Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The daily reporter. (McMinnville, Or.) 1886-1887 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1886)
The Daily Reporter, I>. IRELAND 4 CO. PUBLISHERS. McMinnville, Or. - Sept. 10, 1886 John Berry is clerking at Bettman’s. Jas. Agee lost an infant child this week. M rs. ( t . A. Wilcox left yesterday to visit a sister who is ill at Derry. Melons are all harvested at Uncle Jim Fletchers. The crop was fair to average. Jas. A. Yocum, a well known resi dent of this county was buried yester day afternoon near Bellevue. The auditing committee of the fair are to meet this evening. The total receipts foot up to $1,076.90. Postmaster Wisecarvet has his in structions now regarding special de livery of mailable matter at McMinn ville. Miss Lucy Armstrong, of Dayton, has been visting Mrs. R. A. Logan of this city for the past two weeks, and will remain with her during the fall. We had a pleasant talk with Prof. Price yesterday on the subject of our public schools. it is hoped that par ents will take a lively interest in this matter. On a late visit to the city Mr. Gar rison, who lives near Amity purchased a buggy. He was so elated over it that he went off home leaving his cane at the Eurisko market. Mrs. Sarah C. Davis was buried near North Yamhill on the 8th. Rev. J. Hoberg officiated. She was born in 1828, and has survived her husband, Isaac Davis, since 1882. All favorable to the formation of a choral union are invited to meet at Garrison opera house to-morrow even ing. All lovers of music are earnestly requested to be present at 7: 30 o’clock. Henry Burk has made a record as sack sewer this season at Galloway & Cooks that is hard to beat. One day he sewed 2,000 sacks; and he has sewed one sack in seven seconds, by Dr. Tucker’s watch. The following “ notis” was posted on a gate post in Walla Walla : “ If any man’s or woman’s cows or oxen gits in these here oats, his or her tail will be cut off, as the case may be. I am a Christian man and pay my taxes, but d—n a man who lets his critters loose, say I.” Call upon Deilschneider to-day and price his stock. Cider mills are at work all over the county now. Fruit is cheap. Dr. Young has opened an office in Garrison Opera-house block. Johnny Sax’s sprinkling cart is greatly missed on the streets. O. the dust. W. J. Ilelyer’s city buzz saw is ring ing in our ears like sixty grains of qui nine. Wheat hauling will continue for two weeks yet, but it will nearly all be in this week. Bushels of blackberries wasted and dried up on vines this year for want of pickers. Rev. Mr. Hatch well’s family have joined him here. Mr. Whitmore starts for Astoria Monday. Wtn. Campbell, Geo. W. Jones, and W. B. Martin represent our tire de partment in Salem. Grissen don’t charge a dollar for every package of pop-corn ; but you yet a prize all the same. Supt. Freund has a nice office in Garrison Opera-house block. Teachers find him a very pleasant gentlemen. Apperson sold shirts of his new stock to a business man from San Francisco yesterday. That ought to be a recommendation. C. W. Talmage, agent for the Trav eler’s Insurance Co., has left a beau tiful photo card with us representing the commanders of the union army. The finder of a boy’s open-faced nickel watch, with Holl’s guarantee in the back, lost on the fairgrounds, will be suitably rewarded on leaving the same at this office. What became of articles left in the pavilion? Some of the exhibitors have so far failed to get them. We are interested in No. 3, knitting de partment ; a knit raised tidy entered by Mrs. Musgrove, which was award ed first prize. Bishop A Kay's prizes were awardep to N. K. Harbaugh, A. ('. Davis, W. C. Hembree, and Mrs. J. S. Hibbs in the order here enumerated. We dis agree with the committee in the award of the first three prizes. In our opin ion Mr. Hembree whr entitled to first prize, Mr. Davis second, and Mr. Har baugh third. It was left wholly to the committee. Bishop A Kay had nothing to say in the matter. Advertisers can take their choice, either daily or weekly, at the same old rate. No advance in the price. Well come to stay, if you say so. Dan. Foster, who has been in the employ of F. M. Stanton at Newport during the past summer, is to take charge of J. W. Brassfield’s place at Seal rock. Dan. is a whole-souled, accommodating gentleman and knows how to entertain guests We can return the compliment of our cotemporary the Vidette, for his pretty notice of the Daily Reporter in no better way than by saying that from his position as a mounted senti nel of this lovely valley he has fine opportunity for judging upon which side the jewels are. The plan of giving the Indians land in severalty instead of to the tribes in reservation, thus creating an independ ent nation to be protected and guarded against in every reservation, is work ing well, as the Indian asks for a paper title to his land, and with that in his possession he has some guarantee that the land he improveswill not betaken from him. “Say, Matilda, have you tasted the new tea that A. J. Apperson has just got into his store?” ‘No. Is it good?" “Good! Well, I should just say so. I shall never buy anything else, and I only wonder I did not know it before. Why, its flavor is delicious, and a cup of it does me more good when I am tired out than any tea I ever tasted.” “ I must get some of it." “ Do, and mind you can only get it at Apper- son’s, it was imported direct to this town by himself.” Six years ago, says a New York Sun dispatch of the 8th, Rev. W. H. Harrison predicted that the south At lantic coast would be visited by severe earthquakes in August, 1886.^ He fur ther predicted that at no distant date after the shocks on the Atlantic coast the city of San Francisco would be to tally destroyed. He alleged his pre dictions were made on scientific calcu lations. And nqw the people of San Francisco are anxious, as they have suffered what is locally called “ earth quake weather” for the past two days. On Tuesday the thermometer regis tered only one degree short of the hot test weather ever known. Former hot spells have been followed by earth quakes, so there seems rational cause for uneasiness.