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About Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1909-current | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1916)
d o t t a i d ro it? S r n ít u p l A N D COTTAGE O BOVE L E A D E R à WEEKLY NEWSl’A i’KR WITH PLENTY OF BACKBONE E L B E R T B E D E A M D El .BERT S M I T H --------------------------------------- P U B L I S H E R S E L B E R T B E D S _______________________________________________________________ E D IT O R A f i n t class publication entered at Cottage Urove, Oregon, as secoud class matter B U S I N E S S O F F IC E _____________ - .....- -* i SO U T H F1FTU S T R E E T S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E S On« Year-------- ______________________ .41.50 Six Month«_______________ ______— ----- 80c ________ .40 Single Co pie«. ------------------ ------------- — 6c Three Month» ___________ N o aubacription takru unless paid for in adwuice. ADVERTISING RATES Display, 26 cents per inch; reading notice ads., h cents per line; aurrouuded ads., 50 cent» per inch; classified ads., 1 cent per word. Special discouuta on contracts. Cards of Thauks and Resolutions, 0 cents per liue. LE G A L RATES 6c tier line for siugle insertion; 5c per line for subsequent insertions up to aud including a total of four insertions; 5c per line flat for all notices ruuuiug five insertions to ten insertions; 4c per line flat for notices ruuuing over teu insertions. MEMBER NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION MEMBER WILLAMETTE VALLEY EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION MEMBER OREUON STATE EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION T H U R S D A Y , J U L Y 6, lylb A F R IE N D . (Esther Birdsall Darling, in “ Up iu A laska” ) ■Sometimes when life has gone wrong with you, And the world seems a dreary place, Has your dog ever silently crept to your feet, His yearning eyea turned to your facet Has he made you feel stands. And all that he asks Is to share your lot, be With a chance to be that he under of you it good or ill, loyal and truef Are you branded a failure! He does not know— A sinuert He does not care— Y o u ’re “ master” to him— that’s all that counts— A word, and his day is fair. Your birth and your station are nothing to him; A palace and a hut are the same: And his love is yours, in honor and peace, Aud i t ’a yours through disaster or shame. Though othera forget you and pass you by, He is ever your faithful friend— Who ia ready to give you the best that is his Unstintedly to the end. W H A T 18 V A C I L L A T I O N ? A y A E W O U L D like to have The Yon- \ I / calls Times define for us the meaning of vacillation. In an attempt in our last issue to be as easy as possible upon our president, who has plenty of troubles just now, the Lord knows, we said: “ While we must protect Americana against the attacks of greaser bandits; while there is no lack of patriotism, its ardor is somewhat cooled when it is fig ured that many lives could have been saved by a less vacillating policy on the part of the administration. ” In a fine fettle of outraged virtue The Times wastes about a half column o f good space worth about 12V4 cents an inch in a strained attempt to show that the administration has not vacil lated. Finally at its w i t ’s end for some thing to bolster up its end of the argu ment, The Times says: * ‘ The president’s policy has been about as vacillating as the rock of Gib raltar. ’ ’ We regret very much that The Times forces us into the position of again crit icising the president; first, because we would much rather repeat the nice things we have said about President Wilson; and second, because we dislike an argument with an opponent who ap parently knows nothing about the sub ject under discussion. s e a in |E W O U L D ask The Times first to define a “ vacillating policy,” and then to answer the following ques tions: Did not the administration first per mit arms to go into Mexico, then place an embargo upon them, again permit their entry and again place an embargo upon them f Did not the the administration refuse to recognize Huerta, and then reeognize him by demanding an apology! Did not the administration demand that our flag be saluted! Did not the administration invade Mezico for the purpose of compelling Huerta to salute the flag and then withdraw the troops without the salute having been given! Did not the administration virtually declare war by occupying Mexican ter ritory and then withdraw at the crit ical moment when intervention that must eventually come would have been easy of accomplishment! Did not the administration, by the oc cupation of Mexican territory, so in flame Mexican hatred of the gringoes that it became the duty of the adminis tration to protect our eitixens in that bandit-ridden country, then withdraw its troops and ships and leave onr citi zens to protect themselves as best they eouldt Did not the administration have suf ficient warning that if it did not protect our citizens at Tampico their death was almost certain! In the face of repeated appeals for the protection of American citizens, waa not Secretary Daniels allowed to withdraw all protection from American citizens at Tampico! Did not American citizens at Tampieo have to appeal to a foreign power for protection! la measure proposed by the initiative “ That which wo must ask us rhristinn does not represent the views of any ' teachers is thut these men must submit more of the common people thtiu does a the whole dispute to some intelligent law enacted by the legislature where 11 und unbiased beard to arbitrate “ That which we must demand a* fit* few look after it amt nee uro ita passage. ixena of these United Htates is that ETT1NO 20,000 signatures to an no group of men whose labor has to do initiative petition is no suiull mat with our daily food supply shall refuse ter. Electors arc gettiug so they no to arbitrate their cause, longer sign a petition off hand. They “ They must work and must arbitrate, want to kuow what it means and they t an you comprehend the cost to the want the proposed law to conform to homes of America if our milk trains and their own personal ideas in every detail, ment trains aud flour trains stopf or they will uot assist in getting it upon “ In how many houses will come dis the ballot. Hundreds and perhaps tress and deathf Ne man must be nl thousands of farmers refused to sign the lowed to drive the death angel to the petition to get the rural credits measure b a b y ’s crib on his neighbor's porch, upon the ballot. This measure proposes “ l|e who refuses to submit his eause to give the farmers money at five per to arbitration thereby confesses the 111 justiee of his cause. cent. “ I am for Inlior and for the labor Obviously no measure can suit in ev union. I am for capital and log Imsi ery detail every individual taste. I am for the people, rich and I f electors will not sigu a petition to ness. get upon the b allo t a measure that is poor; but I wunt every iqie of them to not exactly to their ideas, eertainlv they be fair and to stop eating when h e ’s had enough. ’ ’ will not vote for it afterward. PR O P O S E D R U R A L AMENDMENT C REDITS A N Y thousands will vote against how merit is inserted (Eugene Register.) in it anywhere. 0TIT1ON8 are in circulation in Not being able to study all the meas Oregon for a rural credits const 1 ures and get their import, fearing that tutionnl amendment and if enough sig they would not get their import eveu if natures are secured within the eight or they had time to study the measures, nine days remaining for the circulation and wanting to hit the “ jokers,” many of petitions the amendment will be other thousands will vote against auv placed on the ballot this full. The sig measure in order to make sure of knock natures are to be secured by voluntary ing out the bad ones. effort, if at all, for those bark of the The initiative is a mighty cumber measure feel that if they cannot be se some and expensive method of legisla cured in this wav there is not demand tion. «‘tiough for rural r m l i t i ioti in There are but very few willing to Orrgun to *nrnuit |ilu«*in^ th«* unirmi give the time and money necessary to Wlters. enact a law by this method, yet no con Ill brief, the amendment contemplates stitutional amendment is possible by the issuance by the state of bonds up any other method. to two per cent of the assessed vuluu The people must go without many tion. These bonds are to bear interest things they waut in the way of legisla at the rate of four per rent and are to tion for the reason that they have them In- placed on the market if the amend selves made it so hard fo get what they ment is approved. The money secured want. from their sale will be relouned to The initiative is the plaything of the farmers for purposes of actual develop wealthy and the political fanatic, yet ment at five per rent, with an initial we should not knock it tini severely, for fee of one per cent of the loan to cover it is a mighty good thing for newspa costs of appraisal and examination of pers and print shops. I title. I f the bonds must be sold at less no matter ( orious, D a if measure, the word “ t a x ” ÍX Is not the Tampico iucident one of theNldsckest »(Kits upon the escutcheon of the nation! Did uot the administration first say it would recognize uo president uot choseu by the people of Mexico! Did it uot later say that it would, upon a eertaiu date, choose between Carranza aud Vil la, the one havitig made the best show ing of being able to handle the situation to be this nation's choice for president! Did not the administration afterward personally select Carranza! Did not the administration say it could not recognize the murderer Huerta as president! Did it not afterward place itself in a position where it might have had to select the greater murderer, V il la ! Has not eventual intervention been certain for years, and in the face of this certainty, haven’t our guns and annual nitiou been allowed to enter the eoun try, now to be turned against us! than par the state muy charge an inter I f these things are not signs of a vac N o — we did not have a noiseless rate enough larger than five per cent illating policy, what would be a vacil Fourth— for some of the clothe»- that to rover the difference, but in no rase lating policy! some of the folks wore— attended most more than one per rent more than it • • • efficiently— to that little m atter-and pays for the bonds. O W T H A T we are on this subject, some of the sartorial detonations- made As an instance for the need for such we may as well go a little further. the ordinary Fourth of July chemical legislation, the recorded mortgages in Did not Wilson endorse the plank for explosions— sound about as loud by Lane county total pivï,55H, und the av Panama tolls, then afterward use the comparison— as an evening zephyr— erage rate of interest is in excess of wrestling with a rose petal. party w hip to secure votes against Pan eight per cent. A few loans are made ama tolls! at six per rent but* it ia probable that A SENSIBLE SERMON Did not Wilson declare against a tar in these cases the Imrrowers have agreed i f f commission! Isn't he now an ardent to pay the taxes, so their total rate will OR threatening to strike and stop 1 m * eight per cent or over. champion of a tariff commission! It must not all trains and refusing to submit be forgotten that the recorded mort Did not Wilson declare himself unal terably for free sugar! I s n ’t he now their wage increase demands to arbitra gages by no means represent the total tion. the rules of the brotherhoods of amount uf money borrowed in this eoun for a tariff on sugar! Did not Wilson declare unalterably railway train service employes were se try on mortgage security, for it is n well against preparedness! Is n ’t he^iow un verely eriticized by the Rev. Janies W. known fnrt that many lenders seek to Yallentyne. D. D., of the California diwlge assessment by failure to record. alterably for preparedness! Did not Wilson declare himself unal avenue Congregational ehurrh, of Chi The real totals borrowed on mortgage terably opposed to the spoils system! rago, in his sermon Sunday morning. security nre unquestionable far in Has not the civil service been made less His text was: " A m I my brother’s eicess of the amount shown by the than a scrap of p»(*er in order to pro- ! keeper!” — Gen 4 9. records. Dr. Yallentyne said in part: vide berths for democrats! By calculating the difference between “ The greatest problem of human life five per cent and eight per cent on nt Did not Wilson promise a tremendous reduction in the expenses of govern is the problem of getting on together. least three quarters uf a million dollars Many a person narrows his vision un und probably a great deal more, it may ment! Has not his administration (the preparedness expenses and war ex til he sees only himself in the problem readily lie seen what such a rural credits penses excluded; been the most ex and he hopes to get on. But ao man system would mean to the farmers of lives to ------------- himself. — No -------------- man rises — or -------- falls j i.ane county in case all their loans were pensive one in the history of the nation! i -......— This, I f these things are not signs of a I by himself. I f any one is to get on m | transferred to the state fund. vacillating policy, what is a vacillating any real measure he must take his place of rourse, would not lie the case, for the policy! j in the procession and make bis eontribu fund would probably not be large We would say more but for the fact tion there. enough to meet nil the commercial needs that we refrain from criticizing our “ Go where yon will and look into of Oregon agricultural development president whenever possible and do not 1 government, manufactuie, merrhandia- ami anyway all loans would not be care to be harsh on one who will bold mg. sanitation, education or religion, transferred. But the saving would be office but a few months longer. and the problem is one of relationships. great, at any rate. “ We will put dow n into our pillow if The Oregon farmer cannot afford to Notwithstanding that knockers said we will recognize the fact that the earth pay eight per cent for money to be used the b a le fu l)!) and demoralizing! f) ami all its good things are for us all. in development. His returns nre not Chautauqua had knocked out the Fourth “ It is unnecessary to crowd and grab. great enough to justify nny sueh rate. of July celebration, it was, nevertheless, It is also bad manners and bad religion, nnd if be is to prosper as he should the most successful in the history of the It starts disorder that may easily end and if the country is to develop as it city. Cottage Grove is big enough for in loss to all. should— a cheaper rate must lie pro both a chautauqua and a Fourth of July “ An illustration is at hand in the vided. The national rural credit« legis celebration. labor world. Labor has found immense lation adopted by congress is clumsy profit in organizing, that the interest of and unworkable and, bealdes, Oregon W H E R E T H E I N I T I A T I V E D E F E A T S the individuals may be massed and then I has learned by bitter experience that it ITSELF protected and improved by all the men cannot expert much help from Wash working jointly. ington. Home method of securing cheap HE expenses of the legjjilative law “ Capital has done the same thing er money must be found, nnd it be making body are paid out of the with great advantage to itself and to hooves every farmer und every man in the world at large. state treasury. any line of business to give careful “ When could railways have been study to the proposed amendment. The expenses of legislation by the in itiative must be paid by those interested built by disintegrated capital scattered among the many! No great enterprise in the proposed legislation. A D V I C E IS N O T C H E A P The people adopted the initiative be could have been consummated except by cause they wished to make their own capital uniting and the many individ An editorial in a rpcent issue of the laws. They even went so far as to uals co operating in the interest of the Rural Life, Koehestcr, N. Y., is ns make it impossible for the legislature combined capital. follows: “ Capital thus united has become pow- to amend the constitution. Amendments “ The farmers’ advice mill has been to the constitution must be enacted by erful. Like every great power, tempta running overtime this season. The tion to misapply its energy follows nat college professors, magazine writers, the people. A large number of the people want urally. oity editors, bankers, railroml presi “ Labor has bad the very same ex dents, produce jobbers, preachers, teach a rural credits amendment to the con stitution. Another large number wish perience. Organized, united and applied ers, public health officials, agricultural it has become so powerful as to need department experts, nnd one hundred a state wide tax limitation amendment. the closed self inspection, that it do not and one rural uplift asaocintions, conser Both measures seem worthy ones. To get either one upon the ballot, go wrong. vation conferences and better farming “ These two mighty forces have often bureaus have burdened the farmer with seven per cent of the voters of the state must sign the petitions. Under the most paired across the board, always to find so-called free advice as to how he should favorable circumstances the expense of the people urging that they come to an conduct his farming operations, rear his doing even this is several hundred dol agreement and so adjust their d iffer stock, poultry and children, mnnngc his lars, and in addition many must sacri ence that the people themselves would wife and household affairs, trim his fice weeks of time in getting the sig not bear the coat. whiskers, paint his barns, grow his cab “ Now 350,000 railway employes— en bnge and turnip crops, what kind of natures. I f the measure gets onto the ballot, gineers, firemen, trainmen and conduct clothes he should wear, how he should there must be a comprehensive adver ors— are asking what is virtually a 25 vote on political questions nnd run his per cent raise in pay. The* railways business. tising campaign. One of those behind the state wide might soon grant their demand in the “ But this flood of printed advice and tax limitation amendment estimates the interest of uninterrupted service and continuous tornado of chin music is not minimum cost of enacting it into law raise their rates to the people and go on free— it all has to be paid for in one uninjured, the people paying the rost, way or another. And the farmers nre as «3000. Other measures must come equally as as usual. the men who in the end will have to foot “ But the interstate commerce com the bill. There nre n lot of people who high. Many time« that amount has been spent upon measures that were not en mission, the guardian angel of the would starve to denth on the farm, If acted. people, says that the rates must not cut o ff from n government salary or a a a be raised. Then the demands of the some other outside pull, who consider M E A S U R E proposed by the ini men became confiscatory. The railways themselves fully competent to give the tiative is everybody’s business, now are crowded with tonnage, but it ia farmer advice,” is as true here as anywhere else the glut of carnage and God knows it Right you are, Mr. Rural Life Editor. that what is everybody’s business is must soon cease. Out here in the I’ncifip northwest there “ The demand must be denied, so says ia a big army of these would be farm nobody's business, therefore the work Unless the demand ia “ experts. ’ » I t ’s one of the liidierous of proposing a measure and of engineer the railway. ing its way to a successful vote falls granted we will stop every ear wheel in conditions of the present day agrlcul ture. upon a few leaders, and in this respect America, so says the employe. D H O » l a i c a « l'o m it y { •" (•'rank J Cheney makes until limi he t* senior partner of Ilo- tiriti of I*' J ( ’heuey A C o . ilolus liualness In Ihe i*|iy of To. lado, f o u n t y mol Minie nforeanld, and that said firm will |my Ihe sum of u n i .* It l ' N Dll K D n o i . L A I t f l for each aud ev ery case of C a ta r rh limi cannot he cured by tha use o f l l . l l l.'H C A T V ll lt ll K I U N K .1 1’ IIR N I' V Mwnrn to before me uml auhm rlln-d In my presence, this Slh day of lie, ■ mi,. r e THE 4 Stata of Ohio, ci ty of Toledo. I A P ins I Masti A « ' (II. RAMON No tar y I'ul.ii,. H a l l ’s C a ta r rh C u r e Is Ink* n Internally and acta direi llv o p o n Ihe Mood nod ion R culla surfaces o f the system Mend fur taatlmoulals ft re E J I T I E N K Y A Cl I Toh do I) Hold hy all DruirKl’d" . !*•■ m Take llair» ► *n •»» 1 1 % lalll» f. « C'tniH lpt 1 tion ^ akin ^ Absolutely Pure la d e from Cream of Tarter NO A LU 1-N 0 PHOSPHATE NoUre tu C red ito». Notici* is hereby given timi by un or der of thè ( ’ounty Court o f Lane county, Oregon, iluly mudi* and entered of ree ord on thè Jnth day of .lune, Itili!, in thè mailer of thè fatate of .1. ( ’ . t ’Iuck ey, decesseli, thè undersigned wns dlily apponiteli ndministrator of snid estate. All persona hnving fisima lignina! thè said estate nre herehy required tu pre sent thè asme, diilv verified, to thè un dernigned ut thè stori* of Kuow Ics A Ora ber, ut Cottage Grove, Lane county, Oregon, w itimi si« Itionths frolli thè date hereof. Dati'd this flth day of Jnly, 1D1 •!. GEORGE O. KNOWI.EH, Ailministrutor of thè Estate of J. Cluekey, 'leccaseli K. O. l ’otter, Atty. for Est,ite, jlytlmig.’I SHOULD S L O A N ’S L I N I M E N T d o A LON ll I if course it should! For after u siren imus day when your muscles huve been exercised to the limit nil nppliaatiiia of Nlunn'a Liniment will take the aoreiicn nnd stiffness nwny nnd get you in fine shape fur tomorrow. You slimild also use it for 11 sudden attack of toothache stiff neck, buck ache, stings, bites mid tha many accidents thut nre incidental to n «million “ We would us soon leuve our bnggiige us go on n mention or rump out without Hloun’s l.iniim nt Writes one vacationist: “ We use it f rS everything from crumps to tiMitliarkc " Cut 11 bottle In your bug, I m * prepared and hnve no regrets. 823 EAST MAIN STREET Ws pay the highest price» for Hrrsp Metal. Rubber, Sack», Auto Tires, also Scrap Cast Iron. Wool. Rags, etc. W s pay the highest price» for all kinds of Hide», Hlieep ami Goat Belts, Mohair. Wool. Furs, Roues ami Beeswax. LOOK GOOD T E E L GOOD 0 No one run either feel guml nor Im.k good while suffering from eonstiptnmu Get rid of that tired, druggy , lifeless An Ordinanze, grunling to thè Htuml feeling by n treutSient of Dr. King'« urd Oil Company, n corporation, permis New Life I'ills. Buy n box to day, Inki- sion to locate, erert, operate and nimn one or two pills tonight In the morn timi uny w are house, or tunkagc, or botti, mg thut stuffed, dull feeling is gone and unii other nccessnry buildings mi a cer you feel lu-tter nt once, 25c nt your tmn truci of land desrribeil ns follows: druggist___________________________________ All of l.ot No. 2, Block No. 3, Jones’ Vddition to Cottnge Grove, Oregon, ex ceptmg easterlv lini feet, county of Lane, state of Oregon, for thè Storage nini distributioii of pelroleiim nini its The City Transfer prmlucts und other kinds of merrhnn All Kinds of • lise hnndled by suol company. The common rouncil of thè City of Cottnge Grove i | i h * s ordain us follows: Heetion I. The Mtnndunl Oil Company, n corporation, hnving usiti d perniission to locate, erect, opernte and maintnin n IMano Moving a Specialty warehouse, tankuge, or both, uml other WOOD A N D GOAL neeessury buildings, un u certuin traci I ’hone 5ft of ground drsrrihcd as follows; All of Isti No. 2, Block No. 3, Jones’ Office At Exgls Cigar Store Aildition tu Cottnge Grove, Oregon, excepting rnstrrly I IMI feet, Cottnge PR O FE SSIO N A L CARDS G nu e, county *>f Lane, state of Oregon, for thè stornge und distnbution of pe troll-uni nnd its prodtirts nnd other MAX LUEBKE kinds of merrhmulise hnndled by snid THE RAWLEIOH MAN company nnd thè sanie hnving been con siderei! by thè Cuinmon Councll, il is Residenrs Tenth Mt. hereby ordnined nnd permisaion is bere migliipil by given and grnnted to thè Hlnmlnnl Phone 170-1, O R D IN A N C E NO 42H Blackmore & McFarland Hauling & Draying Done on Short Notice Dii Compnny, n corporation, to locate, erect, operate nnd maintnin n wnrr R. M. McCAROAR, D. D. S. house, tunknge or both mul other neces DENTIST sary buildmgs upmi thut certnin trnet Neuralgia relieved instantly by local sp of ground desrribeil ns follows: plication. Residence and office une All of l.nt No. 2, Block No. 3, Jones* bl ck soutk of postoffico. Addition to Cottage Grove, Oregon, ex Phone IJIJ Cottage Grove, Oregon repting ensterly l«N) f«*et, county of lane, state of Oregon, for thè Storage nnd distribution of petrolcuin nnd its I’rartices in all Courts 25 Years Experience priMlurts and other kinds of merrhaadlsc hnndled by snid company, H J SHINN Heetion 2. This Ordinanze shall be ATTORNEY AT L A W publiahetl in The Cottnge Grove Senti NOTARY PUBLIC nel, a weekly newspaper published and Huder Building, Over Metsau Hbup printed in thè City of Cottage Grove, C O T T A G E G R O V E , ORE nnd shall be in forre imrncdintclv upon • be expiration of thirty tlaya nfter Its Phone, 47 Office loiwsou 1 ^ passage and approvai. l ’asseti and ndopted by thè Common DR. 0. E. FROST Councll Ibis 3rd day of July, A. ll. IMO. Electrical Trratini'uta X Ray pictures Ayes, 5; noes. II; nbsent, I. Microscopic Examination of Hputuu The foreguing Ordinane* is hereby aud Blood npproved this 3rd day of July, A. Il UHI!. J. E. Y0UN0 Attesi: J. H. CHAM BERH, J. E. Yoiing, city clerk. Mnvor A T T O R N E Y AT L A W j l y « I.Jc Oltlr.e ou Mam Mired Cottage Qrova :: :: :: Oregon Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given that the under signed administratrix of thn estate of John Nelson Crow, deceased, bus filed iu the county court of Lane county, Oregon, her final account ua such ml 111 in istruì ri x and that Saturday, the 22d day of July, Blltl, at the hour of 2:30 o ’clock p. m. o f aaid day, bus been fixed by said court as the time for hearing nny objections to suit! report und the settlement thereof. I.II.LIE A. CROW, Administratrix. Alti« King, Attorney for natale. j22jl20e Notte« to Credito». DR. A. J. HENDRY 9 i + D ENTIST LADY ATTENDANT O V E R FIKHT N A T I O N A L B A N K Phone 111 Cottage Grove, Oregon A. W. KIME, M. D. PH Y SIC IA N AND SURGEON Office ia Phillips Building, over the Benson Drug Store. Office l ’hoae 34 Roxideaee Phone 120J in tho Mattar of thè Estate of H. C. DR W. M HAMILTON Counta, Derensed: L I C E N S E D C H IR O P R A C T IC Notice is hereby given thut thè under P IIY 8IC IA N nigned bus been iluly appninted ndniin istrntor of thè esilità of H. Cimata, Consultation nnd examination free. Of deci*uscii, by thè County Court of Lune fire hours ti to 5. Humlnys nnd evening» by appointment. county, stille of Oregon. All persona linving claimn lignina! thè (Iffiee and Kesidenee: 104 North Hixth^ Htreet, Cottage Grove, Oregon estate of said H. C. Colini«, decisiseli, are hereby notified nnd reqnlred to pre sent thè suine to thè iiiiilersigiieil, ut Cottnge Grove, in Lime county, state of Oregon, with thè proper Voucher» mul properly verified, un by luw required, ASSAYER A N D A N A LYST within nix moni ha from thè first pillili Cut rates, lowest prices. Gold, 75c; rntion of thi» notice. copper, «1.00; qunlitstive nnnlyai». Dnled this 22il day of Jnne, A. I». «5.00; qunntitntive analysis of ores. 11410. «10.00; rynnide test on ore, «15.00. F R A N K KNOX, Cnreful, nrrurate work, quick returns Admlnistrntor of thè Esilile 423 E. Tenth Street, Eugene. Oregon jun22 jly'JOc of H. C. Conni«, deccnned. WM. BARKER, JR. ^