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The Yakima Herald. Volume I. THE Itim BAH. REED A COB, .... . Proprietors. ■MVn EVERY TRVEIBtI. 12.00 PER ANNUM. IN ADVANCE. idmHfcfag Rgtoi (jpu Appfimtiti PROFESSIONAL CARDS. W. M. WHITS, I U. J. SRITELT U.S. Attorney-1 WHITE A BNIVELY, Attorneys at Law. with County Trasrarar. at the Court Souse. North Yakima. WIU practice in all the courts of tbe territory. 1. H. T. CATCH, I L. C. PARRISH, Sprague. I North Yakima CATON A PARRISH, Attorneys at Law. RTWIII practice In all the Courts of the terri tory. Ofllce on First Street, opposite the Court House. North Yakima W. T. I. J. B. SSATia I A. HIRES. | C. H. ORATRS REAVIS, MIRES A GRAVES. Attorneys at Law. practise in all Courts of the Territory. Special attention siren to all U. 8. land olßce busiuees. Offices at North Yakima end Bllciis burgh. W. T. I. RUWARO WUITMOH, I JOHN H. ALLS* PEED PARKER. Walla Wallfl. North Yakima I ALLEN, WHITSON A PARKER, Attorneys at Law. IVOffice In First National Bank Building. 8. O. MORFORD, Attorney at Law, Practice! in all Courts In the Territory. Es pecial attention to Collections. Office up stain in Hill Block, North Yakima. «. J. RILL, H. D. wm. <l. COR, H. D. HILL A COE, njslclui, StrgMns nd Accoicheirs. Ofltae Honrs—Still 10 a. m., 2 till 4 p m.snd 7 till a o’clock p. m. CV office over Allen ft Chapman's drag store. T. B. GUNN, Physician ft Surgeon. OSes In Pint National Bank, first door up stalls. Refers to W. A. Cos and lUhelman Brda ; also, to any dtisen of Memphis. Mo. * ELMER E. HEG, M. D., Physician and Surgeon. Ofllce hours from 10a. m. until 12:4 until • p. m., and a. until 9 p.m. Office over Alton ft chapman's drag store. Resi dence at Mrs. WlawelTs. O. M. GRAVES, DEjyrisT. All work In nly line first-etas*. Ixieal anesthet ics used to extract teeth without pain. No charge for examination. gMF* Office over First National Bank. MISCELLANEOUS. Fire Wood 6 Draying. 1 have a large quantity Of excellent pine and fir cord wood and fir slab wood for sale cheap. I also ran two drays, and am prepared to do healing at rcaaonable figures. Api^Mo^^, J. m STOUT, FORWARDING AND COMMISSION. MK-The handling of Yakima Produce for Puget Hound Market* a Specialty. Ware house west of Railroad Track. No. 8, Block B. North Yakima. 011-fy XT. KKPPI.EH, City Scavenger,' NOBTH YAKIMA, - - - - WASH. Headquarters at Tneker*s -Livery Stable, on Front street. All orders promptly attended to. Charges moderate. A. F. SWITZER, Contractor and Builder, ROkn YAKIMA, W. T. t . Will Contract for the erection of all elasaaa of Building*, either Brick, Stone. Concrete, or Wood, and will complete the work honestly M According (• jtymneit. Rmunci: Pint Nat’l Buk of Notth Yakima. o®«e, np alalra In Opera Honae. Offlce hour*. ♦ IMf. MILK! MILK! 16 Qiart Tictßtx for SI.OO. 85 (!tM. per Oallon. HMeU and Reatauranu luraUhed at Special Bates, by the Gallon. All lilk GunitNl Pm ut Cltu. Will Mini Bilk Twin Back Bar* W. W. GARDNER, cold aramo daikt. woarn taeima, w. t. FIRST BAWL BUI of North Yakima. *• *• A - *■ = : «HB J * plSaMmt W. L. furwne. Caahler. DOBS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS. Iqi mi Mb Map * UmmikUm. nn mTKMaT <w tm» nifonr*. NORTH YAKIMA, WASHINGTON TERRITORY, THURSDAY, APRIL 11. 1889. loWStorrl Colonel Quaritch By tbe Famous Novelist, H. BIDES HAGGARD. We hare Just made arrangements for the publication in llieaa columns of tho great serial “COLONEL QUARITCET— tbs last and best of Haggard's stories. This Serial will be SnperMj Illnstrated by Miranda, One of the foremost newspaper artists In tiie country. Every reader will desire to follow this story frptu the beginning. This Story Abounds in Dramatic Situations. “COLONEL QUARITCH" will appear In liberal installments, beginning imme diately. . A Few Sample lllnstrations. We Invite particular attention to the de tiga end workmanship of the following illustrations selected from among those appearing in this story: ' Tbs Colonel Meets the Squire. Ma Watched the Dow Cloee. |hn wl SMtaca. Colonel Qilaritoti IS THE HAVE. I LOOK OUT FOB IT! WOMAN. They talk about a woman's sphere. As though It had a limit; Then's not a place in earth or heaven. There's not a task to mankind given. There’s not a blaming or a woe. There's not a whisper yes or no. There’s not a life, or death, or birth, That has a feather’s weight of worth. Without a woman In It THE FI TTER “AMEEICA." My country, tlsof thee, land of lost Liberty, Of thee we Ang. Land which the millionaire*. Who govern our affislrm. Own for themselves and helm— Rail to thy king. Land once of noble braves. But now of wretched alaves— Alas! too late. We saw sweet Freedom die. From letting bribers high Car unpriced suffrage buy. And mourn thy fate. Land where the wealthy few Can make the many do Their royal will And tan for selfish greed Thy tollers till they bleed. And those not yet weak-kneed Crash down and kill Land where a rogue la raised On high and loudly praised Bor worst of crimes. Of which the end must be A hell of cruelty, As proved by history Of ancient times, My country, 'tls of thee. Betrayed by bribery. Of thee we sing. We might have raved thee long, Hsd we. when proud and strong. Put down the cursed wrong That makes thy king. -11. C. Dodge, in N. Y. World. uonrunim. KricEftisa sf liEMtEfc by the Find Brt- tlm sf tbe West As an inducement for the opening; up of the country west of the Alleghany mountains, immediately after the inde pendence of the United States was se cured, the government of Virginia ap pointed three commiaaionora to give cer tificates of settlement rights. Building a cabin and raising a crop of grain, how ever small, entitled the occupant to 400 acres of land and a pre-emption right to 1000 acres more adjoining, to he secured by a land office warrant. “There was,” says a writer upon this subject, who claims to have seen a number of those “tomahawk” rights when a boy, “at an early period of our settlements an inferior kind of land title, denominated a “toma hawk right,” which was made by dead ening a few trees near the head of a spring and marking the bark of one or more of them with the initials of the name of (he person who made the improvement” These early pre-era ptors were fmulshed, I learn from the Mine source, with a cov ering for the feet, which now, if seen, would arouse sympathy (or the wearer. The moccaeine in ordinary use caused but a few hours labor to make them. This was done by an instrument denominated a moccasin awl, which was made of the back-spring of an old clasp-knife. This awl, with its buckhorn handle, was an appendage, too, of every sbot-ppoch strap, together with a roll of buckskin for mending the moccasins. This was the labor almost every evening. They were sewed together and patched with deer skin thongs, or whangs, as they were commonly called. In cold weather the moccasins were well stuffed with deer’s hair or dry leaves so aa to keep the feet comfortably warm, but in wet weather it wm usually Mid that wearing them was “a decent way of going barefootedand such wm the fact, owing to the spongy texture of the leather of which they are made. r«U Stage m the Fua. J. H. Hunt, of Sebastopol. hM demon strated the value of cold storage m a fac tor in the development of the fruit indus try. For years he baa contended with the disadvantages, with which all fruit growers are more or less familiar, in disposing of his fruit at profitable prices on the market or at the canneries. Be lieving that the figures which could be obtained for fruit in good condition three and (our months from the time it is pick ed would more than oompenMte for the expense necessary to be incurred in the preservation, be erected a cold-storage house last year. It cost but ffiOO, but has been more than paid for by the profit realised on the 700 boxes of apples which have found a ready market within the past month. The house is square in shape with double floor, ceiling and wall. The latter are eight inches thick and filled with Mwdoat, likewise the floor and ceil ing. Aa eeon as the apples are picked from the trees, they are placed on trays, simply constructed out of 2x3 lumber end laths. The trays are taken to the storage bouse, and placed one on top of the other in such a manner that the fruit of one tray-does not come in contact with that of another. The tiers are so arranged as to permit of a free passage of air when it is desired, which is generally on cold nights. Daring the day the ventilator* are closed end Jhe bones is made perfectly air-tight. Great care most be taken when the ven tilators are open to prevent moisture in the building else the quality of the fruit will be greatly impaired. Of the 900 boxes of fruit placed in the house la* fall, 780 were preserved in good condition without being once sorted over—Sas/a JtoM Demotrt. 1 i —Red clover seed at the I. X. L. * New LAND LAW. An Act of Great Importance to Home steaders. HesMatrad Eights intend, Lrarn •f Abeamee PrsvMrd fwr—ffilher Important Pravisieai Tha recent congress passed tbe follow ing important act with reference to public lands: An act to withdraw certain public lands from private entry, and other pur poses. Be it enacted, etc.: Section I. That from and after 'the passage of this act no public lands of the United States, except those in tbe state of Missouri, shall he subject to private vntry. Sec. 2. That any person who has not heretofore perfected title to a tract of land of which he has nude entry under the homestead law, may make a homestead entry of not exceeding one quarter-section of public land subject to such entry, such previous filing or entry to tbe contrary notwithstanding; but this right shall not apply to persons who perfect title to lands under the pre-emption or homestead laws already initiated: Provided, that all set tlers upon tbe public land* whose claims have been initiated prior to the passage of this act may change such entries to home stead entries and proceed to perfect their titles to their respective claims under the homestead law, notwithstanding they may have heretofore had the benefit oi such law, but such settler* who perfect title to claims under the homestead law shall not thereafter be entitled to. enter other lands under the pre-emption or homestead laws of the United States. Sec. 3. That whenever Hehall be made to appear to the register and receiver of any public land office, under ouch regula tion* M the secretary of the interior may preacribe, that any settler upon the public domain under existing law is unable by reason of a toUl or partial destruction or failure of crops, sickness or other unavoid able casualty, to secure a support for him self, herself, or those dependent upon him or her upon the lands nettled upon, then such register and receiver may grant to such settler a leave of absence from the claim upon which he or she has filed for a period not exceeding one year at any one time, and such settler so granted leave of absence, shall forfeit no rights by reason of said absence: Provided, that the time of such actual absence shall not lie deducted from the actual residence required by law. Sec. 4. That the price of all sections and parts of sections of the public lands within the limits of the portions of the several grants of lands to aid in the con struction of railroads which have been heretofore and which .may hereafter be forfeited, which were by the act making such grants or have since been increased to the doable minimum price and, also, of all lands within the limits of any such railroad grant, bat not embraced in soch grant lying adjacent to and coterminous with the portions of the line of any each railroad which shall not be completed at date of this act, is hereby fixed at $1.25 per acre. Sec. 5. That any homestead settler who has’heretofore entered less than one quarter section of land may enter other and additional land lying contiguous to the original entry, which shall not, wltn the land first entered and occupied, ex ceed in the aggregate 160 acres, without proof of residence upon and cultivation of the original entry, when the additional entry is made, then the patent shall iasue without farther proof: Provided, that this section shall not apply to or for the benefit of any person who at the date of making application tor entry hereunder does not own and occupy the lands cov ered by his original entry: And provided, that if the original entry should fail for any reason prior to patent or should ap pear to be illegal or fraudulent, the addi tional entry shall not be permitted, or, if having already been initiated, shall be canceled. Sec. 6. That every peribn entitled, under the provisions of the homestead laws, to enter a homestead, who has here tofore complied with or who will here after comply with the conditions of said laws, and who shall have made his final proof thereunder for a quantity of land lam than 100 acres and receive the re ceiver’s final receipt therefor, shall be en titled under said laws to enter as a per sonal right and not assignable, by legal subdivisions of the public lands of the United States subject to homestead entry, so much additional land as added to the quantity previously so entered by him Shall not exceed 160 acres: Provided, that in no case shall patent issue for the lend covered by such additional entry until the person making such additional entry shall have actually and in conform ity with the homestead law* resided upon and cultivated the land so additionally entered and otherwise fully complied with soch laws: Provided also, that this sec tion shall not be construed as affecting any right as to the location of soldiers’ certllfatiu herrtofnrt knri arnica aset kin 2406 of the Revised Statutes. Hoc. 7. That the "act to provide addi tional regulation* far homcotcad and pre emption chtrieaol public land),” approved March S, 1879, aball not be cooatned to forbid the taking of leetlmoop far Baal proof within ten daye following the dap ad vert lard aa upon which inch Baal proof I Khali be made, In raaaa where accident or unavoidable delays have prevented the applicant or witnesses from making each proof on the date specified. See. 8. That nothing in that act shall be construed as suspending, repealing, or in any way rendering inoperative the pro visions of tbe act entitled “An act to pro vide lor the disposal of abandoned and waring military reservations.” approved July ft, 1884. Approved March 4,1888. •(•tk Iri ii IfikiU. During tbe lot, 2nd and Sid of April, Dakota was swept by a series of terrific windutorms and prairie Area, which re sulted in the destruction of more than 12,000,000 worth of property and tbe loss of a number of lives. The storm started Monday night find swept over a large area south of tbe Northern Pacific rail road in Dakota and extended through the southern tier* of counties. The greatest damage was done by tbe wind, but in many places fires were fanned into fury bv the storm, and wiped out of existence several small villages, hundreds *of farm houses and miles and miles of grass and fences. Tbe flames in some instances leaped 100 feet of plowed ground. Nothing like it woe ever known before. Tbe towns almost completely destroyed were Gallo, Olivet, Punkwanna, Laeterville and East Mount Vernon. Three or four other vil lages were badly damaged, and many head of cattle, sheep, and hogs perished. The wind spent its main force before reaching Minnesota, but still much dam age was done there. AtartMMUrU*. The follow ing letters remain niu-iaimii in the postoffice at North Yakima, Wash ington, April 9, 1888. In calling for the same please say “advertised :*» Buyers, Chas August Emery, P H H*f». C H Hank, Herbert Martin Scott Merchant. Mra 8-2 MUler, D A Plotter. Mias Nets Plumb, AugustusM Rollins, AngM Saadaky. Albert Stevens, 8 Blevcns, Dare, Veeeey, W H-2 You ok, B F • a. W. Cakxy. p. m. YAKIMA CITY LXTTBB UHT. Airbart, Mrs TP-3 Aberin, Peter-2 Butler, Edwin Brown, Miss A Bounds, Miss Ella Bigley, John Church, Bill Cochran, M V Cole, Mbs Adorn Carpenter. Louis-4 Cnrry, F A-2 Chinch, l ( Carpenter, Dow Dickey, E V Friend, T C Forabnry, A lax Fanbkn, Henry Gobble, 8 A Herrin. Elencr Herke, 8 J Harrison, Mra Mary Hughea, Mra L Howell, Mi. Mad£ Henry tltt)e-3 Jude, Mlaa Ada Kennedy, Hiuh Kerahaw.J. McKilllpa,jS Mcßaln.D . Manning, Mra LR Millar, Chariee-2 Primm.X H DwkilO Rlcfaarta, Joseph Red. Win Span, MS Short, A S Spoo, Mrs M Slaton, J T Smith. Cap J P Sinclair, Edgar Staton, HI Smart, Mia Bells Schneider, Carles Sham, Joa Smith, Hatty Tithetow, Will Vinson, Mr Walker, Mary Wood',MnElmira Oacaa Vuitcku, P. M. —White clover seed at tbs I. X. L. •• —Five handled bom of soap at Barth olet Bros, only $1.86 per box. • —A large stock of non-magnetic watches always to be seen at Kuechler’s, the new jeweler. apM • —“Hkckmetack” is a lasting and fra grant perfume. Price 25 find 60 cents. For sale by C. B. Buahnell, druggist. —For a nobby suit, made to order, do not fail to call on our popular merchant tailor, Hugo Sigmund, on First street. • —A nasal injector free with each bottle of Shiloh’s Catarrh Remedy. Price 60 cents. For sale by C. B. BushneU, drug gist. —Shiloh’s Cure will immediately re lieve croup, whooping cough and bron chitis. For sale by C. B. BushneU, drug gist. # —For square dealing and value received lor your hard earned cash, caD on T. Q. Redfleld for anything in the line of jew elry. • —Shiloh’s Catarrh Remedy la a posi tive cure for catarrh, dlptheiria and Cank erMoutn. For sale by C. B. BushneU, —O. E. McEwen is now offering sad dles, bridles, bornees and everything in his line at prices not to be duplicated this side of Portland. • —Why will you cough whan Shiloh’s Cure will give immediate relief. Price 10osnta,50ceutaand|t. ForfialebyC. B. BushneU, druggist. —lf you have loot any money lately, Rsdfieid will return it by telling you goods so remarkably cheap that you will forget your misfortune. —Catarrh cured, health and sweet breath secured, by Shiloh’s Csrtarrh Rem edy. Price 60 cents. Noml Injector free. Sold by C. B. Bosh nail, druggist. —For dyspepsia and liver complaint,you have a printed guarantee on every bottle of Shiloh’s VitaUaer. It never fads-to cure. Wet sale by C. B. BushneU, drug gist. —Dr. Ravage will be found always ready to attend calls day or night. Office over postoffice: residence on Second ■tract, one block noth of Firat National Bank. Oct. S-tl. —The Rev. (Jeorge H. Thayer, of Bour bon, Indiana, mj»: "Both myaell and wile owe our iivea to Khiloh’a Conanmp lion Cue.” Fncaaleby C. B. Boahneil, dmggiet. LIKE MAGIC. ■irreltas Grovtb of the level City ef Cntnl VuUiftn. A Glimpse of yakima Through the Eyes of a Representative of the Spokane Falls "Review" When you dinetubark from the train on the Northern Pacific railway at North Yakima and take a survey of the city, the first impression is that it-is not much of a town anyway, bat stroll along a little farther into the heart of the city, among her substantial business blocks, nicely shaded streets and good sidewalks, and you are met with an air of prosperity, not found in any other city in Washing ton territory. Yotfechange your opinion at once, and say here is prosperity, here is a class of people with some enterprise about them. These miles of sidewalks stretching off in all directions beyond the built up part of the town, and the two rows of shads tress on either side of each street, watered by clear, fresh water run ning down the gutters, show that her enterprising citizens hare not laid out a city for 2200 people, but 22,000, which is sure to come inside a few yean. It has made a rapid growth. Four years sgo not a house stood on the townsite, but the indications point to a still greater prosperity in the near future. The old town of Yakima some four miles south of here had been a trading post for yesrs, but after the new and more desirable townsite of North Yakima was located the old town dropped out of existence, the few settlers moving bag* and baggage in a few days, it being s common sight to see six and eight HOI'SKS OK WRXKLS On the road at one time, drawn by num erous ox teams, bound for the new loca tion. Since then fine brick buildings bare taken the place of some of the build ings moved, while others have sprung up along side, built on entirely new ground, until now Yakima has buildings her citizens can feel proud of, and as fine os w ill be seen in much older cities. Besides the large number of shade trees planted along the miles of streets, twelve hun dred additional trees, mostly maple and locust, are being planted, and in a few years the streets will be one vast boule vard. Surrounding the city and branch ing off in different directions are valleys of rich, fertile land that, will grow any thing; a country that 'basoot only pro duced enormous crops of wheat, oats, barley, corn and sorghum, but fine fla vored and lucious peaches, pears, apples, cherries, melons and all the small fruits. Hops are being raised in large quantities and command a higher price with the Milwaukee brewers than those raised on the Sound. Tobacco has been found to do remarkably well here, producing a quality nearly equalling the Cuban to bacco and excelling the Connecticut leaf. A cigar factory has been established to manufacture cigars out of home-grown tobacco. Even peanuts have been grown as an experiment very successfully. In fact anything that can be grown this side of the tropica. THE CUM ATS Is delightful, never excessively hot in summer, although the thermometer runs up to 104 degrees in the shade, but the dryaese of the atmosphere prevents that oppressiveness often feel in moister lati tudes. Sunstroke la Vxnetbing never heard of In this part of the country, while the winters are short, lasting about three weals and never very cold. Frequently ■how falls, covering the ground to the depth of a couple of inches but not enough for sleighing. In February the ground thaws and farming commences, giving the crops a good start before the dry sea son comes on. Irrigation is essential bat the numerous streams coursing down the different valleys, supply irrigation far a greater or Isas number of farmers who dig their own ditches at little expense. Yakima has some very fine brick band ings. tbs principal ones being the Hotel Yakima, not yet finished. 110 by 100, two stories, owned by Mr. David Wilson, of Tacoma, and c05t,125,000; the First Na tional bank, two story brick, and cost $25,000; the Mason building on Front street, Allan C. Mam, of Tacoma, and coat $35,000, and numerous other fine brick buildings, including the opera bouse, Ward Bit*., Yakima National bank and HUI block, the public school and Catholic academy. The principal hotel is the Steiner House, nest and clean In every reaped and a very good place to ■fop at. Mr. Steiner intends erecting this summer a SOO,OOO building. OTHU HEW BtnUMNOB To be built this season are a two story brick school building with a ball tower, to be the finest in the city end V cost $15,000, a Methodist church on Third street, brick, and to coat #IO,OOO. Dr. Morrison and T. G. Redfleld will build a two story brick block to cofct SII,OOO. Dr. Taft and Ward Bros, will build a two ■lory brick Mock, 50x100 feet, to cost SIO,OOO. A party of gentlemen from Se attle will build a three story brick Mock with iron front and plate glass windows and of modern stele of architecture. H. H. Lewis, of Beattie, is having the sage brush cleared off hia 170 acre tract which he has named Sunnyride ; 150 acres will be platted in lota and the balance in five acre garden trarts. Streets will be laid out, treea planted, aidowalka pot don, aad when fixed op wIH be tha moat da airaMo tealdem poftloo ol tha etty. aad masssr «• in a lew years will all be ImUt up, as the new comer can not hoip hnt he plonrad with the enimnndiags. the nil aid dl metev while the tammy ie (lead, end alter heating the are ow the aaeaH green of the rallojr and hill topt, you can taka In the panoramic wUwol the Might, Caacadea, while twirling rp abort all the net la the lona now capped ereUo of Mount Bonier, 14,000 feat high, and Mount Adamt, 12,000 hat, making It a ragged looelinne of mountain scenecy. enclosing the (rail gardens at Washing ton territory. SMUglww. Proleeaor Kim hod. of Hallo, eetimotn that the language moat •pokes on the globe for the last thousand yean at least, la Chineae, lor It la without doubt the only 000 which la talked by orer 008,000,- 000 of the human ran; the neat Unpuge moat in nee (but at a eery great dWanoa behind Chineae) being UlndocatanADokeu by own 100.000.000, Then follows Bar hah, apoken by about 100,000,000; Bus elan, by onr ID#) IjOOO; German, onr . 64,000,000, and Kpaoiab, onr 47*00,000. • li IngkFrnf bfaL The pay on from the earn aldatd the Caacadea my that the outlook lor tho Urgant fruit crop onr grown in —atom Washington U wary promising. Especially U this true of the Yakima and Walla Walla rallaH Barmen and guffaws should gin early eltenWcn to tho pirat ing of trait Iron, when not already done, n Waahiagtoo Is oas of tho moat prolific and certain regions on the Pacific cosat for the growing cl ah kinds cl fruit, in cluding, in the Yakima and Walla Walla nlleya, the man delicate aomi-tropreal nrictUa. Puget Sound will alweya fur nish an ampU market for all the frail that that ran bargiaed in lha Unitary at good prion.—Thereto Al. /oarael. tnfarTrWUg. In taking np tram, particoUHy two and throe year olds, a Urge per not of tbs roots era leal to the tram by being cut off end left In the ground. To compensate lor IbU lorn the tops of the hen should bo well trimmod tad shortened, otherwise the tree will bare men top than the mots can support, and If that U the earn the tree U liable to die and If it don not ft* will make but a sickly growth, or become diseased and just lbs food tfeat insects an only too ngtt to work in. Tho note of the tree, when they are art off in dig ging should be cot off with s ilapa oa the under side end ell the bruised ratting should ho taken off with a sharp knife, and the roots spread ao as to occupy the •oil in rwtry direction from the tree. When the room are all chucked into a hole without (pending and cowered np the tree newer doer eo well and hn not the bracing support that Una should hare In this ooontry. And, on account of the wind. Inn ehohld not ha trained wary high; hot lbs limbs should remain low down on the tm, thereby giwtng tbs wind n little Unrage an pnmtbU to wrench the tma. Tba Tacoma Mpmjra that Col. LN. Money of the Paeco Heaimghi, la preai dant of the Paaeo. Uoldndola, VaacooT er A Portland Railroad company and that be la trying to effort a ooaUHoa with the Ooldendale ft Colombia Valley rail road, and will alao endearer to make con nection (probably traffic) with the Van eoover, Klickitat A Taklma road. Thia doaa not atrika the Hmini editor with any (teat degree of onrprlee. He knew thia raflroad magnate when be waa poor, apaUed bla name with an C. inatead of a *, and only had bla health and energy with which to climb to the boot. Look at him now. VUlard waa manly a aawapapoc cor rrapoodont, before ha came oat hwa aa tha agent of tha German hondholdan of thoOmon A California rnlhoad. Ppm that hia conrn waa npwafd and onward with the aaooptlon of a alight falling off Ini**. OoL Monay’a career opaaa area brighter. Perched on a three lagged atool before a rough deal table In tha metropoUa of Franklin county (Waahlngtoa territory), he waa wont to let aointfliatlocra' of du lling brightneaa flow from tha nib of hia pen elocidatlng and aapom.il.ig upon the future of Paaeo. Today what la hot Tbapraaidant of a railroad company and thia north warn empire Ilea within hia gvaap. In the early Wi when VUlard waa in hia flrta hay-day, If. C. Moore, now Oor 7SZV2XSSS htan^Sg Villard" which warreealred with a. be nign smile, and eridently aat well on a pile of champagne. Malar aalad and other gaod thing* tacked away In lb* great man'a atomach. The transconti nental bubble hn rated ebortly and vniard had no princely peaflz to hia nama thin eren- fl«««n tboee who hid previously failed to And fir him enlogiatio term* hM errorrgh. Bat VOletd ie a big man phyal caUj and mentally and ha tamed defeat into rictoey. PrraHantHnnay la alao great'ia height morathan In belly and framo-fwC&m, circnmatanoe* of hia advent In the mil road world two mol* paopMona. Tha' with joyous clamor and wish that his career may hi as bright aa a Yakima summer day. —For batatas in jewelry, watches aad diamonds go to Keoehtar,t&enetr jeweler.