THE SU2JDAT OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, DECEMBER 2, 1900. PEES ARE NOT JtlSJ Room for Improvement in the Office of County Clerk. PKOPOSED CHANGE IN CHARGES Otker Fees Appear to Be Beuoa able la the County Re corder' OJBce. A financial exhibit of the office of the Clerk of the County Couft for a year- snows receipts Irom feea JC6S4, and dis bursements aggregating 5S552 for sala ries. Books and blanks cost ?3S7. This Is not a bad showing, considering that a large amount of work Is performed for the county 5n this offlce for which tho county paid the Clerk before the offlce was placed on the salary system, which Is now saved, and would probably exceed the amount of the present dflcit. The bulk of the fees are collected In probate cases under a blanket system of ?10 for each estate whether cvalued at JSOn or 5500.000. A fee of $10 Is generally sufficient to cover the work done In a small estate, but In a large one It Is totally Inadequate. For example It Is pointed out that the John. Green estate, which paid only this ?10. ought to have paid at least 5150, and other big estates which have been probated in recent years in like proportion. Formerly this was tho law and court officers think It should be revived. Fees were charged per folio according to the amount of work per formed. In these estates, wills, orders and other things have been copied In full, and there is also considerable In dexing and other labor besides the time consumed of the Judge, and sometimes disputes which occupy days in the hear ing. The statute might be changed to exact a filing fee of 55 in all cases, and then charge fees for all papers filed there after, and per folio for all orders en tered In the probate journal. This would reach the large estates and would be equitable for the small estate which would average up at about 510, not an excessh'e fee. The fees exacted In the County Clerk's office, except in probate cases, are satis factory. A marriage license costs 52 25; articles of Incorporation are charged for per folio, and other papers are chaged for at reasonable legal rates. They could be scaled up somewhat without injury to any one. County Clerics Duties. Clerk Holmes says that the only way to make the offlce self-supporting Is to require every person having business in the office to pay a reasonable fee for every transaction. The services which the Clerk has to perform for the county covers a multitude of things, briefly de tailed as follows: The recording of all orders and doing the stenographic work that is required by the Board of County Commissioners In the matter of roads, paupers, chari ties, etc. The receiving and filing of all petitions for county roads, viewers reports, eta, and recording a description of all the county roads that are estab lished. Also the reports of the surveyor on the same, and supplying road supervis ors a certified copy thereof. The execu tion of pension certificates every month which at times requires the service of the whole offlce force, and approximately would occupy the time of deputies for two days. The drawing of county war rants, road and general, and their can cellation when paid, and the keeping of the warrant register, and checking up "with the County Treasurer, all of which occupies most of the time of the warrant clerk every month. The filling out and certifying to of all commitments of in sane persons In triplicate, and recording tho same. The qualifying of all county officers, and the filling out of oaths and bonds and also the appointment of deputies. Tho supplying and filling out of all affidavits for bounties on scalps. Entering In a register the names of all witnesses that appear before the grand Jury who are entitled to fees and making a month ly report of the same to the County Com missioners with the amount of fees earned. Filing dally and monthly re ports of county officers. Attending the Board of Equalization and registering and filing all petitions for corrections of assessments, and recording the orders of the hoard in relation thereto. The collection of delinquent taxes and the keeping of a record of all pay ments, and the distribution of the amounts collected In the different funds. The clerk being the custodian of the de linquent tax-rolls for back years, Inquirers are frequently furnished with a- list of property, which takes considerable time. In elections, the work of ordering and sending out blanks, ballots and other supplies, registering of all nominations, receiving and canvassing the returns, and Issuing certificates of election. The registration of voters, which re quires additional deputies. These are all public acts, from which the offlce can, of course, derive no reve nue, as from private parties. In the Recorder's Office. County Recorder S. C. Beach says that he docs not advocate the Increase of fees in his offlce unless It Is decided to adopt a system of fees destined to make other offices self-supporting, such as the Jus tice Courts, Sheriff's omce. Clerk of the County Court, Clerk of the Circuit Court, etc Mr. Beach said: "An Increase from 30 cents to 15 cents per folio for record ing instruments would perhaps make the office self-supporting, and I do not think the Recorder's fee Is considered to any great extent by parties to a real estate or mortgage transactions. The fee Is one of the smallest items of the deal, and if tho recording fee was changed from 10 cents to 15 cents per folio, hardly one persons in a hundred would realize being charged any more. It would be such a small matter. Suppose a man bought a suburban lot for J100, and It cost him 51 to file the deed or 51 50. or the same in a 520.000 transaction. The average cost now of a deed is 51: if It was 51 50. what would be the effect of the 50 cents extra charge? "But," continued Mr. Beach, "person ally I have no suggestion to offer as to rasing or lowering the fees; it is not In my province. There are. however, some Inequalities here. The fee for filing a chattel mortgage Is 50 cents. For record ing a release of real estate mortgage the fee amounts to never less than To cents, and sometimes more; that Is, for releas ing on the record. A release on the mar gin costs 10 cents, and there is more -work than filing a chattel mortgage. A release by margin should cost at least 75 cents. Frequently when a party makes a release on tho margin, or a partial release, the margin has to be so filled up that there is no room left, and It is almost unintelli gible. A person will make a partial re lease, or sometimes two or three partial marginal releases. Long descriptions of property have to be written out In a very fine hand, so as to get it all on, and for 30 cents as much labor is performed as we get 53 for in recording a lease. "Charles P. Owen. Recorder at San Jose, called on me last Summer. His Is a salaried offlce. and he has been there 16 years He told me the office income was from 51600 to 52000 per month. They have 10 typewriting machines, and the office is more than solf-supportlng. They get double the fees 'we do here. "I Judge the criticism of this offlce comes mostly from people who don't understand that work has to be done slowly to be ac curate. Speed Is not the first considera tion. A man who files an instrument wants the recording to be accurate. The work has all to be compared, one man holding eppy whjle another reads, and Jf; there Is a mistake it Is noted on the mar gin. Any one who will take the trouble to go through our routine would not say this office is extravagant. "There is a great deal of work that wo get no fees for. because we are public servants, A man wants to know who owns such a lot In such a block, and we look It up for him, and find It if we can; sometimes it takes a day. People coma in to see mortgages and chattels. It takes the greater part of my time every day showing people what they want, A per son wants to see an instrument, or the record of an instrument, and if he can't find the record, I find it for him. I wouldn't advocate the raising of fees un less people want to make all the offices self-sustaining." PROSPEROUS ASHLAND. Oregon's Southernmost City Golntr Going Ahead With. Rapid Strides. ASHLAND, Nov. 2L (To the Editor.) This city, most picturesquely situated on the western foothills of the famous Sls Wyou Mountains, at the head of Rogue River Valley, in Jackson County, has been growing rapidly during the past year. Its present population is conserva tively estimated at 3&00, the exact figures not having boen reported by the census authorities. It is probable that no town in the state has had more evidences of thrift during the past year than this. More than 150 new houses have been built, and even now the demand Is great er than the supply. The railroad traffic is immeasurably greater than ever before, an average of at least 100 per cent over the previous year, and this necessitates a much larger payroll here than hither to, and It amounts to 510.000 per month easily. The payroll to those employed in tho mines within a radius of five miles, with Ashland as a center, amounts to 55000 per month. The fruitralsers xn this vicinity receive on an average 550.000 per year for their products, and the surrounding stockraisers put into circulation probably twice as much more. To these may bo added the products raised by the ordinary rancher, the amount and value of which cannot be estimated, all showing a healthy condi tion of affairs, and one that is attracting population and capital from abroad, par ticularly from the Eastern States. educational Methods. The school interests of Ashland are well developed, and are -also an Important ad junct In making It attractive as a place for homes. Of first Importance Is the Normal School. This was started by the M. E. church as an academy in 1893-94. to serve as a feeder to "Willamette Uni versity, but It proved a failure, hence the citizens of Ashland took it in hand in 1S3C-97. paid the debt against the build ing and campus of 11 acres, and carried on the school for two years or more; then in 1S99 it was placed under the Jur isdiction of the state as a Normal School, and a small appropriation given for Its support. It has proved Its right to exist as a State Normal School, and deserves hearty support by the next Legislature. Professor Clayton, who was graduated from Ohio Weslcyan University, at Dela ware, O., in 1891, has been at the head of the institution for the past year. Before coming here he had several years' experi ence in the leading public schools of his native state. Mrs. Clayton is an accom plished woman, and is a niece of George Dorsey, of Dayton, Yamhill County, a pioneer of 1S52. ' In addition to the Normal School there are two grammar schools and a High School. One of the grammar schools Is a substantially constructed brick building, up to date In all Its requirements, and would be a credit to any city In this state. The other buildings are "wooden, and not at all equal to the demands upon them. Another school building Is a neces sity, and this will doubtless be erected the coming year. The High School Is well attended, and Is In the charge of Profes sor C A- Hltchcok. who. has been here for six years. Another Important feature In the edu cational facilities of Ashland Is found in the Southern Oregon Chautauqua Asso ciation. This was organized In 1S92, and has flourished from the start. The asso ciation owns a suitable tract of eight and a half acres, comprising a beautiful grove and running water, near the center of the city. Upon this tract an auditorium has been erected, with a capacity of 1200. The property as It now stands represents a value of 55000. It Is In line with the other associations of a similar kind upon the coast, and as a consequence has the same talent at Its annual meetings, which are usually held about tho middle of July of each year. Some Xoted Pioneers. There has been a goodly number of early pioneers In and around Ashland, but time, which waits not for any, has greatly thinned their ranks. Among those yet here may be mentioned J. N. Ma theny, 1S43, who so longTived near Salem. Mathenys Ferry and Matheny's Bar, in the Willamette River, will long be re membered. His age has Impaired his memory so that past events are not read ily called up. Another is Patrick Dunn, who went to California In 150 and came to Oregon in 1S51. He was one of a com pany of 12 who pursued a band of Indians In 1S53 to punish them for some depreda tions. He was wounded In the pursuit. He has been an excellent citizen here, and has always had the confidence of the people of this county, having been hon ored repeatedly by being chosen to serve In responsible county offices. The weight of years rests heavily upon him, and he Is patiently waiting for tho summons to take him over to the majority. Gen eral J. C. Tolman Is In the same condi tion, almost 90 years of age. Both he and Mr. Dunn wanted to vote for Presi dent once more, and so were assisted to the polls, when they cast their votes for McKInley and Roosevelt. "W. C. Myers is another who Is well advanced In years, being now nearly SO. While somewhat en feebled by an active life in pioneering the stock industry, notably high-bred horses and cattle, he Is in full posses sion of his faculties, and takes a deep Interest In all that is going on. He had the first dairy of any consequence In Southern Oregon. As early as 1S5C ho began this enterprise with his brother, and sold butter and cheese In all the ad Joining towns, going as ar south as Yreka. Prices for butter ranged from 51 50 down to 50 cents a pound in 1S69, when he quit the business, and cheese brought 33 to 40 cents. On Sunday last the hilltops all about were white with snow, which descended during the previous night. On Monday the air from time to time was full of snow, but it melted as rapidly as It descended. Yesterday morning there was four Inches on the ground. As the day was quite warm most of it melted by night. This morning daylight revealed a good seven Inches on the level, exclusive of what was left over from the day before. The temperature has not yet be3i below freez ing, even at night, so that what Is now In sight will soon disappear, unless rein forced by further storms. In the moun tains five miles distant reports come that snow is two to three feet deep. GEORGE H. HIMES. She Thought It "Was Real Sunshine. Pittsburg Dispatch. It is the thought and attention be stowed upon details which give some houses the indescribable charm that oth ers, however superior In decorations and furnishings, can never hope to attain. This was happily Illustrated the other day at an Informal luncheon party. The day was dark and rainy, but as one of the guests stepped Into tho dining-room she ejaculated: "Why! I didn't know the sun had come out!" Then, when she saw her mistake, there was a pleasant laugh at her expense. The bright effect had been produced by placing a large bunch of brilliant yellow foliage plants on the sill of the broad English window, and the silken pillows lying on the window seat had caught and held the sunlight in the various golden shades. A large vase of nasturtium vines and flowers served as a centerpiece for the table, HOMES FOR TEN MILLIONS WHAT IRRIGATION COULD DO IN THE ARID AND SEMI-ARID WEST. Why National Irrigation Association Has Takes Up Work Instead of Leaving It to Several States. "The tree Is the mother of the foun tain. "Save the forests. "Store the- flood waters. "Reclaim the deserts. "Annex arid America," That is the slogan of the National Irri gation Association, says Professor F. B. Newell, of the United States Geological Survey. The marvelous growth of the movement fostered by this organization, which held its ninth annual congress at Chicago, November 21 to 24, is attracting the attention of the public In the East, as well as in the Central and Far West. The magnitude of the problem the organ ization has bravely set out to solve and the influence and energy It is bringing to bear are well worth considerate at tention. Millions of acres of barren land that might be made arable; miles of territory now uninhabited that should support many thousands of prosperous families. THE ARID REGION That is the proposition now being -wrought out. To persons who are not familiar with the matter many questions naturally arise. The first and most comprehensive is, "What Is the National Irrigation As sociation, and what does It seek to ac complish?" Briefly, this organization, composed of men Identified with the man ufacturing, transportation and commer cial interests of the country, as well as thoe In professional occupations. Is seek ing to provide the largest possible num ber of homes upon the public domain. This can come about only through a 'wise administration of the resources In water and forests, since upon these de pend directly the value of the vacant public lands. But why should not these matters be left to the Washington au thorities to settle? Simply because the Congress at Washington has not given serious attention to this matter, and the conditions are becoming so ominous for the future that the business Interests of the country as well as the philanthro pists have begun to take alarm. The great public domain, one-third of the whole United States, Is being admin istered not to make the largest number of homes, but rather the reverse. Under wise laws and Institutions framed with a knowledge of the facts, 10 families can obtain a good living where now one is scantily fed. But why should this not be left to pri vate enterprise? It has thus been left, and individuals have seized upon ail they could grasp, and in many Instances have ruined the opportunities for making homes for tens or hundreds of other in dividuals. The treatment of the arid public land has been comparable to that of a poorly tended orchard, -where each apple has been bitten by a bird or in sectthe a.nount actually consumed is relatively Insignificant, but the fruit is spoiled. Ono rnan by securing title to a few acres controlling the water supply has virtually become possessor of thou sands of additional acres which might otherwise have been used for farms. The opportunities for .doing this on a smalt scale have largely been seized, but by combinations of capital they may be In definitely extended. Why not leave the development to cor porate enterprise, as in the case ot rail roads? This also has been tried and large irrigation systems have been built. In nearly all Instances these have been financial failures, although of great bane fit to the country. It is highly Improb able that more capital can be brought to construct these costly works unless the most stringent and oppressive monopoly THE DESERT AFTER WATERING A VALLEY, can be created. If well administered the benefits are such that they cannot accrue solely to a water company, but the pub lic gains at the expense of the Investor. The latter becomes an Involuntary phil anthropist, simply because ho cannot con trol all of the returns which come from his investment. In other words, these works, when suc cessfully built, benefit -the community, but not the owner; The situation Is com parable In some respects to that In build ing lighthouses. Improving harbors or public roads tho corporation or the indi vidual who expends the money cannot be sure of securing remuneration for his enterprise. Why not turn over to the state in which they are situated all of theso lands and let each state attend to the matter? 4 This has been frequently advocated and tried in a small way, but the states in which these lands are situated are for the most part poor, and the lands themselves must be used a. basis of security for money obtained; in other words, the lands must be sold or rented to secure funds, and this in the past has Invariably re sulted in putting the lands into the hands of speculators the very thing to be avoided. The National Government is the owner of these millions of acres of fertile but arid lands, and as the owner has duties as well as privileges. But the question may be asked "Why should the East be taxed to assist In developing the West?" The answer lies In the fact that the prosperity of one part of the country is closelv linked with that of another. But the farmers of Illinois and Indiana f ""' "" ' - n'.'jigi say: "We do not want more agricultural land and more products brought into the market, as will result from the creation of more small farms in the West," This is a mistake founded upon ignorance. The products of the arid and semi-arid region cannot compete with those,, of the humid. Different crops seeking a different mar ket are produced. The products which come East are almost wholly semi-tropical or the- more extensive dried fruits. The ordinary farm crops of Illinois are protected by the heavy railroad tariff from the competition of the far West. Now, what Is the reclaimable country like, and what is to be done? Briefly stated, there are. in round num bers, 250,000 square miles, or COO.OOO.OOQ acres, of vacant public lands. Of these. 674.000.000 acres are suitable for grazing, SG.OOO.OOO acres are covered with woodland. In which there Is also grazing, and from which, fuel, fence posts, etc., can be had; there are 70.000,000 acres of forests of com mercial value, and about an equal area of absolutely desert land having no present value. There- Is water sufficient for the Irriga tion of from 73,000,000 to 100.OQ0.vOO acres, depending upon the methods of conserva tion employed. The average size of an ir rigated farm Is about 40 acres to a fam ily of Ave persons, not Including In this the grazing or range land. Probably 10.000,000 people could find homes on farms and be self-supporting If the water supply were properly regu lated. This would mean an enormous develop ment of the mineral and other resources, BEFORE WATER ING. which, with the prevailing scanty popu lation, will thus be vastly augmented by the mining and other Industrial occupa tions, as well as by the merchants and related trades. The experience of the Old World has shown that there Is almost no limit to the density of population within the arid region, where, with ample water and continuous sunshine, tho soil pro duces the most wonderful succession of crops. At present the vacant public land can be considered under two heads: That which is truly arid and that which is semi-arid or sub-humid. In the case ot the first. It is impossible to make a home without providing a water supply. In the case of the second, however, there are years when large crops can be produced. Settlers have rushed In during these times of unusual moisture, have attempted to make homes, and when, year after year, the crops havo been lost through the pre vailing drought, the farmers have become Impoverished and have finally abandoned their homes, as has been the case in Western Kansas and Western Nebraska. The soil of these drought-stricken re gions is notably fertile when watered, and the luxuriant vegetation which follows an occasional rain lures on the pioneer to his ruin. Farming there Is a. gambling operation. Wwhlch the occasional high stakes cause thousands to looso their Judgment and risk their efforts In "a hope less undertaking. The semi-arid regions Include the great belt of country extending from Western North Dakota through the western por tions of South Dakota. Nebraska. Kan sas, Oklahoma, Texas and the eastern part of Colorado. Here may be foirnfi thousands of ruins. Indicating the ati tempts made to secure a foothold with out first providing a water supply. It Is truly the land of famine, for, like all the great famine regions of the world. Its soil Is extraordinarily rich and everything Is conducive to prosperity except the one factor of rainfall. While the Government has not taken up seriously this matter of the reclamation of the arid and semi-arid lands, Con gress has authorized various investiga tions by the Department of the Interior. In whose charge are the public lands, and by the Department of Agriculture. In 1ESS the Geological Survey was authorized to Investigate the extent to which the arid lands could be redeemed by Irriga tion, and since that time It has been systematically measuring the streams, surveying reservoir sites and obtaining facts and figures on which to base an estimate of the cost of reclamation. Not only aro the surface streams being N ORCHARD IN THE SALT RIVER ARIZONA. measured, but Investigations are being made of the underground waters and their movements. Maps showing the depth of water-bearing beds beneath the surface are being prepared, showing by lines or colors the depth to which a well must be sunk in order to reach the pervious rocks. In localities where artesian wells occur these maps also show the height to which water will rise above the sur face. Many of the desert valleys of the West are thus being watered by the ap parently unlimited supply lying far be neath the dusty surface. Among the most notable of tho recent works of the Geological Survey are the examination of St. Mary's River, in Mon tana, and of Gila River, in Arizona. St, Mary's River, receiving water from the snowclad Rocky Mountains, flows along the eastern base of these into Canada and carries away to the north, the wafers needed on the dusty plains still further to the east. Milk River, a tributary to the Missouri, rises against the side of St. Mary's River and Is cut off by the latter from the-well-watered mountain area. It is thus a mere brook or rivulet, except in times of storm. The division of the hydrography of the Geological Survey has demonstrated that the water from St. Mary's River can be conducted around into the head waters of Milk River and kept on the south side of the Canadian boundary, flowing east ward to the parched, fertile lands of the Milk River Valley. The surveys have not yet been brought to completion, but it is probable that several- hundred thousand acres can be Ir rigated at a cost not prohibitory, pro viding homes for thousands of families. In the extreme South It has been shown, that reservoirs can be built on' the Gila River, storing up the flood water for the public lands and for the supply of the Indian tribes residing along this stream. These Indians have from time Immemorial supported themselves by agriculture through the use of these waters, but In recent years the activity of the white set tlers have resulted In depriving them of the water, and they are reduced to penury. Thousands of dollars are. being expended to educate these Indians, and at the same time they are forced to live In idleness and are not allowed to con tinue the agriculture of their forefathers. INSTITUTE OF PSYCHOLOGY "The Greatest Study of Mankind Is Man." Now that so much Interest Is being shown in the powers of the mind, and that wo are beginning to recognize the possibilities that He within us, the an nouncement that an institute has been established In Portland for the purpose of teaching how to develop and employ those powers In every-day life, and of healing the sick by natural methods, will be hailed with joy by many. Dissatisfaction with drug-treatment and the cures exploited by the many systems of healing without medicine have drawn much attention to these methods, and many explanations of their curative power have been given, most of them, er roneous. ' The Science of Suggestive Therapeutics offers a rational and scientific explana tion of all methods of restoring health; shows how the power of healing may be acquired and exercised; and teaches the development of the latent powers of the mind and of personal magnetism, upon which so much of our success In life de pends. Any person of ordinary Intelligence and ability can secure this development, and the opportunity -hould not be neglected. The Institute Is under the able manage ment of a well-known Portland physician, who has devoted the last 10 years of his Ufa to this study. This gives to all pa tients the advantage of a medical exam ination and diagnosis. The Institute is pleasantly situated In elegantly furnished offices In the new building, corner of Seventh and Wash ington streets Classes for Instruction are held on Monday, Wednesday and Fri day evening of each week. A free clinic, for patients unable to pay, is held from 9 to 10 A. M., on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Private patients are received at any time. Correspondence front pa tients who have tried all other forms of treatment In vain will receive careful and prompt attention. The Institute of Psychology makes' no charge for consultation. A PHYSICIAH'S DILEMMA. Found at Home in a Dazed, Condi tion, and Fears He "Was Drnssed. Dr. William M. Booth was found In a semi-conscious condition by his wife In their rooms at the Labbe building last night, and Mrs Booth fears that her hus band has been drugged by parties un known. She left Dr. Booth after supper to call on Mrs. Tuttle, of the Cambridge building, first locking the door of their room. On her return, shortly afterward, she was surprised to find the door of the room open, the furniture disarranged and her husband L'i a dazed condition, sajlng he had been "doped." He- Insisted that two men had visited him during her tem porary absence. The police authorities were notified, and City Physician Zan ex amined Dr.-Booth. The latter was unable to make a sufficiently clear statement, but a medical examination showed he was In no danger. Dr. Booth had been engaged In a mining transaction in the course of the afternoon."' His money and watch were safe. PERSONAL MEIfTIOITr J. S.. Bradley, a Bridal Veil saw mill man. Is at the Imperial. J. A. Rundle, a Toledo, Wash., mer chant, is at the St. Charles. M. P. Callender, a Knappton lumber man. 13 registered at the Imperial. William Holder, of Moro, ex-Sheriff of Sherman County, is at the Perkins. Hugh Glenn, a well-known citizen of The Dalles, Is registered at the St. Charles. F. H. Day, of Minneapolis, a prominent timber dealer, registered at the Perkins yesterday. W. H. Hosklns, Postmaster at Foley, Tillamook County, Is registered at the St. Charles. L. Q. Swetland has resumed hla po sition of chief deputy In the County Clerk's office, and was yesterday hard at work. D. "X. K. Deerlng, Sheriff of Union; A. H. Huntington, Sheriff of Baker, and E. P. Laurence, Sheriff of Grant County, reg istered at the Imperial yesterday. A. J. Johnson, of Astoria, Government timber expert, registered at the Perkins yesterday. He left for Washington City over the Southern Pacific last evening. LIVERPOOL, Dec L The Cunard line steamer Lucanla. which sailed from here for New York today, has on board Had don Chambers, the dramatist, and Wins ton Churchill, who Is to lecture In Amer ica. NEW YORK. Dec. L B. Albors, presi dent of the Albers & Schneider Company, of Portland, called at the Eastern offlce of The Oregonlan yesterday. He left Portland November 9 and has visited St. Louis, Cincinnati and Washington, D. C. Mr. Albers arrived in New York last Sat urday, and leaves for the West tonight He expects to arrive home December 6; . DAILY CITY STATISTICS. Real Estate Transfers. J. H. Roos to Clementina M. Sedlak. south half of lot 6. block 31. Ca ruthers' Addition. November 2C 5 1 Kate Beach and husband to Jullanl Topp. lot 30, block 41, Fremont, June 7, 1S97 500 Ernest S. Hatch to Emma Westburg. lot 14, block 44, Llnnton, November 23 15 A. P. Armstrong and wife to the Portland Social Turn Vereln, Kran kenkasse, lot 13, block 12, King's Addition, November 17 1 M. A. Poppleton to Laura H. Whal loy, lot 70. block 10 Alblna, April 17.. 1700 Marriage Licenses. Julia Segal, 20 years. Isaac L. Swett, 27 years; Clara Waller, US, F. A. Fourte, 31; Sophia K. Walch, 27, George. Park. 47; Lizzie Lawrence, 32, W. M. Plercfr, 33. Births. November 20 To the wife of John Zoller, Guild's Lake, a boy. November 27 To the wife of Herbert E. Rosseter, 429 East Couch street, a girl. November 19 To the wife of Thaddeus Glass West Portland, a girl. November 2S To the wife of John Wor rell, 302 Hamilton avenue, a girl. Contagious Diseases. November 29 Samuel Bohler, 12S East Sixth street, diphtheria November 29 Agnes Weigand, 827 Will iams avenue, scarlet fever. Deaths. November 29 Delia Ann Pringle, 454 Yamhill street, aged 79 years; old age. November 29 Beyrman L. Thomas. Good Samaritan Hospital, aged 46 years; cancer of intestines. The Tools Took Wings. John Packett was arrested yesterday, charged with carrying a concealed deadly weapon and larceny of tools, on the com plaint of William Wolfsteln. Separated From His Money. Nellie Lockwale ' was arrested last night, charged with the larceny of 5S0 from J. A. Johnston In a house on Fourth Btreer near Everett; , FOR DISTRICT ASSESSORS SENATOR BROWNELL HAS PRE PARED A REFORM: BILL. It Provides for the Appointment by County-Coart of District. As sessors With Full Povrers. Senator George. C. Brownell, of Clack amas County,, has prepared a blll,provld ingf for the appointment of District As sessors within each county, withthe same powers and duties as County Assessors. He. will introduce the bill at the corning session of the Legislature. Its text fol lows: , A bill for an act to amend sections 2456. 24&5 and 21S2. of title lv. chapter xlll of Hill's Annotated Laws of Oregon. Be It enacted by the Legislative As sembly of the State of Oregon as follows: Section L That section 2156 of Hill's Annotated Laws of Oregon be and the same Is hereby amended so as to read as follows: "Sec. 2456. There shall be elected at the general election by tho qualified electors of each county of this state a County Treasurer, one or more District Assessors, as .may be determined by the County Court as hereinafter provided, and a County Surveyor, who shall hold their of fices for the term f of two years, and until their successors are elected and qualified. There shall also be elected County Com missioners, wh shall hold their office for the term of .four years, and until their successors aret elected and qualified, to succeed the County Commissioners then In' office, and "whose terms will expire at or immediately succeeding such general election. "At the meeting of the County Court sitting for the transaction of county busi ness in the month, of January, 19u2. and whenever thereafter It shall be deemed by said " County Court advisable, the County Court sitting for the transaction of county business in each county of this state shall lay oft And establish as many assessment districts within said county as said County Court shall deem conveni ent, necessary and proper, to consist of the whole or such number of contiguous precincts as may be deemed advisable, and.' there shall be as many District As-k sessors within such county as the County Court of such county shall thus deter mine; such District Assessors stall possess J the same power, authority and preroga tives and perform the same duties as are fnow exercised and performed by the .'Countv Assessors of this stato." r Sec. 2. -That section 2458, title lv, chap ter xlll, or Hill's Annotated iaws or ure gon, as amended by an act entitled An act to amend an act entitled an act to amend section 245S, title lv, of chapter xlll, of the laws of Oregon, as compiled and an notated by W. Lair Hill, relating to the terms of county officers, approved Febru ary 20, 1SD1, approved February 23. 1KB. be and the same is hereby amended so as to read as follows: "Sec. 2468. The term of office of the of ficers mentioned in section 2456, of this title and chapter, shall commence on the first Monday next following the election of such officers, except that the term of offlce of the District Assessor shall com mence on the first Monday of January following the election of such officer; and before entering upon the offlce the per sons elected thereto must qualify therefor by filing with the County Clerk, or. In such counties where there is no County Clerk, the Clerk of the County Court, wherein he Is elect ed, his certificate of election, with the oath of offlce indorsed thereon, and sub scribed by him to the effect that he will support the Constitution of the United States and of this state, and will faith fully demean himself in offlce: and he shall also give and file the undertaking hereinafter provided for." Sec. 3. That section 24?9. of Hill's An notated Laws of Oregon, title lv, chapter xlll. be and the same is hereby amended so sm to read as follows: "Sw. 24S9. If a vacancy shall happen. In the office of JCounty Treasurer, District Assessor, County Surveyor, or Commis sioner of the County Court, the County Court of such county must appoint some suitable person to fill such vacancy, who shall hold such offlce until the next gen eral election thereafter, and until his suc cessor Is elected and qualified. A person annolnted to fill a vacancy In either of the offices mentioned In this section, be fore entering upon such offlce, must quali fy therefor as In the case of a person elected to such office." Sec. 4. That section 24S2 of Hill's An notated Laws of Oregon, title lv. chapter xlll, be and the same Is hereby amended so as to read as follows: "Sec- 24S2. The official undertaking of a District Assessor and County Surveyor must be given, approved, and filed In the manner prescribed for the official, under taking of a County Treasurer, but the amount of such undertaking must he 55000, und such official undertaking may be in substantially the same form as a County Treasurer's, substituting the name 'Dis trict Assessor or 'County Surveyor,' as the case may be for that ot County Treasurer. A Commissioner of the Coun tyt Court Is not required to give an, under taking." TAPPING THE SUN'S STRENGTH Process by Which, Old. Sol's Energjr Can JBo Utilized for Poiyer, Pearson's Magazine. L The problem ot tapping the giant strength of the sun, of controlling some portion of the power and heat so freely given to man, has been passed from the ancjents to the moderns through the hands of the greatest men of learning of all times without any adequate solution until the dawn of the 20 th century. The Grecian. Archimedes, the Edison of. his day, was perhaps the first to handle the question, and to set It traveling down the centuries; Ericsson, the American, and Mouchout, the Frenchman, were among the last to seek, the solution, and both succeeded In making the sun operate small motors. Nothing more was done until Dr. William Calver, ot Washington, Invented the pan-hellomotor,. and can now control a greater degree of heat than, man. ever operated before. The fiercest degree, of heat that any ono has hitherto been able to make is the 6000 degrees that has .been registered. In the electric arc Dr., Calver is able to generate 24.000 degrees, ot heat. Ot this he is able to control 10.00 degrees with abso lute safety, white he Is at present at work constructing an apparatus which will easily give him the mastery over the fulL amount of heat the he generates. With his invention,, which, briefly, con sists ot art arrangement ot mirrors- to- re flect the sun's rays upon a, focussing spot. Dr.- Calver could burn down a rocky mountahr, and reduce It to a level plain without as much as lighting a .match. Russian iron, of the kind so unburnable that it extinguishes the fire in the fiercest furnaces, melts under the heat at his control as a wax match is melted by the flame. Tough silver coins or stout glass tumblers become in a moment running liquid in the heat of the focussed rays; while with his apparatus he. will perfor ate a soaking wet plank of wood with a. dozen holes in as 'many seconds. Secret of Hnndwrltlnrr. The subject of handwriting Is so di verse In its ramifications that it would he Impossible to treat of them all In the spaco of a .newspaper article. Hence, one can only discuss those features which come prominently before the merchant or banker In his everyday business life. And whether we glance backward to the Phoenicians, who are said to be the men tors of handwriting, or forward to the electrical apparatus ot tcda5 which can transfer actual forms of handwriting over a wire 1000 miles long, we find the same Instrument governed by the muscles of the hand was and Is the medium by which our thoughts are transferred to paper. In the last century, except for one new style of penmanship, no variations can belaid to be noteworthy. Whether it be the Italian school, with Its neat and pretty forms, or the French, with its elongated and scratchy letters, or the Spencerian. with Its free and running style, or again, the vertical hand being taught in the schools today all of those follow- after a time the same rules In re spect to the characteristics of the Indi vidual. The schoolboy graduating with his fel- lows and possessed of the same style of penmanship starts on his buslnes career and, due to difference In conditions or en vironment or possibly to some physical or other peculiarity, he obtains a handwrit ing as he reaches the age of 30 which he keeps for the balance of his life. This handwriting, full of departures from that which he possessed when ho left school, belongs in its variations and peculiarities to him alone. These differences constitute what is known as his personality. In so far as hla writing is concerned. A logical sequence to all this is that though the same forms and the same let ters may look alike that fact Is no indi cation that the same person wrote them. These same persons might have learned In tho same school of penmanship. THREE WASHINGTON BUDS Grant's Granddaughter, Washing ton's Great-Grnndnicce, Ruth Banna. New York Journal. The blood of distinguished statesmen distinguished, in curiously different ways, it is trueflows in the veins of three of this year's beauties- The granddaughter of General Grant will charm Representatives and officials in the Capital City, the great-grandniece of George Washington will make her bow on the Island of Manhattan, and the daughter of Senator Mark Hanna. pretty little Miss Ruth, will go back and forth between the salons of Cleveland and Washington. Nellie Grant Sartorls' eldest daughter, Vivian, recalls "pretty Miss Nellie" aa she must have looked when General Grants and. Indeed, a whole nation of ad mirers, used to call ner "Little Sunshine." Vivian Sartorls has wavy brown hair that people frequently describe as black, be cause they see It tna room where there are more shadows than sunlight. She has big gray eyes, set in an olive skin and shaded by well-curved brows. She is Eng lish In coloring and health, but In every thing else, especially since her mother asked Congress to restore her citizenship, she Is American. Washingtonlans havo adopted her as a child of the Nation. Little Miss Hanna, the youngest daugh ter of the Senator. Is never described as a home-body. She Is an outdoor girl In the fullest sense of the term. Two years ago she established her fame as a Diana by chasing down a wildcat on her father's premises In Thomasvllle, Ga. Senator and Mrs. Hanna happened to be entertaining a large house party at the time, among them the President and .Mrs. McKInley. The boundaries of the Senator's pre serves, among the finest In Georgia, aro guarded as carefully as jnay be, but oc casionally wildcats and other small ani mals from the adjacent pine woods find their way In. Little Miss Ruth became aware that a large wildcat had been seen trespassing, and, nothing daunted, she planned a campaign against his life with a. success that marks her a typical child of Senator Mark Hanna. She and her cousin, Howard, accom panied by trained hounds, made what may be called a daylight start. Through sandy fields and thick mud. the young woman chased the cat until finally he was run up a tree. Then she fired the shot that brought him to the ground. An hour later,, while the family and their guests were at breakfast, Miss Ruth walked In with her wildcat and estab lished her fame to the title of Georgia's Diana. The last of this trio of buds. Mary C. Washington Bond, the great-grandnlece of the father of his country. Is also a pronounced brunette. She Is pale, with a pallor made striking by heavy masses of dark hair and wide-open black eyes, shaded with heavy lashes. Although. Miss Bond has been but lit tle seen in society, she Is already famous for her beauty. Mr. Peter Marie, in his "Collection of American Beauties," se lected her for one. She appears there a3 a lovely, smiling creature, holding a fleecy veil of white over her dark locks. She has on an old-fashioned satin gown, short-walsted, low-necked and short slfeved, caught In front with -a bunch-of flild flowers. Few Congressmen Win. Distinction. AInslee's Magazine. The average length of a career In Con gress Is four years. At the beginning or every Congress about one-third of the members of the House are new to the business. It is a rare thing for a member to- make any sort of a mark In legislation before he hag been in the House at least two- full terms, and those who have forced themselves above the surface be fore the close of a single term can al most be counted on the fingers of ' one hand The ordinary Congressman cornea and- goes and leaves no trace behind him,, except on the salary vouchers. The man who stays 'n the House for more than two terms has a. fair chance of wielding a little Influence. He gets his name Into the Congressional Record once In a. while; he Is recognized by the Speaker occasion ally; and if he is unusually lucky the newspapers take Tilm up and sometimes give him a headline all to himself. People who suffered with rheumatism have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla and found lasting relief, Ktv edition. Dr. Humphreys Manu al, 144- pases, on the care and. treat ment of the slcfc In all ailments, mailed free, fits the yest pocket. When the chills run down your back; take "77 -and the cold will stop right there. When you commence to sneeze, take "77" and that will end the cold. When you begin to cough, take "77" and that ends it. When you feel that you are taking cold, take "77" at once. If you have a cold that hangs on grip take "77" and break. It up At druggists', 23 cents. Humphreys' Homeopathic Medicine Co., Cor. "William & John .Sts... New York. Box Calf Storm Calf Vici KM New Styles at Reasonable Prices. "TW BDYS Style SHOESik E. C. GODDARD & CO. OREGOHIAtt BUILDING.