelf.