The Plaindealer. (Roseburg, Or.) 1870-190?, October 08, 1903, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE
Roseburg Plaindealer
Published Mondays and Thursday!.
PLAINDEALER PUBLISHING CO.
H. H. BROOKES, Editor.
MARY K. BROOKES, Proprietor
Entered at the Post Office in Roseburg,
Ore., as second class mail matter.
Subscription f 2.00 per Year.
Advertising Rates on Application.
The Editor ol the FlaIkdeiucr has no lntcn
Hon ol making a lalse statement reflecting upon
the life or character ol any perron, officially or
otherwise and any statement published in these
colums will be cheerfully corrected If erroneous
and brought to our attention by the aggrieved
party or parties. Our intention is thateTery
article published ol a personal or political
official natjrc shall be news matter ol genera
intn-Mt and for the Welfare of the State at
large.
OCTOBER S, 1903.
VACCINATION.
There is considerable discussion
going on regarding the vaccination
orders issued by the County Health
Officer for school children. Now, we
do not propose to mix up in the mat
ter, because we believe that vaccina
tion, if rightly performed by a com
petent person, with virus from
healthy cow, will prevent smallpox,
At the same time, if the individual is
afflicted with lung troubles, vaccina
tion should be avoided. If one could
see under the lens of a powerful micro
scope, the terrible monsters revealed
in a speck of active vaccine virus,
they would kick harder against being
vaccinated than an Idaho thug when
a rope is placed around his neck to
send him to glory.
The ten thousand microbes scratched
into a child's arm soon multiply into
tens of billions and a battle royal
takes place in the human system un
til all the microbes favorable to the
spread of smallpox have been killed
and devoured by the microbes from
the injected virus taken from a cow's
udder, and, in the words of the negro
girl, the very-old-lord gets away with
the verv-old-devil. but in a case of
consumption, when the cow-pox mi
crobes get into battle with the di
seased lung microbes, which are an
entirely different order of animals
revelling in microcosm, the result of
the battle is doubtful and the child is
too often made far weaker than be
fore the vaccination operation. If a
child is reasonably healthy, the vari
ous breeds of microbes can fight it
out and very little damage results,
but if the child is diseased, then the
cow-virus microbes have a very hard
fight and too often the millions upon
millions of aggressive warriors are
driven back to the place on the child's
arm where the serum was injected,
and the battle ground being piled up
with the dead and dying warriors to
such an extent that the living warri
ors cannot eat up the dead ones, the
flesh is poisoned by the dead microbes
and it sloughs off in the form of pus
or drops off in chunks. But we did
not intend to go into details of the
microbe battles from a layman's
standpoint; and as we have doubtless
let down the worm fence, perhaps the
County Health Officer or one of our
learned physicians will give us an ar
ticle on the microbe that renders the
human system immune to smallpox.
All we ask i3 for the doctor to give
us a pen picture of the brutes in the
King's English, for he is a fearful
ana most wonaenui looking beast as
revealed by the microscope, and as
the human system contains billions of
living microbes of thousands of dif
ferent kinds, every drop of blood
teeming'with living monsters whose
battles are as savage as those of any
known animal on earth. Other mi
crobes have the forms of alligators,
devilfish, serpents and the old world
saurian monsters in miniature, but
they are all fighters and cannibals
and, strange, to say, small and insig
nificant in size as they are, each one's
system is a world in itself for millions
of smaller microbes, and the question
of life, where it begins and where it
ends, no man can tell.
Fool Legislation.
We notice that several of the rock-
ribbed democratic newspapers are
trying to make capital out of the new
tax law. Now, we are perfectly
willing that the democratic mule
be allowed to bray and nop his ears
and flop his ears and bray until he
gets tired of such amusement, but
the facts in the case are: the new
tax law which passed the late lament
ed legislature, was introduced into
the Senate by Senator Walter Pierce,
a democrat from Umatilla county
and it was backed up by all the pres
sure Governor Chamberlain could
give. If the bill is a fool measure
now it was a fool measure when it
was so strenuously advocated, and it
ill becomes the democratic press to
assail the bill, fool measure though it
be. The facts in the case are
Pierce was in the Senate to make his
mark and, like Jacob, the double deal
er of old, when he saw his chance he
lifted up his voice and wept" over
the corruption of the republican
party for allowing taxes to be paid in
the spring instead of fall; and when
all the democrats from Chamberlain
down, gathered together, they had a
regular hellabaloo time of it and cat
erwauled over the iniquity of forcing
the rich wheattrrowers of Umatilla
o hold their money over from fall
until spring, to pay their taxes with,
and sq they proceeded to pass a bill
so that these wheatgrowers should,
ike a fool, be separated from his
money, and the democrats, supported
by the Multnomah grafters, proceed
ed to levy by law two annual tax as
sessments for one year and, unless
Supreme Court holds to the contrary,
the taxpayers will have to pay an an
nual tax next spring and an annual
tax next fall. Truly the way of the
average democrat is more mysterious
than Solomons four wonderful ways,
when it comes to trying to fool the
public or shift the responsibility for
crofts like the tax bill from demo
cratic to republican shoulders. The
tax bill was advocated by democrats
and approved by a democratic Gover
nor.
A Reverend Slanderer.
The Plaindealer is in a receipt of
a letter from the very Reverand K
S. Minshall, the traveling agent for
the Review, in which that gentleman
says: "I am certain of this much that
H. H. Brookes HAS to go." "I am
very free to confess that I am doing
all I can to help you to pack your
grip, to leave Roseburg." This
the man who is employed by the
Review, and is slandering the Editor
and the Plaindealer in the interest
of the Review. Now we have no
fight to make on the Review or on
the reverend Minshall for the extracts
from his own letter, shows just what
kind of a reverand gentleman he is,
To Cure Sore Eyes.
There wiil be a special Salvation
Army service at the Opera House to
night at which Brigadier Hill will
give an illustrated musical lecture
with moving pictures, living pictures
and a lot of high grade combination
melodies of a numerous and serious
nature. Bald heads on the front
seats will be chanred 15 cents. If
they have glasses 10 cents extra
while the preserved seats will be 25
cents. Small children in their
mother's arms will be admitted free.
Turn out and give this grand aggre
gation of culmulative music, pictures
and song a helping hand. Every
thing is warranted to be first class
and up th date. Remember the time
and place. Tonight in the Opera
House.
The way of the transgressor
ruff," but the path of this editor
far ruffer." Last week a certain
man, whose name is Unmentionable,
came to the office twice to have the
Plaindealer publish an article re
flecting on a competitor. Before the
day was out the editor was asked to
show Mr. Unmentionable up, by Mr.
Dontmention. both were women
scrapes. We did not reler to either
and as a consequence both reproached
the editor for failing to publish the
news, both got mad and stopped their
business and their papers and the
Plaindealer will no doubt go by the
board. Had we published what the
men desired there would have been
two genuine sensations in Roseburg
and a vast amount of damage and
malice would have resulted. The
Plaindealer never turns the grind
stone to sharpen any man's ax, but if
these two ex-patrons will promise to
give and take and hold their tempers.
we will publish full particulars of the
scandals in our next issue. What say
you, Gentlemen?
It seems that the detectives sur
rounding President Rooseveltwant to
make a record for watchlulness and
as a consequence every man who nas
a morbid curiosity to see the Presi
dent, is arrested as an anarchist, a
lunatic or an attempted murderer.
The many reports sent out convinces
European nations that the President
is in hourly dread of assassination or
that the men protecting him are a
set of fools. There is not a single
European government that would
allow a report to go abroad, that a
long haired, white headed crank was
determined to see their ruler, for
public notoriety of such affairs only
produces a craze to do likewise.
Eighteen thousand miners of the
Connellsville country in Pennsylvania,
are being organized to fight the mine
operators. The union was wiped out
about fifteen years ago after a ter
rible struggle. The fight will be
commenced anew and as a conse
quence the savings of the past ten
years or more will be blotted out and
nobody but the labor agitators will
be benefited. Labor and capital will
suffer alike in the struggle. There
are now 80,000 miners in the union
and the out look is very gloomy.
The Rev. R. II. Kennedy, pastor of
the Congregational church at Hills
boro, charged with burglarizing
the home of one of his church mem
bers about a month ago has had
his final examination trial and been
bound over to the circuit court.
Russia will note vacuate Manchuria,
and Japan will land troops in Corea
and seize that country as a compromise.
A CATHOLIC
DIPLOMAT.
THE ROMAN CATHOLIC
ENVOY RECALLED.
HE WENT TO MANILA TO SELL
THE FRIARS LAND AT
EXHORBITANT RATE
A Rome cable to the World says : The
negotiations in the Philippine islands
botween the Vatican and the United
States government regarding the sale of
the land held by the fiiars and the re
moval of the native monks from the
island have been cin... off by Pius X.
Mgr. Guidi. the Roman prelate sent to
Manila as apostolic delegate to conduct
the negotiations has been recalled to
Rome. The general opinion in Rome is
that Mgr. Guidi's mission has failed
principally because he would not accept
the price offered for the friars' lands by
the American government.
It has been decided at the Vatican that
hereafter Philippine island questions
must bo dealt with directly by the pon
tifical secretary of state and the govern
ment at Washington, or, what is still
better, through a 8ecial representative
of the holy see sentj to the United States
from Rome.
There is a rumor that the Vatican will
send a special envoy to represent the
(Wve at the St. I-oni.s Exposition, and it
is thought that this same prelate will be
intrusted with negotiations touching the
Philippine:. The onlv ditlicutly in the
way is the fear that the American gov
eminent will not recognize the papal en
voy as a full-Hedged diplomat. Rut it is
thought in Rome that this ditliculty will
be easilv overcome in consideration of
the offer from the Vatican of an import
ant display at the St. Louis Exposition.
lhe I'LAINDEAler nas been aware
for several years past, in fact, ever
since the stuffed prophet at Buzzard's
Bay ordered a naval salute to be fired
on the arrival of Mgr. Statolli to this
Fullerton -
REGISTERED
Our vCaboraiory Products are JFull
Strength and uniform in excellence.
ONE OF OUR SPECIALTIES.
Goodyear Rubber Company's
Highest Grade Syringes and
Hot Water Bottler.
EVERY PIECE GUARANTIEE BY US.
Fullerton -
Phone 451. ROSEBURG, ORE.
country that the Roman Catholic
church was determined to force an
entrance into the deploraatic circle
at Washington. If this is allowed
then every religious order in the
world Greek Christians, Mohame
dans, Sun Worshipers, Abysinnia
Christians, the Presbyterians of Scot
land, the black Fetish worshipers of
Africa, the Hugenots of France or
the Lutherns of Germany, should be
allowed a special envoy also. It is
our opinion that the quicker such
business is cut our entirely the better
it will be for the Catholic Church at
large and the United States will have
peace, lhe very -moment that the
Roman Catholic Church is allowed
special representation every church
or religious organization in the
United States should demand special
representation also.
American Federation of Labor.
The Plaindkaleu is in receipt of
a copy of the address issued to organ
ized labor in the United States. The
address appeals for stronger unions
and for a united fight for favorable
legislation. We copy from the re
port, "In connection with the meet
ing of the executive council and by
appointment, a conference was held
with the President of the United
Stales for the purpose of discussing
important labor legislation. The
eight-hour bill wr3 considered at
length, the President staling that
his mind had not changed on that
form of legislation since he had
favored it as governor of New York
state, and therefore was favorable to
the passage of the proposed act.
"On the anti-injunction bill, in re
sponse to questions submitted, the
President replied that tho subject
would have his most careful and
earnest attention.
"Other important questions affect
ing legislation as per decision of last
convention, were taken up and on
behalf of the International book-
binders' union, the Miller case was
discussed. The executive council
brcniu". - the Prealdont'H attention
the manner in which his decision had
boon quoted and in addition to the
relationship of Mr. Miller to the
bookbinders' union as brought forth
in the charges against him, the 'open
shop' idea was carefully considered.
Replying to statements on the sub
ject, President Roosevelt set forth
that in his decision ho had nothing in
mind aud a strict compliance with the
federal statutes, including the civil
sen-ice law, and that ho recognized a
difference between employment by the
government circumscribed by those
:ivs and any other form of employ
ment, and that his decision in the
Miller case should not be understood
to have any other effect or influence
than affecting direct employment by
the government in accordance there
with.
He furthermore made plain that
in any form of employment except
ing that so circumscribed he believed
me iuii employment oi union men
ll ( II I m
was preferablo to non-union or 'open
shops.' In view of the publicity
given this subject, the executive
council of the A. F. of L. takes thi:
opportunity to say that the trade:
union movement stands for strictly
union shop, experience having proved
that where the open shop svstem
has been tried reduction in wages
and profits have ensued, with genera
disaster to the industry practicjn
that system, and therefore declares
that the best interest of the labor
movement calls for the employment
or union workers and discourages in
everv wav, shape and form the de
teriorating effects which follow th
recognition of 'open shops.' "
Two Offictrs Killed.
A special from Burns of yesterday'
date says: The dead body of John
b. baxton, a isurns lawver, was
brought to this place last night, he
having been shot and killed by Jac!
Frost, alias Harry Egbert, a fugativi
burglar, wanted in Douglas count-,
Saxton was acting as deputy sher
iff. He had arrested Egbert, but h
Richardson
DRUGGISTS
Ric
arason
Near Depot.
escaped from the officer on Sept 25.
t On Oct. 4th Saxton and Jack West
; came upon him at the ranch of Chas.
Fields, 125 miles south of Burn?.
Egbert and his wife were in the
house alone and as the two men ap
proached Egbert fired upon them, kill
ing West almost immediately. Sax
ton entered the house and then a bat
tle was fought by the two men result
ing in Saxton's death.
Officers are in pursuit of the mur
derer. A reward of $500 has been
offered for his capture.
It is believed that the murderer is
j Jack Frost, who is wanted by Sheriff
Parrott for burglarly committed at
Drain last spring, but so far no de
finite information is known. 'Frost
served time in the Salem peniten
tiary. OBITUARY.
Charles I-redenck Putnam was
born at Lexington, Kentucky, July
7th, 182-1, and died at his home in
Tin Pot valley, 4 miles from Drain,
Sept. 26, 1903, at the age of 79
years, 2 months and 19 days.
He crossed the plains with Captain
Bryant's Company in tho year of
184G. He was a printer by trade
and worked on sevr ral of the earliest
publications of the state.
December 27, 1S47, ho was married
to Miss Roselle Applegate, who
crossed the plains In 1843. Eight
children were born by this union,
seven of whom are still living. Ho
had 2G grandchildren and 4 great
grandchildren.
He settled upon a donation claim
in Tin Pot valley in 1851 and made it
his home until death called him to an
other prepared for him. Ho joined
the Christian church in his boyhood
days and lived in that laith for over
sixty years.
In tho early fifties he spent a great
deal of his time in hewing out tho
road between what is now Drain and
his home. He spent some time in
imiu ' near Elk City, Idaho, and also
in California. Ho was in tho famous
J go(1 nei js 0f the latter state in 1849.
Nonpareil.
A Strange Case,
A suit congesting a sixty thounnnd
ollar estate left by Ferdinand Knuu-
or to his wife Marie developed some
startling charges at San Francisco on
Wednesday. The story of Mrs.
nauers life as told in the suit is
that she originally eloped to this
country with a German army officer,
after deserting her husband. While
iving in Chicago she induced a lieu
tenant, whom she had married, and son,
whom they had adopted, to insure their
ives in her favor.
Botli husband and son died of my ter-
ious ailments, supposedly poisoning.
While the son was being buried
Marie eloped with the undertaker and
fled again for Germany. Hero the
undertaker died suddenly. She then
returned to America and came to San
Francisco setting up in business as a
massage artist. While here she be
came employed as nurse to Mr. Knau
er, aged 73, induced him to take a
llat. Moved by her pitiful story that
she had lost husband, brother, son
ind her dear old grandfather, Knauser
was induced to marry her. In
December a surgeon informed
Knauer than an opperation was
necessary, and to please his wife, he
attached a codicil to his will, bequeath
ing her all his estate. Knauer did
not survive the operation.
Suit is brought by Knauers rela
tives.
Real ILstate Transfers.
P. Sharps Durlantl
Sethers, $500: the
sec 2, in tp 25 s, of
et ux toO. ('
swA of swi of
r V, west, con-
tabling SO acres.
Louisiana C. Johnson to 0. C.
Sethers, $800; nej of the swj, n of
nel and se of nei of Eec S, tp 25 s,
of r 3 west, containing 1G0 acres
more or less.
tawis W. Harris et ux to 0. C.
Sethers, $S00; ei ofsej of swj of
sej of sec S. tp 25 s, of r ?, west.
James L. Hunt et ux to Copelan
$-10; beginning at the sw cor of lot 2
of sec M, tp 25 s, r 5 west, running
thence e 3 chs. thence n G.75 chs,
thence w 3 chs, thence s 0.75 chs to
place of beginning, situated in sec 3
tp 25 s, r 5 west, containing 2 acres.
Robert Bloom et ux to Henry
Wieck, $200; the wJ of nej of nwj
of sec 1G, tp 27 s, of r 7 west.
j W. J. Lander to Robert Bloom,
i $-kk); the nel of the nw of sec 1G,
in tp 27 s, of r 7 west.
Fred Allen to Robert L. Allen,
$1000; the wl of sw sec 31. tp 22
s, r"5 west.
J. B. Riddle et ux to E. W. Riddle,
$1.00: lots 7 ami S of block" 10 of
the town of Riddle, Douglas County
Ore.
Henry M. Copeland to T. B. Cope
land, $150; a piece or parcel of land
I lying in sec 10 tp 25 s, r 5 west, con-
! taining 25.20 acres.
1 C. L. Parker to Walter S. Bunch,
; $1200; commencing at the se cor of
see 25, thence n SO rds to starting
point, thence n 50 rds, thence w 1G0
rds; thence s 50 rds, thence e 1G0
rds to the place of leginning, con
taining 50 acres, all in sec 25 tp 23 s
r 10 west.
The Cobb Real KsLnte Co to Mary
Odcn, $00; lot 12 in blk 13, in
Waite's ad to the city of Roseburg.
H J Wilson et ux to Mrs Fredricka
Kimmel, $1; lots 3 and -1 in blk 23:
also lots 1, 2, 7 and S in blk 29; all
in the town of Canyonville, Ore.
Willamette Real Estate Co to G A
Burt, $115; lots 1, 2 and 3 of blk 3,
in the town of Yonealla, Ore.
Marguerita Perini and husband to
J A Mackev, $300; beginning at a
point 30 rds west of the corner of
sees 11, 12, 13 and 14 of tp 21 s, r 4
w, to the corner of land of Wright,
thence north to the right-of-way of
the 0 & C R R, thence in an easterly
direction, following the line of said
right-of-way to a point within 30 rds
of the line between sees 11 and 12,
thence south to the place of begin
ning, containing 1G acres; all situa
ted in sec 11, tp 21 south, r 4 west.
A New Exhibitor ft Angoras
Oregon State Fair.
at the
Mr. L. A. Mnrsters, of Cleveland,
Oregon, made his first appearance as an
exhibitor of Angora goats at tho Oregon
State Fair this year. His exhibit was
not large; it consitod of three does, two
of which wero thoroughbreds from the
C. P. Bailey Hock and tho other a doe of
his own breeding. Ho was naturallv
gratified in scouring the lirt-t premium
on the latter doe in competition with
the fine does which look lirs-tand second
premiums at the show nt Dallas last
winter. Although Mr. Marstera is a
new exhibitor ho is by no means a new
breeder and his tlock is one which has
long boon established. At eoiuu time
prior Vo 1873, Messrs. Landrum it Rogers
sold to Richard William, of California,
127 fino grade Angora does and n pure
bred buck. In 187;t Rev.C. B. Marstors,
then of Siskiyou county, California,
lKiught this (lock, paying Williams f 15
per head for tho does and $325 for tho
buck. Shortly nfterwards Mr. Marstera
moved into Oiegon, and n number of
years ago his (lock of Angoras passed
into the hands of his sou, tho pre-ent
breeder, L. A. Marstera. From the
time of the purchase by Rev. C. B.
Marstors to the pront day tho best
bucks available have been purchased
for use in the llock and special eflbrts
have been made to breed kemp out of
thu flock, with most encouraging results.
In tho last year or two Mr. Mnritert
lias been strengthening hla (look
by , the purchaso of the best does
which ho could buy. Not long ago ho
secure:! eight thoroughbred does from
P. Bailey & Sons, and whilo nt the
Stale Fair he secured six of Craig Rros.'
choice does. He now has a thorough
bred Hock of about 40 and proves
hereafter to confine his breeding opera
tions to that class of stock although he
will buy and sell standard Angoras.
As a breeder ho makes his flock ono of
the leading ones of the state and he will
hereafter make full exhibits at the State
Fair every year. The development of
this flue breeding Hock of Angoras will
Ih3 a great convenience to Angora goat
raisers in Douglas and Jackson counties
where the industry is developing with
great rapidity. Rural Northwest.
Cleveland News.
i lie weather now looks as it we were
going to have some winter.
Pi lino picking is about to close in our
burg.
Horn, Oct. 2, to Mr. and Mrs. Jesse
Tooly a ten iound girl. You will have
to plant another row of spuds Jess.
Mr. Edgar Long returned from Coos
Co. last Sunday and reported everything
us booming down there. He worked for
Mr. Bill Howell near Randon. He says
that Mr. Fraker who had the misfor
tune to lose his store by fire last spring
tnd his nephew, C. D. Daniels, have
eone to Ualitornta. Mr. t raker lias re
sided near Ccxiuillc City for some Unit
oast.
Mr. Jesse Thompson of Coles' Vallej
parsed through here last Sunday en
route home.
Mr. Robert Haydon who has been i
Tucson, Arizona, for the pan two year
is visilini; his parents Mr. and Mrs. Will
P. Haydon.
The Dillar Bros., of Melrose, were in
our village laL week.
David tiooil is visiting relatives n
Oikland this weul'.
Budd Good and i W. Mimhick inaih
a flying trip to Garden Valley, Sunday.
Wallace Munlock, Cleveland's photo
grapher has a fine collection of pictures
that he took while in Pennsylvania last
winter. He has some fine stcreoptic
views also.
When vou Fee a streak of duet along
lhe road and do not see anyone, you
may be sure it is Budd on his nevr wheel.
Geo. Churchill and his brother-in-law,
"Terrible" Dunamof Melrose were ped
dling freh lieei in our midst last Mon
day. James Dawton has been hauling straw
from Sherman Fortin'a of French settle
ment. Mr. Clus. Pierce returned oneday last
week from Washington.
School will besin next Monday with
Mrs. Millerof CurrieCounty at tin- helm
Mr. Frank Bateman passed through
here last Saturday on his way over the
mountains.
M rs. R. W. Masters with her daugh
ters, Vivian and Ruth, were visiting rel
atives here last Friday and Saturday.
Simon Nigua moved into his new
home Monday.
Bill Long has been hauling cedar posts
to the Curry ranch of Riverdale.
Mr. John Thorn, one of Roseburg's
prominent citizens was a visitor here last
week.
Mr. Alfred Woodruff and Misses Viv
ian Maine anil Mabel wooarutl made a
(lying trip to Roseburg last Sunday.
Rev. Meru. left Monday for his home
near Portland. We will miss him very
much.
Mr. Morgan, of Cole's Valley, has been
working on his new residence, formerly
the old Sam Wasroner place which he
has purchased.
Mr. Mackhuen of Wardtou was a wel
come visitor here last Sunday.
Mr. Jesse Toolev has erected a fine
new barn on his ranch.
Mr. Johnnie Hall, of Melrose, was on
our streets Tuesday.
Mr. Adam Dorncr is gathering his
grajtcs this week.
The old grist mill, a familiar sight to
many people here, fell down last sum
iner.
Hootx).
The Portland newspapers hav
made a desperate effort to down Mrs.
Riggs, the superintendent of the
Florence Crittenton Home for fallen
women. The Oregonian especially
persecuted her because it seems that
Scott wanted to run the place him
self. The lady patrons of the Home
and the managers stand by Mrs.
Riggs and the Oregonian will have to
turn its evangelistic work in another
channel.
Now we are in for it, sure, for
Prophet Reals has returned to Port
land from Puget Sound. While up
there Reals gave the people frosts'
earthquakes, floods, aurora borealis,
wrecks and sun dogs to feast on and
now he has issued orders to loca
Prophet uibson to give us just as
tough a time as he can and from this
time on the weather signals will be a
caution.
secretary Hitchcock has sent sev
eral lectures to show up the beauty
of the forest reserves in Oregon
The lectures, however, do not explain
why the government takes land from
which the timber has been cut or
bald mountain knobs or land on which
there is no timber, as forest reserves,
and lets tho owners select tho best
timber land in Oregon in exchange.
The Washington State Liquor Deal
ers' association has issued a very piti
ful address showing how tho business
is being entirely ruined by prohibition.
Mrs. Stanford will donate another
$1,000,000 to the Stanford university.
For Sale.
75 lambs and
130 ewes, Met ino and
Cotswold sheep.
Address Paul V. Cuvll-
lier, Wardtou, Orecon.
71 lm.
For Trade Small farms in
Indiana to trade for Oregon
11. I.. Ball.
t-'outhom
property.
JStf.
The Sfora That
FISHER & BELLOWS COMPANY
ftEiS CL0THI1G
It doesn't require any considerable ex
pense to wear good clothes if you exercise
good judgment in selecting from thor
oughly reliable and correctly priced stocks
such as ours. The Fall and Winter dis
play is at it s best. Styles and materials
to please the most critical. Prices 25 per
cent less than you will pay at other stores.
We call particular attention to our line of
Oregon Cashmeres, Fancy Worsted, Fan
cy Cheviot and Thibet suites. All our
suits from $12.00 up have non-breakable
front. Haud padded Shoulders and Hand
Tailored Collars. All are Union Made
and marked at from $J5 to $18
MEWS' OVERCOATS. A remark
able Hue of the leading styles in all the
newest mixtures and plain materials,
$7.50 to $20.00.
MEM'S RAINCOATS. We have
everything I hat is good and that will turn
rain. $2.25 to 15.00.
IJnyV Suits, H .ys' Overcoats and a com
plete iL ek of
General Merchandise.
Phone 721
Write
The Bar Docket.
(Concluded from last issue)
(11) Wm P Johnson Lumber Co,
plaintiff, vs C R Potts, defendant;
Dexter Rice and 0 P Coshow, attor
neys for pltf, and J C Fullerton, afc
ney for def L
(12) R A Reagan, plaintiff, V3 A E
Moler et ux, defendants, suit in equi
ty; Dexter Rice, attorney for pltf.
(13) R S Sheridan et aL plaintiffs,
vs Henry D Laughlin et aL defend
ants, action at law; 0 P Coshow, at
torney for pltf.
(14) Mollie M Robinson, plaintiff,
vs 0 F Robinson, defendant, suit for
divorce; J A Buchanan, attorney for
pltf.
(15) Ole Hanson, plaintiff, vs Roy
Fisher et aL defendants, suit; F G
Micelli, attorney for pltf.
(16) Churchill & Woolley, plain
tiff, vs L B Adams, defendant, action
at law; J C Fullerton, attorney for
pltf.
(17) J A Black and TE Bledsoe,
partners, plaintiff, vs J A Eggers, de
fendant, action at law; L Barzee, at
torney for pltf.
(IS) Mary J Moore et aL plain
tiffs, vs J F Rose, defendant, suit; J
C Fullerton, attorney for pltfs, and C
S Jackson, attorney for deft
(19) Wilbur Drollinger, plaintiff
vs Allie Drollinger, defendant, suit
for divorce; J A Buchanan, attorney
for pltf.
(20) James Inman, plaintiff, vs
Emily Inman, defendant, suit for di
vorce; J A Buchanan, attorney for
CITY COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS.
Appointiseat of Stan&ag Committees
for the City of Rescbarx.
In accordance with the Charter I, .
V. Hoover as mayor of the City of Rose
burg, Oregon, appoint the following
standing committees lor the ensuing
term to-wit:
Committe ou Ways and Means II.
Wollenburg, I. J. Norman and W. A.
Burr.
Committee on Fire and Water Frank
G. Micelli, J. II. Sykes and I. J. Nor
man. Committee on Health and Police J.
H. Sykes, C. W. Parks and E. L. Bash
ford.
Committee on Expense and Accounts
H. Wollenberg, C. W. Parks and N.
Rice.
Committee on City Improvements
Frank G. Micelli, W. A. Burr and II .
Wollenberg.
Committee on Judiciary N. Rice,
C. W. Parks and E. L. Bashford.
Committee on Electric Lights I. J.
Norman, W. A. Burr and N. Rice.
Committee on Elections will hereaftet
be appointed.
Respectfully Submitted,
E. V. Hoover, Mayor.
Probate Matters.
The will of Theodore Zander has
been admitted to probate, and it di
rects that, after all debts have been
paid, his brother, Albert Zander, re
ceive the sum of one dollar, and the
balance of tho estate, of whatever
kind, is bequeathed to Mrs. Clara
Rast, who, by tho terms of the will,
is appointed sole executrix of the
will and estate.
Guardianship of Mamie Spolinger,
a minor. Ordered that $700 be re
invested for the support and main
tenance of the minor.
Estate of Electra McClallen. Or
der for sale of real estate entered.
Guardianship of Mamie Spolinger,
Di The Imsiness
for Prices and Samples
pltf.
(21) MrsACKidd, plaintiff, vsJ
H Messier, defendant action at law;
J A Buchanan, attc rney for pltf.
(22) C A Sehlbrede, plaintiff Vs
R E Smith, defendant, suit in equity;
0 P Coshow, attorney for pltf.
(23) Rosa A Clark, plaintiff V3
Carrie P Tracy et al defendants, suit;
Crawford &. Watson and John L Hen
derson, attorneys for pltf.
(24) JHMatney, plaintiff vsL C
Williams, defendant action at law;
J C Fullerron, attorney for pltf.
(25) Rosa M Hashing, plaintiff vs
John Haskins, defendant suit for di
vorce; John T Long, attorney for pltf.
(26) Phoeba KitcheU, plaintiff, vs
James Moore, deft action at law; J
A Buchanan, attorney for deft
(27) CW Ballard, plaintiff, V3
Evelyn Ballard, deft suit for divorce;
C L Hamilton, attornev for plaintiff
(23) J A Buchanan as Administra
tor, plaintiff, vs Edgar Walker, deft,
suit; C S Jackson and J A Buchan
an, attorneys for pltf.
(29) H H Martin, plaintiff, vs A
Creason, deft, action at law; Frank
G Micelli and John T Long, attor
neys for pltf.
(30) H. A. McClaren, plaintiff vs
City of Drain, deft, action at law;
Louis Barzee and John T Long, at
torneys for pltfs.
(31) Cyrus Smith, plaintiff vs
Douglas County, deft appeal from
County Court J C Fullerton atty
for Appellant and Hon Geo M Brown
Dist attornev for deft.
a minor. The sale of real property
confirmed.
Guardianship of Charles Smith, a
minor. Report of the sale of real
property approved.
Guardianship of Floyd Stephens, a
minor. Report of the sale of real
estate confirmed. j
Two of the highway men who have
been giving the police in Portland so
much trouble turn out to be a young
man and woman. Both are under arrest
and the chances are there will be!
some more love making at the peni-
tentiary as the young woman is vervi
comely.
Am Edacator' Exploring Trip.
President Haiwr of th. TTmiw-dtr
of Chicago has succeeded la securing
irom me suiian ine ngnt to explore
the ruins of ancient nahrlon. The. mi
verslty has now obtained permission tcj
eicavaie in uei iDraDIm. Application!
was maue to the sultan for permission
ro explore me ruins of Babylon and Its
nclchborhood In 1000 n
delays U was granted. But further de
lays occurred, and the Irade was not
issued. Then It was discovered that
ine uennans had received permlssloa
to explore the same territory. It U be
IleTed that tho ruins of the temple Is
which Nebuchadnexxar offered sacri
fices In 5S0 B. C. and also an extensive
library of clay tablets will be uncov
ered. Miss Romantx Test
to be married. Ah. he Is my tdeall i
Mrs. Oldun Oh. ho'U outgrow that
Toronto Moon. J
He Kwn It AIL
Little WlllleSay, pa, did Solomoa
kuow more than anybody that ever
lived?
PaHo did, my son with the excep
tion of your eighteen-year-old brother
George. Buffalo Times.
"Hp who has nothlnr to da rit rrr
to rig a ship or take a wife" la a Pot
raguese way of expressing coinpariioa.
'I