The Weiser Signal. IDAHO’S GREATNESS. Indian Vitlle-v. ! Notice—Boundaries of Election Precincts. Down around St. Anthony, Inaho, Farmers are very busy haying, of In compliance with an •der of the they have a little wheat land, a9 can ; which they have a bountiful crop, Board of County Commissioners, in and INVEST AT WEISER, IDAHO THURSDAY. JULY 19, 1894 for the County of Washington, in ihe be seen by the following extract from Grain and gardens are looking fine, ! State of Idaho, made mi entered of re- j: Washington County, the Land of Many Resources! Homes for Thousands! Miles of Grazing Lands I an exchange from that section : but there are lots of grasshoppers cord on tile ninth day of July, in the tear 1894. Hundreds of Farms! Millions of Saw Logs! Gov. Altgeld doesn't care whether “An estimate on the power of the and we fear they will take them. Notice is hereby given, that the follow ing is the name and general description of O- — O his bean-shooter breaks window lights water which glides uninterruptedly Mr. Davenport, of Emmett, is in V* electing precincts, the name of the regis Wf.iskk. the County Seat of Washington County, and Metropolis of Western Idaho, in the White House or not. over the falls at St. Anthony, shows our valley doing dentistry work. trar of each, and the time during which I' thriving incorporated town of 1.000 inhabitants, It is the nearest railroad point and headquarters for a large district of that it would grind the wheat that Mrs. Berger presented her husband registration may be made for the County agricultural, stock-raising and mining lands, which extend for 150 miles along the Weiser and Snake rivers. There nre several good and suffi of Washington, Stale of Idaho, at thegen- SU could be raised on a piece of ground with a fine boy Sunday, the 16th,and This county contains many fertile valleys, which for richness of soil and consequently large yields of wheat, oats, hav and cient reasons why President Cleve cral election lo be held on the first Tuesday grain of all kinds, can be equaled by but few places, excelled by none. Weiser has a two-story brick school house with iu 100 miles square,estimating the yield Joe is very happy. after the first Monday of November, in the itflcienl corps of teachers: a substantial court house: the best roller Hour mill in the state, of 150 barrels daily capacity; a $20,090 laud would not look well in military year 1894., to wit: at 20 bushels per acre. Now 100 Lindsay and Anderson have re and a $10.000 hotel: a bank, newspaper, livery stables, mercantile establishments. &c. uniform. Precinct No. 1. Weiser. The noted centers of the Middle slates consider 25 bushels of wheat per acre an extra yield, and it is for them: but it is not Om miles square meai)9 a pretty fair sized turned from their mine in Long val Beginning at a point on Snake River at uncommon in Washington county to harvest 50 bushels to the acre, a yield which cannot be surpasssed. Another point to be I im Senator Call is the latest recruit to ' »nsidered is this: that the soil here is everlasting: not like that of the Mastern and Middle stales, of four or five inches depth, wheat farm, but it also expresses some- ley. They think when they get their the month of Rock Creek, thence up said Ou the ranks of those who blackguard creek to tin-summit of Mon roe Creek Butte but from 20 lo 40 feet down, the soil continuing the same richness as the surface. These lands being brought under a system of t thing like the size of the country 1 ditch out they will get lots of gold, thence along the divide between the waters irrigation, not costing one fourth what the making and re-making of soil does the eastern farmer, good crops are a certainty each in the newspapers for printing the truth which would be made tributary to They got $20 out of their mine and of Jenkins and Monroe Creek to a point year, theyields not depending upon seasonable rains, which come as often out of season as in. but every farmer irrigates his lands about them. on said divide west of the dividing line oy his ditches, and thus is independent of the very elements upon which depend lue success or failure of the eastern farmer. St. Anthony and which is suitable for only worked three days, between the lands of Barton and Palmer Many farmers devote large tracts of their lands to the cultivation of alfalfa and other kinds of hay. The former is the i If it wasn't the year tor Congres wheat raising. Several small children around are on said Monroe Creek, lhence i east- most profitable hay, which yields 2» ions per acre and three crops can he harvested per year, thus maikng nearly 8 tons. Sir erlv direction across said creek on sain For hay there is always a good market, tanging from $7 to $10 per ton. sional elections some sensible and One hundred miles square, means suffering severely with the whooping line to Mann creek to the section line of For potatoes and other vegetables, this section has no equal. Au acre, to potatoes with proper care will produce 20 U ns, helpful legislation might be obtained 10,000 square miles, and embraces cough. Sections 17 and 20 in Township eleven which can be shipped to outside markets with profit. North of Range four West of Boise Méri Fruit of all descriptions is most profitable—apples, peaches, pears prunes, etc.—the quality and flavor of which cannot be from Congress. 6,400,000 acres of land; at 20 bush Pete Anderson’s rheumatism is dian. the té along said line and East to excelled by the state of California, which is considered to be the garden slate of the Union. di els to the acre, we have 128,000,000 j worse the last few days, and he has I the Weiser River Iheucedue South to the Cattle, horses and sheep graze on all our hills, and thousands of head of each are annually shipped to the great stuck mar There will be no German court if : Cbm UI v line. Hie ce West on said line to kets of the world. m bushels of wheat; at 40 cents per ■ the whooping cough too, which is-. Snake River, thence down said river lo Our climate is mild and lieallhful. While cyclones, blizzards, floods, grasshoppers and all those calamities are raging in lo Emperor William carries out his an- the plac. bushel, this wheat would bring, in I pretty severe on him. f beginning. eastern states they are unknown in Idaho. Tl nouuced intention to banish from Registrar: U. M. Harvey. Our mountains are supplied with an unlimited quantity of rich ores—gold, silver and other precious metals—and there are round numbers, $51,000,000. It' Our very satisfactory term of court all scandal mongers. j Precinct No. 2. Maun C'reek. today many rich unlocated prospects which will, in the near future, yield fortunes to those who invest in them. We nave in tfa would make sixteen million barrels of school closed the 9th. Beginning at the North-east corner of lids county the richest copper mines west of the Rocky mountains—namely, the Seven Devils—situated about ninety miles north of Weiser, near the head-waters of Ihe Weiser river. The country surrounding tile Seven Devils is rich in gold and silver—found ai Regardless of bis personal sym flour. It would require fifty mills of Sam Logan has just returned from Weiser Precinct on the Weiser River. f I thence up said river to the divide between in quartz and placer mines. Washington county also contains the nourishing camp of Mineral city, twenty miles north of tii Weiser, and Ruthburg, fifty miles from Weiser. The entire trade of the famous mining camp of Warrens, in Idaho county, pathies the first duty of every patri a thousand barrels capacity per day, DeLamar, where he sold a load of Sage Creek and Thousand Springs Valley, ol conies to Weiser. otic citizen is to aid in the mainte running constantly, to grind the wheat. eggs. He reports very dull sale. thence along said divide to a point called Talc Mountain. I hence West lo the sum- A railroad has been projected from Weiser to the Seven Devils, and arrangements have been eousumated for u preliminary M nance of law and order. It would require a train of forty- Win. Linder started to DeLamar mil of Monroe Creek Kutte, thence along survey. In additii to the large mining ■glon this road will open, it will pass through the fertile and populous valleys of Middle. tl four cars, running eneli day in the last week to haul wood. tile Easterly and Northerly boundary of The trouble with the Pullman mon Weiser Precinct to the point of beginning. Salubria, Indian and Council, and penetrate the finest and most extensive timber bell in Idaho m year, to haul that amount of flour out July 17. opoly was that it tried to make the Registrar: K. E. Utley. o- -o of the country. It would place some Precinct No. St, Middle Valley. wages of employes bear tiie brunt of AI.FRED EOFF, President. W. S. BRUCE, Sec. and Treas. 1) thirty millions of dollars in the hands Importance of Good Roads. Beginning at the North East corner of the bald times, without reducing its .... .ii. „ —tl —..Creek Precinct and following the CALL ON OR WRITE TO THE n of the workingman annually to handle At the recent world s congress of divide between Sage Creek and Thousand dividends. roads, held in Boston, a paper was Springs Valley to the divide between V those crops and uiüIh It would place ___, i. . , ,, WarmSpringCreekandPineCreek,thence V The man who intends to try to re $1100,001) annually into the hands rtu< 'JJ Albert A. Pope, which should down said divide to Idle Weiser River, at of one hundred thousand people. I “wakml “n "Merest in the matter of j i.,1Vùt 'k-Vsu-H x’dueeriim V 11 Weiser Land and Improvement Co. t concile all the explanations given for Hie lie.ul of a the “hard times" would better eii- It would make times good in a city Uî00^ public highways all over the s„j,| creek, ilu uee Westerly uhmg the ili- WANTED-G0LD MINERS v gage a room in an insane asylum be of half a million of souls." I land. Among other things he said: vide South of Crane Creek to the Weiser assignee si II at publie auelion. giving 20 j River, llieuce up said l iver lo the plase of j To develop the gold properties days’ uolii e thereof by publicali ii Ihe CANARY’S fore beginning. All Hint shows tiie gieutness of “Aside from questions of political beginning. tn following named pai s. to vit: Weiser ! Lewiston, Miners’ Delight, Atlantic, Signal.-4 Hie time, pi: 1 our state. Those figures show the gain, which is perhaps tiie lowest Registrar: Edward Fletcher. nd coiiiliiion of Many of the big newspapers seem II of said estate except as I Product No. 4, Salubria. South Pass, Gold Creek, or on the said sale of a! < granclure of Idaho. St. Aothony is standpoint to consider the good that above stated, that said property be sold to Tonsorial Parlor to be afraid to handle the strike Beginning at the North West corner of Hustler Belt. You can get full Infor- the highest bidder for cash only, and that only one of a hundred sections and cornes from meuns of communica- Middle Valley Precinct, thence North IS THE PLACE TO question editorially. Brace up, gen said property is not to sell for less than : wheat is only one of a thousand re tion, there is to be borne in mind East to (he summit of Cuddy Mountain. . ination regarding reliable mines which GET BARBERED. tlemen; the public awaits your opin thence Southerly along the divide leading twenty-five per cent of the cost thereof, that good roads are tiie great high are for sale by tiie camps mentioned including freight, and if the said property Shax7-0, \ Ilalrowt, I sources oa figures. All Idaho awaits lo, and to llie mouth of the Middle Fork ion of the situation. I,.. it disposed of upon tiie day fixed in 1 Ho. ( QSe. of tin* Weiser River,thenceS mtherly in a by addressing James A. the time when the strings are loosen ways for tiie advancement of social McAvoy, said notice of sale, the sale thereof mux- direct line t Next door to Filnn’s restaurant. point on the Lillie Weiser county clerk of Fremont county, be continued from day to day, until all Sir George Pullman is like the rest ed euough to allow us to command life, education and Christianity. River whore the section line bet ■ said property is disposed of. Lander, Wyo , Win. J 'NI O. W . AVERS, •of the professional philanthropists. the money to dovelope all this mag- The visit of friends, tiie attendance Sections 1 and 2, Township 14 N. of R 2. Sturgis, Jr , The property to be sold under this or- W. f B. M. crosses said river, I hence Cheyenne, Wyo. A. Kendall,cashier der consists of a general hardware stock, He wants big interest on tiie invest nificience. of the children at school, and the Southerly to the head of Dixie Creek. machine and farm implements, wagons, ATTORNEY AT LAW. ments he makes ostensibly for the gathering together at church are all Ihciice along the Northerly boundary of first national bank, Rock Springs, A Composition on Governor. etc., which is more particularly described Middle Valley Precinct tu the place uf be Wyo., S. L Spangler, chairman Fre ill the Inventory made by said assignee, WEIS HR, IDAHO. benefit of his fellowroen. (By an Idaho School Buy) governed to a greater or less extent ginning. mont board of county commissioners, and tioxv on file in tiie Clerk’s ftice of A governor is a man wlmt governs by the condition of tiie roads; and Registrar: S. R. Denney. Washington county, Idaho, to which ref ET. business promptly and correctly Men do not always vote ns they Atlantic City, Wyo. Mr. McUonnol is our governor. He tiie abandonment of tiie farm and Precinct No. 5, Indian Valley. erence is hereby made for a more full de V attended to. talk, hence the wise man will not put Beginning at tile corners of sections one, Tiie Union Pacific is tiie shortest scription of the property to be sold. governs us. 1 have saw Mr. MeCon- the crowding together of people in bis money on tiie newspaper poll of two, eleven and twelve in township 14 n. and quickest line to the South Pass Upon any sale being made,said assignee ttel. 1 have beam him speak. He the cities is due largely to the isola r range 2 , b. M.; thence southerly country; daily stages from Rock shall execute to the purchaser all neces THE VALLEY HOTEL. the House, ou the sugar schedule, or long the mslerly boundary of Salubria sary conveyances and bills of sale. come to our schoolhouse one day. tion caused by bud means of commu Springs and Rawlins. any other part of the tariff bill. precinct to the divide between the Little E. Nooknt, MRS. BOB JOHNSON, Prop. He studded Kirkltatn s grammar when nication to and from tiie farm. But Weiser river and Crime creek; chenue Judge of the District Court- easterly along said divide to the county Sale of School Bonds. Nice clean beds and grand good "grub.” Mr. F rank MacVeigh appears to he wits a boy. He told us boys so. the problem to be solved is to pro ! In pursuance to the above order, I here- line: thence northerly along said line to Notice is hereby given that the L.v offer for salt* at public auction, ui said Everything Itome-like. makes it a favorite stopping place. Rates. $5.00 per week fur have played a thinking part during 1 expect that helped make him gov vide money to build good roads. the divide between the waters of Middle school trustees of School District No. insolvent's former place of doing business Fork and the main Weiser river; thence board and lodging. Transient. $1.00 per ernor. 1 wish 1 could study Kirk- Many farmers are opposed to the in Weiser, Idaho, on Saturday. Julv 28, the strike troubles at Chicago, When westerly along said divide to the easterly 1, of Washington county, in tiie state 1894, the entire stuck of the Idaho Com day he begins to talk Senate be may find ham’s grammar. My desk mate, Dick good road movement because they boundary of Salubria precinct; thence of Idaho, will sell the following de- mercial Company, insolvent (not includ- along said line to tile place of beginning. other people doing the thinking. Watson, he likes Mr. MeUotmel. believe it means to them increased scribed bonds, viz: Coupon bonds of log book accounts, notes, bank furniture, I------RANK HARRIS. Registrar: John Anderson. said seitool district in the sum of ,l,|d tinner’s tools), to the highest Dick told me so. Dick said more, taxation, and in some sections of tiie bidder or bidders for cash, provided said Tiie rumor that President Cleve Precinct No. 0. Kulhbur; three thousand dollars ($3,000), to be Mr. MeConnel was a Eplitribus uniint country agricultural interests are so Includes all the territm between Stur sum shall exceed 25 per cent, of the cost ATTORNEY AT LAW. land and Senator Hill are to asttrae payable mid redeemable in five years me! earring! f said stuck. depressed that they do not feel able orther boundary of IVTIJ, attend to legal work lit all courts man aud wheu lie told me timt, l said Washington county. Snake river from the date of issuance, bearing! W. F. Sommkiu amp, Assignee. the characters of Damon and Pythias d Hu First publication June 28, 1894. *' of Hie state Office on First street. 1 was for him too. I don't kuoxv to bear greater financial burdens. dividing ridge east of Heath Milting Dis interest at the rate uf eight per centum ; Weiser. Idaho. Outing the coming big encampment trict. wliat that is, but know its away up Now, I am going to urge a plan whioli per annum, and to be issued in such i CAI.L. of the K. of P. at Washington lacks Registrar: M C. Henley. denominations as will suit tiie pur The Democratic State Central Com- Then Dick lie said: shake. We shook 1 believe to be tiie least burdensome confirmation. Precinct No. 7. Mineral. chaser. rnittee, at a meeting held in Nampa, Dick said Mr. McUonnol was power- and the most effectual and equitable Includes a 11 the territory •th of Weiser Sealed bids will lie received for Ute May 15, 1894, lias appointed Wednes- .p V* . precinct and west of Middle valley and w By the by, wiiat does Congress ful on irrigation, for providing good roads. A man so power- Let each south of Uulhbtirg precincts to Snake sume up to aud including tiie 30th day, August 15, 1894, as the time, 3 think of the strike and its attendant ful as he must be first in State establish a gradual succession | Ever. day of July, in tiie year 1894, at one pease, sec- and tiie city of Boise as the pince of troubles? Tiie gentlemen at Wash ond in war and third in the hearts of Registrar: la ds Neer. o’clock in the afternoon of that day, Salubria and Indian Valley tux—that is a tax on property pass- when the same will be opened mid holding tbo Democratic Stale Coitven- ington are usnally entirely too tnlk a Idahoans. That’s wiiat I call get- ing by succession by inheritance or Precinct No. 8. Council. Beginning at the northeast corner of Sa- considered by the Board of Trustees. vention. Each county is entitled to tive. Why the present silence? Is Stap© L-iine. ting Utero, Dick knows what lie is legacy. Such a tax might be ar- inbi'ia precinct, thence in i northerly di- Bills will not be considered that the following representation: lection to mid including til tl head anybody afraid?. talking altdut. Diek told me this ranged as follows: On estates valued are for less titan the par value of tiie {—United •Slates waters of Hornet creek; thence in a north ...... lOildaho.. . .10 Mull.—{ The most talkative politicians in confidentially at recess and ho said, at $10,090 up to $100,000 one per easterly direction to the main Weiser river, bonds, and the trustees reserve the Alt rns. . ... 4 I,atah . ....14 below Price vnlli thence east to the di right to reject any mid all bids. : Bannock ----- Kd Lemhi E. S. Jew Et, I., Proprietoi. Congress nre silent concerning the “Don’t you forget it.” That m iu is cent; on estates over $100,000 to ___ (! vide between Weiser river and Little Bids should be directed to “I. F. 1 Bear I.ake ...... 10! L fan . : Salmon river; I hence southerly along said strike; they haven't decided which going to the United States Senate $500,000 two percent, increasing the Smith,Clerk of the Board of Trustees Bingham ...... 8 K lend. 12 ! Leaves Weiser and Indian valley every divide to the north line of Indian valley Boise ...... 8 Ne* Perce... 8 I morning except Sundays. side to come down upon. In fact, Sboup lias his inns, Sweet has his big amount by degrees as tiie inheritance I precinct; thence west School District No. 1, Weiser, Idaho." said line lo the Canyon ...... 8 Oneida .... C Freight and express carried at lowest election bill speech and Bill McCon- we of beginning. By order of the Board. Cassia .. . they probably don’t wish to Come increased. Tiie succession tux OOwvlic • 6 I possible rates. Registrar: Joint O. Peters. Smith, Custer...... 4 Shoshone . . .18 r down on either side. uel has his irrigation, and if that he not fall upon the poor. Those 1. F. lndiatt vail md Meadoxvs stage line I . . . . » ,,, Precinct No. 9. Meadows, Elmore.. .. (i|Washington . ... 4 j m.‘j whose estates amount to $10,090 can ] |lich\(]es „n tl)Ht ,errltorv kn Clerk of tiie Board of Trustees.
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