t M c M innville . O regon NO. 3. VOL. II. The DaRy Reporter, AMORE. Hope, and Love, her sister graces t it roc, 1 ’<> she moves do bear her company. ’»» •: <>U’ 1 fe is ove uiur with night— ■in - such stars our heavenward path to E. L. E. WHITE. D. C. I RELIAI» A Co., PI III.1SHEHS. When tome complained because their wa> grew nrk. Kirov r. wiij nead hopes’ pMle corpses cold T he D aily R eporter is issued every day and stark, in the week except Sundays, and is delivered I heard h< wf -per to her sisters three, th' tn new faith and hope and lOVr in the oity at 10 oents per week. By mail, 40 "Pend through me.” cents per mouth in advanoe. Rates for ad­ Bl'e snfd no in« e. blit on her row serene vertising same as for T he W eekly R eporter . The pr-n- vf pi t .'tn purpose cou I be seen; Book & Job Printing« We beg leave to announoe to the public that we have just added a large stock of new novelties to our business, and make a special­ ty of Letter Heads. Bill Heads, Note Heads, Statements, Business Cards, Ladies Calling Cards, Ball Invitations (new designs) Pro­ grammes, Posters, and all descriptions of work. Terms favorable. Call and be oon- vinoed. D. C. IRELAND & CO. A n«! " her eve ne.ii.htof ovo shone bright / V. u.~ e. dill', n tt.e host of Night. home grew brighter; nor that home i .< ><— v. olv horison brightened where she si.oi.u: Now s n<>rnes«. Gr Song of a lAiy E. E. GOUCHER, M. D. PHYSICIAN "AND SURGEON. M c M dtkyilli - - - O rroon . Offioe and residence, corner of Third and D streets, next to the postoffioe. DR. I. C. TAYLOR. ------- o-------- Late of New Orleans, La., Piles and Fistula a Spe­ ciality. Consultation free. Ao Cure Ao Pay. HF" Offioe with H. V. V. Johnson, M. D.. McMinnville, Oregon. jas . m ’ oain . Her fine array was wrought In opeis nf ate, And woven by the «huttie« of the aun. In noiseless warp and woof of tissue fair. And kindly juices from the warm earth won| And all of wandering odorr. that were sweet Were oaugbt within her silken web of light; And perfumed rain« that wept around her feet Their fragrance yielded in the summer I night. The lily tolled not, spun not, yet «he grew in loveliness supreme, from day to dayi A band Divine imparted every hue, And clothed her in her beautiful array. Therboon of Jew«, and rain, and a« a kise; Her white and suppliant petala clasped ia thanks amid created bits«. Ol If such Issues, spring from gifts of thine, If such unfoldings on thy bounty wait. The ambient airs which nurse the life divins My soul shall steep, my spirit satiate. It shall be mine with suppliant hand to claim The utmost boon thy treasuries may hold; Why should the lily’s bloom my spirit shame, When Earth is rich and Heaven is raining Mold? —Clara Thwaitea. h . hurley . McCain & Hurley, ATTOBNEYS-AT-LAW AND ¡NOTARIES PI BLIC. Lafayette, Oregon, Especial attention paid to abstracts of title and settlement of estates in probate. Offioe—Jail bniding, up stairs. Mrs. M. Sliadden. Fashionable Dressmaker« paFThe Taylor System of Cutting and Fit­ ting employed. Third street, Next to Bishop A Kay’s store, MoMinnville, Or. i N Bv W Hair CnttAa*, MRaviax and sham* poain* Parlor. 15c SHAVING 15c. C. H. FLEMING, Proprietor. (Suooeesor to A. C. Wyndham.) Ladies and children*« work a specialty. 0^*1 have just added to my parlor the largest and :finest stock of cigars ever in this eity. Try them. D. C. li RELAX© A CO., Rae Joi Printers, McMinnville, Oregnn. issi Ristori’« Plea. I met one day last week an old lady who told me this story of Ristori, of whom she spoke in terms of most de­ voted friendship. The story has never, she told me, been printed before: Mme. Ristori was playing in the oity of Madrid in the Royal Theater. She had carried the audience away in the act by her great power, the curtain had fallen on the first act, and unusually long applause occurred. No one could understand her absence. The time came and passed when she should have resumed play. What was the meaning of her absonceP As she was passing from the stage, in the wings, stood a poor woman, who caught her I"* menL “Madame," she said, “do you that bell now tolling P" “Tea." “That bell tolls for tbs death o4 aty ' husband; he will dis at sunrise to-mor-' row. Won’t you," shs implored the woman, “plead for meP The Queen ! sits in the box yonder." The great tragedy queen went to the Royal box and begged for the life of I that man—a man that she had no par ticular interest in, but simply because i he was going to die. Mme. Ristori pleaded so well with the Queen that i with a pencil she wrote his reprieve and he was saved. Meantime the truth had crept out among the audience, and when the curtain rose ross again ths whole, audience sprang to their feet. Tears | ran like rain. Hats and handkerchiefs were waved. Shout after shout went I up from ths multitude—not for the regie queen, but for the woman infln- .tely greater—the.woman that pleaded for a life, and not in vain."' price two cents . MISCELLANEOUS. ! tnon • nation th on i whose loving sou T’.u »me i fiovr.i p; ion never roil) E Hs II y nri.-e-he . ................................ u b tn. tufas' asleep , M I i!e ,oi e flows on in currents strong and • ei'p. •o- D. C. IRELAND. 5. <>,.r i> t g ter. BY CON Entered in the Postoffioe at MoMinuville for Transmission Through the Mails as Sec­ ond Class Matter. W ednesday . J anuary i ■ j ’ Ella Wheeler-Wilcox. the author of "Poems of Passion,” has a fair ecm- plexion and hazel eyes. It is said that the poetess took her first dancing les­ sons at a village near her home, when she was 8 years old. She became a terpsiehorean devotee, and, when not composing, often gayly tippet! the light fantastic, like some fabled faun, hum­ ming a tune to suit the motion. Years afterward she was at a reception given in her honor, and danced with such grace that a reporter described her not. only as“the poetry of motion, but poetry in motion.” Her iirst attempt at compos­ ing was at the age of 8 years. A lot of old-fashioned Howers grew about her uoine. On the blank page of old let­ ters she found she wrote a story d< scrib­ ing the jealousy of Mr. Hollyhock be­ cause Miss Dahlia danced with Mr. Nasturtium and Miss Fouro’eloek hung her head in a sulky manner because Mr. Bachelorbutton did not waits with her. Ella’s mother noticed her absorb­ ing occupation,and when the little story was read, she foresaw the literary fu­ ture of her child. But poetry, success, adulation, and even marriage have not robbed her of the love for dancing, and her grace in that accomplishment keeps pace with her literary progress. She wrb in New York the other day reading Erocif for her forthcoming novel, "Miu loulee.” She said: "I am not as im­ pervious to criticism now as I was be­ fore I was married. Since I was mar­ ried many cruel and bitter things ap­ peared in print about my husband and myself. Why, a woman who professed to be my friend wrote to an Indian­ apolis paper that she saw my husband, and described him as a man devoid of any emotion. She wound up the letter bv saying that he had exhausted all pleasures, and at last concluded to niar- ry a poetess just for the novelty. These are mild stories compared to some. If all couples were as happily married as we the world would be filled only with sweetness and light.” ------ (o THE CLOTHIERS 1 ------ OF YAM HILL CO., Third St., Opposite YAMHILL CO. D on ’ t F orget the BANK. P lace , — Where you will LATEST STYLES. Furnishing Goods of all kind, and above all THE LOWEST PRICES. Also agenta for the Brownsville Woolen Hill, Carrying a full line of all goods made by these celebrated mills M «•TH. inn vi 11 e LIVERY FEED AND SALE STABLES Garden of Eden Rocks. Since the (lavs of the “forty acres and a mule" dodge, if a month has passed away without some ridiculous fraud being practiced upon the colored people here, your correspondent fails to remember it The latest and most PROPRI ETOKH absurd was brought to light to-day, when a colored man, with his eyes Fine Carriages, Baeks and dancing with delight, came in to show Saddle Horses, me a treasure that he had just bought in the shape of “a rock from ths And everything in the Livery hire, Garden of Eden." It looked like a small piece of slate, in good shape was highly perfumed with musk and packea in a small paste-board box. Hs At Reasonable Rates. had bought it from a white woman, who toltl him that she was from the Garden of Eden, and was ths only liv­ Family Gregory Stör«. ing agent for the sale of the rocks. She had thousands of them put up in simi­ Third Street, MoMinnville, Oregon. lar paper boxes, and sold them through the country at 25 cents each. Shs has sold several hundred in Columbia. The Time»-Star correspondent tried to buy (SuooMaor to L. ROOT.) the colored man’s rock, but ha resolutely refused tan times its prioe. A big re­ vival ia in progress among ths colored Methodists of this city, and ths afore­ said white woman ia reaping a rich harvest in the sale of her “Garden of Eden rocks" among the ignorant en- thusiasts. — Columbia (& (X) (Jer. CW •snnuft Time»-Star. LOGAN BROS. & HENDERSON, J. Harv. Henderson, ▲ man io New Yota woo n»d been the victim of a card swindler, went in­ to court and described from memory thirty separate marks that had been put on as many cards by the thumb nail of the sharper, each of which iden­ tified its particular card. There are several towns in Montana without a single unmarried women, and the local I papers tell piteous tales of the rich • an< <1 eligible bachelor« who are traveling about from town to town look* ina for a wits. Notice of Co Partnerslrip. Having catered into Oo-PartaeralMp with D. M. Caldwell, in the FEED AND FLOUR BUSINEAH. In Hkobe’s bnilding, opposite ths Poet oflhse the firm will be known as COLbARI) A CALDWELL. Mr» Caldwell will attend to the wants of the public. All sales will be for each at bed rock prises. < irders delivered to any part of the city free of extraebarge. J. J. COLLARD, D. .M. CALDWELL, MoMinnville, Or., Dee. 27th, IfiM.