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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1907)
OREGON MIST YOUTHFUL CRIMINALS. Entered at the Fostoflice at St. Helen, Oregon, as second-class mail matter, Issukd Kvkrv Friday Bv E. II. IXAGG. ' Kditob and Propriktor. .Subscription Rates One year tl.50 Six months .75 Ailvertisine rate made known on appll cation. Legal notices 25 cents per line. CIRCITT COURT OFFICERS i Thomas A. McBrid. District Judge G. L. IlKDC.ES District Attorney COUNTY OFFICERS : , R. S. HaTTan, Jud(fe,... St Helens W. A. Harris, Clerk. ..St. Helens Martin Whitr, Sneriif..,...St. Helens Caspkr Libei., Commissioner. Mist H. Wkst, Comm'r Scstipoose Kdwin Ross, Treasurer. St. Helens A. T. Laws, Assessor.... St. Helens I. H. Copeland, School Supt....Houlton Frank B. Frkscott, Surv Rainier H. R. Cure. Coroner. St. Helens OCTOBER 4. THE SERPENT'S TRAIL xue uregoman, in commenting npou the nomination of McCarthy upon the labor ticket in the City of SanFranciscc says: . -. . X,. . - "McCarthy is a 'labor man of the earns kidney as Schmiti. Why the unions cling to such leader is a mystery which will be solved when we know why the churches tolerate such members at Koekeleller." In order to bring the comparison nearer home would it not be well to in clude the name of that (hiiiing light of Methodism. State Senator K. A. Booth, who was honored at the Portland Con ference last week by being chosen one of the lay delegates to the general con ference of the Methodist Episcopal - Church T Mr. Booth is a wealthy man, being the head of the Booth-Kelly Lum ber Company. He is also, at least in church matters, a very liberal man, and has contributed quite freely of bis own means to the support of Willamette Cni . vereity and other more or lest worthy church projects. Yet there are those who have not the fullest faith in his in tegrity and who would hesitate to place him in the class of desirable citizens. One Francis J. Heney Is apparently of the opinion that there are other placet that would be a more suitable reward for Mr. Booth's past conduct than that of delegate to the rational conference of a great church, for State Senator Booth is today under indictment on the charge of conspiracy to defraud the United States Government out of its timber lands. Mr. Booth may not be guilty That is legal presumption, and we sup pose it was strengthened in the Port land conference by a farther liberal con tribution to Congressman Hawley's uni versity at Salem; yet, in view of the fact that the Government has convicted a liberal percentage of those against whom indictments have been returned, it might have had a better appearance be fore the world if its greatest honors bad been confined to those who were not even under suspicion of crime. We note that much ado is made over H. G Kemp's supposed misconduct snd that a committee has been appointed to try turn on the ground of fraud in concec . tion with some church printing. Yet sucu an oners is wmte as snow com pared with that chared against Senator Booth by the United States Government. It may be that swindlitg the church la looked upon as a much greater crime ttian robbing tfie Government other wise the two are on the same footing, lor neither Kemp nor Booth bave been . found guilty. Senator Booth has, however, been con victed by public opinion of one offense that shows him in the same class at other great financiers who best effort is to, by legal inean, acquire nnfair ad vantages over their fellow men. He was the sponsor of a bill which, had it b come a law, would have deprived the people of their rights and given into the hands of his corporation the absolute control of the logging streams of Ore goo, pi icing the small owners of timber entirely at their mercy and compelling them to sell at such price as the manipu lators might dictate. The rottenness of this tmaiare, when exposed, instantly secured its defeat, and the Oregunian was amoni I he flrit to denounce it. Truly, when tbe ureatett of the Port land churches confer It highest honors upon such men, there is very little to be aid about the unwisdom of laboring men in pl.cing their confidence in demtogie. , When wa Iok over the country and see that nearly every town in the State is sending out advertising matter by the thousands and we are not sending out any, is it any wonder that we are not reaping the beneflis of the low rates from the east is we should? There is not ai o:her piaoe that will stand adver. (By Thomas Speed Mod by. Missouri state Pardon Attorney, in Succejs Magatine lor September.) Two-thirds of the convicts in Ameri ca's greatest prison are men without trade or profession. Look Into any Slate penitentiary and you will ordi narily find that at least oue-lhlrd of the convicts there confined are young men ranging in age from eighteen to twenty five years and that nearly alt of these came into prison absolutely without the knowledge of any useful and gainful occupation. According to the Uulted States census, considerably mora than half of those convicted of crime are ignorant of any kind of trade. In these atatiatics two facts are boldly prominent, vis., alarming proportion of voutbful criminals, and the exceedingly high ratio of criminality among those unskilled In any trade or profession. Comparatively few of the youngerclass of felons are illiterate. In my own ex perience I have never met with one who c uld not read nor write and very many ihy tar the greater number I should say) are possessed of no small degree of in telligence. But, however stupid or how ever precocious, scarcely without ex ception they are found to be young men who have not applied themselves to use ful, honest work. And this is true of both the poor and the well-to-do. There is no warrant for saying that the ten dency toward criminality is naturally greater among the idle poor than among the idle rich. One frequently meets with young men of good parentage be hind the prison walls; young men, too, who could not plead poverty as an ex cuse for crime. Why are they there T Toe answer is given by Gustare Marx, one of the Chicago "car barn' bandits. who recently died upon the gallows It wasn't drink that caused my downfall," he said "nor cigarettes, nor bad companions, either. It was just idleness. Idleness led me first to cigar ettes, then to drink, then to bad com panions then to the gallows. And blame my folks. If they had made me remain at work, work would bave kept me too bus to have planned robbery and murder." This is the story that fits them all First, idleness; then cigarettes an drink, to blunt the moral sense aud de stroy the will; then living b .youd one' means; then indulging the riotous ex that spell debauchery and make for ruin. And may they not rightly blame their "folks," aa did Gustave Marx? Not once, but many, many times has the typical gray-haired father stood be fore me pleading for the pardon of bis wayward boy. And the story is always and to. ever the same: "He had a good home and a Christian mother. I gave him a fair education. There is not a drop of criminal blood in his entire fauiiry. He is first of his name to wear the prison stripes. He is not a criminal at heart it is not in him it was cigarettes, drink, bad habits, bad women, bad companions." etc., etc. Ah, bow often have I heard that plea True? Yes; every word of it. But it was not all the truth. The boy had never learned to work. He bad not learned the meaning of work. He may have "had a job." He may have work ea in a shop, or clerked io a store or in a bank. But he bad two masters. He loved the one and hated the other. His heart was not enlisted with his hand and brain; his soul was not io bis labor, andtherefoia he knew not work. There was no joy in his task. Therefore he did not work; he only half-worked. For a boy does not always work when be swings a hummer or balances a set of books. If he find no joy in his task, if he looks upon his employer merely as "boes," and npon the day's duties as period of slavery from which "relief" comes only after business hours he does not work, he shirks. To such s boy the wine enp will ba a temptation. He will seek his "relief" in dissipation, and will soon be found with others of his kind, evolving schemes for getting rich quick ly ana without the usual drudgerv. He may gamble, he may play the race, or whatnot. He is i eeply imbued with the impression that the world owes hi u a living; ar.d the ruo;e he ponders the suLjett the less scrupulous he may be come as to how he gets that livine. He does not think of what he owes the world. He may end in forgery or em bezzlement if in i,olbing worse; but, what ever the rjuta he taker, the gen eral tendency is downward, and the penitentiary la yawning for him. -"Tell me," mid an tdd church deacon. h:s voice quivering wiih grief as he dis- oriat nas attributed It toadofeot in COLUMBIA COUINIY our appellate court procedure. Ah I no, no; that Is not the thing that it filling our prisons with young men far from it, Indeed, Uo to the prisons, and find GIRL A Kansas Paper". High Prait of Mis Mary Conyers. them H ere, and talk with them ssl have talked with them, as I have talked with hundreds. The young man ta prison garb la the one who knew not his work, Herd I recorded the failure of church and school and home for they taught him not the simple truth implied in the ancient Persian maxim : "He who sows the ground with ear and diligence at talus a greater merit than he could gain by the repetition of of ten thousand prayers." For honest work is worship, and "faith without works is dead." The old saying that an Idle brain is the devil's workshop is literally true, aa shown by the prison records. Close the devil's workshop, and von will close the prison doors to a great majority of young uinu who are dally dunning the felon' garb.s This is the "closed shop" that will clone the principal avenue to crime, Let the cnild be taught that idleness itself is a crime. The boy who dread his taik, who shirks useful service, Is de veloping the germ of criminality. It is no snswer to this to say that such la the disposition of most boys. Perhaps it is. But it is true, most fortunately, that most boys overcome it, and be unto those who do not. Indolence, procrastination, shirking, halt work through these a boy first learn to steal, for iudolence is itself essentially dishon est. It is the tap root of crime. The boy who habitually steals from hi em ployer is In a fair way to steal some thing of more tangible value. He ooveta that which he doe not earn. He does not recognise his obligation to give his work the Lest that is in him : to give to the world the best service for service and to give it first. In short, he bas not teamed work. He is not interested in the task before him, in the business immediately at hand. Hi mind is else where, in dreams, perhaps but beyond the dreams there lies the shadow of the iron bar. (Abilene Chronicle) Mayor and Mrs. A. W. Rice entertain tained last evening la honor of their niece, Mis Mary Conyers, of Clatskauie, Oregon, Over on hundred people were peesent, and the large company aud the beautiful home with its ample, plewsiug, decorated, and brilliantly lighted rooms and porches made pleasing and happy scene. Miss Couyer is on her way home from New York where she ha completed a two year course in vocal music, aud Inst eve ning, assisted by sou of the best local talent, she gave a moat delightful musical program. During the evening Mia Conyers favored the company with four selections including "The Rosary" and a Japanese love song and each number wet with hearty applause. Mis Conyers has re markable voice. Its richness and scope, as demonstrated by her selections last evening, were the object of much favor able comment. The ease with which her selections are rendered 1 remarkable, and, as one person said, "She just sings,1 The piano accompaniments were played by Miss Pearl Johnts. Every number was well received and the program was one of the most pleas ing with which aa Abilene audience ha been favored. After it conclusion re freshments were served and the remain der of the evening was spent with social converse and musical selections. The entertainment take high rank in A hi lene' social aflair. RUSSIAN METHODS. Hard Time ta Kansas The old day of grasshoppers and drouth are almost forgotten in the pros perous Kansas of to-day; although a citizen ofCcdell, Earl Shamburg, ha not yet forgotten a hard time be en countered. He say: "I was worn out and discouraged by coughing night and day, and could find no relief ontil I tried Dr. King' New Discovery. It took less than one bottle to completely cure me." The safest and most reliable oough and cold cure and long and throat healer ever discovered. Guaranteed by all druggists 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Don't Be Disagreeable. One of the most disagreeable of all people to live with is the women who thinks it ber doty to tell nnpleasant troths. Tell your friends all the nice thing you near about them, but withhold the unpleasant thing. Never give advice nnless you are asked to and even then don't be insulted if it is not followed, When a person paysyou a compliment snow yoor pleasure frankly. And when yoi pay a compliment do so in an tin affected, sincere manner. Never carry bad new if vou can svoid doing so. Some people take a morbid pleasure io doing so and are never hap pier than when detailing some woeful tale. Don't let Jealousy prevent you from tel.ing the nice things you hear about other people. HI Dear Old Xetber aijf uem oia mother, who it now eighty three yean old. thrive on F.lec- inc miters," writes W. 3. Br u noon, of Douhlin, G. "She has taken them for hont two years snd enjoy an excellent ppetite, feels strong and sleeps well." That's the way Klectric Bitters affect the ged, and the same happy resold follow n caas of female weakness and ireneral debility Weak, puny children too. are aieniijr eirrnguiened DV them. Guar- anieeo alto tor stomach, liver nd klit- ney troulile, by all d'Utrgist. 60c. (From Tuesday' Oregonlan) . K. Redding, the eratwbil polill dan, who I charged with complicity i a plot to blackmail Mayor Lane, sought. to gala the release of Mr. Belle War mire, hi alleged accomplice, last nignt by surrendering himself to the police and demanding that h be locked np the womau't stead. Felling in bi efforts to secure bail for Mrs. Waymire, Bad ding Insisted npon transferring hi own bond money and retoroiug to 'jail. Chief bntamacber refused to make the exchange, and Mrs. Waymire spent the night in th city jail. Kadding said he would at range today with lb Municipal Court for the transfer. Mrs.' Wsymler's bond wa fixed 500, that being the amount of bail Rad- ding and L. L. Mandelay, hiiinppoeed accomplice, were required to give Satur day. She arrived from Vancouver too late for a bearing in the Municipal Unrt aud her case wa continued until tomorrow. It was after trying all day to raise $500 that Redding devised the plan of surrendering himself and going back to jail In order that Mr. Waymire misht not bar to spend the night iu prison. Th accuied woman firmly adhere to ber story of the Hamilton building f lair. Subjected to rigid examination! yesterday afternoon by District Attor ney Manning and other, the did not contradict any of the statements that the made in the Interview printed in the Urcgonian yesterday . All efforts to con fute ber and bring out admissions tend ing to dicredit her statement failed. For more than an hour site withstood the fire of questions. The authorities flimil Concluded that there was nothing to he gained by questioning Mrs. Waymire aud Mr. Manning directed that she be taken back to jail. And you will stay in jail ontil you are ready to tell the truth about this matter," threatened Mr.Mannimc a the last resort. ' "I have told th troth. There 1 noth ing more I can ear, no matter how long you keep me in laii." ihe replied. It seems that the authorise in Port land are cloee Imitator of Russian method of administering Justice. Guilty or not guilty there was no justice In Imprisoning the women under the circumstances nor did the district attor ney have any right to threaten her will iraprionmtnt in order to extort a con lemon. SCAITOOSK TliowIyrHln latent tliott the wild hay crop, but uiot of our dock men r provld'-d for. The fruit yield It not uptotU svemg but Uic ipiallty I good. Mr. r.oorira L. Fox. ol UoldlU'l 1, NV, u vLliii.,, l.iwnila here, t leant is til sail' gmilul fellow. Mr. M'witl Wlckershaut and son nrt visiting Maud at Cdr Kapitla, loan. Th Chapman Timber Company ha lust Installed an uietoilate talety 'gi system where thflr truck crwse the main line of th N. P. Such safeguard are needed at every railroad crowing Joint district No. 1 h opened school with three teacher and will put In an additional teacher in thort time on ac&iiiut of th overcrowding of th prvteut quarter. Archie Collins, an old lime young mn of Scnppoos, peut a Week her visiting rrhittvMand friend. II gov to t all fornln soon where h ha purchased fruit farm. Dr. B. llUchloid our dentist, ha de cided to more to Portland and open up an otlli-e. Dr. 11. ha made many frleild who regret hi departure. Several of our young people have re turned to school for the year. Hoy Price going Agricultural College, Ewd. I-eonard to Seattle, Wo., Koy Wkmt to Weston Notmal, Jam luaie- roy to Portland Acaileuiy and Ad Wleat to Pacific Vlilverll All of whkb tliows a need of higher schools near home. Mr. W. P. Kingston, Mgr. of the South Fork Lumber Company, recently estab lished at rVappoooe, it making rapid progress on their new mill two mile west of Hcnppoose. The company hat tract of fifteen milliou feet of titular available. Th Ladies Aid will give a Novelty upper and entertainment In th hall Friday night- A good time Is assured. Mr. Minnie Price ia still conRned to her room at the Good 8uiralla hospital but at last report Wat Improving rapidly. SUMMONS la UwCtnull Coarl alms iuit l Onwou, tar Columbia I'uuttlr. Anna Louu Cut, ruinUft John Franklin Cole, ftefitmlatil. To.'oha rmukiln l ul,lh !.., n.niM J.l.a in in nunem me nimi oi rirun: -i nn am betdiy rviutrvi tu ttwr and num., th. ylaJtll (let kbIiui jr.iu ID lha aliv. tutnlr.1 till, oo or bafcira the la.l ,la) ,rr-?U..l In ll.a tmicr nir ut.l.t aih.o ol lht Mimntulla. niilt ma.1 ait'l rnlen-l la Ihla aul. luail t)u it prtur me loin uar t Jmiilr. Wit, au.l If rod tail lu an aliwu !,-! ali,rr I,., thclyol, I bo plahillll u (ha aal. BMttl tiir Ui rrllcl .lomatvlCTt in hat r,.iai. lain t heroin, which I. IS auhaiaa-n lot niKr o utrcoup iiiaamnus tua n.atrlaaa rlatl..t. iu. anattns ii.n Hamuli an.i trrnlaki, hr ilia cu.iu.l; ol hat minor chll.f. J.ih. Vara Mar tola, lor tha r-a(a-.tl,.n nl ha. nan. nt lor bat ctnta aud dubuiaamanu uf Tula anmrniMia ta pobll.ha.1 la (, Mlal nnrt a WrI for HI ronwrmlva .. ''f ol Hon. Thomaa A. M. Brtla. Jml ot ..... ..... , our. o, , otiinrua t onnir, Oregon, dtilr hi a, la au.l rnlem.1 oo lha Jus .1.. ,.t.... letnlwr I V! . an.l lha .lal l lha llrrt nolitlratloo J" ' "rtolwr HI. iwr, U imbiimoou lllAKIl U. BKDrtNKll,. Albiniar lor I'lalatln SIM .utm Intha Cln altroortof ,h, eUt, 0; oreituo lor I olninhla Conmr, 1.1a Winter, .laiull'l Parry Winter. tefiot.l,.,,i Tn Perrjr Winu-ra ili ,!. name.) drfrmlatit in n nam ol lha Mala ol llrrvon ton arpharrhri"Olralloaiar antt au.w.f l0 ii.TV . 7" in Ilia abot an. llllnl court anl i-atiaa on of i.i.i,.k.. or. 1 1'WJ. villi h laait Wfkt alta, .t.i o ill:o. and It ana 'all i , """I i r " J ' . tor rrttri t,a,ml hit ... . v..,n,Mim, , ,,: lor a .liaauly. ...a w .-.oil ,i, matrimony now . i.n.. .. iw'n abort, winul ulatiiflll ami dl.u.la.ii and foratirh nth., and lunhr, n.f .. ... court e.m mrnt ami 'irt ' i in i auiainmia w mbll.bad b; oI,r m ft,, ir Houorabi. It. a iiaitao t,,....; .., .." County e. nrt, mail and ania,rd . !. .." aei'l IW7. at 4 MA 110X4 11, DKVIT All.,ah... . rirat nubllMUon HtmL ju til. i..i.iJ.' ..V": I, .jo7, r ..v.o o DOSIDESS'SBILLeG TENTH AND MORRISON STflCKTS, FORTtAND. OR A. I. ANMSTIIONO. LL Su IHMMeutai ""vr Kducate lor uccm iu tluwt tltu and at Muall tspao, and MaA, dent to a position it tm a com4ent. Quality 1 our motto, ant) rttata?. thorougl. work Wing Mover lOlVeall per month for office help, troctlon Inture rapid irogrt, V teach tha Voom leal, the earl iTlT voucher and other modern Buthixl of bookkeeping. Chart ir I ov eaay, rapid, legible. Beautiful catalogue, buaitiet lorma and yttmrntat1 write today. Rltruct any merchant, any bank, any n-pwUh, C. T. l'UKMCOTT K. K, QUICK. I Th'b Columbia County ABSTRACT AND TRUST CO. Titles I-xaminhd Abstracts Madi li.- Non-Rksident Taxks Paid Rkai. Kstatk Vi" ar IxANS,TC St. Johns!! St. JohnsH A QILT EDQEO INVESTMENT! SituatcJ tictweett the rivers, with dcto water frr.nta on all sides, surrounded and crossed by five transcoaii S ucntal railways, it must become theinantifictiirincr.nJ shipping center of Portland, ' MONTHLY PAYROLL 50.0001 Invest now, you will doubleyour tnouey in two vein. H. HENDERSON St. Jobns.OregttB loajf Philadelphia St. Q xijujuuuTT.iTmriiiiiiiiiiiiiirnTTTm soots NEW FALL SHOES Walk..r.Over...and...J5oro$U $3.50, $4.00, and $5.00 They are Better than Ever All the Good New Patterns All the Old. Good Patterns Catalogues will be Sent upon Request KNIGHT SHOE CO., THIBD ANO WASHINGTON, PORTLAND. OMC. 'UAAJUJLtJLtJLftlSti limn m in mwirnifwrmwiifiitw wnnffwnnnwiiniiiiir. I THE BIG STORE : DWN O Y THE DIG SAWMILL Receiving I hve money to loan on atmrovcri real estate security. W. H. POWELL, St. Helen, Oregon. They are Oregon Applet. ureat Jintain't imporUtmn o armlr. ha reached 9,0.10,000 barrels a -ear. of cussed the rase ol his own on "lell i"""" on ha,, 'rom the United State. me why It It tlut the tons of pracher 1 vo"te PPle in the British market and deacon always linn o it so badly f" ,r" ceT'in kind 'rom this country. They do not always mm ontsobailr i 0tber Enro')ean conntrie want Amerl- I S'lvls-d him, hut tdey an mt exi-mpt ""'VP le'o '"Ke quanlitie. Why re from the operation of those laws which ny erer 1Iowed to rot under the treea? SUMMONS New Goods Every Day! Iu the Week. Pearl Cciirt I'laiiitlir Va !fW :.,lll. Ilafrmlant. io uu.t.a,.ii. tha .twv, Mmtl d.fen. Ill the nam W ih Hia,. si... y. I . , i,e Cf.tirl govern liamnn nature. A boy mav he well scho iliil In creed a id dogma, and still fall. In all such rases there is the tame vlml ilefict in tliC Loy'dacation. xnejoy, th? b3.iutv, (he ntllnr. the giory i norjeat work, St Louis Globe-Democrat The favorite apple of Old England are inose mat are raised in Oregon our Yel low Newtowns. Spitzenburg, Northern opyana trie wonderful Ban nana bring uigner price in Englaud than applet raised in any other section of the United Stale. If we had tha ac rn thi. m.t. and the dirfrraca i of in lolenc. even in the umallan n,l,.,.. Ilirt(rflwellas will Columbia countv these ahoul.l h. am n - n. i and there (scarcely any eounty getting! sons impressed npon ihe youthful inlnd woold U ,,!Cei'n about fifty million as little. Th re must be a reason for it J and the fatdsr who so Instructs bi ion ioU'n ' Briti,b -oM """"y for iu When the mud gntg bad then there will , H home miv s.ivj the St .i ti..,..i PPle crop, and a great portion of this NOTICE OF INTENTION TO APPIY FOR LIQUOR LICEK8E. TO AIX PPRSONU I'fivi'iavii.i. tarn ol rou will a imr. .i.l, 1 ' i..l7.".""" yiuous aivl mall llnuori ami hanl i.i. 'juaniuiei lea, than one gallon for a .rl.l i j rWliiat, l-'olamlila County, U,ZV,.' ZUl .'k J7 W;u will h. U,l apelVOTjlTJS; '"'! "'""'''I ....pll.tlouol John Fre. alaaed la.al ... ; .""' '" wina rr..lan. lii.t. M'irt, mailt. u ,',t.rl n,. "7 . mlf .ml ,urtdll IS saJiJ Mlf MAIION A HrliKVir tit lllillllou fir i,UI,II,-.iimk, m,':XnV'!n' I'lalntlir. vy. i, 07. Sotlce for I'nbllrall mi be a perennial hovl atout food road, vast sum would come to Columbia M a1.tamtiti.if v , I t i rr-i , hut yet iveliave made no effort to est ha Is ttnht ia i.a hi- i. .'.County, people i here who buy up .mall farm and , own ake, who Iaa. n . io excel in It a. a I ' enoairhtofomatlie.nflr r,n..r ' ai. w . . ....w "nM jallMUo. . - , ., wui um worm owei to mm, will not lonir be i up and thus tre cm get good roaJtJ witliont.n hnnn,.i.i - .r.,i ."i . ui:.a 1. I .1 . . ..... the land is divided Into r.mfi,.K,:" . Z "" " IT. "u " B"am?l tM " hi : " w'iiwii. mi rii;u:is are , aionaay in Uctober. tivwlt- rvtnhar taw.' . i9," ra,r ,demand r ,ot l,lm' 'mJ m 2,rt- th joSTi!!SS s and there ml I be more bim there. Tescb the child to love bi. ' attend at the office of ttTcoart, CMk When holding tiiere will ba lor good roa men to work ao e, ana men tliey will come in a be understands that me ining In it, full- TnT AiuTa? errr0rkrthem "'Jgr.ndeir.o cehere.Ii, . the o, not. AU tl a. ran be don tbi year iweetnee. and g!o-y of a well-lored Unk, lathe way of setting peopl cut here I. tie boy i. safefyou .. iSZ. wr every one to wriie a letter to some of t-ieir frie.d , in the east of son of the the be, f,om T crime. ' advantage, we Jhav.-. Tht ill help' Orlminabt, ms to b. now Increa. oa$ lnla tu United 0tt, One great CulSnlbl. cuirA i X thnjr rtaya prior to lha lvnnK ,, ,i uu'"" Hunoralilc Ixvly at IhaTall IlrJ, ,,i VilL T Wh day at J (,, l, wfl, to f lald li ! ort houat In ll city ol'm. i;itn,W , " 'J.'! lvwiitya,iIHtat.. that' a llcuii JJ iwad t l;ni 1'oriUml, Urpfon, r?.,J, m."':" l.""h '' , nW, lam umne. notu a la karat, alma th.t i. - Hh lha iirwuioha 7.1 .7. .", Vl-iiaiie MUCKIaEI BTTOBCl a Reputation of Long Standing for Only the Best In S General Merchandise! I Dart & Muckle. ;8t;nelens, - . . : Orcgon, jiuiuiaiuiuiiiiuiuiiiiuiaiuiu mmmmiM iliiilwr l.im. in ik. ..." . . a a ni v.-..,. ... J ... . -'"i m l aiiiiirn , ,,... v. than i,,r airlpiiltiiu i . .? Mmtn-r ur h"r.l.lrl;;rs1,!l,;x.:,''rl,' malt li.joor. and frmnilol.lBr in I. 11,1a. i tha, on , allot, M,,imHt ' ,"ui't'"i" hyla ol (tcapiNXH lu a.1,1 iZ?h, ..." in...... ...j ; t "n- ..0 .L."n,''i andanun, K bilh, A MiX, H a i.yoin, i) , .. - ' r jr examine cne asMtsment roll and cor. rect all error in valuation, descriptions ut Ha""e oi iuo, iou or other prop, erty. Dated at my office September, 1907. A, T. LAWS, uiirV;.iT a r . . n ";. J.yvu - m e unre, j w iitliitnlli ' . i V Kli.ii 1 A til i i 'V. ,:"',,, ,lrl( 'i Mannilit, K t; j.ali . il i! ,,L' A V Bal. li . If nwanaiin, a aaaainaray, Aug " '" B"arnat,T. , r. M Atlanta. John a v Wwp'JiS S 'J!', 1 r 1 Jnhmuri, t uini, u "s K w 'u'Wmi't- 5. : 7. wl;'i ;H H hnil.lt, H Nu inan, K liair... 1'ati.ooim. A.Auiler..,,,, J M Milloy . iLimi if'J this 24th day of i arar. r iirn 7rV iZ7'7"7''""V,m wnrw, (,H HuuipV CCII. V wfliiaTjaTJ. tuvSSTi .vi, m u aoiiior. K It Uin. u I ii v anuataa, liao w alt Tti.-Tini... . l;ha L.rch.r73 L HunUim, Shu u;. "i M'xix ' " n.il...,. ,... 7".'"r" " t.odfiey.nr, iiil.r, luu;, w """ M ') l lator, HUHNU.18 In the Clrnuli Court of tha Mi.i. , io' Coin,,, waownir ' Oroti, 4 am. flalntla ll..Ht.tin orrr..,","v '.' n.m. nl '.I. . "!""! ('" 'iiiiiiiuina AiT.l i'"1? Hi ,iiiin,t, in-vvii: " l,rl r In IhlaHiiminniM la miI.ii.i ,Zt . 'Uwl(I. (lit lmt nililsit court ,!? ... . ' I'"1" "I tli 14m day ol uptml,. "''n'1 '""l oil JOHN lilrriiiii.uu JOB PRIWTIWC 18 OUR DU8INC38 WE Jiare the best and most . JWHceln ColambiA County are prepared to do all kinds of 'Printing on short notice and di most reasonable prices ATRIAL WILL CONVINCE OREGON IU3IST County Assessor, l J'.-ta., aa -ai a4