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About The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 2, 1897)
& Live County Paper. HILLSBORO, WASHINGTON CO., OUR, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1807. Subscribe for it and en- THE ARGUS Intend at the Post-office at Hillsboro, Oregon, as Second class mail matter. LtJCIUS A. LONG, EDITOR. County Official Paper. ISSUKD EVERY THURSDAY BY ' The Argus Publishing Company. Subscription: One Dollar per Annum. Six Months, 60 cts; Ituee ontlis, 35 cts. Opposed to Gold Mono metallism. Be lieves in the Bimetallic Standard Thinks we Ought to Take Care of our ovn People Before Annexing Hawaii. ' Has no use for Marcus A. Hanna. MEASURE FOR MEASURE. The republican party seeks to ad vise its adherents that we must have "sound money ," and to get ''sound money" it must have the gold standard gold monometal lism. The party made the greatest use of these assertions last summer, during the presidential campaign, and it was at that time frequently pointed out by the opposition that its. very position wab contradictory. It held for gold and said we must have an unchanging dollar. It wanted, in other words, values to remain the same.as they then werel And yety men voted the ticket for fear of a "cheaper dollar,"' or high er product, as measured in dollars. Speaking by the card, the repub lican party seeks to have a financ ial system which means a larger measuring power of dollars when applied to the farmers' product, while putting into effect laws which make the farmers pay more of these same dollars, for which they must fight hard, to the manufac turer for the manufactured article! This is rich, indeed, and who is there who has hot common sense enough to recognize that such laws strike the farmer both front and rear? How long can a party live .which holds out such a policy to those who are the makers of all wealth? It is a solely and simply a Question of measure. Will we have a dollar measure more prop erty, or property measure more dol lars? SOMETHING ABOUT LAW. The Oregonian is, beyond doubt, one of the most able papers pub lished on the continent, but this does not preclude its getting badly mixed on more than one question of vast importance. Its opposition to the democratic income tax is well remembered. Its assertions that men have the same opportuni ties but that many do not avail themselves of chance are indeed questionable. It is a fact incontro vertible that even on the Pacific coast, the opportunity to build a home, as in years ago, has passed away. The public domain has been taken up; a new generation has came into existence and it must seek avenues of labor wherewith to get money to buy a home. Condi tiom have changed in the last twelve years. Twelve years ago an able-bodied man could make fair wages in Oregon or Washington, even on a farm. Today the farm jaborer can get no more than half the then wage,. Farmers cannot jrfford to pay the old time prices. Jt is only when crop conditions abroad create an abnormal demand for American wheat that American growers can farm with any degree of profit. Mindful cf the fact that farmers must necceesarily thrive before business men in cities can thrive, it is nonsense to talk of op portunity! A man with $10,000 in cash can make an opportunity A man with an annual income of over $3000 can create opportunities bv the wholesale. His chance to financially thrive is a thousand times better than he who reaches his majority with a capital stock of nothing but brain and muscle. The Oregonian reiterates that law cannot help the impecunious. Very true! But equality to all before our law-making bodies can prevent much peculation and this will pre vent impecuniousness in many in stances. If law were but for the creation of order it would be differ ent. But corporations are before each and every meet of our legisla- lures and Congresses asking for special privileges and they get then where, the poor can not, and do not. Laws create conditions, and where conditions force much' from the many for the few, laws .r forceful, forcible instruments. SPASMODIC VIRTUE. Portland Simon papers and Port land pastors are making a great howl about the disreputable North End, as allowed to exist under th Pennoyer administration. The truth of the mutter is Portland's Whitechapel district flourished un der every anterior administration, and blackmail has been indiscrim inately levied under the regimes preceding Mr. Pennoyer's occupan cy. All at once the gold cult has became very virtuous. This is hy pocrisy for you! Ten years ago dens of infamy wit every wheie in terspersed over Portland's business sections. Today they are said to be more isolated than under the Frank administration. Vice was blackmailed at every opportunity to provide Simon with campaign funds. The complainants seem to have forgotten these things, but the Portland public certainly has not. The Pennoyer regime is no worse than the othirs and economicallv considered is doubtless better. The whole trouble is summed up in the desire of the Simonites to gain con trol of the municipality. POSITIVE MEN AND ft EASURES. The state of Oregon should next year send two congressmen and one senator to Washington who are positive, one way or the other, on the money question. Straddlers should be left at home. Bimetal- lists want silver men, but they would prefer gold monometallists to men who are anything before election, in order to be elected, and then anything which strikes their fancy after being seated. To this end men should he put up who are clearly arranged on distinct lines of money standards men who are not political weathercocks, preach ing gold standard one year and against it another. The people of Oregon want either one or the oth er. Let them not be forced to vote for or against a straddler. Let the issue be clear and inevitable. It must not be obscured by the per sonality of politicians who are any thing for the five thousand dollars per year and 'perkisites." Let us have positive men on positive plat forms and then the result will not be negative and half-baked. This line of policy, followed everywhere, will soon put an end to strife and fcive us positive resusts. EASY TO ANALYZE. The New York Tribune insists gai ly that Mr. McKfnley wtl do what he will do' when Congress meets, and it stands ready to say "amen!" to what that may be. It is need less to say that a public officer gen erally consults his closest friends when he is about to enter a public function. He generally goes to those from whom he has received the most help and what they advise is generally heeded. If those inter ests which wielded the public press in his behelf shall decree a message urging currency reform, Mr. Mc Kinley will doubtless coincide; if they fear next fall's elections and urge a non-committal policy, Mr, McKmley will non-commit. If they urge a currency contraction he will urge it. If they would urge independent bimetallism Mr. Mc Kinley will send in such a message We know that a commission was, sent abroad seeking international co-operation on the money question. We know when ' that commission was abroad Mr. McKinley sent in a message to Congress which plainly read between the lines to the effect that we didn't want any interna tional agreement or anything else but a follow in the wake of the En glish financial system. He stabbed his own commission in the back 1 his he did at the instigation of his "friends" the agencies of cor porate Jwealth here and abroad? vhh wis nisiory iresn in onr minds, the New York Tribune tak es good ground when it intimates that Mr. McKinley will write "some kind of a message." . FAITH, OR FALSITY. Since England has refused to enter into a bimetallic agreement, and is conceded by the brains of the it re- publican party that the admin is- tration will Dreserva the irnlrl stan dard until such agreement be affec ted, it is time for socalled rennhli- can journals to either support one or the other financial system. There is no middle ground. Internation al agreement by mediation has fall en by the wayside. ' It can no more fool the foolish or worry the wise. The presidential commission sent abroad has fully established the i "corpus delicti" and no one except a fulsome fanatic or an furtheror of falsity will hold out hopes for a . resurrection. There are, no doubt, a few fanat ics who believe it can be accomp lished. It is rather amusing to yet witness this demonstration of faith in a number of socalled republican papers of Oregon; reminds one that "Faith, fanatic Faith, once wedded fast To some dear fasehood, hiurs it to the last." Rut if it be not faith which moves these scribblers, then must itbede liberate falsity. Either will undo the republican party. The silveriUs, in all their plat forms, contend for something tangi ble. They have built a structure which no architect of political econ omy can mistake. It cannot le deemed at one and the same time as mosque or its opposite. It is a positive platform and he who reads understands its intents and purpos es. Unlike the republican platform which is construed to stand for both gold standardism and bimet allism it stands for something, and that something must be possi ble before international bimetallism can ensue, towit: independent bi metallism. Blind faith or studied falsity can no longer govern the public mind. RELIEF FOR GOLD HC TER8. There is considerable agitation over the asking the government to send a relief expedition to the Klondike. The government, perhaps, could do worse than to send in supplies to the starving prospectors and adven turers, but it should be remember ed that here in plenteous America there are many times many thous ands in our populous cities strug gling penniless, cold and hungry, to find a prospect that will yield a color of that yellow medium, with which to feed little ones. The ad ministration may answer that it has legislated for those at home, but it should also be borne in mind that it has legislated for those, as well, who have started in the quest of gold, in the making of gold more valuable. There can be found plen ty of destitution in the eastern cit ies, and if we are to have reli f work let us at least treat all suffering on an equality It will not cost as much to relieve ten times the suf fering at home as in the Arctic Cir cle. LAYING HIS GROUNDWORK. It is known that Jnhn H. Mitchell is quietly at work to gain control of the next republican state con vention and Ibis he bids fair to do in almost every county in the state Multnomah excepting. Here in Washington county the majority of republicans are his firm defend ers, while many who support him chuckle over the way the genial ex senator capers on the money ques tion. They seem to think it a huge joke that Mr. Mitchell can hold so many to the g. o. p. on the money question. As it now looks, Mr. Mitchell will go to the state con vention firmly entrenched, where he will probably -'endorse the St. Louis platform" and then bend his energies towards whipping the re calcitrant "Corbett crowd" into line for the bloodless fray. The pooh, dear, antique Inde pendent says the silver papers gloat over wheat falling. Let us grant it be so, just for argument! Didn't the Independent, say, two years or such a matter ago, that Dolph'8 financial policy "would decrease from one-half to two-thirds the price of everything Oregon has to Belli" No, No! The silver pa pers want a policy that will give old time wheat values. The administration bimetallic commission must feel heartily pleased to know that subtle diplo macy was used by the power ap pointing it to defeat their work abroad. This has the effect of mak ing the republican platform read, "We are in favor of the existing gold standard, and will defeat in ternational bimetallism, if possi ble." And it seems to have been possible " EDITORIAL RAMBMNGS. Uncle Sam can't even have the basis without help from the bondholders to begin with O! "chased" system! What the thunder do we want of law anyway when we have so manv ii,i,.ni- gent politicians who dearly love the peo ple? The president is busily occupied ex- Wvfp The price on every Suit or Overcoat in our Fall and Winter showing Is a drawing-card in Itself. Our variety, our patterns and our methods do the rest. Remember there are no heirlooms in our stock. More are the world famed Suits, Pants and Overcoats. They hang better; they're finished and pressed better; they wear and please better than any other make of clothing in this State. II WEHRUNfcr & SONS plaining to Spain that his understrap pers are only joshing about Uncle Sam's love for Cuba. With large delinquent tax lists running in the Independent and Oregonian, it i.i no wonder that the glamour of "prosper ity" has taken possession of their editors. Congress will soon assemble, but it is not expected that Mr. Dingley is prepar ed to explain that forty million deficit which is eating into the body politic of his cherished measure. So Mr. McKinley is to have a gold bust representation for the Paris Expos ition. That's nothing. By 1900 Uncle Sani will have gold "bust-' which will make Mr. McKinley's turn green. Perhaps Mr. Mitchell has discovered that there is a vast similitude between a cross section on the Moon & Mars R. R. and a like survey of political paths in Oregon-"darned hard to find the stakes. " The president should not lose a chance of a lifetime in office to touch up the ;ia tion in a blaze of glory. The Machete dislikes to anticipate executive functions but the president will certainly lose caste in Oregon, if he fail to send Benton Kil leu to Cuba 8n a geodetic commission. Buxton Machete (rep.). , John Bull loses no sleep bewailing the two good drubbings received from Uncle Sam. He quietly sleeps, serenely con tent, happy in the thought that his on ly and enlightened gold standard is bet ter far than bullets, and that through it he makes us pay a tribute which annu ally would pay for an empire. His Roy al Nibs will let us whip him every ten years if he can continue to control our financial legislation. Jolly John Bull! IS IT CORBETT? Legend of Oregon: Many, full many moons ago the Chief of the crv.ititless tribes of Oregon, at the behest of close tillicums stnt one of his medicine men who was swift in the chase of wampum back to the rising un o sit in a coun cil to deliberate and inveigh against cul lus chickainin in company with medicine men of great fam . The Sachem crost river and mountain and lake and plain, never resting nor breaking a twig day and night he travelled sleeping not ex cept with but one eye that he might bet ter serve his tribes and at the same time watch cultus chickamin warriors, brav est and most treacherous of whom was him called Chief Who-Lost-His-Robe. But Lo poor Sachem! Those of the big white Illihe hnew him not and offered him no pipe nor no skin to seat hfmself upon except that which the great Spirit had given him. Faithful Indian that he is, mindful that the Siletz braves were with him in spirit, he returned not to the Chinook r or Tualatin nor Clackamas but remained day after day in front of the Lodge which made him w lcome not. And there he sate.. Moon upon moon passed and still he sate, and sate, and sate, and spat upon the earth, making no plaint as becomes a true skookum chickamin brave. His eye faded, his hair grew whiter and yet the warrior sate. The string of wampum grew lighter and lighter while his heart grew heavier and heavier in the knowledge that his people were not represented. Meantime an ev il Chieftain named Klondike sent to him a message intimating ere many Chin ooks had blown it would take a whole moccasin full of lion skookum chicka min to buy a cuatin with cropped cars from the Linton emporium, and the soul of the warrior grew yet more sad and he Still sate but not where he was wont, in side the council. The Oregon flows on in his faraway home, but he lets it flow. He waits and sighs not. The Chinook whistles across liie hunting grounds near to the western sea but the medicineman whistles not back the sweet refrain for his soul is full of sadness and he cannot pucker. Chemawa Wa Wa. Ind COURT HOUSE NEWS. PROBATE. Ci (a tion ordered issued to heirs of W in Guthrie, deceased, to appear Jan 2, 1898, to show cause why or der should not be made granting petition t- te'l rrnl estate. .1 A Imbtie has lull appointed guardian of U F Imbriin the mat ter of the rst-tcs of U.oVtt ('.nun !!!. d-censi d, and D.ivid !.ibrie. deci-iiKi d. Oidend that Oloi.k of Cnii) !,-.;in fur iin' r 1 1! r ;. a! ekht j 1 1 'ei'iit. said money le'onu' irtr Ui twit heirs of the Alois I'ard ui::ef rt'tute. '.. 'siileiire unknown Tl" ."di, i!uV:n:i'Mi of th' I'rif tin! f!i . hardi-i n estatn has l en oidt ivd cloi-i'd of rt cord. Real Estate Transactions. Lyda A Young ami husband to ! Dough ty part Audrew Harper d 1 e, I2200. J V Sliute lo Ccctli-i Ferris tract 5 in ! airview ad to Hillsboro, fyuo Alfred Davies to J unes M Smith 40 a in sec 21 t I s r 1 w, 12414. TJ Walian and wife to Win IMwards 4.43 a sec 16 t 2 s r 2 w, fSij. Wm Ca ter to Mrs Belle Vnndehey n e )i s e 4 sec 19 t 3 n r 5 w, 100. Frank A Stockwelt to Joseph J Hartley Slockwell creamery tract, f.iix). D C Miller and wife to Klizabeth Thom son pr.rt of lot 10 truitvab; nd Forest Grove ar.d other lands. 5;;n. Wm R Smith and others (heirs) to Han nab. B Smith e n e sec 17 t 2 s r l w, $1. August Gubhart .ind wife to Cbas Wall s y2 n w ,'4 of s e s 35 t 2 s r iw for" Joshua Clark tu John F Kidder and wife part blk II Forest Grove, J.itoo. N R Weils and wife to R A Myiie tract in sec 36 t 1 n r 4 w, f.1360. P J ikhmiiz and wife to C 1' Wunderlich 40 a see 1 7 t I s r 3 w, $713 Wm Vaiiderzandun el ai to John Ver bo irt 87.66 a Wm Wilson d 1 e, Jiooo W H G oss to IMward J O'IXm s w sec 34 t 2 11 r 4 v, Jr. W II lucl-."r to Mary Smith 1.80 Humphrey!-,' ad to Hillsboro, $675. TWO FOR USE Send for free sample and judj;e thereby. IlilkWft.lrfflK And v pftiiiiju.;i v uitui Ciiiciooati liopire Both i K Cash in Per Year IP-Iuv Advacnc. Tie Enquirer in a 9-cohiinii. 8 page paper, issued ench Thursday. Largest in cheapest in price, most reliable in news. all large, type, plain 'print, good white paper. K our readers want 11 not her live pujier tlie Enquirer is that paper. Call or send order to The Argus Puhlishing';Co t Public Sale. Notice is hereby given th.it hy an order of "'U v.iijiiiu..,-ionrin 4.uilll Ol U Uillll;illll County, Oregon, that on Wednesday, De cember Hth, 1ii7. ut 2 o'clock p. 111. the old Washington County Jail building situated in the Court House Square, will he sold at public sale to the higheat bidder fur cash 111 hand, aula to take place at the south door ol the Court House, in Hillsboro, Oregon. B. 1 CORNELIUS Chairman Board. Daled at Hillsboro, this 10th day of Nov ember, 1807. Notice of Final Settlement, Notice is hereby given that the minor signed has tiled his final account as executor of the last will and testament of Knima Htark. deceased, in the Count v Court of'the Htate of 1 regon, lor 'Wasti ington County, and that said Court has appointed vonday. I eceinber 20th, 1W7, at the hour of 10 o'clock i. M. as the time for hearing objections to such final ac count and for the settlement thereof. CIlhTSTOl'H II EDM OLD hxecutor of the last will and testament of Km nia Stark, deceased. Dated at Hillsboro, Oregon, this 18th day of November, 1807. ROBERT WAGNER Has moved his boot and shoo repair shop into the building one door west of tho Pharmacy, 011 Main strait, where he will bo pleased to do good w ork nt Lowest Possible Prices V ILLS BORO, OREGON The Hillsboro Pharmacy The Leading Drug Where DrugM, Medicines. Paint, Clls, Niuntfcs. llrushes and all DruuKlst'H Nitti't i h may be procmed at prices that !itnlv dinlaiico competition. THE DELTA : : Special Attention Given to Quality : : and Accuracy 111 Dispensing. : : A Full Supply of Toih I Atticlcs, I'ttfi in : : cry, Patent Medicines, 5-cl.iol Hunks, I'.to, Sac Car Largo Stock of Fine Perfumes The Largest Ever Shown in the City. Telephone tVom Store toOlliiiv HILLSBORO CITY 1. K Beef, Mutton, leal and Pork Kept Constantly on Hand. Highest : M.ukct : Trice : I'aid : tar : Fat : Cattle, : Sheep : it ml ; lion Cash Paid for Poultry. MAIN STIiKHT. - IIIU.SIKHU), OK MOON. ZCiTY LIVERY STABLE; Cor. 2nd and Washington Street It ViHlZZ YO'J WILL FIND THE BEST TEAMS THAT CAN BE HAD IN HILLSBORO L7ESYII113C nSST-CLASS. GOOD 1 ..... I'OIKl1 -''ls'1''l,, I ibllOUl j. NOHTIIKl l', Newly Furnished j mm and Renovated, A first -clays table and h'u accommodations fot ti e convenience of guests. . . , Notice To Bridge Builders. A contract will be let at the county court room, at Hillsboro, Oregon, Washington comity, on Wednesday eceinbcr 8, 1847 at one o'clock p. ill. to the lowest bidder for building a bridge ovtr a creik unit cainon near the house of Knox on the crnnty road leading from Hnxt n to the resn.e ice of J. N. Ilailev, in said tiounty, . all bids to be sealed. The ci'limiission ers court reserves the riejit to reject any ' and all bills. Specifications may be seen at the CK'iks nllice on and alter this! week. By Older of conimiss'oners court. I!. V. Cornelius, Judge. 1 Notice to the Public. Notice is herely (tlvon that the undersign- id farmers mid residents at Mniiiitahulalu and vicinity ill prosecute lo tlio fail ex tent of the. law, fur such cilVenses prewrih- i en, an persons who limit, iisli, or other wise LreNpHKH upon the farms of said 1111 dershriifltl. Dated at Mountaiiidalo, Washington Co. Ore,, this 'JMth dav of Seplembor, ls:)7. II. Taylor Hill, ('. K." Miorey, John Smith (leu. Ilaiins, I. I. Nurtbinp, .1 I', ('rock er, M. M. Howell, M. W. 1 full , J. C. ,af I'erty, S. J. Kallnrty, C. It. Taylor. Ueo. H. Anncntmut, .John lbaeh, A. (' WirtK, W. A. MotitRoincry and W. N. Ilayimui. Notice for Publication. IANII Omen AT OlIKHOK f'lTV, Oll.l Oct. 20t li. ls7.f XroTIl'K is hereby Riven that the follow ly ini;-namefl settler lias li led notice, of his intention tu maka linn! proof in sup port of his claim, and thai said proof will lie made hrforo the County CI' rk of Wash hildon County at Hillsboro Oregon, on lice. -1th, l)7,viz: (it-ant Kacon If. E. No. R'!7.'! fur the K 'A H W X, nnd hits ii and 4 of Sue. 7 '1 i 3 N K 3 west. lie mimes the following witnesses to prove his continuous resilience upon anil cultivation of said land, viz: Thomas (I. Mtiaehain, John Q. Johnson and Dan It. Koe, of Hacona Ore., anil William JieeVes, of Forest drove, Oregon. l!l-7 Uohkkt A. .M11.1.KK. Register P- BROWN Hrrmo, ucoM 7 union nuc, iiili.niioko 0 faUSIG AND just 3 Lessons in Piano, Organ and Harmony. PUNCH, CHAKCOAt CR AMIS' PASTRr, INDIA INK DRAWING oil painting Notice for Publication, . Lakh Office at Okkoon City, O11.I Oct. ID, lH')7.f O'l tCK la hereby Riven Hint tho follow 1A iiiK-naiued settler has tiled notice cf his Intention to make final proof in sup iiovt of his claim, and that said proof will bn made before the county clerk of Wash ington county at Hillsboro, Orenoii. on Dec. lth 1897, viz: John Bynia H. 14. 10306, for Hie W i of N E y4, 8 K V, of N W '4 of Hee. IB and ti W 4 of 8 K V of see 10 tp 8 N IU West. A He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation of said land, viz: K. J. Cvubb, It einrioh Peterson and A. H F. Wulf, of Hiixton, Ore., and J. il. Ken ned', of Greenville, Oregon. 4-fi KohkrtA. MiMiitn, Kenlster. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice Is hereby given that tho under signed has liled her final account in t.lie CfllMltv I Vilifl. nfllm Ut..i.. ..f ior Washington County, 111 the matter of v.iu cwiio ui Ionian ij. wiiuams, Deceas ed, and thai said Court has set Monday lltnAlh Int. .'.I' Tti,nn...L o. . . . '. in u. ui ucu-iuucr, 1TO, UI ie II O'. clock A. M., ol said day, at the County lYiiirf i-i. in,, 1,1 ii;iii...h.. iv.. ..1.!.. . r ....,.,, uiu.u,U ItKlllllKlDIl County. Ormriui a. Ilia lima urn! ..l i'..- ;-JT ... ..... v,,,,vull,, ,iWW lur hoaring objections to said linal account and for the settlement of said estate. Dated at Hillsboro, on this 1st day of November, 1807 SARAH.!. WILLIAMS. Administratrix of'the Mutate of Lyman L. 11 minion, 1 t'ceaseo. HAflLEY A. ItKOWN. Attorney for Administratrix, J. Q. A Young, now Serving mi the Circuit Court petit jury, is quo ted as ono of tho survivors nf t1w Whitman massacre. Union Block Mam Si. Ur. V. A. Ha i Icy 1 - j r i t 1 1 r . Houso. DRUG STOHC MEAT MARKET. ItKKST, l'H.,r 7 TEAMS, COOD BUGGIES and DRIVERS THK tiRKAT GOLD t SILVER COUNTRIES OK BRITISH (Old MIIIA AM) KASTKKS ORKtiON AUS ALL REACHED VIA OR&N No Chance of Cars between (HA K Kit CITY SI'OKANK I'OUTLANl) anil Khorlrt Lute In SI'OKANK Connecting with ALL HAIL ROUTE to . . Trail, Rutland, Marcus Nelson, nnd nil Kontenay Mining Camps. . . LOW KATES and THk'OKdl TICKETS For I'uiiijihleis and Detailed ' '1 1" M( I I II I " W II III.RLM'KT, y (len'l Pjivn AkiiI 1'iirllaiiil, Oregon?" Or J. I. Knight, Hillsboro. Ore. ' Fine Watch Kcmiriiiir h Npeeialty. E. S. BOOTH . . MiAI.EU IN , . Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Bicycles, Sewing Machines, Musical Instruments. MAIN 8TKKKT, Ol'l'OBlTK BANK, Ilillsl.oro, - . Oregon. 1! VI lUVtL M Transact 11 General Bunking RunIuchh J. W. HMUTR A. C. HHUTK , . . .. Manager . . . . .Cashier Sell sight fi.xi'liango mid Telegraphlo Iraiislni'M and miiM Letters of Credit available throughout (ho United Ktulos. Draw Mils ol' KxeJianiro on London, Uvorpool, Dublin, l'nr;H Itoi-lin. Krank-lort-on-tho- iiin.Ktnekholm and all prln. clpal cities of Utirope, Collections made on up accessible polnta. BnnUins biiiirs from 9 u m to 3 p 111. Hillsboro, Oregon, GO JEAST VIA America's Scenic Line U 1 I 'ai n vim (ml THE LIHRARY CAR ROUTE Meals in DiMj.,g Our a la Carte Mock Ikllast. No Dust.. Shortest and (litest Line To St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth, Chicago ...And all Points Eat.,,, lllUlfl nn1 Tntinini feu 1 uiuuv UIIU 1 UUlll)li 1 1 jiiii f Aim 1 11 i'iyi THE 1UIVU in Sleepers, Dining and Li brary Observation Cars. DAILY 'MAINS -FAST TIME Service anil Scenery Unequaled. For tickets an.! full information call on or u!rliess, If. T. Bngley, i n Ab,,,1, Hil l-,,or. Or. A. li. 0. Dennision, C. 1', & T. A. Portland, Oregon, '