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About The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 15, 1898)
Liv OoUillSr $mt. rllLl.Sltt)k(J WASlltKQTO' COvOI THUKSbAV, DEO. 15, 'OS. ! .... . .O . 111 ' "... !. .! Ij, hi r Subscribe for it and , 4 THE ARGUS Knteted at the Post-office mt Hillsboro, Oregon, as Second elm mail matter. LUCIUS A. LONG, EDITOR. County Official Paper. ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY BY The Argus Publishing Company. Subscription: One Dollar per Annum. Six Months, 60 cu; Three Months, 85 cts. Opposed to Gold Mono metallism. Be lieves in the Bimetallic Standard. Thinks we Ought to Take Care of our wn People Before Annexing Hawaii. Has no use for Marcus A. Ranna. WHICH SHALL BE SUPREME? It is passing strange that bo many intelligent farmers are prone to ac cept the statement that overproduc tion is the sole cause of falling pri ces, and are apparently willing to acquiesce, as 'twere useless to furth er consider the matter. If the argu ment of overproduction hold, and let us assume for argument that it will, then we are face to face with a great economic wrong as between the great creditor and debtor ele ments, a condition favorable to the creditor and highly injurious to the debtors and when we say debtors we mean nations, states and cities, as well as individuals. The wrong is: that money legislation has been trending to contraction, and condi tions effected that money could not cheapen in proportion to the imag ined cheapening of all other things thus causing the producing debtor to sell more of his property to buy a dollar with which to liquidate. It is self evident that the creditor element appreciates this situation, as it is always insiduously striving to keep legislation from creatine a condition which shall surely return a money uniformly cheapened along with all other things purchasable, la other words, class legislation has all along the "cheapening" era held to protect the creditor, and allowed the producer to go to the "chea)" era without protest. ( But the theory of "overpreduc tion" is hardly valid, hardly sus tained, as witness, within a short period, the cleaning up in one sea son of the wheat "overproduced;" and this in the face of but one sea son's partial crop failure and one must see where the overproduction theory comes in when we realize an average price of only 65 cents per bushel in the face of the greatest shortage of a centuryl And now we are back to practically a half value market, and still weakening. The time will come when Amer ican producers they are not serv He like Europeans will use the right to a voice in affairs and re verse the class legislation of the last 25 years. Producers of proper ty are entitled to have their "over production" as measured in money, met with an overproduction of mon ey to correspond. But overproduction has explod ed and the girt of onr social proh lem lies in the fact that one of the streams which in the past helped to feed the money supply, has been dammed, causing virtual contrac tion; making money scarcer in pro portion to commodities produced by farms and factories; to an increas ing population; to the constantly growing volume of debt and de mand for money to meet the exi gencies of all these agencies. If the quantitative theory aDply to commodity, bought by money, then the quantitative theory must apply to money, for money, is in UV bought by commodity. All ""lorities admit that the law p noias. .Locke says: "ThOmfiie of money in any one conn try is the present quantity of the current money in that country in proportion to the present trade." . Hume asserts: "It is the proportion between the cir taUting, money and the commodities in" tne market wntch determines the price." John Stewart Mill lays down: "The value of money , other things be ing the same, varies inversely as its quantity; every increase of its quantity lowering its valne, and every diminution failing itiu a ratio exactly equivalent." Ricardo emphatically declares: That commodities would rise and fall fa price in proportion to the increase or diminution of money, I assume as a fact that is incontrovertible." . To take up the question of our nation alone, to say nothing of oth er countries, we note, that, with an ! increasing prouuction, commerce and increased debt, all of which has fbreed a greater demand for money, CJll, legislation has passed which Jj ejdvalent to outting gold coin- , rvuv uu ioi n wmi guiu mm nJrrr then produced was worth full gold values. This legislation u -beneficial only to ino.i.e taker ani holders of large credit demands. Producers should seriously begin to study this matter of money and ponder well before theirs shall be the ballots to further debase what is their result of labor. It is to be hoped that the minority of furufers who tiro years ago voted, a waiting international policy, will, in 1900, join that majority of the Caucasian race in America which in 1896 vot ed for better prices, to the end that American labor and its results will not be cheapened to their detriment. AN UNWILLING WITNESS. We may call him an unwilling witness. Mr. McKinley's message was a much more grammatical in strument than those of his past. It was, to all intents and purposes, a recital. Suggestion was very vague, and his steering away from the money question is indicative, that, altho' he is willing the pow ers shall legislate as they see fit, he is at present not prone to launch experiments into the national era, by his exscutive intimation, other than observance of the platform upon which he was elected. The whole tenor of his message which touches upon the money question seems to equal: "Do what you will but remem ber I have advised nothing. Take your action but leave no responsi bility on my shoulders." It is the president's apathy in this regard which is digging his political grave. Mr. McKinley has an ear for the plaints of . the great industrial classes and his unwill ingness to get away frm his Meth odist sense of popular service is making him somewhat unpopular with the banking and income classes. Wires are already being laid by the persistent and most energetic of the product debasers to lay the president in the political shade and put up a new man for the 1900 race. There is a touch of the pathetic in the president's atti tude. He has known business ad versity himself and he is rather backward and conscientiously in getting too far to the front of the banner which readi: "The more debased are commodities, the sounder is the dollar." It is getting along about that point of the calendar when the Oregon State House janitor should have screwholes drilled through cuspidor bottoms, pre paratory to securely fastening them to the floor that legislators and clerks may not carry them away. In this kindly suggestion that the state be not robbed Washington county legislators will take notice that no offense is aimed at them. Indeed, we are constrained to believe had our legislators borrowed spittoons, they will take them back to use during the coming session. How poor it must make your Uncle Collis feel as soon as he Crosses the Califo rnia line into Oregon! Just think of it! The sudden transformation from a seven teen thousand dollar roadbed to a three or four thousand dollar track, is enough to make Uncle Collis remember Oregon institutions in his will, and California assc ssment in his curse. Mister Pentland, of Independence, who boasts of being a gold standard' editor, says he wants the referendum because newspapers will get big money printing bills. When we get the referendum the state will do its own printing aud distri button through an economical plan, and Mister Pentland may be expected then to be opposed to it as an item of expense. Since last May Three Thousand and Thirteen Phillipine babies have been named Dewey Aguinaldo, and nine have been named McKinley. No report as to the Mark Hannas. An Oregon Volun teer writes that one was named Joe Sim onthe kid grabbed at every thing in sight. The San Francisco Chronicle, before the election indignantly denied that the Southern Pacific was ever in politics. It has now changed its mind since the Southern Pacific carried the California legislature and each issue goes after Un cle Collis' candidate for United States Senate. 3o not get alarmed, should the Tele gram, of Portland, suddenly say: "As predicted by the Teleeram a von or "so ugo, new years win come on Jan. i." It will only be the Telegram predistiga teur, congratulating himself on the suc cess of one of his usual happy forecasts That gold standard editorial leader caption, "doiaar wheat" has either been ignominiously pied by the devil, or rendered out of date by its rival on the editor's page, "simon stiu standing.' Or has the price of wheat fallen under the fatherhood of Mark can it be? Evkrv effect has its cause. And now comes our friend Jones, asserting the bet ter price oWiops is due to copious slak ing of lager in Germany during the Kai ser's visit to Jerusalem -but perhaps the Czar s universal peace joke caused the in crease of smiles. ThB American sheep is beginning to baa back to the cheap Cleveland era, sor ry are we to chronicle. Can it be that confidence is not yet fully restored! What will the Oregon legislature do without J. e SiiuolU This has been another bid w.lf for tli CortvUs. Probate. Final ammm filed in re estate of Albert Wilcox, deceased, filed and eet for hearing on January 9, 1S99, at 10 A. M. Semi-annual account in re Mar tin Manning estate filed and ap proved. Bond filed and approved in re iSathaiuel Holland estate. Report of sule of personal proper ty in re estate of Ciotleib S'a ger, deceased, filed and approved. Pe titions tiled to sell real estate. Citation ordered to the heirs to show cause, etc., by Jan 14, 1899 Inventory and appraisement filed in the estate of Glaus Peterson, de ceased, filed Mild approved. Ap praised value of personal estate $5SS. Real estate $1800. Semi annual account and report of sale filed and approved in re estate of Otto W. F. Weiehbrodt, deceased.- Administrator ordered to pay expenses of administration and preferred claims. Final account in the 'James Dickson estate filed and approved. A TILE MANUFACTURER Who Does Not Advertise, and Who is in Favor of Repeal of Duty. James. H. Sewell wants Profit for Farm and Labor. An Argus representative recently visited the North Pacific Clay works, "ami ttie followiug conversation took place: Mr, Sewell, I see you have a large stock of draiu tile on hand. What was your output this season? 'The North Pacific Clav Works did no manufacturing this season." Well, what was yout output in 1897? "We manufactured some last year. It cost me about $500 for labor. You see the fact is, we don't just absolutely make die for fun and when we see we can't sell we make no more." Well, but what about vour i8q6 outmit? "None at all. As I have said, we uon't manufacture when our stock is complete. ' Probably you do not advertise. You have close competition? " es, we have competition. Thre is one other factory in the county, and the state is quite well supplied. North Yam hill, McMinnville, Newbure, Saleru aud so on, have factories, all close to railroad communication and accessible to most any point. But competition cuts a small ngure. mere is nothing to compete for. It only cuts prices a trine. But men do not buy tile because thev are chean They buy because they think they can get a profit from their use. They figure the use according to the value of the product produced, and the principal product is wnea ana that has been running verv low in price for years. Consequently there are but very few farmers who feel able to improve their land. There is plenty of use for drain tile and if the profit to the farmers on their products was sufficient, there would be no quest ion about competition. It would take all the factories of the state running at their miiesi capacity to supply ttie demand fracypally, we haven't made any tile since 1892. That year we paid out $3000 for labor and material to manufacture with, and had a better demand with bet ter prices, than we have today. But the hard times set in and ruined the farmers' prospect for profit, and since that time it has been as much as thev could do to pay their necessary expenses, let alone improve their land. In fact 1 have tile now in my yard that was manufacture'! in 1892. The fact is, there is no tile bus iness now. Of course there are some sold' but the small amount, divided among the different factories, is very little profit to manufacturers. As far as advertisement is concerned, I think the North Pacific Clay Works are pretty well advertised. I have one one ot the largest, as well as oldest established plants in the state and I have shipped tile all over the country, from Corvallis to Walla Walla. I furnish ed the tile for the State Agricultural Ex periment station. No, thank you. Just give Hie farmer a good profit on his pro. lung and I am rea dy to start up the factory- Yes, I employ 12 men in the factory, besides that em ployed getting wood for use. I have burned 500 cords in one season." What was the cost of your plant what did your machinery, kilns and apparatus to manufacture cost you? "The factory as it now stands cost me f7.5oo " You sustain, then, quite a loss byyoui factory standing idle? "Yes, I lose to some extent. The int erest on the investment but labor loses much more. Take the $3,000 paid out by the manufacturer in one season; then the same amountjor digging the drains and laying the tile, making u total of $6,000, nearly the first cost of the plant lost to labor in but one year." Well,-you are not talkin.- ns would be come an ardent tariff protectionist. "That is where you're wrong. I am one of the extreme protectionists. I believe in protecting labor. Make conditions whereby labor may be profitably employ ed, then the lactones will take care of tnemselves." Well, hew would you protect labor? "By giving labor something to do and if you will have it have the govern ment make the same kind of dollars for the laborer that it makes for the banks, by taking off the 50 per cent, duty now imposed by our government on the Dro- uuct 01 siiver ana give to tne silver miner the same privilege of the mints as the gold miner enjoys that the laborer may receive the full value for bis labor and not be robbed of 50 per ceut. of the pro duct of silver, as well as wheat and many other things. But please excuse me as I .1. -r -M" r - ..... .. must go ana superintend some work in the hopyard. CITATION. IN THK COUNTY COURT OF THK State of Oregon for the County of Wash ington. In the matter of the estate of Gottlieb Staeger, Deceased.! To Regula Albertina Staeger and Kmmu V tlJielinina Htaeger, Greeting: In the name of the State of Oregon, you are hereby cited and required to appear in the County Court of the State of Ore gon, for the County of Washington, at the Court room thereof, at Hillsboro in the County of Washington on Saturday the 14th dav of January. 18!t. tit. 1(1 ,,.lr,ot in the forenoon of that day, and then and there to show cause, if anv nviat viiv order.of Court authorizing the Administra tor of said estate to sell at public sale the the following describod real estate: Beginninir nta stone, the N. w. trim. of the H. Harmes Donation Land Claim on the 8. line of the L. I ledsoe Donation Land Claim in Section 84 in Township S, North lUng3 Wtwtof ta WJ1. Jder. run- jSCHULHERICfl&SON Steel Lever Harrow, 50 teeth, , $11 14-in Wood Beam Steel Plows $ia, 13 14-ia Chilled Plows, ... 11 A Special Bargain for Newspaper Readers! THE SEMI-WEEKLY REPUBLIC ... ... AND THE HILLSBORO ARGUS ?niZlaLf0IleJ)ollar and Twenty-five Cents h n ' "u now groat r-,,,.8 , J:e"wXs "L 8 u?&XL?X7ry " , "" !!,e social service ofthe New York Herald a d Ne York I ninml llv1.TT'.Ve'' tl,e S01ue.it, made tor a limited time only, onr trien.N .will" I l- ',, ' . ,l tt.VnT Hike advance of this lihem. VL XV HILLSBORO rARGUS, nins thence West on tn S.mil, li... f said Bledsoe clniiu to the Southwest cor ner of the James Iinbrie place; thence South to the North line of the .1. I. Nor. (limp Donation Land Claim; thence Mast to a stone corner of suid Northrup Claim tliunco South tl.24 chains to a stone of said last named claim; thence Kast 14.M0 chai ns to a stone corner of lust nm,..,l ,.ii... Vlaim; thence North 11.75 chains to the place ot beginning, containing 19 acres of .... ., v,.,. unoiii urn anovu nam oil iiurmcs prayeu lor in tne petition of John Smith the Administrator of said estiitu i,.n,i, ........ .1 .-. ; ;;. v""' ".vvr tiled. Witness, the Hon. I,. A. Hood, Aidm ot the County Court of the .State ot' Ore gon, for the County of Washington, with the Seal ol said Court alHxoil this lath day ot December, A. I., ISixS. Attest: . j, A. i,ulire (Sea!) Clwk. lly J. B. Wilkes, Deputy Clerk. Notice of Final Settlement Notice is hereby given that the under signed Kxoeutor and Executrix of the last will and testament of James Dickson deceased, have hied in the County Co ur ot the state of Oregon, for Washing ounty their final account, and the sa Court has fixed Monday, the 6th day bebruary w Bt the t'Jnv, ro, ,,, of tjurt in 1-Jillsboro, at the ii .iU- hi "1 ot said day, as the time a 1 1 pit, v , 1 , nig objections to said account an ' ' , H i al settlement of said estate. Dated at Hillsboro, Oregon, this 15th dav of December, inns. 1 my Willi am i Dickson 4 Mabia Ann Dickson Executor and Kxecutrix of the suid hit will and testament. i THE CHRONICLE Milk. ncwspniiern In the United Htstei. TUB CHItONIUI.K has nou.ln. oast. It leads all In abllltv. entrnrl.. mm THE CHRONICLE' Teteimnhln n., ne lato.it and most reliable, Its Local News ta u.lpst and, spiciest, and Its Kdltorlals from the' ililost pens In the country. I'llli OHKONIOLK ims always boon, and always mi he. the friend and champion ot th people al KtHMiKt combinations, cliques, corporations, ot jpim-saionsor any kind. It will bt Independent ' everything neutral in nothing. ulldlot. the: daily By Ma'l, PvtlaKe Paid, 6.70irttr. l.iLJ The Great si Weekly iu the Comtry, 1.50 a to iliioludlnn iKistHifD) to any part ot the United Hiiitus. ( iiniida anil Mexico. I'HBWKKKt.Y CIIIIUNIC'LK, tbn brightest n l most com.ilete Weekly Newspapei In the "rid. prints ruituliiriy 84 columns, or twelve nifcs.or Ne-,v. MtBMtnre and (teneral Informa ion; also u uiaKiiillceiit Agricultural Uopartment. 3MPLE CJPIE3 8NT FRiE. 00 vou want the CHRONICLE Reversible Map? 1-HOWIN8 The United States, Dominion of Canada and Northern Mexioo And the Map of the World ON ! MK OTHER SIDK. : e d $a anil Get th Map and We kly 1 bionlcle f .r One Tear, ! ag prepaid on M ,p and Papur. ADUliKSS " M. H. de YOUNO, , 1 Proprietor a F. Chronlole, FBANOIMOQ, OAi. The Chronlcln B Chronicle Quote Prices on Farm Implements Cull and Examine Goods. They will carry a full line of Implements HILLSBORO, ORGON Notice for Publication.- Land Okfick at Oiikoon Oitv, Or.) Dec. 7 lw.f NOTICK is hereby given tlnil tlio I'ollow , ing-imined settler has lit.d notice ot his intention to make final proof in miii.. port of bis claim, ami that said proof ,vi he made hel.ti-e tl,n ...... i i....i. .... n- : ingtotl County at lliltshoYo. Oi n o , January 11, lsw,vi: ivaroiiiie i ever, mni ...,.i i,..s., of ivtui r neuTieli, deceased; 1 1 . . . -- . . i!0 He names Ihe following witnesses to prove Ins continuous residence upon and cultivation of said land, viz: John Shieve, ot Clackamas countv, Ore, and t hslia Howell, Andrew J. "nobble and John Hobble of Washington Co. Ore Chas. 1(. Moorcs, Kegistor. .UMKUTAKIXtl l'AUl.Olt. J. C. Imnikin has opened nn under taking parlor on the corner of Main and Third Street, and Is prepared to furnish on immediate demand, lino , f cask kts a x d co v v i n s : ? a. jwt the loTfCNt possible priev Will J- ' lake pharge of funeral, - The hurst , ( , Una of undertaking supply u th ; "iimy. liiveliim u call, v if 1 HIZI.SHoliO, r.. OK WHIN. - r y Notice of Final Settlement . i ,j Notice ia hereby given that the undor irtfWWlyftaaiiiiiistrator of the etiU of K. P.Hmlth, ; deceased, has tiled hi dual ol coimaj anch Hdministrator In the oourtrv court of State of Oren for WaMilnif tiiii county and that tho iatdoounly court .el!'.fn ,' attllB t!""rt roonl i said court at Hillsboro, county and stuto nforesaid at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m. of said day as the timonnd place for hearing objeet loiiH to suid final account, if any thoro be and the rina settleinent of said ostate Dated at Hillsboro this Nov. 17, m,. A. SMITH, ' Administrator of the estalo of N. F. Hinith deceased. Executrix' Notice. Notice m hereby given that the undor signed was on Oct. 24, 1HHH, appointed and continued as executrix of the last will end testament of Jacob Trachsol, deceas ed, by the County Court of the stale, of Oregon for Washington county, and nil persons huvingchiiniK against said estate are hereby required to presmit the same wiiii proper vouchors, to inc. at the ollicc of John M. Wall, in Hillsboro, Or., with in six iiionins ironi date hereof. MAUOAKUT THACllKia, itxeeutrix last will and testament of .lacoo 1 racnsei, deceased. Dated at Hillsboro, Or., Nov. 10, 1N!W. Treasurer's Notice. ALL COUNTY WARRANTS ICN dorsed prior to Sept. 1 lf, are now called for, and interest will cease alter this date. Hillsboro, Dec 12, 'm A. 13. CADY, County Treasurer. OR&W Time Schedule . . .. From Portland Fast mail leaves at 8 p 111 for Salt Lake, Denver, Ft. Worth. Omaha, Kansas City. St. Louis, Chicago and Kast, arrives 7:20 a 111 Spokane Flyer leaves at 2 p m for Walla Walla, Minneapolis, St. 1'aul, Dultith, Milwaukee, Chicago and Kast, arrives 10:15 a m ' Oeean Steamships leave at 8 p in. Al) sailing dates subject to ehango. For San Franeisco for Deeelnber, suifing dates are 8, 8, 13, 18, 23 Hiid2Sth. Columbia Uiver leave 8 p m exeept Sunday, Saturday 10 p in for Astoria and way landings, arrive 4p in except Huminy Willametta river leave fl a 111 exeent t!,ll1,la I1... 11!, T... , . ., . ' ii viuKiiu vuy, iNewoerg, naleni and way laiulingH, arrive 4::!0 p m exeent Sunday 1 Willamette and Yamhill river leavo 7 a 111 Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday for Oregon City, Dayton and way landings, arrives::) p m Monday. Wednesday and Friday m Willamette river leave 6 a m Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday for Corvallis ami way landings, arrive 1:30 p m .Tuesday, I hnrsday and Saturday Snake river leave Uiparla 1:45 a m Monday, Wednesday and Filday for Lewistoiij leave Lewistou 2;45a 111 Sun day, Tuesday anil Thursday for Ripuria Add ress W.II. HULBUIIT, Gen. Pass. Agent Dodwell Carlill & Co. ' Gen. Agts. N, P. S. S. Co. Portland, - . Oregon, r& &k IB. nr n u u.if .xtm vnur new ra 1 . nHMV, n a ' r- 1 1 a w rauir r. .: n.' .. ii iliiljliliiVA 1 u yo DIUIK The sure seal Clothing Sup II. WKIIIil'Ml and SON, The Hillsboro Pharmacy,! The Leading Drug Wlinru Di ngs, Medicines, l'aints, Oils, Sponges, Brushcx and all Druggist's Suiulrici iiciy he procured at price that simply dlsliincc competition, I 1 - Fact is, thnt many people do not know whore our name cuius from it's ti good name and we hud good reason for adopt ing it. Lot tm explain:. Drlttl in dm -Hli letter of the flreek Alphabet and is (dinned like a Triangle, three sided. ore established in Hillnhoro, the threo-enrnered letter in ti'ftv significant. Please remember, also, that our name is, and ," t ntUuys will be, too, the sure, sign of highest quality an low- eto, tiriee. We will lie nlwnvs iiIohhciI to Imvo von' nail nt ititK gUfrd'0UR SODA A HILLSBORO CITY MEAT MARKET. Beefcltilton, Veal and Pork " " ' Kept Constantly on Hand. Hifhest : Maikct : Price : I'aid ! for : Fat : Cattle, : Slicq ami : Hons Cash Paid for Poultry. MAIN STREET, 'lIILLSRORO, OUIi(J()N. Shofe it We, llai Transact ft (leneral Hanking Huslness J. W. SHUTK Managei A. V. NI1UTK Cashier Sell sight F.xeluingn and 'll'legrnphle Traimfers aud issues Letters of Credit availahlo thnnighout the I'nlted States. Draw Hills of Kxrlmugo on London, Liverpool, Dublin, Paris, Herlln, Frank-fort-oii-llie-.Vnin.SUiekliolm and all prin cipal cities of Europe. Collodions made on all accessible points Hanking hours from a 111 to 3 p 111 Hillsboro, Oregon tk2(UWasl")D J. J. WORTH INGTON. Losseo, k. Newly Furnishec and Renovated. A first-cluss table and all accoininodatiotis for the convenience of guests. ... NOTICE. City warrants up to August 1, 181B now payable at tho oilloe of city treasurer, Sehultnerioli store, Hills boro, Oregon, and Interest will cease on same alter this date. Dated Sept. 14, 18H8. F, O. MiTciim,!,, T, ,, 0 fltv Treasurer Iiy Ceo. SciitiLMKHicH, Deputy ELIABILITV b a qual y some newspapers have lost sight of in these daysof "yellow" journalism. They care little for 2 and a great deal for temporary sensation. ' It is not so with THE CHICAGO RECORD The success of THE RECORD rests upon its' reliability. IE " eWSa" thC neWSand tells the tmth it is the only American newspaper outside New York city that has its own exclusive dispatch boat service and its I is the best illustrated daily newspaper in the world Its war news service is unapproachably the best Says the Urbana (111.) Daily Courier: "We read the war news in the other papers then we turn to THE CHICAGO RECORD to see how much of it is true." 10 Mailison street, Cblag ,n" auCA00 RECQftft tm If . - .!.M.. i,t t . nai esneuu v -vuu w 1 nmi nm k....,.. .... ' , t uusuiumy .1 lie curl J graceful, the crown is becoming, the finish is fault less. The hut market is full of trash and tin trash looks well hut war it I You'll have .iij look elsewhere for it, however. Our new Soft and Stiff Hats are of such style unJ character and service that tell your triends your exact knowl. edjje of "what's what." IHM.KilOKO, OKF.GON 'n ion Block Main St. Dr. Y. A. Hnilcv Proprietor. House. Now, nn we were, numerically the third .WrYTElT? IS IGEGOLD J I " I V ' I Administrator's Notice Notice is hereby given that the undersig ned has been unpointed administrator of the estate of Ambrose deceased, by the County court 0' Washington eoiin ty, Klatool Oregon, and Ihat all persons having claims agaiiiKt suid estate are re Otllred to present the mime properly veri lled, to me al. the olllce of John M.' Wall, Hillsboro, Oregon, wiihin six moullis from (lute, this i::ih day of del., isiw . , ... John Wall, AdnibilMlralm- of the csiaiool' Ainbiose ( ox, deceased. SUMMONS. IntheClrciiil Courtof the State ofOregou lor Washington enmity. Herberdlua (Jertler, I'lulinlll' v. I' rank Oertler, , Defeiulaut in 1 rank (inrilei- 11,., ,.1.. 1 .1.. fendant: " "" "!" In tlic name of the State of Oregon youaro herohv renin red to apneiiiiidimHver the complaint .herein llle.l by Monday Ihe 28- 11 J .iiy .fi Nov',Vllc"'- Hi o being t ellrstday ol the next regular term oT iul;!.,l1rt ".v!)" B" l" apiiearand a iishi r the ooniplaint the phiintinvlll ap p y totlioeiiurt lor the relief demanded t eie 11, towit, loradecien dissolving the 11111 riage and nmrrluge tionl ra:t now cx st tig between you and plnintill', un.l for a judginent against you for the costs and l'''sem.:.its.of this suit, m,d f,,,. s iol S'ff'f,t th. ui'-t in,,,- ,:,ear equitable. . Ibis huiiiihoiih iH sei . ,,, jou by publienii,,,, lly the hou.Thos. A. .Mcltrhhf ,Tr , 'e above named court, w bleb saiii i , , mttdoand dated at Chambers, ,, Oregon, this 2ilth day of Septemh, ; ; : 1 1 , S. It. IK'S 1 1 ., AUornoy rr Plaintiff. 1