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The Yakima Herald. Volume I. TUB YAKIMA HERALD. Olcial Paper if Yatiaa Cointy. REED i COE, Proprietor!. IMI'KO BVEMV THiHRDA% • 12.00 PKR ANNUM. IN ADVANCE. Miotua hla I'p* tfffotiea. E. M. Rkep. E.UUS «ml Bminw M«n«iyr. PROFKSBIOSAL CARIjS. obobob Tvaaaa. w. t. milboy. l.». howibyt. B. B. MILBOT. TURNER. MU.ROV A HOWIJTT, Attorneys' ill 1 aiw, SOUTH UKISI, WASH. I* 8. Huwlett, ei-Becelver of PwbUf Moneys at the U. 8. Land Ofllce. will give Special altrntum to making ohl paj*n for SettUrt, and to Land Conlttli. •g. T. CATO I*. | L. C. PABBISH, Bprague. | North \ aklma. CATON & PARRISH. Attorneys at Law. practice In all the Comte of the feni- Sk UEce on First Hired, opposite the t ourt House. Vaklma. W. T. 1 H. J. HNIVELY, hwoUlOi XFnqgf “'>«** Attoi*ney at Law. jf nil.- ..Itli County Treasurer, at the t'owrt MIU practice In all tb* J. B. IB.VIB. | I <■ » »«»»»“ REA VIS. MIR ES * eIRAVES, Attorneys at Law. SSI-ws sxs asisanas burgh. W. T. 1 BUVABD WHITSON. j J °wSlU wi” PBBD PABBBB. Wal “ * “ North Yakima. I ALLEN, WHITSON k PA/IKER, Attorneys at Lt’,w. fiy Qlßce in First National 8. O. MORFORD, Attorney at Lav, Practice* la all Courts iu the TrrrUon E * peelal attention to Collections. .. O.Boe upstairs In Hill Block. North Ya. DaToTw. CAfttr. na. J. B. CHAP* AN - Biochemic Physiciam.*- plaeaac* treated according to Nature's law*. ' We Incite our friend# and all who belle e In true aclence and a«iv*ncement to call and see us. Calls attended.!" da* - or night, tlon free. 0(11 re over Cost Oillce, North \ akima WaaMiWf- wm. o. cos, M. n. «■"««• “• *>• COE A HEO, Physicians, Sirpois lid Accoucheurs. omce Honrs-* till 10 a. m..7t1Tl 4 p. m. and 7 UUS o'clock p. m Offlcc on Second atreet. near Allen & Chapman's. DR. J. JAY CHAMBERS, Physician and Surgeon, Kaa had Are years' pmetleo-ooe ywr Assistant "ulnwon of City Hospital. Baltimore. Kapeclal attention given to surgery. Obstetrics and ulaeaaea of Women. Office over Bushnell’a Drug Wow. mr-U O. M. «RA\ EB, dentist. All work In my line first clam. Ixx-al anesthet ize used to extract teeth without pain. Mo charge for nomination. iigp-Wfice over Pin* Wattonal ta*a. . J. T. KINGSBURY, (City Engineer.) Civil Engineer. WOmrg: Room Mo. 1. Kingsbury Build in" north Yakima, Washington. HALU DeWTTT & GARDNER, Civil Engineers. m* Ota UoW u< Onto Md«iW. Office Over First Kstlonal Bank. MISCELLANEOUS. Eire Wood & Draying. Vatoo rnatwo 1 dears, and amprmmr-d to Jo hauling at reasonable Agures. A. P. SWITZER, Contractor and Builder, Rtm YAKIMA, W. T., Will Contract «or the erection of all elamea of Weed!aßl haieSly ° ? lit According (« JUnement. UrillKi: Pint Nal’l Bank of North Yakima. OKct, la rear of Rodman A Kabelmau'., Yak Hotel Yakima. OOee hour.. nr unoui m of North Yakima. »»■ S^sar"'- A ' * KftSJ; sws j r Lavi.. Kow.nn WaixroH. *■ President Vice Preelrteot W. L. ■Tkiawaa, Caller. DOBS A ABN UAL BABBIBQ IfTiimß*. am. Ml Mk EieUm a hBMOk lalo. Mn amnox time uroun. NORTH YAKIMA, WASHINGTON TERRITORY, THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1889. noTirV: ton pi Ki.irvrio*. 11. 8. Land ornc-B at Xohtu Yanis W. T..f | J»:> :t. issj. e HE FORK T'lF, lIGN. REGISTER AND RE e elver of the f. S. District I mel olicf. Application of Ai--l.ll"* ‘UiiKer. oishnpol I* e I) loco c of Nlih)llml>> of the K man e'a he tile e'hurrh, font Patent of the I'til test Ms »-*t l«* e to ratel Atvailu* Jungcr s:ml hi* •hcccmi n> In n a« ltl*h<>|M «f the DieM i-«e •>( M»|i:aliy of sale! K ma t e atholle- I'b’ir. li, for It e taint* cm lira eel In the- raid sf. Joseph fsth In Ml*-1 a claim. Ihe name belmr In Yakima fe un y «f re •aiel, an t In the- JnrlMlicii.ni e.i rat i P.*'rl<t I and Olflre leiiel witlilu the* Jiirlxlie tint! •( the pine-eiec e»f Munim.l) ef the t.e.nian t Hi lie.tie- Church. Take aotho, that f. At-aMlii* fine e-r, R<>iraii f'atbedte hlahe wof tl e ItieNcae of Ni«i'allv /of, the Rowan < atrollc Chun h) in Washing on Ter rlorv, do I ere lev irate ntplh alien a* nnh 1 Hirhop to tl e II u. I cjc .tcr ainl Kc e l cre.f net Dlatrle-t I ainl euttev. to ir-u- my r a t u* n 1 of Mid Dlot-cm-of tin- Ron ho e ati-e hc I Inircn I anet of my All ceaMNS In o *'e e tell! cl met of hind ' herein etesa rle la* that eeMain n l-*i n • aim.! eeitnmeiul* known a* tl e St. <i«cpU Catholic Mission tTalm, In Vnklnia (' tint , Winelimvt n Terrlfor*; Pat aald »' pi I all n aim claim ia ; 1 made untie' and hv »ir need the icta ut re-ald, of the C'oneresa of the Unite I S'n ee e.f Ana tst 14. IMS anet March is 3, and (' e r.ghie the eln 1 and Ihetebv confc re-1 anet rested. The lauds e lain eel hy me the >atd Acyidhu tiinver, Bishop as a'etn-sa'd, lie u - a id in re- par- ! tle-nlarl dc»«-ril**d n« follow*, to-wit; Begin-1 ulna a' a p-dnt on the u trrli I a ik of the Atitan iim River In Section Eighteen ' s>. To..nahip | Twelve It’ii North of Kanire Hevenleea '*7 l I a-t ( of the Willamette Mcrid'ati. In ' nk.nui County. i W. T.. 47 chela* aonth of the. tin te se lion or tier on a line between Section* 7 and I', aim r inning then e noth <7 e-ha to; • cnee- west I -Jj chain*: the i*eaonth f e-ha n«; thenee ve*t , SO da ns to a point fie-' a n« south of ihe i| ar- | ter seefletn corner on I tie he’ween s«*t«iu* if I anet |R, In Township It, Neirth < f I anire l<. Fast j of Wll'ainettc Merldlnii; I' cii-co'ith chains: 1 thence-weal t chains to the west bexin.'s > lire) e»f aald Section IS; then e uh on aiei \.e-»t > bounds V line of rM id Se*« f ton i;t to the north bank nf aald Ahtanu UP e-r. and then phv the meanelera of the aald \htauum lll\e-r down i stream on the north I ank t<» the pla e of N-dn-, nine. e-ontnlnliiK Four II mdreei und Seventy-, ae en f477) a-res. no re* e.r les*. Ile e!»y give nev’leee»f n-y inteti hui fe» male-' C l anef to e-s'aMish the* claim of the »ald | nan t'athedle t'hnren In and to the land cm haueed In the st. Joseph ratlodic M'ssjon < la ni, by nrovlne the orctu afi- n ami use f He same bv the Fathe-s of said e hurch Pr missl- nan purtatsea as i rovielel *n sai l Ads so u* to entitle a patent to laaite tl ttvh r from tl c I’nl e*e| sta e-s to me. Aegldln* JMilter, and m - aue e ea*->r* In oTldr. aa Bishops of the Dl itar of v |«- nallv, In trial, for the toes, pup ses and t-eneflt of the Roman t atto 110 I’hitreh: said presif to las tna e before the Hon. Re-lster iinet I ee-el' er of the United Kla’re ldatrie-1 l and Of re at North Vuk- Ima, W ashlnao n Territory, on the tSIb * "V e>f SeptemU-r, iss". a' n'riork of 'I at • av. l-y the testimony «t ihe f llowlna w-ltne-a-ea. to-wlt: ‘Eugene Ca«jno-ie e Id rouse- and loni« Joaepl n'llerhomer, of New Westminster, I r tlah Col umbia: Edward Oa*e. of The Imllea city, btateof Oreg n: Naioles n Metii llvarv, <f the City of Van onver, Washington Trrrltor.-; Peter H. Fox. of tl e Cl'y of Va o-'a. Mate of Ore-« n Webster 1.. Stabler, \nthenrv llerle an I l anle Lviieh. of N nh Yukltra. Wa*h'ii!{leiii Terrlt r ; Andrew tier als, of Yakima < It *. Washington Territory: and Indian Knea* and Ineliim of Hlraeoe-. Yakin a fi iiiitv. \Va*blii/ti n Terrlt'rv. anddoenwea’an evidence to ls*«nl»- mltte.l on the hearing of the mat er. A KG'Dll'll UNGER, jy 15 fit Bishop <d the liien-eseot NiaejnaUy. IRA M. KRITZ. Register USTorttL 12T akima LUMBER YARD! G. 0. NEVIN, Proprietor. LUMBER. DOORS. SASH AND BLINDS, LATHS, SHINGLES, AC. Aleut for tlie Celebrated Averill Faints, tie lest Faints on tie Market AND A LARGE SUPPLY ALWAYS ON HAND. Office and Yard. Wwt Side of Bwilim.l Korth of Depot. North Yakima. W. T. Summons. TsaaiTOKV or Washington.! Cock ft or Yakima. I Martha If. Ja Hnmr. In the District Court Plaintiff. of the 'territory of Wn.liln-'t. it. and f«» the Fourth Judl.la vs. > District there f. halo ing tennsal North Yak ima. Vaki-ia Count). -Hrnry Jabdihr. Iu raid Territory. Del endant. lot*. To the above us med Defendant: Yoh a e l eteoy n. tilled II at Mani a 11. *ar dlne. of Vaktnia fountv. W«»lilnirt- n Terntor . Plan lir. has hi ed a complaint against ».iiln tl.e District foil t.f the Fourth —li.lal Id - tried, holding tcrsi at North Ya Ima. whl 1 will route on t » Is- heard sixtydav s after the first publication of this summ us. to-a It: si tv day after the firs t day of August, .sss*. a id lines, you ai'pear an I ans..er the sa ue on or hefoie the first da ot o< to cr. itsr, the-ante w.ll he 'aken as confesaed. uni the prate- of the said com plaint granted. The .Meet and prayer of said e. mp'alnl Is to a mud the bon «s of 11 atrlmon and obta.ii a deei ee of divorce from the sa d De fendant, Henry . ardlue. and for tl.e < ustodv • f her two ehildrrn. Ms v and father ’ardiite. n|ion the go nnds of a andonmen* and de.e tlon for one >car and more, to-*ii; from t'e ehrht day of Fetornarv, isaa. n raw particulaly «e ftirth In complaint now < n flic. Witness m* hand and the seal of »ald Court this »;tb day of 'n-y. -M». fsEAfll IIAkRY A. CLARKE, f’erk. By (iRoKAiK W. GAK"IN '». DepU'v. Lewis r. Parhsr. Att rnev for Pla ntlff. a fit unci ti mvmm. XT OTIC R Id HEHKtvY OIVEN TO THE [M stoc kh- Idem of the Na i he* and t owv rfcee plU'b Company : That a meeting of the said Stockholders will he I eld at theo 'ceof Whits- n ♦ Parker, North Yakima wa hiiigt n, on Satur day, the 'fist day of Sep cmher. .* V a the hour ot I o’llork p. m.. f rthepnrpoeoi votingoo the question as ’o whether 'he • at>‘ id St. ek oi the said font; any si all be In. r.a-cd from A*.«» to EM. A'. Dated rifftm J. r. STEWART. President.' W. . I.INfE, JO-KI H SIKCt'ENSON. J . r*w»«. t n v -res te- blast imctrr hxsmjtih ay niiTUXsmp. • hereby riven that the partnemh p Jw beretofor- eiiam be. wee i, tie •• r a'gned, under the firm neme of la *en Poaler A- Co., .atnl* dav diaaolv, d by *’•■"■"l onaent. »I 1 • eh'B due »a d Bno at- »yablc to N. J. . a re i. who aas imea all liabll Ilea of Mid • nn. K. .1. lit.AO'- N. J.T. r t.'TEB. • *. J. KKIKbr.N. Dated at North Yakima. July *. IW. 1 1 An Economical Fence, IHAVR now the eole right for Yakima Conn ie for one of the be* wire fence, ever pat *°'lr a ran mi»»u in nnr. Wire and for making on hpnd. Thoae A COMPETITIVE SYSTEM. | Competition Creates Repulsions and Dis integration Follows. *a(nrc Admit* <ff ('•Mwrlldeilnii •r 'lrukU»M lMnimoi le Ihf neeliitprlng ef Dawlnm. Whenever we work counter to or against ( nut «re. defeat will lie the result. This is ' true in every relation of life-. Whether practiced individually or an* communities 1 the result will lie defeat. Neeture, or the God of Nutuie, vorkw on the plan of at tract i->n und cohos on. The aim ho ileiihe plumtii in tl.eir orbits by the power of a: traction, or gravitation; the planets hold their satell.tes by the* same lower, and no ma tter into wh..l department oi creation we turn our investigation, the same law is found in full force. 11l the animal kingdom we observe that the lieasts go iu herds, the fowls in fl«s ks the fishes in shoals. Naturally, ti>au I* no ex. ept on to the rule. The iati.ilv is I the starting point; then groups into I ncighlsirhouds, villages, towns, ills, ( states and natiema. All move in pet fed haru.ony with Nature's laws until we come to the enactment of laws to regulate the l social re lations and husiue-ss r. lat os of est. hto each. Here the natural Is ig nored and the urtilhiul subs ituted; sol- Hshnees, avarice, gree d; there eonstitn e the basic principle, the web and trie woof of human law. Instead of attraction, we have repulsion; instead of ceihesieitt we have disintegiation. .'■elf-inte rest is eon cod* el to be- the mainspring of business, und tneu, high and low in the e-bur. b and out of it assume that society cun lie no bight r than this. The idea that “each ought tee or «an esh etu nth* rs belter than themselves,” us Paul said they should, is Ireute <1 as visonarv. The great law e>f the political economists of the world, (he lew ii|N>n which all the business relations ol Ife rests, is competition. They nov r cease hi extol ainl glor fy this law. We arc lectured over un«l over, again and again, on the lieauth a und virtues < f ‘•just competition,” ‘’natural competi t on,” “healthy eom|tet!un,” etc., wh u the sum total ot the whole system is that ‘‘might makes tight,” the strung :he wi uk and instead of “surv.val” ot me last it is ’survival” e>f the meanest. limi.it ss ia a hu„e grab game. Iy it the heat and highest development of uwn’< nature is possible. Tne church tr.es os hard an it cun to tnk h • supreme love to God and univer sal love to man,” without inti rferimr with this «on tiler law. It tries to develop die good, expand the sympathies, enlurgi tne lecling 01 love and hrotherliood Ik tween man and in an, in ita pulpit Duell ing on the Sabbath day, but all through the wiek this Satanic method of business counter.ctM fully and completely its efforts, and developa the avarue, the greed, the lioggislmcss in man, uu.il, to the successful coiu|Mtilor, the heart i turned to stone. No man can be a Chris t an and do business on the competitive line; he must rise ah >ve this law or lot ted all claim to disdph ship ot the Mas t. r. The law • f »ou.js nsation is the la-, of laUtr. His rewards will lie given to men * accord ng to their works.” This world-w ide, greatly renowned law of com lietition counteracts and auta e ouizesb-dh. (that if Nature was to reverse lurla. s and go into the “combine” and ‘truat” imsiniM? What if old Sol was to con clude to monopolize the whole system? Th -ii he would say to the planets, ‘‘Con e into mv Itosoin, you are too small to stand alone.” Wouldn't we have a warm time of it? What anarchy and chaos would r. i>cn throughout the solar system, lint suppose this freak of nature should e • .end to the heavenly hosts that best i d the sky; take in the constellations, de a my the* s-veet .nJuenccsofmep eidos,” ai d i.reuk tlie 'bunds ot orioti,” i.ud the grand combine should gather into one hu,e pile all the material universe, the • youwoul I have “monopoly "ami ‘mists' mi a magni iceul s ale. This is exactly wh it men.are trying to do on a a.uad scale in business. The great rai.roads absorb the sinall; the great foundry eats up the little one; the gnat factories ..ni.ei .tosiid„reuterhyforming* trusts, ’ so us to gulp down at one swahow all U.e wealth and laisir of the counny. livery line of business is Isiund humi and foot by this law of comuetit.on. The tariff is pre eminently controlled hy it. Tnruu„h tie w hole canvass in which tlie tariff and that alone was said to be the issue, we don’t remember of seeing a sensible and cone t soluiion oi this tariff question. Hie argument by the dembcr.t' was (list fats r would l<e be..elded by a little reduction. The r. publican s argument or asKcition was that tlie tariff protected labor. Men shouted themselves hoarse on a thousand undone platforms with this cry that tariff is for tlie protection of I .Dor. The tariff don’t protect labor for ih.ssimplenasou: it can’t. Com pell ion won’t |ierinit it. \\ e pmiiose to demon strate tills. Manufactnring, mining, and all the great iuduetrlea everywhere, are i not benevolent • n.erpr.me; tliey are pro-e- j cuted to make money. Well, now se : will suptwse there are fifty or a hundred , in the same line of business, more orlese. The one that can turn out g< od* at a pro; I lor the lowest price, vill sell .he greatest amount, of course; and unless Hie others can sell aa»heap they w ill l« | driven to the wall. Nobody can di-pu.e that. Will, now, what lolto.s/ This 1 follows inevitably: As ail can buy the raw nmf risl ut the same prl****. it follow# 1 that the one who can Imy lalmr the cheap est will win. Don’t you now see how the tariff protects l.ilmr? Just like the master pro!* ted Ids slave. In order to " huv lultor’’ i'hwp, they send to Europe to, <(Ved, e the slums and bring over the most degraded creatures on (tod's footstool to take lh« pla<«s of Aimri-an citizens; exeryls dy knows thin !a true. The pa u I er. criminal, dirty, nuked, pitiable crea ture* that have lieen reduced to Inde scrilwhle degradation hv thin glorious law of competition-—nu-n, as one has said that enn live on anythinir from “ raw hide to w rou dit nuila,” are brought hy whip load* to depress (protect) t lie labor n arket. Yet. wane-worker* about themselves ho*r-e in praise of the delusion. When Mr. Dl.iine, in Ida New York speech, be wail hy saving that the “tariff affected lalor from peeling to core, and from con hack to |>eelinir attain," he ought to have exphdmd how it affecte<l labor, and tak ing hi« friend Carnegie as an illustration he could have enli htened hla audience Mr. Carnegie made 41,500,000 last year that lie could have divided with his work men; hut did he? Not much. Then he conM have further elucidated his subject hy ti.ing the testimony of Mr. lilanchard i lumlier merchant of Chicago, a* given More the “tariff commission." He tes tified ua follow*: “I am high tariff on lumlier, hut low tariff on iron, wool cot ton, leather. glass, etc. I will tell you why. I own timlier lands and sell | Mum page (that I*, timber atamiug) I«• sides, 1 ojK-rate largely myself, and tin arltf puts money in my pocket. I get -'2 I er IOuO feet more for toy stumpage, and f. |ier UiOO feet more for my Isianls. 1 have just sold 5.0.) ,00j fe» t of lumlier .Now, 42 jier 10 0 f.et on 6,00 ,0 0 is just 10, tut ami that isjhc difference betweer tii h tariff and free trade on lumlier. lam Id h tariff, I am, on lumlier. They tell us this hleased tariff is to pio‘e>t Aiueri an labor. What do you Hiipi>ose I d.d with 410,0 0; divide it with my work men? No. 1 put it In this calfskin wal let. I did. Of all n-y workingmen I am the only one protected. Wages d -pend on the supi ly and demand, my friend and not on taxes. When you see two men after one boas, wages are low; whei y u mi* two bosses a.ter one man, waves are huh; that is the whole of it, theory. rlmiple and practice.” Wasn’t that h meat ? Y« titis as true in every line oi protection. The tariff always goes Into the wrong man’s junket.— HVtfon Leada. .1 Traulrr (Inal. Having returned from a three month* tour in Kiimf*. old ex-Senator tabnr, c»f Color id*•, is reeking with recital* of in cresting expereuces. Barring the trivial cirumst.ince that they quarantine* cainat him in Scandinavia, under tlx rroueotis impression that he wan a Mor mo’i pros. lyter, there was nothing, to me the word* of our so -iety reporter, t. nur the harmony of the occasion. W hi he wa-* in Italy the senator tried to bn ome of the pi tares and statuary that he saw in the Vati -an, and inasmuch ns hi off. re I very I lieral pr!«*e*, he thinks th the proprietor made a mistake in not sell n,». Traveling from Edinburgh to Lun ina th • senator met a very charm in .'entleman named Allred Tennyson; sue jiicioned that he was a newspaper man I«caiise he was so well (mated, and thb suspicion was cunflrme«l When Mr. Ten nyson recited a number of poems, which he assured the senator were original. ‘ It s a wonder to me,” said the sena tor, “that you don’t print some of them I-oems.” Mr. Tennyson made no reply, but he looked rather surprised. “Oh. I mean It,” said the senator; “I know poetry when I see it—l sat next !• John In ,nils in the senate chamber for thr-e months, and moreover, I rnn the I e dvllle Uf.nld for two yean. Ther are four things in this world that lima cynosure on, and they are minim proper ty diamonds, ruffled night-shirts, and poetry. Now, I’ll stake my reputation that some of them poems of yours are i* g»»od deal above the average-*-particnlar ly ih it one you recited alsxit the crick.” " You I ke ‘The Brook’ ” ‘‘Ves; and that other one about Maud and the garden; they’ve tot the right ring— fl»e> ’re full ot the divine iuflatus.” Mr. Tennyson did not say mu.h, but the senator, who likes to en-oura-je s*raggllng talent, uasured trim that if he ever wanted to publish Ida poems in bonk form, he could get a check covering the expense simply by addressing H. A. W. T.d-orat Denver. The senator did not think very much of Westminster Abbey; he objected to the air of snobbishness which ole ta'ned (here. He ran out to Stratford* upon*Av«m for a day and |4aced a -40 I ton | net upon Shakes|<eare’s tomb. He sought in vain to learn enjit of the wherealiouts and condition of the play wright’s f imily; wanted to do something for them if they were needy. Hadron* trib ited to the Bartley Campbell fund and as Shakespeare's pieces had also been played iu his Denver opera-lmuse he thought it no more than right to h< Ip mi the d ad author’s widow and children in c: sc they were hard up.—C .ioogo .Von. la latenattsaal PrwiWity. foursviile Vimi ier-Joui oat: Let ns not lie aurprised if we presently hear that Beatrice Mary Victoria Feo era’s b .by h; s been named Benjamin Harrison Rat* teoberg. WAITING TO MARRY. layer Wheelwright, ef Tueme, Stirts i Hatrimonlal Agency. krona a be ore ol Bseara i:aat •ME Wreet* Who Waal to bo U ltc*..U kal They Nay. Tacoma Stun: Mayor Wheelwright took ag immenae bundle of letters and impera out of hia |»stoUice box this inorninx. The most of the letters were addressed to “W.” A. Wheelwright and when His Honor saw them he groaned audibly. Pyin|uHh‘xing friends gathered near and anxiously inquired as to wheth er the mayor was well or not. Reply ing only with a sickly, enught-out-in-the a I ley-after dark smile, t lie mayor lock d tlie secret in his breast and retired hastily to h's private otfiee In the eliamlier of eommen-e Irtilldlng to l*e alone with his misery. The (Boston hoax is heeoming burden some. The letters were all from fair, young, but lonesome eastern damsels w ho had seen the Poston neAspajier des patch almut the mayor of fair and famous Tacoma writing for wives for his country men, and they had addressed him with' the very commendable and praiseworthy j intention of securing one of these bus bands. From the tone of the letters the young men of the oast have ben neglecting their duty asthe girls want bus • •amis awful had and quit k enough to put a special delivery stamp ou some of the letters. “How do yon account f.»r the origin of the Boston disputh?” was asked the mayor this morning. ‘‘l have not the slightest idea,” said he. “What will you do with the letters?” “Preserve them as curiosities,” said the mayor with a resigned, vhtimißcd smile. The Joke haa a serious aide to it. Good I oking, industrious, virtnoua women, young and middle-aped, who are toiling day after day in fa-tor.es, shop* and stores, in a hard srramble after a respeii aide living, willing to l>e«*oiiie a wife to the man who will treat them well. The> are willing to work for him for a home «nd proie lion, and many wonld doubt less take rare of a little home desirably, and make excellent wives and ,a happy fan ily dr- le. But a joke is a joke, and .flen »TU* I, an thi y will soon learn by the nileme that anawi ra their letters. The mayor allowed a Se rt reporter to take copies of some of the letters. Some of the letters are scan-elv legible, but the mllowing are com para! ixely w. 11-written, nd eating some educstion, and in several ■ases a degree of refinement. Here is a letter from a good girl 1 1 Cleveland. 0., who is w tiling to pit her .mis around some decent man's neck and lie called wife; Cleveland, Ohio, Aug. 2, ’B9. To the mavor of Tacoma De*tr*<ir: Would you please give me lie address of some honest, intelligent entleman ot Tacoma wiio has matri nony in view. lam of tJennan de*i*ent and 23 year »f age. 1 am a good honseke per -n t ■onsider.d intedigent and go si lookin' Ido not wish to put you to any incon .•eulence, but woul I lie much obli e«l u you If you will favor me with an answ. r. Hoping to receive an answer soon. I re main, Very Respectfully Yours, • Eva Hive s. No. 21 Noble street, Clevelan I, <). Here is a dear, good soul ot forty sum mers, who is willing to sacrifice herself nd s lovely 10-yesr-old .laughter on th marriage alt-ir. The widow is a little aki.ti-h, as she do »’t si ,n her n ime, but she can be found if anyone wants Ixr. rt.is is an elegint chance f.»r a widower and bis son. Colton, Aug. 3,1889. ToW. A. Wheelwright: If it is so that you are in need of wo men, I will come and bring my dsught. r. who la nice looking ami sixteen vears of ige. lam a little (taut 4 o nivaelf. 1 will -nine at once if you will send os a through Icket. lam a widow. I can give re er ■nces. Address, box 29 5, Colton. Cal. I*. B.—Will give my name when I hear from you. Follow ing is a letter from two girls, aho are willing to come as soon as they ■an make an engagement with the rl Jit sort of a man. The girls want a home and are evidently working girls. They ire recommended to any of the young men of Tacoma who reply to their letters, as eligible: 8 vs* C'E, N. Y , Ang. 2, 'B9. Mr. Wheelwright Dear Sir: Seeing the advertisement i » the evening Herald, of Align* 2. myseli and a younx lady friend are de-irons of a home if we can have an honest, industri ous hoaband. We do not care for wealth only so os to he mmfortabfo. doping to hear from you soon, we re main, Your obedient servants, M.tav E Wadowoith, May A. I/>iku«r. 620 Mulberry street. Syracuse, N. Y. Here is a willing girl, who site down hard on the men of her town. Mie is in clined to lie a little affectionate, but means business and don’t like either liquor or foolishness. Tliey seem to suf fer for husbands in Cleveland. Cleveland. 0., 1005 Cedar Avrurs, I Aug. 2, 18S9. S My dear Mr. Wbeelarixbt:- Dear Mr: The article 1 saw in the! Hr aid % Id there were a go#d many men oit at your pla- e that wanteti women and that they did not indulge in liquor. That ia more than we can say about the men here. If you please, f von have a goid man about 30 years old I would like to get married. I can do any kind of work If yon k iow of any man tbit waste a wife foil him to wrfce*aJ give me h ; .a a lelreaa. There are three or four girl* he re that want hntehanda ami they wouleln't write. 1 told them I would write and aec if I hud anv hucctim for there In not ii man iu thia city we would have. Would rather marry a Mranger than any. If 1 get an answer will send my photo.-rapli in return mail. I am a farmer's daughter and know all about farming. It is my delight. I must close now. Goal-bye, honing to hear from you anon. Kij'.arkth G. e.s. IKAD l\ LOVE AT IUCTT. A bntfriariii SM» Tran taaist Hi* Son Wn*t Let Him Harr). I’liineus T. Iturton is the oldest citiren of the quaint old town of (iranhy. Mr. Barton has almost readied the niut'eth milestone on the journey of life, hut feels so young that he has fallen in love again. He is worth from f3»O oto .‘SO, KO. His family «»f four sons an«l ore daughter <k» not want a stepmother, and are trying to change the old man's mind on the sub ject. He was brought hack from the sta tioti a few days ago while on his way to get married. In fart, the old man today is a close prisoner, and is not allowed t move outside his farm, lest he make an* other break to lead his sweetheart to the fiarson. He declares, however, that he j will get married again and that he is old enough to know what he wants. The I • Id man's story of love ami childidi in | ruination is, indeed, a romance in it-elf It was not un' il a week ago that his amily din ov* r <1 that he was courting a wi low in Springfield, one in Hartford and an other m Bel hertow n, ami it is said that a beautiful widow of this dty is among Ida admirers. One day lost week the old man hitched up his team, and after changing his old farm clothes for his Sunday suit and cr wling into the buggy, remuiked to hie daughter: ‘ 1 am going to S|»ringflold to gel mar ried.” ' To get married, father?” The daughter looked at her gray haired sire hal'-amazed ami half-bewildered, hut liefore she could speak another word the old man was on he way to marry the charming widow of 5), who said she loved him. He drove to I’elchertnwn, w here he In tended to take the cars to As soon as he had le.'t the yard, hit dan:liter ran down the fields and told her husband, and the latter hitched up tin astest horse on the farm and started after the aged wooer. When the non-in-law got almost into Relchertown the <»M man was se< n about hall a mile ahead. He turned around and mw he wa* pursued. The old man loves a fast home and soon had the cne he wan driving breaking the record. He lined the whip freely and dashed into th< town of Tel. hertown on a run. Ilia son-in-law, who wan driving like lelm, caught him at the de|iot. With ■ earn streaming down Ida fa«-e, he lieg P ed to Ite allowed to go to Springfield, but the young man made Id n return. Heia now kept' Under the watchful eyes < f bin aun’a family. A reamer«alhd anil could not et "biro to any am thing on the subject of hia love affair. The selectmen have decided to inventigat • the case and com pel the aona to let him do aa he pleases but the sons have arranged for a hearing to lie held at Northhampton, August H. when they will try to have court appoint a guardian over tlie old mao and his money.— Holyoke If mortal. Tlf Latest fna tie Wits. The atamp window of any postofflre la a sort of Li.-k observatory.— Rochetter Kt preit. In spite of their proverbial alowneM telegraph messi tigers go ala ut with a great deal of detpatib.— Potto.. Pott. When a washerwoman ehangea her place of resilience, one nu y ask her “where she hangs out now” «ithont using slang.— Potion t 00. ier. When the cashier glrdetb up his loins and fleetb in the silen o and darkness • f the night, then docs the ex-chc* ker drpait with the exchequer. —Tent Home Ax ptett. Happy lather—“ Joe, old boy, give me nullable name* for my tain babies.” Joe—“ Are they boys or girls'.'” “tilrls.” “How will Kate and Duplicate do?” Time. “Will the glaas-hlowers stiike?” Is the question asked by an esteemed contem porary. It suggests another inquiry: “Will the glass strikers Wow?”— Wath ington Cnpi at. “Fattier,” said Willie, who had just been corrected. * that strap is liereditary, isn’t it?” “I don’t know that it is.” “Uut it iteacenda from father to son, does n’t itV'-iWiuhing on Capital. ■h b Ihnipjlt i F«r«. An exchange gives the following with reh mice to feeding an appetite which ran be as easily controlled as pandered to: Every time a man takes a 1J rent drink of whisky he is swallowing a good farm at the rate of 1.0 square feet a gulp. There are 43,000 square feet in an acre, and placing the value nt f43.0»*. makes the Und worth I mill per square foot, 1 cent per 1 square feet, and 10 cents for 1 0 square feet. Three drinks a day, with; its consequent loss of time and interests, | would clean out a homestead of 160 acres i long before a man would really be reedy to qu’t active work and retire to the, privacy of an almshouse. Number 29. TKTifIPAHI One of tbe lost Plctinsqa Region m the American Continent. **»«••»" IMS n«r« AtwelMe %r m Roael I rani VaklnM—A MM. 4<n Wenlrrlnnl. Some* thrty mi let* went of Yakima is an almost hidden wonderland that nearly equals in scenery the far famed Yellow* stone park. It is a country of vast ex tent extending far into the beait of the Cascade mountains, but owing to tbs difficulty of access heretofore existing it has not been frequently explored. What is known as Tietan park is one of the moat picturesque regions on the continent. The Cowyche valley extend ing wcoot ward from Yakima rises gently fur some twenty miles and thus forma the foothill* of the Cascade mountains. Traveling toward the mountain range hriu., a the tourist to a great elevation w here he may look back over the vast pi .tins and valleys of Eastern Washing ton, upon a scene of , INDKHCaIBABI E OBANDKIB. Entering the timber and journeying up ward n few miles further brings him to the precipitous ver.e of what is known aa Tietan park or Iwsin. Clambering\p by the side of sotpe great, towering crag, and looking down over this wonderful region, the sight is grand and appalling beyond description. A- far as the eye can reach, this nigged rim on wh Hi he stands mar be seen by the tourist, circling around the basin or park that lies many thousand feet below. The whole region is heavily timbered and the great moss-grown rocks, rising here and there in wild confusion, one shove tlie other, sag test the castles and towers and deserted cathedrals of some enchanted fairyland, "Where iplendor fstta on msrUc walls, A.i'l nolle* old In »tory." I o scene on earth could surely be taught with more awful grandeur than the Hunset of a summer’s day when view* 0.l from one of these towering crags. Winding tbrou.li the great expanse of woods In low, the Tietan river and numer ous smaller streams ap)«ar at such depth like so many whining TIIBKADH OX SHA KE upon a dark-hlue background, the little s|N>ts of wild meadow here and there i seem l.ke liny points of gold. The som bre shades of towering peaks fall hi deep ening black across the forest wide, and rugged rocks ranging rudely from the heights above, suggest a troop of myriad monster shopes stealing down the moun ts'n’s side. Suspended in a sea of golden clouds, the great ml sun hangs far away up hi the other shore. Sinking lower and lower, he sifts with golden furrows, the gloom that hovers across the vale and s'orms the shadowed haunts with a thou sand bursts of tire. Filling theever-bend skies with tints of rosy light, “On ihe edge of glow-lug heaven. He xmlles In triumph on the night" Such is a faint description of a sunset s one upon the towering ruin of the rag ged mountains that sumund Tietan. Climbing down toward the level ground that stretches so far below, the scenery is not to lie described in wonts. Kveu the (winter’s skill would fail, ao wide the view mid so appalling is ita grandeur, bunking far off to the west a mountain stream , fed perhaps by THE STEBXII. SHOWS Of Mount Tacoma, is seen to leap over the rim and fsll, as if in gathered mist, within the forest bank thousands of feet Mow the spot where it makes Its first mad plunge. Following the path that leads through the forest, the tourist has acanwly left the edge of the tall cliflk that stand up perpendicular walls when he reaches on an ice-cold stream that issues from a cavern and winds its wav through the woods toward the river. Water more deli. lons and refreshing is not found. Farther on are numerous mineral springs that )<o'l up fmm the level groond, stmni |y char ed with soda and iron. The Tietan has ever been a sort of sacred spot among the Indians and many strange 'e .ends ding about the mountains and crars and springs and streams within these circling mountain walls. IXWAH TRADITIONS. One tall mountain that stands in the center of the group is supposed to have been the throne or abiding place of the Great Father. Each of the surrounding mountains represented the meeting place of some of the tribes of Indians. These s mon-t-ona owing, to the peculiarities of composition, are of different cokes, end tin** «mors are believed lo nave repre sented the different colored blanketspecu lia- tn their respective tribee. Here it was t’.ta TUB OBBAT CHICS Was wont to call the tribes of men to gether—en ?h to his tribal mountain—and c Mim-il with them “In the brave days of old.” These were perhaps the same far off days w hen the morning start sang to gether an I when the Great Spirit was ac customed t« viniting the nation* of the far east in pillars of fire and en the tups of tb * rest mountain*. This region of as torsi wonders is eoen to be ace wsiWe, It la said, by a road lo be constructed from Yakima, through a pass discovered tlie present season, that soak ing Tietan park a convenient resort for is ty ota*e FalU Artirw.