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About Hillsboro independent. (Hillsboro, Washington County, Or.) 189?-1932 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1895)
1IILLSB0R0 INDEPENDENT. Uoxqueh and hot no jit. JCuterad to the pMtuffln at HUlaboto, Oregon, u seooua-ciavse waiter. Mubaorlpllon, In idTua, parjrar S1S0 Karl of SulUbury has replied to Sec retary Olney'a note defining the pom tlon of the United State with refer ent to the arbitration of differences between Kogland and Venezuela over the boundary line, and an in terpretatlon of the Monroe doctrine. While the reply has been delivered to Secretary Oloey, the full text has not yet been made public, though It ia understood from newa reports The house committees will prob- fro,n England by cable, that the ably nut be announced till the latter reply In substance is a refusal to ar- part of next week. Speaker Keeu bitrate any of the territory eastward is iiH-etlug with more hindrances 0f the Sthoiuburgk line. Moreover, than was expected, because ot the Lonl Salisbury raises a new case. 1(1.1 new men, who are mostly h now contends that the Bchom strangers to him. burgk line was not arbitrarily run; that Clark P. Crandall. into captain of i.?J!SSs2! infantry; authorising the JIILLHIIOKO PUBUSHINO CO., Proprietor. I. U. C. OAULT. Editor. otfiiitL fArmu or tub citv FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13. rh IWnnlgn aiiovmtl that.see Off " " "" . . . . I authentic data, and that It can be a HritNh neei is on its way 10 ene-1 . " 7 . r-uclit with perhaps the intention to proved by the records, the treat) president to appoint John W. Lewis a second lieutenant ia the regular army; to pay John V, Lewis In addition to his salary as register at The Dalles, laud office, from April 17, 1890, to July 7, same year, penslou Edward Hughes, late company C, Fifth United States vol unteer?; to pension at 120 per mouth P. F. Castleroan, who served second lieutenant Oregon volunteers In the Indian war of 1855; to allow Orvllle T. Porter, late United States marshal of Alaska, all sums which bad been stolen by Adolph A. Meyer while deputy; for the relief of War ren mil; to pension at fau per month Marshall R. Hathaway, of Vancouver, Wash., to pay Henry Judjje, of Ashland, Or., 13780 for equipments furnished by him to the nt the Corlnto Incident, we need taNcrlpUonn and the maps, that It F1rt Oregon cavalry in the war; to n,.l I. ...rr.rl.iixl In m the harbor r""v,'Jr irj-iracuw ncnslon at the rt nf i7S p month and custom house of New York ocru- ' . uo irrritury Urt or.ta.u Ueo uagheHt a mMWr of the pled till that 1425,000 seal award M"1?, ' lTSO,ou ,"u Mexican war; to pay John Thunnan collated. Wish they would. Per- "" '--"'-'- of Portland, $5,000 for Injuries re- haps this administration could have r... ru. .. . ieAmA by ,,,, whlle employed as . some Americanism injected Into it. " " ""'" !" deckhand on the steamboat Corvalll . . . . iuiiiuit, uuit'sa .iigiHtiti uy urutr A rich and suggestive cartoon Is force proposes to hold territory hav- hhown In the Inter-Ocean this week, mg a cloudy title. If there are uiap The Sultan of Turkey is represented and document that prove where the asbelugat his bloody work and has I tine ought to be, then the interfer- pllel high alwut Armenian skulls, ence of a court Is absolutely necessary to John Bull, representing England, is to establish the same if Venezuela some distance away, but hurrying .with all his might to tho ghastly , scene. The question is asked, "Will Eniiland tret there in time to erect a tomb stone?" It will hardly be neeessnr to Im peach Minister Bayard. It will probably le sufficient to notify Ven ezuela that we will maintain the Monroe doctrine. If England will not observe the law then she will have to be put on a line of coercion, when Mr. Bayard will come home of his own accord or take out English naturalization papers. Impeach ment now is Impracticable and ill advised. There are too many cuckoos in the senate. will not recognize them as binding without such Judgment. The United States so far has tie- decidi'dly the best of the debate, and if we preserve a firm front wo will establish all we demand, and more. We must not bluster, but we must not back down. If we get to hum ming an air similar to the old "51' (O pay Avery D. Bibcock and wife, Polk county, $2,000 for use and occu pation of their donation claim; pay Thomas Oulnean, of Oregon $100 paid by him for a land entry at Shasta, Cal.; to pension Margaret C, McKay, widow of Dr. William C McKay, to pay Peter Grant Stewart (iervals, Or, $7,500 for land taken for a military reservation at the nouth ot the Columbia river, in Pa iflc county, Wash.; to pay II. M Kimball, administrator of the estate of II. S. Kimball, $.'812 for proiH-rty destroyed In the Whitman massacre to pay Nicholas Dupuis. of Van w or light" we must sing it out . Wash. .All! for her tkn cicar anusirong. xngianu win noi from hlm hv lh ftnHk. r tJl... ...ill U....I. I " raio win u uuwu iu. .limmr to mv II W Ml, I.. I JBT If iu Ignorance she shall despise work d in our navy and muck our army we can of hls , thft ,,,-. impress a needed lesson or our strength and spirit. But some may answer that perhaps we underrate England's resources. Hardly. They have been told to us often enough In case of war we would soon cross into Canada. England would have no army to meet us. It would take hundreds of transports to An Eastern exchange sums up the whole of the president's message in this brief paragraph: "The gist of the message upon foreign affairs is that France won't release Waller, army in America sufficiently large to Ln( 1S70. to pay William i nor permit us to see the evidence be effective. No force less than weather f2l70 the amount tlon of mills at the Nez Perce agency; to pay Sidney W. Moss, of Oregon City, $7,000 in compensation for lands taken for military purposes In Pacific county, Wash.; to refer to the court of claims the claim of L. A. Davis, of Chehalis, Wash.; of $14,841, for carrying the English malls from land an I nivmnla tn MontlAolln hutuuun lufiQ A. Stark paid by upon which he was convicted. Eng- 500,000 men would do to start with, land won't answer our questions and it would take more than 500 about Venezuela, nor malto the Can- ships to bring them. Would our adians stop killing our seals, and commerce be driven from the seas? Germany has stopped the im porta-1 Probably. It was in 1801-5. But tlon of our meats, but we have col- while our commerce Is destroying, Iwfml an .Til flotir AfT of Mnaln anrl I U'hur urm.l.t Ha hunnitnini, in that, of I . - . . . . . ... ..-rt- B . water irom me Umatilla river across ror tnat reason naa better suppress our opponents? Kven the very trans- ,he Umatilla IndKn reservation, and all active sympathy for the Cub-ins port ships would be at the mercy of Lcr088 (he preflent N.,1(K,, -n,i. aI-0 ..I . 11 t 111 L.. I I 1 I " ' him to Owen Wade for clerk hire while Starkweather was register of the Oregon City land office. Senator Mitchell has Introduced a bill allowing the city of Pendleton the right to lay pipes and conduct struggling for liberty. The Christian World stands aghast at the butcheries of christians In the first centuries, and call the Roman emperors, who permitted them, such names as modern vocabularies fur nish. Yet those times, horrible as they were, are equalled In 1893 with in the Turkish dominions. This, too, while diplomats are temporizing at Constantinople. British Ambassador Currie ought to be held responsible for all the lives sacrificed since he backed down ten days ago and re turned hlsshlpsto the Mediterranean our commerce uemroyers, eunvoyeu a bill to establish an assav office at though they be. Bakor CUv. alao for . Dublie bu(iin(. But there is a defense more power- Lt Tne Dai lea. to cost $100,000: also iui io .revcui war man " for a public bulldin at Baker f!itv. l .1 n. .!.! I I " rniuvu iiieuiiuii. wur ciiiwiis auu i cost $100,000, corporations owe r.ngianu a lot oi Senator McBrlde got Into the har. money, ana mose urmsn capnauisis nes8 quite eary IIe hag ntroauced will not allow their government to the following bills engage In any enterprise that will Jeopardize their Investments. America has absolutely nothing to fear from England. We are masters of the situation if the present admin To relieve settlers on railroad land grants; for the relief of W. L. Adams; to provide for a public building at Salem, costing $100,000; for the relief of the legal representatives of Chaun- Tho comptroller of the currency re ports that for the twelve months prior to his report fifty-one banks line established where justice dictates. left the national system, and thirty- isirauon win oniy witn uignny auu Wy jj Lock WOod; granting a pension .irunism uw.are our posiiiun. e lien amln Franklin Dowel I. of can have our Alaskan boundary line (.)regon. to gnnt a pension to Ada J marked ana recognized where lt be- Schwatka, widow of the late Limiten- longs. We can have the Venezuela at KredSchwatka 1FTCB HIS MCA IT. Tho following paragraph was found on tho street yesterday. It Is presumably a piece of editorial copy , lost by the Cornelius Searchlight man, and was intended for publica tion, lt must not be lost: ' Treasurer Sappingtou has shown the people of Washington comity his peculiar capacity as a county official. Any man who is so grossly ignorant as to overcharge himself Is lust as liable to switch the cut and have it the other way several times next year. Populists, put your brand on Sappiugtou. He can't ilgger' worth a cent." Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report SdOLUTCEV PUCE MIUHT HAVE BEX Ult't'EKEST. them a pension, and thoso who were in AndersouviHe also want to pay for their board, whilo they suffered so many cruel deaths there. Patriotism will have become a drug of the, crudest form when such a thing will be tolerated for one moment. Many of the confederate soldiers were fighting for what they thought The Louisville (Ky.) Commercial thinks that President Cleveland does not display that Himalayan honesty, t0 be right, but they were fooled aud wnicn was aiwui the only thing any- deceived by their fool-hearted leader body tried to give him credit for, In All of our readers know that the lir the treatment of the tariff question norance of the law excuses no one, In his message. He denounces the Lnj had tho government seized McKinley law, in accustomed demo cratic style, as designed for I the protection and benefit of fivored classes at tho expense of the mass ol citizens, and then has the assurance to say that It was insufficient for rev enue, curtailed our trade relations and hindered our entrance to the markets of the world. 1. i m very weii-miormeu man Known that this .McKinley law, with less thuu the present internal revenue tax, raised enough revenue to pay the expenses of the government with surplus over, and that during it: exeriui(iiil, until its repeal wat- threateucd, our exports reached the highest point lu our history. Such a statement by the president of the United States, in the face of such ascertained facts, shows a lack either of information, Intelligence or hou enty. Again, he makes the astound ing statement that oue of the causes of the depletion of the gold reserve was the fulling off of exports under the operatiou of the McKinley tariff, when, under the present law, they have reached a point, lower than under any year in which the Mc Kinley law was in force. Another statement which staggers us into amazement, is that the de pletion af tho gold reserve Is not the result of the deficiency of revenue. The treasury pays the expenses of tho government with greenbacks, these greenbacks are redeemed out of the gold reserve in tfie treasury, and again paid out for cxjienses, jet, although this is an acknowledged fact, the president informs congress government everything thi'y had lands, houses and even heads, they should not expect any rotoration. No other power in the world would have done o in ucli under the same circuin italic es as the government has to tho rebels, and now for them to ask to be pensioned is an insult to our hone-t, true American citizen. Gorman helped to put a duty on iugar and t leveland consented I e- cause that Is along tho line or free trade. It is now said l lint I lie presi dent will liivor an ineiea.su of the ugar duty. Rrpuhiicuiis will hardly .igree tJ this since in was that party which, in 18!0, put sugar on the free lit. They will put a duty on wool first. mmmmimnmm M There is strong evidence that In fexas the democratic party lssoshat tered upon the silver quest lou that lt Is liable to break in pieces. As po litical affairs are shaping themselves, it will not be improbable that the next democratic candidate for presi dent can only arry the states of South Carolina and Mississippi. The St. Louis, Mu., Globe-Demo urat has been examining tl e new constitution of South Carolina, which is to take effect without being submitted to the people, and Ts lead to remark that a "long Hue of prece dents is violated to say the least It is true that the supreme court of Mississippi has decided that such a roceeding is valid and proper, for the extraordinary reason that a con stitutlonal convention Is 'the highest that the expenses are not paid out of ""s'aMi '""'y known to freemen the gold reserve. in a representative government,' and that tho butmiu-ti n if its work to a popular vote 'will be found to degrade this sovereign body below the level of the lowest tribunal clothed with ordinary legislative powers; but there is room foe doubt, nevertheless, as to the authority of such a body to thus ignore a" funda mental right of the people, par ticularly when, as in this case, the object Is to disfrauchi-ie a majority of the voters of tho state. six went into the hands of receivers, or eighty-seven altogether. During the same time charters were granted to forty-three. So there was a net loss of forty-four banking institutions, which go to show that the banking business is not as profitable as popu lists and democrats would have us ' believe. To stimulate banking Insti tut Ions, it would seem that Risen tirely proer to allow banks to issue currency to the full par value of bonds deposited, instead of to 90 per cent, as now, and perhaps lower the tax to a quarter of one per cent, For a long time before 189:1 we had a gold reserve and the greenback too, yet we were not troubled about either. What gave us, anil even G rover, during bis first admlnlstra tion, most concern was the surplus. The tariff law of 185(0 was framed for the very purpose of reducing the rev enue. 11 did lt, and at the same time protected trade. Like the air we breathe, the conditions then were so happily adjusted that we scarcely knew we had tl.em. What Is the reason that under this democratic re form, free trade administration these blesiings have turned to curses? The answer Is easy. The revenues are not sufficient. Of unusual interest to every reader of this paper, is the announcement made elsewhere in this Issue, by The St. I ,ou is Globe-Democrat, unques tionably the greatest of American newspapers. The mail subscription price of The Daily and Sunday Ololie Democrat Is reduced at one blow, from $12 to $0 a year, placing it with in the reach of all who desire to read any daily paper during the coming great national campaign. The Week ly Globe-Democrat remains at $1 a year, but Is issued In Semi-Weekly sections of eight pages each, making it practically a large semi-weekly paper. This Issue Is just the thing for tho farmer, merchant or profes sional man who has not the time to read a dally paper, but wishes to keep promptly and thoroughly post ed. It is made up with especial ref erence to the wants of every member of the family, not only giving all the news, but also a great variety of In teresting and instructive reading matter of all kinds. Write for free sample coges to Glojjp Printing Co., St. nl, Mo. WORK MID 01 T. The work laid out by the Oregon senators may be thus summarized: Senator Mitchell's bill to pay the Indian war claims of Oregon and Washington asks an appropriation of SHORT OX DCflOCKACV. The Commercial has for years ad vocated the retirement of greenbacks, because it considered It wrong In principle and bad in example for the government to continue In the bank Ing business. It is not the province of government to conduct banking, t.i.2!C.f.r.8. This is a vnrv Mr "y more inan to pui.lisn newspapers, - i .. ... amount, and the government is vwv "ruK stores or ruu noieis, and slow in paying such claims. The ln ,,,,ln 8 ,n tne ,ue of n",ef, " same bill has lieen before congress VM m9m wf 'y-lnfornied people for several .tw hut fUvroi.i KM!' the Idea thst when times are action has never lieen taken in either "arj " w ow,UH ' s-arcity ol house. Thefaet that itomrht tn Hp moneyt which the government can paid makes no difference with hwi,y relieve h' 8tarlin " printing I iiraim in congress. I ' ' " The senator's amendment to the ln" """, however, of the presi- a i . . . . present Indian depredations law pro- ,n1 our l,ren "eplorable fl posthat the court of claims shall have jurisdiction to adjudicate depre dation claims which have been al- nancial and commercial condition Is due to the existence of this greenback currency, and can be relieved only by lowed by a stale commission, acting retirement, is so palpably wrong under the authority of the legisla ture; also that where it npsars that a state has paid any depredation claims, it shall enter up judgment In favor of the stale; and where any such claims shall have Usn is'iidim? In any department of a stale, it shall 37:,.,MM).0(H "ve len presented and be acted upon and adjudicated the ri,,,p, mwl- " president names same as provided for in the act for ,8H0 U,crt,,!e ,,e wants to give the claims filed in some department of iml,re,i,)" he silver purchases the general government. that It appears grotesquely absurd to urge it. The president admits that for eleven years previous to 1800, only $28,O(M),0(M of these notes were pre. scnted for redemption, while since that year the tremendous amount of The bill which the senator Intro duced to settle the amounts of states on the Mississippi plan, would allow all states admitted since 1857, $1.25 per acre for all lands withheld as Indian and other reservations. Another bill which Senator Mit chell has regularly Introduced in congress, and which sometimes Is favorably reported by the commit tees, Is to reimburse California, Ore- gon and Nevada for money expended by them in suppression of the re bellion. Oregon's share Is $:135,1.)2. This might he paid, but California has claim of nearly $1,000,000 and Nevada's is ttm.OOO. It is these big sums that mm re the statesmen la Washington. The bankruptcy bill introduced by Senator Mitchell is the well-k nntt-n Torrey bill, which has been pending in congress for several years past. Among the bills Introduced by Senator Mitchell are the follow Imr- To remove the charge ol desertion against Julian Fox, late of company O, Twenty-sixth Kentucky infantry; to pension, at the rate of $20 per month, Mollie Crandall, wIiIaw of of tho Sherman act started the im pulse which drained the gold reserve. The truth is that this immense drain upon the gold reserve did not com mence until the result of the fall elec tions of 1892 announced that the democrats were to take control of the government, pledged to overthrow the financial and economical policies which for a generation had conducted the nation to a height of prosperity never reached before In any age by any country. Then all European capitalists began to market their American Investments and take the gold away. The Wilson tariff, with Its monthly deficits, has made the drain continuous and increasing, only to cease upon its revision radical enough to produce a revenue. As the president Inconsistently admits, under republican administration the greenbacks never troubled the gold reserve. It was reserved for a demo, cratic administration to start them on a run upon the gold reserve. Iiuis vllle, Ky., Commercial. The U. S. cruiser, Cincinnattl, caught fire next the msgazlno, but by flooding with water an explosion was prevented. The, Louisville Commerlcal tells why another democratic administra tion is not to be expected for 33 years : Unable or unwilling to profit from the lessons of the past, this generation resolved to try the experiment of an unrestricted control of the govern ment by the democratic party. It has been dazed to see the industries of the country prostrated by the edict of a democratic congress, humiliated to find that, ln diplomacy, foreign nations treated us with an Indiffer ence which approached contempt; and that a democratic president in dorsed an economic policy which in sured us a continual deficit, and a foreign policy of hesitation that look ed like cowardice. Safely indeed may one predict that not until another generation steps upon the stage to be taught its lesson by ex perienec, will the democratic party tie again trusted with the administra tion of this country." In discussing the free coinage f f silver President Cleveland said in his message: ! esisially entreat the people's representatives In congress, who are th.irgcd with the responsi bihty of inaugurating measures for the safety and prosperity of our country, to promptly and effectively consider the ills of our critical finan cial plight." Notwithstanding this al The city election in Astoria occur red on Wednesday last. There were two tickets in the field republican and citizens'. The republican ticket, headed by Ex-Judge Taylor for may or, was elected, except city treasurer and one police commissioner. Those two were elected from the citizens' ticket, but they are republicans national issues. tSEASOM OP 1S93.1MH1. WILL RUN TWICE A WEEK BETWEEN San Francisco and New Orleans OVER THE GREAT SUNSET ROUTE LEAVING SAN FRANCISCO TUESDAYS A SATURDAYS From Tuesdsr, November 5, 18U5. Will soon be here, but tee liace been here for years and are still here ready to do all hinds of tcork intrusted to us HAVE YOU PRESENTS . To sell ? If you hare, tell tchat they are through these columns, and you tfill not hace to carry them ocer for next year. HILLSBORO PUBLISHING CO. Iu V. BERCKMOES, WATCHMAKER The most complete, modern, elegantly equipped and perfectly arranged Veti bulal Transcontinental Train iu America New Equipment, especially designed and b jilt for thin nervice. SEW DIRECT COXXECTIOX IX ORLEANS FOR ILL EASTERX I'OIXTS. Ol'ICK TIME, iiiuuiwmuumuu Kxerutrlx' Xotlce. The next national republican con vention I to lie held in .St. Louis, Mo., June ltl, ISiXi. The place was chosen after an active contest on the part of Sun Francisco, which locality had twenty votes on (list Imllot, though its strength was not main' talned. On the fifth ballot St. Louis hud twenty-nine votes, Chicago 6, San Francico, IG. The pressure lias heen too slrong for Turkey to stand alone, and she now permits cilra guard ships to most pathetic appeal, a representative I sail through the Dardanelles. Hut it district in Kentucky returned at a lis doubtful if the massacres of chris- special election last Saturday a demo- tlans will lie suppressed at once, crat to Hie state legMsture pledged to return Iree Silver Hlackburn to the U. S. senate,' to triumph over the president. - - - . . I'ENSIOINS tOK Til E ( O.M tDEK IT! S. A corres pom lent, noting the propo sition to pension tho confederate sol diers, writes these lines: , i biP before congress for the pensioning of ex-rebel soldiers, Is the latest piece of news for tho American people to think over and to diged in their mind, coming as it duei during ourgreai flnancial stringency. "Away b.ick yonder in the early Co's, when the greater number of the slave states, headed by Jeff Davis and his crew (aided by John Dull all n the dark) tore themselves loose from the United States government and fired upon the stars and stripes The libellous statements lately con tained in the Evening Telegram of Portland will be promptly and em phatically refuted and shown to Is? absolutely false. Till then the J.ndk pexdf.nt will not make further comment. Mtm' kh elders' Reeling. rpiIH A S S l' A I, MEETING OP THE 1 at rkli,.,.ert o' His Kir-t N';itlrn ltnic 1 1 Mill b..r , O.ero-i, i I b tu-iil ot tiipir hiuik'oir liniie on Tiielnv, J.inuar; i.i, iruu m o c o k r. m, 1 1 a iiit day, f(r the Haeti'Ui i.f (iircciura r tli enmiinx jr, ami uir bucii mnor l uaiuesi as mnv .im whim a.tl'l lni-1'lir?. 29 33 J. 1). MEKItYMAN, C'silner. Net Ire of final Krttlcment XTorirK is hfpriiv nivvv th,t lN ll.r ii til, rniK teil .'m nilr,iinr of the Mini" i f Mine rrn .'. Brown, ile,'cn,-., har Mel h liiml nirount ni ho 'h n'lmitiia rn- ,u . a . i . t. . wr, I I Hie L..unlv curt WhiiiL-ton that floated over Fort Sumpter, com- Cou..t. On u m, na ..it ivu.t i,,.. up. noin e.i .m iii-inr, ine . n "or . f IKvitii- hrr. 1HL Ml I'l 'nVl.i-L- . i. i Un ill any ether country save these of hearing a.iui urr-iit,t. laren lu rtillirn. Ilrrenn. Ill a Wlh United States, they would have been hanged w'thout delay. After four years of hard fighting, the once flourishing country made drsolate with a million persons made widows and orphans, a million straight, hearty men made cripples and invalids for life, and the gov ernment thrown two billion dollars In debt, and as we are now recover ing from tins awful catastrophe, along comes some hot-headed, shal- low-hraimd, Oxey army man and asks the people tluy made a cripple, a a . a wioow una xi n orpiinn io give a is-nsiuii to Hits- ssme rebels who caused them all their misery. - I know that those rssr boys in blue who survived after thclrruelty In Libby prison will feel like giving day of Njt. mcr. !!; KHKD J. IiROWX. A lminl-lr.il ir f tne n ; ni M nprv. C. I own, del ea..n, tfT-.H EXPRESS! WILLIAM UPPER, Prop. Having )iirclIHrd Mr. Amli intrrrt in tlaa line. I hprrliv niinntwA thai am prepnreil to execute ,11 commit amna eiilniMctl to nie Portland re nmilc on XTOTICE IS llKlit-.HY litVES THAT the uri'lorsliineJ tina taken out let.eia traiRineiitury on the estate ol Haniuel Hml Inr, late of Washington County, OreRiin, JeceaaeU, All D raon huvinir claims UK 'lost aaiil eatHte will present ttieni, to mo iiiiiiersiKiieu, at tne otnee ot mourns I). linniDlirey, in Hillatiorii. Oregon, lor Hllownni-e, Willi in aix month, Irom the Inle Inrt'ol. anil nil nersnna knoarlnv llieiiiHtlves Indebted to ami 1 e-tate, are requested to nu ke immediate payment to in,, uniior-ivneii at her remlenre near Belli nil v, Wnililni-ton Couiitf, Orei(on. -li-3i KI.IZAl'.Kllt srol.I.AU. Exerut ix of estale of Huiuuel Slutlar, cJeceased. Novembrr Hi, ISttj. Itojs' and airls' Aid Noeiety - of Oregon. - HOYS MAY TlE IIAU (AND BOME tlmes icirls) lor (1) ordilmry aervlre at wnites: (I1) up . ll indenture, 10 wi rk, at tend school, and he liroimht up somewhat as your own;l and (3) children may be hail lor leel adoption. Add as W. T. (lARDNEIt, tU)it. liny.' and Uirla' Aid Horioty, Port land, Oreiroll. KKICK I. A VIM.. TOH v hrick RI NO. THE: WEI. I. KNOWS' k luveraud enntraniar. w lism ail w irk entrusted to liiln, draw i lana and apeciheations, and ma.e estimates. r..i, .Mice in iiniaimro: T. II. lonaue. 8 V. . Huston or 1). M. C. Oault. 1'oriiMiid aunress, ain Lniuniliia St. 0-9. Second M., ar V. O., Ilillshoro. .. WATCHES. CLOCKS .. JEWLERY. SPECTACLES. ETC. Flue aud Coiiiplirafi d Mattli INpaii lntf. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED PACIFIC UNIVERSITY - - - THREE COLLEGE COURSES CIiflSSIGflL, SGIEflTiFIC, LITERARY The Academy prepares for College a k . a thorough English Education, the . :r. paration for teaching or business, penses eery lou?. Board and.roon ;. Ladies' Hall $3 to $4 per toeeh, nctuuu1M j eiecmc ngnc ana neat. THE COLLBQE DORMITORY Under excellent management, furnishes board and room at $2.25. per toeeh. . Many students rent rooms and board themseloes at a total cost not to exceed $1.50 per tceeh. For full particulars, address ' president McClelland, Forest Groce, Oregon. WINTER TERM BEGINS JANUAE7 2, 1S95. THE LEADING DRUG HOUSE TUB HILLSBORO PHARMACY Careful supervision lit emnprinnral i,l,r.:,.l..i i , petent ...1 painstaking ph.nnacU I -.-.. u.snsing .,y com- Th llillsboro I'liarmaoy orders its .IniRii from the mort rellnlilo ninniiliirinrer. ?nniVr?'".h,,n,,,Khln'"l with every requisite vrfuTSS. Ing a fir8t-clns prnption business. The proprietors re ever atclifnl that ilia m..t.ap,,r,,vl a.est renieilk, are continual ly'being ad-lod to the t k a tl e siTi'iii i's of nuMhi me and pltarmaey adyan.. Iteiiur'possesL-d f pM.inr advaMnL-es in t i r! o 51" "''I'11"". -1 its buoino rule of taking trade diaroimt" f S C druares0"8' re'ai' V"' ""T""? '-" 'IkTo" L"o ' Forty -One Dictionaries 1IT 274 SPECIALISTS. EDITORS AMI COST OVER SHiM,UOU The owner of a eopjr of the Funk A Wag. nails' Ktsndard Dictionary has a complete library of 41 Special Dictionaries, each Hit "' onecisiisis, me product of nearly live years' Inbor of the most profound .lull it ia Ih . I. a tt1 , .1 L - . .jv..w,nin IUI ITIirill WnO US fn t,n lisli laneii'iffe. :KAKLY 60.000 TOPIE3 of this great work were ordered before it was completed: and within eight weeks after Its comple tion, iw was in use in tinhiMn Hi.i-n. . departments of the Oovernmsnt W..I.. ingion, inc uaing tne Supreme Court of i iiiumi males, niniiiisoiilan Institute, iwiiariiiiciifc oi r.,i intinn .in a . . u i. depHrtments of the Uovernmeiit of Canada in the Bchoolsof New York City, itrook Ivn end other lnre cities, and in Leadine i , 11 1 It : ii,n:tne the numlT fninnl in vv.i........ ,.,rinni,iiiiui. 11 isine Highest Authority bfinit the l iint i ro.lnr-t ..f n. . " " r.ng,isii-apealtlng World, I'uiiiislieu by , . , T1IK Kir.NK A WAGSAM.S CO, Si Y'ork. X. Y Ti. n..,i i.inrr nine cmes, and lu l.raiiine Iiitversilies and College! of the Country, t Is the Most Comprehensive, defining m.mn Waliilary terms more than I'ORTLAVn PCItl.IC fiClfOOLH I roRTLsSD. tlKKOO. Jsiiii... Ol lu..i i io me I irons ot the l'oriliin.l P..i.ii The undersleneil havin .nmk... . .... rareliiliy examined the HlanJsrd Diet'., in. ary of the Kn Ish I.anauaire, publislied by he runic ,V U airnsll. '...,, v.i York, cordlnily rerommemi i !'ii pirpma and guardmna of pupi s iu the I iib.i S, hools a., in onr jii lgment, the isl D rtionnry f ,r sclnwl and family use with wh'rh we are ernunint I. W. I'ratl. Cit H, ,..i .. L It'g'er. Principal lligli School: 'h u siier. Principal Kaiilni Sclumi : n. t A, Inm., Principal Stephens Hchool : Jf L. Praif. Principiii Wiihunis Iorkwimd. I'.li,:..,,l m..i. ' wlA.. .i ,n iiiiiiiinisii h V v i R"b,"'. I'rlncwml Central School . K. Downs Prin,..n.i II atesd H hoot: (ieo. A. IV.Kl.. v..i. hool. S ilem. Oreeim: V It iL.il. " S.ilem, Oregon. I Ii'i giilar trips to I'rires low. Bomlsjs, Metlne-.il n s A Krldajs Retnming on the dsys following. Special attention given to the eiecution of small orders. Lcsts order Sold only by MiWriptinn. le r lXFST on displa A a , - V.a V VII u IISIIII IB rim ft Da T(-Plltnf anrimdi,l Af bDrPTiitiu. ...... . also on band. " ' lxy " nu -YK-(.iLASSK.S PATENT MEDICINES of all K,pl.r kind, alway. in st.K-k. The fiueHt WINES and LIQUOK8 ai.pplied In csesof .icknes. on proscriptio Union Block, THE HILLSBORO PHARMACY, Hillsboro, Oregon. DELTA DRUG STORE Next Door Krjan-Laldlaw Store. M.ln Street, Illllsboro, Oiion. SPECIAL ATTENTION' TO qUALlTV AND ACCIIIACV IX DISPENSING. A FIXE LINE OF TOILET ARTICLES, PATEST MEDICINES, &c. AT LOWEST l'MCES. Or. Price'i Cream Baking Powder World'! Pair Highest Medal and Dlplona. CIUS. g. JACKSON B. W. SCOTT H. V. SCOTT & CO. e REAL ESTATE . HOMESTEAD AND . . . . R. R. LANDS LOCATED TlXRF.lt USIIS R0UJIIT AMI )M I'. 8. Land Office limine a Specialty. FkA. P.T. L. The American Protective Tariff Leagua u a national organization advocating "Protection to American Labor and Industry" as explained by its eonstitu tion, as follows : , AmZt'."'l'ci ! thi 1-esfi.e shsll b. to pntert b" U"'f m ""te. "hich sh.ll l2,L:,"'m'r,, '"ltr.al products agsmst the competition of forsrgn Isbor ISt.LEI RI.UCK .. S. IX A. O n. T II, . P.bl!bfiV Ageat, Newbrrr. . Ores;, 1'orevt t.rofr. The U. S. Gov't Reports now Royml Baking PowdQ k superior to mil othtn. There are no pertonil or private proms m connection with theoraaniza- ton and it is sustained by memberships, contributions and the distribution of its publications. UH!!li.?0r?""'Zrr ""cited efaedir-f TJ " 0ff,c"1 Ct.rr..p,rd;nM.', whethi .Sli,"1 leontr,butiontl e JJU.'Ji'iii "V'h 'i'f ,in ou"te sTJTJlf " Ph"' theTnr,ff,,1..t,cn. Com- eM.r " m''4 10 ",r" '' B0 n t..