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About Weekly Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1900-1924 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 5, 1900)
WEEKLY OREGON STATESMAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1900. THE 1MLY CM SUB Published every F Jjuesday and Friday j j by the ! STATESMAN PUBLISHING: CO; 266' Commercial; St, Salem, Or. R. J. HENDRICKS, Manager. Subscription rates.- One year, in advance. $1 qoj Six months; in advance. 30 5 SUBSCRIBERS DESIRING THE ; AXf die, of their papr changed mast Matt ths name of their former postofSce, afl well as of the.ofric. to which they wish the r3teper Chan JedJ : '; I Hop are sti'I dull in price, and the'. prospects tor a oeuer marker are not f very bright. i control the marketing' of their fruit, so that the markets will not be flatted. This will require co-operation and con fidence on the part of the grower, and a willingness on their part to abide by the result of a system of classifying as to quality and grade. It will. of coarse, take work 'to bring this about, but I believe we have men in Oregon who are just' as honorable and as cap able of carrying on this work las they have in California or elsewhere." r" The above js a communication from D. M- Crouse, of Liberty, to'the "Ore gon Agriculturist and Rural. I North west"; at Portland. I .. . s .. ' : - The spirit of organization seems to 14 if2 fc ;n ; rror. t. " a i'u f that if there is necessityjbr organiza tion by the hop growers, the' fruit growers should also combine their- in terests. ,. V "- ...V.' b ' V There is no question but the problem of marketing their, products will be a serious one for the fruit growers, whenever they hall have a full crop. We can scarcely realize the immensity DO YOU GET DP : WITH ALAftE BACK ? ey Trouble Hakes Ton miserable. Almost everybody who reads th news papers IS sure to know of the wonderful I; - " " i. Mivu i iic svaiecry ica.izc ine immensity county politics, j Some very good men ! of tfe yield of fruit in Oregon when rc wng uiitca oi ui connection wta t ine trees snau a;j nave come into tu: the various' offices. '; .-". K :- bearing, and in the years of abundant - . ' J ' - - IJ' ij crops. , Perhaps we. will have an illas- it w ill cut a figure in the business: es-! M'00 W'!I occasion rttxt year. We oecialfy after 'this year, if operations are , have, if the weather from now on r .. . '. I successful this year. Nothing shows the sweep of modern industry more distinctly than the fact that the 'world'a production of beet suf gar for 1899 was 5.510,000 tons. . Mr. Carnegie's benefactions for pub lic purposes in the year 1899 amounts to $5,155,000. Not all of those who envv his income would be willing to imitate his outgo.! r to harvest time is favorable. WE WILL EXPLAIN. In the last year the railroads of Con necticut carried 50.a69.468 passengers, with a record of none killed. The trosiey lines of the state" catlsed tihe death of eleven passengers "in a total f 5f.o84OJ. i ' One-fourth of the world's otal dut pwt of coal is pro.luced in the United tates'and the eost of. mining per ion is, lowest in this country, ijast year's exports of coal went up to .4,000,000 tons, and this kem of foreign trade is growing fast. j A Boston church has suspended from , it membership two trolley car motor men for running their cars on Sunday. So far a known,! however, the church i still paying its janitor, its orgfmist and its pastor for faithful performance of tlyrir 'nrcesairy wOrk n Sunday. The liits of the ' Weekly Statesman (now issued it two sections, on Tues days and Fridays) have nearly doubled since the JOth of October. This was as great an increase, as .we expected to make, when the; change was decided uon. The indications are that it will double again in a few months. At 1at. the water has been turned in ; to Chicago's big drainage canal, j There - has been a great deal of talk at St. Louis and. in the neHUiorhood 4l that city of attempting to prrvrr-thie turn ing of all this sewage into theSdississ ippi. But such an attempt will scarce ly be. successful now. . ; . .. ' " " ,. ., Ocean-going Vessels are increasing rapklly in size- Tb pumber of ships launche-d in Great Britain this tear fell off 1 j per cent, but the tonnage, is larger by jo.ooo. i Two steamers of 18. 8.15 tons eachhave been launched at Belfast and several six-masted; schoon-' ers of 3000 tons constructed for coast wise trade!. ! . ! . . j ' The Aocited Press reports: that "the commission, appointed by Presi dent McKmky to determine Jthe most feaMble and practicable -oute! for the canal across the ist hmus of Panama will sail. Saturday for the scene of its la bors." Ir is not stated which commis fUti the last, or the next to the last, Or one of the various others.) , '"My own opmion is an 1 j has J been for many years, thai we need, first of all, more people " Governor Ger hi introductory article in New Year edr ti n- of thr Statesman. Governor Geer is quite right in his opinion. More peo ple will bring all the other things we need; motor lines, manufacturing con cerns, diversified and intensified agri culture, bfltter wagon roads, and hun dreds of other things that are necessary to the accommodation amt : enjoyment of den-ely populated communities. ' ' i THE FRUIT GROWERS "I see my time is nearly1 trp for re cti vtng yonr ahiabl( paper for 1890. I have been benefited much by the con tents of its columns, J although I hare had. nothing to cleer roe up in a pecu niary sne from my orchard; but the Pjow P'owed. the harrowed harrowed, the clod masher ran, the war on the borer was kvpt up, pruning was faith fu.Iy attended to, and the spray pomp was used-U as thoroughly as if the trees had been loaded with fruit. My trees look weU and are better set with fruit bttds than ver beOre since I have had the orchard. If the condi- !r ayoraM hope to hare B. R. Alley in the' Baker City Repub- tican says: in ine aaiem Statesman please explain how 'they lost the mag nificent appropriation for the Willam ette river and Yaquiha bay, secured by Hermann. Perhaps Vou Would like to shake hands .with- "Our Binger!' Eu gene Journal. , T While the Statesman would not like to fall into the habit erf following up the vaporings of the Baker Gty Re publican tnan, "Col." B. F, Alley, who utterly Jacks fairness, 'disregards truth fulness, and is painfully short on com mon sense, we will do a little explain ing in this particular case. .1 "The magnificent appropriation for the Willamette river." about which he speaks.1 was not passed until after Mr. Hermann had ceased to be congress man. It 'was passed during the special session of the last congress, and after Mr. Tongue- had become'' a member: "The magnificent appropriation . for Yaquina bay," to which he refers, it is assumed was the million dollars for the continuation of the contract. There never was one dollar of appro priation passed for this. The law au thorizing the secretary of war to make the contract was 'passed at the session that nded in June, 1896. Mr. Her mann was a member of "congress for, a year thereafter. .Oregon's delegation in congress was full. Ellis was in th house. McBride and Mitchell in rhi eijate, every one of these gentlemen was ncaniiy in sympathy with the im provement of Yaquina bay, and; will ing and ready to do everything in his power to assist in the accomplishment ot that object. Another session of congress was held prior to the expira tion of Mr. Hermann's termr of serr- i-e. , x et tnese gentlemen were not able during that time to secure a dollar of appropriation for the contemplated improvement.' or for carrying out the contract, nor were they able to prevail upon the secretary" of war to approve the project and let the contract. The present delegation succeeded in pre vlmg upon the secretary of war to do the latter. It was thwarted and de layed through the engineering depart ment, which is thoroughly hostile to ft, until finally the riveri and. harbor committee was induced to! take up the matter and block the improvement, Some of the newspapers jare charging that the present delegation procured a commission instead of an appropriation-. An appropriation was an utter impossibility.: The commission was a compromise to prevent the total repeal of the law authorizing the enntrnr The' commission has dodged the main question referred to it. that is. wh-tW or not the contention of Capt Symonds that the extension of the jetties , will not . improve the harbor. i not. In this way, the contest has been postponed, not decided. , . Kurnerf s Swamp-Root, the treat kidnev. liver . , And bladder remedy; fa. I. . J . 11 iTV fir v rra t m-ria a r5 cal triumph 6t the nine-i , I teentn century: dis ! covered after years of 1 sctentuic researcn by fxSrt Dr. Kilmer, the emt- A&r.. iBwdaHst an1 1 wonderfully siiccfessful in promptly- curing Um, Ktr Kla9.?r iirl 'miA tmu. bies ana tsngnxi disease, wmca is me worst form of kidney trouble. v i. Dr. Kilmer 4 Swamp-Root Is not reo- iwimm'Mf.'ff Avrv1hir& Kilt if VAII havWti4- ney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found Just Jhe remedy you need. It has been tested In mgnv win in hossital work, in nrivat chase relief and. has proved so successful in vMVMMlhit a snecial arrangement has been made by which all readers of this paper who halve not already tried it. may have m sample bottle sent free by mail, also m book tirxA nut If vau have kidnev or bladder trnuhl When writing mention reading this generous oner in uus paper and end Tour address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bin g hamton. N. Y., The r-tnar ' ffifrv nmf twf n dollar sizes are. sold by all good druggists. CRTBBAGE FOR A TOWM STTE was packed full of eart and Amer- .z line luetic w..-. fii. i aiiv laii ill Ltui 9:d. uisluis. i it", i . f t.i fl I ,n . pjiiinAirai , y..,.. - - ' - - - - T . . . , j i ... 1 1 l an v Ula " ijuicmciucvu a lumucr ui nrai csiaie ; "l uuiujhjj uuiuu nu cauic. i ana instead oi spieaaing F out In a li'W as to -whether the town s'lte ot i here was a man from McCauleyville I Xat had lik4 a cabbage, it DlndlP X leans wondered w"3at could be the dun pose of it: j I: "That's pimple enougt.M said the Cuban bourehoMer. "In a ffw weeks roots will grow in the ah Inalde the off the limb stick it in tha can' and- Ij; ,win nown. Seattle Post-Intelligencer. , The Puget Sound is a very good country. But there is a much better one for the; fartners who are coming West down Kere in the Willamette val ley. Our soil is generally "richer and deeper, and anything that can be raised there can be grown here. The main- rea son that more new people are settlincr uo there than down here is that the ! railroads drawing their main coast bus iness from. Washington are more active; than our Oregon roads advertising the resources of the country and turn ing the tide' of immigration so as 1 to be of benefit to their properties. There is every indication of an immense ac cession off new people to our Pacific 1 men: as to wnetner tne town site ot "yrc was a man irptn ixicuauieyviiie j at nal Ilk Good Hope should be located on the that bet six milch cows Sundberg would j for all the -v Goose river ;or three miles from that quit winner! at least 'ten -.'points.' ahead Kdr four feet sedgy ,;streara near . where Portland 5 of Elh's. t . and a, little now is.. ne? aispute started jin tjassel- J XJn the tnira nanaimg ot the cards, ton,f was carried to Arthur thence - to and they were honestly , dealt, Ellis Newberg and- Grand Forks and one held four five spots and the turn-up of iuiciioou , rjesoivea : useu into tne : V,,c V wasj a -icn yu unaoerg neia proposition tjhat the disputing factions s three six sppts and a nine. When the I 1 .1 v . t . ' I f t t - "T 1 a sctuc ine mancr Dy a game ot i varus were piayea icuis was. 52 ana cribbige. pach side was to choose its Sundberg 42 points. The deputy sher best flayer, and which ever side wdA inTs Indian horse rew-his lariat pin at tH -"- X-ftnrv Hit a tri lw - Vv fa. , tills ltintir 4ni4 oArncc m v I may be stafedthat cribbage is, a game I tie The game was helduntil he could idolized on the frontier and understood k- pursued, overtaken, and then be as it is not in; the effete East. In this kicked several times in the side to teach T ... 1 ,v . r , . . . ' 1 ' . ' ' , . ... 1 uvujdi party ot real estate specular- j nun oettcr manners, xne aeputy aiso, I ors rid cribbage board was to be found, t to show; hi possession of the animal, so without. ceremony. 121 holes were sho l through the left ear and the-j hollowed out on the , prairies, waeon game went on. v . I a. I a i- . . va a a m . - - . siaa.es were selected tor pegs, and two ine -sun was making tne western sky j finished; but the next job will be iut - . .avu amL v ' " " " ...v, .. u . ..o '.v i nit sauic, lucre Will DC J list aDOUt 0 werei selected t? move these pegs as Jthe score peg of the two player? stood j many hard places jn it, arid then we 1 the cards were played. . Such a game at 7 1 12 each, and there tfre but nine I be. wishing justf the same t! latiwe coul ! ofcnbbage was never played before. points to be played for one or the oth-4 get through that job? could that we are present iob. sort of way, world like a auitlower. thre hig-with bi rank leaves fimver at f h Itmv th j. . . ! . rw' )uu. never coukj pecoymze aS;. i cauli lower. " Tiik max who Forks, And the Main Who6 ; Gets ' Throuch Things thk Easiest Way He Can. L man Y1'" so far 4dvancel that he hkes the (work he is doing-- wide Air. Moggletfrn, "has rcakon to fee? hopeful of himself. I suppose that the very great majority .of us go through N the work we have, in hanp. the eaMest Hy .we can and get through it, skip- ! oirisr the . hard ola and ..thinking, we 11 be glid when , it's "Tlie fact appears to be rays tr7ng to -shirk the mean welU in a feeble and the next thine we taLle n - going to do fight up to the handle: if u,CfWiV - 1 nis ine in a Hood at deuce, a seven ana a ten as nasty a but when we strike that. When that bev tfte Klamath rrver crossing.; Each man combination as any cribbage player comes the present work, don't we trv had learned the game in a mining, ever cares to hold. Elli, singularly to shirk that, ttd? We -do,Tindeed And camp, that iplace where imagination enough, held also a nine, a deuce, a that's what wefdo all through life- daily never dwells and cold calculation is the seven and a ten. Suc3i- things happen putting off ddr best endeaj-Ors till to. SDirit Of life. The de"lf rf mrAc in rihKari rne verv, ten millinn l:iJA t -Li'' i .1 thrown out, the spectators stood up, years. j . ; do: isn't it? . v I . ' ' , the players sat.asquat. Stretching far The card tijirn-up was a five spot. El- "But occas onally you ieet a man out on the prainc s level was the double lis led his deuce and it was paired by who puts in his best lickV every day row of peg holes, scooped from the vir- Supdbcrg, who thus, made two points, and rejoices in the labor he doesn't ' gin sod. On. the cut of the cards Ellis Elis then lid his ten,' and that was care a contin ental what' the next dav WOn the deal and erih TK D.:.:. c. - .iA K C..K. : J . . J . - - 'v- -me ,v. j uiiuu., , wvF . ictv, i Kuiug iu ui uiK to mm, ne can nan- laction cheered, but a threatening ges- mdye-pOlntsi The next card of Ellis die it whatever it is;Vjust riow he's en- ture toward his pistol by a deputy sher- was aseven,1 giving him thirty-ofte-two, gaged with today's labor; ind he docs ihT who favored thej; River Site caused and tvvo points. that up thoroughly and coniplctely. and demonstration to cease. Sundberg led with his seven and El- searches outlhe last nook Ind cranny T t iT- swearasto nis oppo- ns aaaed a nine to it. tundberg paired he isn't tryjrtg to see what he can pass a-- a iwo-cara ic . muc auu Kdiucu cuuhi lur ii 1 Dy, Duf what he can root out; and'he discard was made-by each, the crib card, which made his eight points in j goes home satisfied with his work, and tormed and Sundberg . led with a trey, all or a total of 120. Ellis counted his he's the ond man in a thousand that his pay corrcs- cms coverya rnis with a; ten spot, leav- hand and found that it held In points leads all tW ' rest and ing his opponent to add a deuce and just two. Sundberg counted and held j ponds with his labors, make the first fifteen-twb. Laborioiilv in his hand two ooints. which trave l ' - T "io me uisi uirccn-iTO. LaDonous v in nis nana two Doints. wnicn 12 the first peg was moved two holes. Jiim the game and located the site of j W-ILL BE A "TERRIBIJe YEAR." " " vA.miini aiicT 1111s, uou nuyc uu iuc uanti ui iuc xvivcr and when' th firct VtnrtA nA . n. i . - - - ."V, suu K.1 IU 3 counted Ellis had 12 points and Sund- It is irntpaterial to the story that in bere id. 5 th - coast states. Orecron could &et' and bercr in 1 1 t 1 r . . ... , TV y-... 11 f V ' f . . 1 . -t 1 .. . "cu a rm urge snare oi mem. 11 "' u w uuuucri! 1 crm ma arai. .never laia oul- ror a lonjr time.. she-could have combined effort in, this ' i ,j "f-?11 fin"hed his discard he though, in the tales of . the territory, I Apparently inspired by the vagueness direction f We need the new Settlers. ! u."1 7 t"4 tw scvens ,and two this game Of cribbage held ,a place. The I of, Mmt, de Thebes' predictions for airccuon. . vve neea tne new settlers, j eights. On the turn-uo of the rrih 9 Vmct holed were in aitrht 1 for manv 1 mm Cirt3 Mn hi. ii, There is room for them here. Govern- ix appeared. He therefore held in his day and were often pointed out to "ten- precise detkils from a-' rival charlatan, or Geer, in his introductory article in "and at Jeas ' twenty j points. Ellis derfeet"' from the East come to see- that is to sky, cheiramanci r. the New Year edition of the Statesman, f Gpened hind F,th ad of a six the banana belt. The man' from Mc- Sheseeihs to flout Mn e. Thebes' pointed out some of the reasons whv cP V aanKerouS. m.!'e sometimes. Cauleyville lost his milch cows and an I declaration that Venus will be the nil--., ur - - reasons why Sundberg covered it with, an eight. El- other man from Abercrombie talked ing influente next year by prophesying ui.g more, pcopie lis suppea in a seven, secured a run of without his horse. Some land changed that 1900 Will be a more terrible year than Oregon. The state of Washing- three and scored three points.' Sund- ' hands and considerable monev. In all I than 1870. Ithe vear whirh ih .Fnrh ton as a iconimonwealth, the cities and "efK Paired and scored two. . Ellis there were involved in the outcome of know as"rannee terrible' par exctl commercial bodies and the railrriad P,avcd f trey, made thirty-one two, and I the game about a thousand dollars' lence. ' i. Sikgeher to tnil ena. f counted two more points. At .t he end worth of wager, . , . ft 4? re to do not spare expense. . Wtai-o m.to , i '.. . . - . r Within a year of the Peaice confess x. AmB.rinM floe nW. ana-, cannot, .tnlnk I tel-midablW battle. Vuilt ha v. .- Quick. Tlla mental nrnte. or. not. 1 " zri . 7 - 1 two important . Dersonaire. win die Death ,of Queen. Victoria! ..and Pooe Leo in the Spring Announced by a, fans rrophetess. PAVING STONES OF TAR. Enormous Quantities Cotuntmedm the 1,1 Various Induetriea. Wnwi iM -r- i... 't. h. I .sJSr,n time yueen Victoria s . - . - 1 ; . - j "- l and tne -vne.: .. Pavini? stones, with tar a.' nrw.Af I . :- . . itar education, which' lava suoreme I - -ri rl ..-.ti.Ji. the ingredients of their composition a " n7:?!!ter",gold on'cauUoi, two must be redded as a novelty, " fhe" TiTS ut b"S ' "ft UStatU confer in Germans are malrtncr nrtifiial -v,v.rr .ivu uauuu, mil we moBi awallowlnz a. cow. and that nuts him I .It .. .! . ... rZ 1 . : . mouwtnes are only aoDraHmat. St.. 7.-. '-'-. 1 in resistance ot tne-zahatives " ?. ":'. . aaa-ng Droken tttlcaa tn the treaiury department " nlI? nf . . .:. i'V . , a nis is reaucea to a powder f the French arovemmenr r.en.lv I . .V?ni- ?t - oeii Deration and uimn-tHtiiA uv,n -w.ec,.r. A . s. : is reannnainie me tha hsiior th, n n and subjected to severe pressure, and tne pavmg stone is ready lor use. LOVE'S LABOR LOST. Anxious Mother What did 'Mr. iertnAir u. j. , . 7 is reaponstDJe ror Uie belief .that an JunfhelSof - the Point Ject.and.the ngures they have reached , vVZm T 7 are jrobbly s accurate a aay that L He a,ways P,n have ret been aublihJ. ' ncver 0n the same day, and. while Most of the gold used in the arts Is f" ,s harmleas enough Idiosyncrasy in peace. It is a decided drawback; In Cummings say to ' youjastnight, Qanu nPJoyed to la'rgre extent for the war By the tim an Enarliah officer when he was trying to button your i most praotlcaJ purposes, as In den- maKe UP j mina the chances aire gove7 :. , j tistry. It Is doubtful if even Jewelry tht erorythina: else") minded. -Be- Clara Vhy, he said any man who!con"Ume larger quantity of gold Iore ne can 8rraJ,p tuation the sit ade gloves that wouldn't button eas-I thMD ome. other ways In which It H u "on has graaped hint-. r than, mine oueht to nuir the tni. 'I ased. The eonsuntotion for ciMtnr - "I iake these comments In all kind- alone Is very Iarc The films of gold ,,n because my sympa4biea a re en leaf ere very thin, 'but enormous num- tJrely with the British, but there im no bers of-them are a.pplled to a. consid- ttlns; away from the fact that quicto- . wv.t TMici muiuiaciUres, UCJ1 -"" aim UKk-unii( guns M liflM .iMTBlnr "iwuvlra 4-- .. hSVe the Call In mft,m VlMfara' nJ Farms for Sale i a i1 . i made ier than , mine ought to quit the busi nessJ " , Anxious Mother Well, Dear, take my auvice ana aon t waste any more a, I '. t a - . . . 4. time in mat airection. FARMERS COMING! Several small colonies of farmer are on their way to the state of Washing ton and some of them will locate jon ouunu. Kjnc party had made- ar raneements to settle in Uli.Am - - . - veaaa ty,. and the transportation companies report that numbers have engaged pass age to other sections of the state. The vear is Iikelv ; ,.wiu aiuunK agricultural communi- iKTs ana it win De especially marked on this side., of the Cascade mountains. There are few spots more inviting to rer unn tne ncn country around Puget Sound, and those who? have moved from less favored sections and have taken op a home on our generous lands have never ceased to j congratu late themselves that the change was made. A mild and even climate with no extremes is in sharp contrast to the harsh surroundings of the East, where 'people are "burned in summer, frozen in winter and forever battling with bliz aards, severe frosts, drouth and cy clonev Here they find a genial tem perature with atmospheric disturbances almost unknown. They find opened to them an existence with sxme opportu nities for enjoyment and not a never ending fight with nature, j Moreover. -T.4U1.1 wn reajues that this ; Doctors Can't f Cure It! OontagclS blood nolaon la ahAlr.l. beyond tha skill of the doctors. They may dose a patient1 for years on their mercurial and potash remedies, but he rill never he. rid nt v a . - ather hand, his condition will grow JteadJly worse. 8. 8. 8. is the only eure wemme axtiiciion, Decause ft ia the only Temedy which goes direct to the cause of the disease and force it from the system, j 5?! tosoa. aad the est doe rs did aae BO (rood, though I took wir ireaimeal t a 1 1 a rsily. Ia tat. I seesiad o aat worse all the All In barn, ore v ' 287 afc aires cultivation. House - and new hard. JVatered. Price ,6oo near above. res. sign. Jewelry, "booka, frames- fur- have the call In modern warefare, and niture, pottery aaid other article!, and ne further, fact hat rapid cerebra the segregate value of the cold thus 1,011 not the long suit of our couslna boM for rildlna- has consideraly in-. "r that the Boer are no better, but creased ainoe eJeetrn-a-lkUiw am irt there la bmh wwwi" wxmJ. H two . T D vmm iiiw ' " B .. . vwwu. v . W UCV6 I . VOfrue. both beeaxiae mnp 4Uii t that thelf ranV au t- i.. i I AU . . v . .wmm, i v. . d ,MaJF .vur QOTle BAd aim IwranaA' ilia tm . Mml .li, kAAH.wiHUj . l . t n vy Aru-nLwu AvrviKn aovntur- -wastes a considerable quantity of the " ra, . who . pounc ; upon an opportunity metal. -Jlivwiiiii w w n w , . . . '. - - . . . " x- iwn iia-, ' uuugrj nooo on-a, not mince Die. . wuiu.nc in pi -mc - oriina army. neel more tne arts ' about thirtV-one Ihnn.it. than an),In. .u. ? . pounds of gold In a vear vhlrh -iron infne a .4 numbens. Kran. t.' w.ean. ??irMiemocrat. pre-eminent manufacturers 'of Jewelry ' nd other article of inTur,' h... iv. ! 210 and mllls on Willamette ten mtles south c 6alem. yatlon and bas house and adjoining Sidney elevator fiver, about AH tn culti- btrn. v All in cultt- ERIC10 $17.60 PER kpftE. 150 Jusrea of unimproved land about ODD THINGS IN CUBaL with ao unml mnmntu. ' ' .? i : , vwuBU.tuaviv yfe Skja. . a j - - about thlrtv-flve thn.n. ... The way Natives Plant riwv an rea pounas a year. Oreat Jtrttain ' also surpasses the United State with ! 34,100 POUndfl. Herman v - wuus, Switzerland is.too American. Soldiers malted Tables. Some odd! t h t rur'm tianhM, I. V,.t,. Italy -when man wishes a .fence around . . tlla vavf . aw. 1 a . . ' . W9'. Russia 9,000. k4lUtrlaJHnnM his yard or. field, he -t,' i...ita Belgium and Holland ,820. , he plants Itr and It growa, too.' TMrst Aft lAkSkirMB-a aa tr . Ka Atifa mm K a a .175. and - mvua.ua ,B2u. i-o.nu it njwB, too.j first whiia. i took alaioat !ot.,' ""' wnj me .united uu vreat ounoie of plfton twlars ncra Ii " i . States connmua in tliui . . i r - 1 . , ". mmiM , rood i uttier lEencn ; wnere i "-7. i u tun i "u more silver than urtiL. be want hi. r.. ; ss! dTOJs? i ;j j iru pny -ihe .tick, , thVTwigT m ; ;w uzz rr is-j - 7 " aim- more exten- '"" ine son or Cuba iseo. C JRS KvU. 3 ! Sre1!S1,!f,fl1Utr, UM- - .lst ut directlV e twtVk ,x T a frlesM I . I tOT Solid ailvei- r.It n . . . lkm .. , . ..ire iwi, ... oiivc-r )iaunr, " unmcnei ana leaves and namentaf " fn other 0E Presently . th we H a dense hedje"? Tne 2ra'na. btoTPhy. The tree, enclosing the fleWL And , J! tr1f In lb Unll States. re nd nail, to drop out hVre consume over live hundred aw fifty, nor boards to fall down and let In thl a canrK y,T' d the fence 1. gooTfo. ?n- iZT? ce about tbree hundred and dred yeai"- ' - i 209 oS .m!, ".r1 aeh' "Ia Jf at the -roost curious thing 2W.0OO and Great Britain 208,000. that one may see ln Cuba. WW rou mink of a camp table that ineoa I tbs took q oeyaa toln- paoielne, ana it eartsf me eomplrtelr. bail nwiu-onn raw ra. W. . KSWXAW, ' T , , '.:! - ' v UMutton,Va, It Is lira aalfw!atmet(r. poi5n1 "senary j beside. totally dMtniTtnir t)..Vl;...! flry up the marrow in the bone., pro duefng a stiffness and swelling of the Joints, causing the hair to fall out. and pltely wrecking tha jstcm. S.SS&B100II i - 7- uce mm ueac ftanfferona niiwMl, were cmped. back at Santiago they . i ' " . "l'v to nave a bountiful rmr um K . SLOWNESS OP THE BRITON. r . 1 " wmieu sack at Santiago, they Why He la Being Outgeneralled In the ff rai nusnber. ot lltUe table, Sosth aMm. nr.. w drlvlnjr forked atLw. t r:' - d using a top of boards. : Of A good deal or nm... - ' counse the leea tAAh ni beTr the BTltLTh We fiv ? b,are 73tSS been outgeneralled thu. fr In the branches And In two or three Boer war." aald a ' vT.'.. ' y" four nice tree -win of strategy that meet - ther an H ne win ret-dream that at canal street cigar store to mat T I once table leans. Another cu afflalra of state' bur ZJl : rtt. thing.,-At JOuajKans-nb ill surprise me a n.eti. "rTn 1 tin can was - fastened aronnH ,-. ille. down the riverf land and light clearing PRICE PER ACRE from above. 1(50 (acres of upland '.'ad Joining laet loam. About v mentioned. All i one nundred acres, in cuHlvatWm. fcai. nee unrjtr Umber. 0Tenie nurl prinir water, but no building.. . ; T imiv irom abbv. lvei prairie iani, all cultiva ted, except frlnr Of hrliali ,lnn. .n..b Good) house and barn arid young r VAMtallU . price 20 i?er Acre. 62 T "re bttt three i'Wtle. Boutheat un wooaburn. cimA mWu t " mwyjt ss vufJTiiait .cujmratlon. Buildings, . orchard and uuuibi water. .; 17s PRICE S1.2GCL . J - . KMIIVIMZ I 1 TCI a flWUI nlnei mile, below Salem, near Simon's -anping. Ajoout alxty acre. Ift c-ult-vatlbn. AU fenced. Fair jbulldihgs. PRICE 112 PER ACRE; V- fl acre, about two miles from Ge vauL Good prairie land all In cultlvS uom. and weJI fenced, but no buildng- PRICE $1S PER ACRE. Ajl tite above landa xon tm anM on easy term, of payments 0F"or further particulars apply to Maemaater St Elf relL PortUndt Oregon, br . B0Z0RTH BROTHERS n i SALElf, 0EEG0N. -