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About Hillsboro independent. (Hillsboro, Washington County, Or.) 189?-1932 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1896)
HILLSBORO INDEPENDI1T. fciur4 In th postorrloa al Htllaboro,Orafoa, aa auul-claa waiter. Mntiarrlptlnn, In ilun, pt yW Mil OrUillO PUBI.IHH1.NU 1X., Proprlator. 1). M C. (JAl'LT. Editor. UHt IAL PA J JIM Or TMB VIT FRIDAY, AlOUST21. ICKITKLIt A PRESIDENTIAL TICKET. r'nr Prtatdant WM. M. KIN" LEY, ol Ohio. . Kor Vica-Proldant UAKKKTT.A. HOB ART, of Nr Janaf. Kor I'reaidantlal Elantur T. T. (JEEK, of Marlon Count-, M. II. YORAN. of Lan. K. I.. 8.MITH. of Wun. J. V. CAri.E8.of Multnomah. I 01 STY - LKAtU E ORtiASIiTIOX. Notion 1 hereAy given that a call !wj been '.uutsJ Ly prexiilmna of the Hcvt'inl cluta named below, for the ort;anlxation of a county leKgue t the court hou.se, Ilillxlxiro Iretfoti on Kepteuitier :Jtl 18!6 at one o'twk I. M. Each club in requte4 to hold a meeting prior to I he alxive tlate and elect ilt'legate. hm follows: One at large for each club, one for each U5 member and one for each fntctton of 15 members or more. I. A. Macrum, president McKlnley ' club Forest tirove. Calvin Jack Sr., jireniilent of Farm ington club. John Buchanan, president flub of CumeliuH. S. A. McSherry, prenldi-nt Laurel club. J. It. Mayo, present (llencoe club. X. X. Harding, president Oaxton club, J. N. Fisher, ftrnt vice president lieavertoa club. (1. W. Patterson, prenldent HilU boroclub. Hon. II. V. Hates who ha Just re turned from Klamath County brings good rejxirU from that part of the Stale. There are many sound money democrat in Klamath County who aresuporting McKlnley. Mr. Gales is firm in the belief that the state will be. carried for McKlnley. Hon. Johnathan Iiorn ha resigned the position of necretaryof the republican state central .committee and Hon. O. X. Denny has Imii appointed in hi stead. Mr. Dcnney i recognized an a strong man and will do etllcieut work in the coming campaign. Sound money and Mrtcctlon i his watchword. Dr. Xansen, the Xoreweglan ex plorer who in June 1H93 railed from Christiana expecting to drift over the Xorth pole, ha returned. He aband oned hi ship in March 185. He took the ice and succeeded in getting 4 degresH further north than any other explorer. He reached a point 8ti 14' north latitude, only 3 4r from the pole, but that '2-6 geographi cal mile ha not been traveled. Xausen got beyond all land. He had under him only ice. He believe the north pole is a sea, probably of ice. I .ant year there were aproxinmtely Xim.OOO.OOO wortli of good imported in tbi country. Xow aupoe time had been such a duly lniMMed thai only $;no,000,iMH) worth having Iteen iuiorted, the other IWMl.WNl.noo worth having been made at home. That ,WI0,(M)0,(HH) could have been distributed among a million lalorer giving them 100 each. That money would have remained at home riculated among more titan the orig. inal million latmrer. I there any ue to deny that we would have let ter times? The stock acsertiou of the free coin er that the price of wheat and silver began to fall In 1873, the year of the great crime," and have fallen con tinuously ever since, i easy to ans wer. It I unly neccessary to a that the statement I untrue. The market record show that wheat did not begin to fall until HM. In 182 it was several points higher than in 1874, 1875 and 187ii; and in 1881 it wa higher than it had been at any time during the previou ten year, with a single exception. Hut in the same period, while wheat wa keep ing ita price and frequently rising, silver fell more than 10 ?r cent. It is absurd, therefore, to talk aUut a connection between the two tiling. There i one slat in the Chicago platform that must not be overlooked That paper denounce federal Inter ferance In local affair. It I yd fresh In the public mind how Presi dent Cleveland sent troop to Chicago to (piell the mob of July 1894, and it I yet remembered how Allgeld, a leader with the demo populist., railed against the 'nut rage." It I nonsense to write Alt geld down a mint by saying that he afforded every protection to the rail road a coon a ask! to do so. We do not want a pai ty that wait to lie asked to extend he' p. The country need men tlmi will suffer rioting lr forethey are kel. Alt geld now asserts that be would hat ivtit Mate trooM to Chir.igo If the City author ity had Invoked hia intrrfrmr. That I not what the preaideat did. He saw that soldier were required to restore order and he sent them. Xow what we want I a man in the execu tive chair that will do likewise in a aim I -emergency. Hut Mr. llryan endorse a platform that denounce ftderal Interference. Wherefore we do not want llryan. FA LSE OH COX TRA OIC TOR Y. In place or at time the free silver coinage enthusiast assert ' avvt to believe that the unlimited coinage of silver would create such a demand for silver bullion that the price would advance at once to 11.29 per ounce in gold. Xow while all unite lu ac knowledglng that de mand for an art icle fixes the price yet the demand created by a single country adopting free coinage of silver i not ......i. ti.at it u-ill iioiihl the itrice of ruva the metal. Bryan in hi Xew York speech asserted that for a fact, but he n .... knnw It to be true. On the vau v ----- oiher hand there are the best of rea ...... r. iiiAvlmr it is not true. Hi assertion solemnly made wa that "free ami unlimited coinage of silver lay the United State will raise the bullion value of silver to its coinage value of 1.29 ner ounce in gold That Is. free coinage by the United i..., u ill roil the value of i... at tyui lum iuui nf silver coin in HIS" fijinnYn"', use in the world to 8,lHH,(HH,IHlO Bryau's siieeeli in Xew York and hi eeche in congress prove win he never made any Intelligent study of the finance question, but ignorant as he is, entirely safe to say that he knows his assertion I false. .No one having even an elementary know lege of the question who ever said this or arylhlng like this Mieve it to he true. Bryan say free silver will la-nt til the laborer and the debtor. But bow rau it benefit either If silver umier free coinage advance to the gold level? Here i where Bryan refutes Bryan. It would be a hard under such condition Tor Hie lawrer to earn a silver dollar or the debtor to pay one a it to earn or pay a gold irollar. There i an irrepressible con flict betweeu these two assertion:!. One necessarily and inevitable ex lude. the other. Yet these were the central arguments in Bryan's ach. Kverything which he said in the two houa in which he wa before the Xew York audience converge in these two assertion, l'erson capable of analyzing Bryan's neaiiy con structed and iniinctnt sounding sen tence can trace a similar ignorance, confusion and contradiction running through hi whole aech. In alter nate paragraphs Bryan hit Bryan. After all, Bryan's talent for maning the wjrse appear the better reason has it limitation. With all the gild ing which he ran put upon them dis honesty remain dishonesty and false hood, falsehood. Bryan is a disap pointmentagreeably so to the maj ority, those who oppose nimj ii- agreeably so to the minority, tnose who support him. Xo one ougnt to be deceived by this 1.29 i-r oun.-e assertion. that rvsmx. The Bryan democrat will fuse with the populist of the northern and Westesn State but they will not fuse in the south simply liecause they do not have to do so. The demo cratic majority in the south are large enough without the aid of the epu lis!. Watson realiz.es this and sen sible populists at the Xorth, know It. In Washington the fusion was effect ed by nominating two populist elec tor and two' democratic. If the fu slon wins there are four vote for llrvan and two for Sewali and two for Watson.' There i Die shadow of another kind of fusion In the south that tends te cast a gloom over the democratic mauager. The St. I-oui tilolte- I teinm-ntt of last Saturday has this news reort on the new move: "It not at all unlikely that a coinbina tlon ticket will be put In the field by the republicans, national democrats isipulists in some of the southern slate. The executive committee of the national dcmociacy is in recei))! of prooition looking to this end from Alabama, Texas and Florida, and is inclined to look upon them with favor. The leader of these three parties in the South have not yet discussed matters of detail in the proposed fusion, but it i probable that if it is to be carried out they will fuse on the state ticket a nearly as possible in proportion to tiie strength that each one isses and that eh-e-torial ticket will le made of men pledged to vote against Bryan and Sewali. In all three of the states mentioned the populists have declined to enter into the fusion with the democrat arranged at St. loiiis, and are strong enough, in combination with repuh. licans and sound money demM'ra(si to swamp the Chicago ticket in each of these states. This is an unqiH tionable fact when it is considered that under these circumstance! the colored republican vote ofthese state will Is? protected anil counted. That element alone is almost sufficient to carry them. iii executive com mittee will consider these proposi tion at it meeting in Chicago on Monday. The llpulli-an in the slate nam ed have not submitted the question to their national committee, nor have (he populUt to theirs." WHtMRK TilK JkRmot IUT. The demopop have had much to ay alsiul men and institutions whom they claim mnii.li money for camp- igii exppitiv. it migiii lie well for litem to look at home. To assist in this very proper study the following table I presented which was made up by a Washington corropou lent of the St. J hi is (J!ol Ihin.srat. afford an luterestimr bird's-eye view of the total wealth of but '11 of tin leading silver-mine omuerif the West, who either in perjii or by their agents, h;iv tst-n active in shaping the 111 to-1 plunk ia (I var ious platform of the democratic, pop ulist and sliver conventions recently held in St. Douis and Chicago: Hwttlle.Cllforuia 1 TOl,0O0 Virli. Iftlforms w,wi,..jw jobu Msckty -. .ouu.'i Mggau j,wj,vjw W A.lrk . .WW.IJiJ Win M 8twrt. Nv.l 4liU,0U) K J Swland Sharon saUl).. if,x, 0 It... Unri.l Kadn 31.tU0.ULH) Hauttor i V JunM (Coiu ktuc lud) flood null lienor Hilvr hnllinK ork. K C Cbarotwra, Onlirio nlvirr mill Ch E I. n, California I. K HoUm, Old XnlKrspt uiina Mark luljr Anaconda, Mont ana but SiW.-r Smelting Wurka ... S It llauxir, Molilalia ailver ulura , fjcuch syn.lituii) 1 i.ira.u niliia), t'lari I.cadvilla Silver Smaiiing Work Hroadaaiar aaiata livlaua Mon tana smatur II M Tcllr. Coloradu.. Senatur ilantla, Montana . 3,000,000 !,") i.,uuu,iju i mo.wi ao.onu.uuo l.),ta) 1,V,(i)0 JI.OUU.U'IU 10 lOi.OO M.OHJ.IIJU S .7)0,oll0 J.irai.uuu . S.iaw.oiu Total ...tMT.ww.WW Thi sum, .-.47,(SSi,imm is sssetSHl by concerns. Xo wouder the Herat's can maintain a free silver paper in California, the "Examiner" and another in Xew York, the "Jour nal", while they newotitate fr a third in Chicago. It wa lor 2,mni,KMI that Teller bolted the rep ublican convention at St. Iouis. These iieople have uciiuinsl this welth within 'Jo years, and no de mand thttt the industries nuilt up by the labor of a ceutry shall . contribute to further augment their colossal fortunes. The shares of this Ci million dollar are held by 21 corpor ations while an equal amount of U S. bond that these silver mine bar ons would pay off in silver, at fifty cent on the dollar are held by 'wind ows, orpans, schools and charitable institution. What a source for the collection of a large corruption mud. Xo wonder Win. m. Mewart who his iil.iMXi.(MHl dollar can aft'onl In circulate his "Silver Knight" in this county. Tllk BOV OKATUKMrVLK.' The Astorian has disinivered thici Secimen of the brilliant and ready stjle of repartee for wWch Candidate Bryan Is so' distinguished! Voice (In the crowd at Pittsburg) 'Woulden't the silver mint-owners have a monoisily?" Bryun (his statesmanlike and con vincing reply) "The inineowners are the only Kople who produce sil ver, Just as the gold miner are the only eople who produce gold." (Tremendous applause ami great cheering.) The Treasury figures for August so far show a deficit of over 10,000,000; and whatever may le said about the need of more currency, this certainly shows that the tlovernmeiit i sadly In want of more revenue. The Astorian call I'enoyer the "humbug mayor" of Portland and hi apyolnteea, "hi odious crowd of satellites." Notwithstanding Pen- oyer's admlstratlon will be unfortu note in many way for the City of Portland, it will Imj fortunate in other resmt'ts. There were a lot of people in the City that were Infalued with the great tlemngogue ami nothing but a good dose of him would do any good , The Indiana Farmers' Association ha ")0,ihki members, "Comprising '(O0 republicans, yo.rstll democrats, 1000 populists and Iimki prohibition ists, and 42,2'iO of them are going to vote for McKlnley and sound money This indicates a republican gain of 15,000 over the presidential vote of 192. "The silver sentiment is swiftly disapeariiig," say the prrsi dent of the association, "and the Indiana farmer don't want any of your cheap money." HIE I'AKI.E tit Kill ST St.MK It i fitting that thi free silver travesty should lie emls'llished w it li hob-goblin stories, and that ourliiix otic Silver Knights should regale their listeners with the marvelous capture of an American Congress, by the mysterious ut Seyd. I say il is proir that in thi movement ol sliver inineowners, in their sjsrious plea for as M igrant a is'ice of class legislation as ever found lodgement in the human brain, that they charge every tine opposed to them as dis, honest and corrupt. Kven if it were true as they charge that a hired emissary of the Itothschilda succeed ed in besliming and corrupting a large ami Intelligent Issly of Ameri can citizens, it has nc place in the ! discussion of the president statu of the silverquention. But it is not true. A more infamous charge never rest ed upon forged evidence. Il is more than shameful thai some of the mem lsrs of that congress now living, and who are now taking u prominent part in this movement of "organized greed" should put into the month of their dead collcogue wonts they never uttered, or to give to the words they did utter a base and sinister motive. The charge in brief is foil nde I up on the story that one Crust Seyd, Nsefal agent of Briti-di interest by the use of a large corruption fund succeeded In bribing a congress of pure and upright men, Senator Stewart among them into passing the law of s7:l, "demonetizing" silver. The story lias a peci!lc foundation in a garbled n .tl ,. ,i 4ii'h ly lion. Sain' I I l'q r introducing the scl r fT:, into the lloii-s-April It. 17:!. 'll.r piirt referriiig to F.'ii-t Seyd taken from Cong. ti:o,i pige I'iiil is as follows "Mr. Kni-I yd, of lxiili.n, a disiingtiislidl writer who lti given great s'teiiti in . -ulj.tt of ttili.ls mi.! itiiuagi-, after t l mining the M draft id itie bill furnisheil many valuable auggotion. ; which have la-en Uirormrted in tblj bill." Thosp life Hie Word a Mr,' Hooper uttered them, but Mr. Weaver In his "call to action" iage 320, with the usual volubility of I he populists has added the word "is now here" where they would best serve his purpose, that Is after the words "a distinguished writer," plac ing Mr. Seyd in Washington while all the evinence goes to show that he was in Iondon at the time this "awful crime" wa committed. On the 22nd of August, ),', Senator Hoar read in on senate the very letter written by Mr. Seyd to Hon. Sam'l Hisiiier in '73 lu which he plainly and emphatically urged Mr, Hooper not to agree to the cause of the bill relating to the silver dollar Kvery work and word of Krut Seyd goes to prove tbo falseness of the claim that ho wa other than the friend of silver. In hi letter to Mr Hooper he was earnest iu hi plea that the standard dollar 1st retaiued, and its weight reduced to 400 grain, so that It would circulate and become again one of the actixe agents of com' mcrce," to quote hi owu words, The son mid brother oi Mr. Seyd then raised their voice to silence the sland er on the father and brother then de-cea-ed, denying in emphatic terms that their relative had Is-eu in the United State since the year IS'iti. Bred and born in mUreprene utatiou and forgery, this heuliful fable has been told Usm the platform, though the press, and by the fireside, until the promulgators of it themselves Is lieve it true. There is not an iota of evidence in sopxrt of it. On the contrary all the evidence obtuinable tends to disprove it. The very fact that its sjMiiiMor resorts to garbled" seches to sustain It, is evideii'-e of its falsity. It would tie w holly ridi culous were it not coniemptahle. Where, were the Tiilmau the Allgelds, Vests, Pennoyers et al in the years following 1873 up to and In clusive ol the year 1883. that they did not make the welkin ring with their exisure of the "infamous crime of 1873, which shrunk down half the current money of the United States"? Were they too busy amass ing fortunes during those prneroii.s years lo note the iiwlul divergence Is-tween wheat and silver iuui the ruin it wa working usiu their fel low men? Or were they not in fuel telling the dear ieople of the ruinous effects of a protective tariff? Kven Mr. Bryan just 4 year ago had not discovered the enormity of the "crime of '73" and the wm and mis ery it had entailed upon our ieople, but regaled hi listener with fear fully told stories of the cruelty and mendacity of a protective tariff, anil the wonder land ol prosperity this country would become under the (Milicy of free trade. II. S. Hi iwox. S( 11001, API'0KII0MKT. lif, ('' Xtiiir mid AililrfxH, Am) 1 , MillHlH)ro...U-' K-' 2 Thoa Tall sit, Coriielins ; 14 so 3 K V Miilloy, Ijuirel-- 1117" 4 J K Wilson, Cenlervilln !'(" 5 1 1 (ion Ion, Forest i rove, . . TH M rl Walter Wisomore, (Vilnr Mill 2.t:l lu 7 IVter Boseow, IlillHlxiro...... !'7H (io 8 U J I! Hanlcv, HillslMjro 74 IK) Jos Conned, (ilcni'ot! ... 1U7 oil 10 K S tiiiylonl '-i 70 HI 4", Hit li'i h) jtJ I. Kruse, StaOi.r.l II JlK II Jeter, (irston 12 John Itoeker, Jr., irfenvillf-. K7 2 I. .S Wilkes tireenville l:i 0'. lit 14 Hi 17 I J andevelden, ireenvlle-. 11 II isiewart, Forest U.iove..--ti II Temple, liaslnn. ....... Culvln Jiuk Sr., Kariuiiifitoii,, 111 ill 7'.':l fi'i 114 70 los :!o :ri o " A J ritiino, lleavcrUin 10 J W Sewali, llilllro :0 A W Wright, Mi.l.lletoii 21 S A D Meek, t llencoe 22 11 II Reuanner, Miildleton 2:1 jt .1 M llurroiiitli", W Portland.. 2ti'ilJ I' llfnrv, Tualatin 27 W W Wo'lcott. Forent (.irove... 28 .1 S Miller, liaslnn 'JH itThiK tirunt. SeaniNHise K.S HO (!' !MI 135 05 I'M SO i'sil 10 140 K Ml 7"i H5 10.1 00 2 .1 H liulav, Kwilville 1KH 70 :iu K 1' Lilly, (isles Creek 170 2o :m.il W K Y mi "e. Sherwood .. 24 Co .12 Matlliewi bates, (iaMoii 4S 10 ;!M lulius Ashahr, HilUboro . 107 !lo H'i jt N I. Wili-v, Xewlioig y,:i :in ::y J 1 1 Kindi, Kiiit.in lltoo 40 John .Vojrli, Tirrilrille- lot 70 41 W I. Andrews, MountaiiHlale.. 121! W 42 Oliver L Curtis, (inles t rwk.. 74 00 42jlK h llmltje, Sylvan 43 K I 'avis, t iU ncoe 4t A t Stephens, button.. 4.i A ' Mttll, Slierwo.l 4i.i(t'M Mi-Ciirinlck, I hiiiiiI 47 I'red Krnger. Miildleloii (H S A K link, beaTertoii 40 .1 K I'iikIi, t iaston 2li 20 His 15 11 45 12:t05 :t: ihi 70 :iu :!io 75 "Hi 2o 0i 20 77 70 "l jt K (' Miller, Schools . - S Itnrns, Moiinlaiiiiluli A 11 Ne.wkirch, CnrneliiK W4 :tt Philip tiniv, t iirtieliiis.. ...... 1 III 5"i 4 r J K il r iu II, lieilmnr Vi Alfreil (ineriier, I'lleiHiie. "7 M S I'.arneK, 15earerton. " .1 Miller, Karmiimton iV Mr Abliie t'otmrn, (ilemm-.. .. HO l' W ll.algiM, lue.v'ille 01 liiintin Tannoi'k, Dixie ii2jilC liiirt.in, Cwlar Mill O.'l J I Nnrtlmp, .MoillHttindule.. 27: so 122 10 122 10 as hii '.HI 05 :! 15 4 10 00 IHI S SO til W K Newell, Dilley o. ." t5 W II l.n-ter, (ilenwmxl til o5 OH llarlint Minith, liaslnn 07 jiJ"lin A JoIiiihiii, I'nrtluii'l t W II Wier.lilenene -- 74 00 1 10 f-5 40 !'" 70 :so 4 10 '.Hi 20 lOO 15 Kl 25 1 70 fill IMI 00 70 71 Ti 7:t 74 7 7li 77 . 7S 70 HO SI 2 ( lul llitteiiiHi), (iale Creek.. Mn I. S Nichold, tili'iicoe W . Slierer, (inlea Crn-k - J l Hinct, I lux ton L ( liner. Tiialulhi Samuel liraff, lletvanr PC I'illiert, Oreeiivilie..... . A K. Meail, Kreenville .. til 05 t' is'ltlr:iw. Blooming li'il.MI Jo l (ileuson, Fore-t (irove.. 25 '.HI J I'almaleer, Ktsilville . ti J Similiter, linlel lleniy llellsrg. 1'e.lar Mill.. S A I'lirlioin. Tualitaii . A Tliumaf, tialea Cretk . 04 75 !SI 05 US 40 W !SI 4 10 ti 4 I 40 25 20 :15 244 20 1 1 1 in H.) 115 5'.' 20 tfii li :t5 15 In 4 0 i 74 i o 2 '7 2' ::o K.I M jlV lii ken, (ileneoe- i mm McMillan, llavward .... s7 jtll II Kibls-y. linxton A ( Slli'll, Sherwisal David A ( arter. I lillnlmro ... l J W M. Hubert.,! mien Creek- 01 W W Uak Dil'Mr !il.i"i It Itristou, Mi.l.llelon t'4 Henry J.nie. Ilenvertoii.. .. Oi Win .lainieMi, ftaleitrh . LI'. Mi'Vlani", eU-rif If r (' llerineii, (Vnteiville !' K I ( raiil.. Iloxti.n ' .TIia'ih.T .. T- .(il . ll.'ii artrli.a. K.alN. I'roni ;i Utter ri'iin i, U J liiti.r. riniu. of I).. i i i In i '. Mill. Wl :ire i llllltliil to m ike Mil I X - r.i t : - h.ve (., i.e-ihi'l n in ns-iillllln-hiiil4 !ir. Kliiy' New li tsivt-ry. n the -nils ui re alimnl inn r veli i. in the e- ,r mv if , While i s i-Vr if Ihe it iplisi church at liver Junction she wa brought down with pneumonia suc ceeding la grippe. Terrible par oxysms of coughing would last hour with little interruption and ll seemeu a if she could not survive thum. A friend recommended Dr. King New 1 kt.u..kui.rv- it oniek in its work and highly satisfactory in results." Trial isilllc tree at iiiusDoro Pharmacy, ltegular size f0e and 1. l.rj) Hlir MadVllark. I saw in your paer a statement that Zulu Vulier would restore any head of hair to natural color iu three week. A 1 was very gray I sent for a sample package, and iu less than Ihree week my hair was ier fectly restored to natural color. My wife's h.irijwas light red, and by using Zilu Vulier, her hair i now a beautiful auburn. Any one can gel a sample package tif 'ilu Vulier by sending 21 two-cent tamp to Wil son A Co., New 'Concord, Ohio, and if it does not. restore the hair to nat ural color lu three weeks they will return your stamps; it not only re stores the h tir to natural color, but will stop the hair falling out immed iately and is one of the Ist hair tonics made, and you take no risk, and if il does not salsify you perfectly Uiey w ill return your wnnip. A Kkaukk. The M fid I'aiiaeea. Jas. I.. Francis, ulderinan, Chicago, mi.vs: "I regard Dr. King's New Dis covery as an ideal panacea for cough, colds and lung complaints, having um-iI il iu my family lor the last live years, to the exclusion tif physician's prescriptions or other preparations." ltev. John 'iiirgus, Keokuk, la., writes: "I have been a minister of the Methodist F.piseopal church for fifty year or mine, nnd have never found anything so Is-nellcial or that gave me such speedy relief as Dr. King New Discovery." I ry tin Ideal cough remedy now. Trial bottles free ut llillsboro Pharmacy. CnfathoBiad Spaea. Magnificent as aru all the sidereal systems displayed to our obaorva tion, wo ought still to remember that there is a limit to our vision. ven the largest and most brilliant of suns might be so remote aa to be entirely beyoud tliu ken of the great eat telescopes and the most sensitive of phutograpbio plates. Doubtless tars exist iu profnsiou elsewhere than in those parts of space which alone oome within range of our in strumonts. As space is boundless, it follows that the regions through which onr telescoes have hitherto conveyed our vision must be as nothing in comparison with the realms whose contents must ever remain utterly unknown. Inuuiuer able as may seem the stars whose existouoe is already manifest, there Is every reason to bulievu that they do not amount to one-millionth part of the stars which oouupy the im penetrable depths of the firmament Robert Ball in Xew York Sun. "Mf Lod(lDK la on the Cold Orouud." At an early date the still favorite old song, "&Iy Lodginir I on tiie Cold Uround," obtaiuud a sucoess of a very different kind, attributable oerhaps at first to the singer. We are not told whether it wus compos ed especially for the play in whioh the actress Moll Dttvius, u rival of Nell Owynuo's, sung; it so effective lyi history only records that her ex quisite rendering of this plaintive air attraotetl the artentioii or ins majesty King Charles II ou a visit to the pluyhouse and resulted in royal favor for the ingor, who was not in future so hnrdly lodged. -Corn hill Magazine. Mew Canadian Proviuora. ('anudii has bestowed names on it9 territory bordering the Arctio (M-eau. It will hereafter appear on thu ninp in four districts or provinces Ln gara, Franklin, Mckenzie and Yu kon. The four ccmbiued contain 1,421,000 square miles. Literary Note. "They say that bicycles are driv ing; books clear out of the market." 'Yes; folk who own good wheel don't care whether they can read and write or uot." Detroit Free Press. The Pre. If the press i to maintain it dig nity a an educator of tha people, it must load and not follow. It must fearlessly express the truth, not pander to tho almighty dollar nor to blind partisanship. Last mimmer I said to tbo editor of a p.mat cosmo politan newspaper, "Why do the newspapers print so many columns of sensation btull in u questionable niannor? "Simply," said ho, "to meet the demands of the tougher element of the community, which read not!). ing else. This kind of news is read by all classes that have much to do with the imjHco, by 'sports,' inhab itants of the slums and of 'the Ten derloin' district." Would minister preach or a teacher teach to leu.se tho baser ule. muntsof tho community? Then why should a newspaper? Forum. Cut A-qiilntln. In ft) country town in Kentucky there is n More where they sell "nioateverythiii." Tho young man who does thu selling intends to be a brilliant hand at repartee some day. Meanwhile he practices on the pn trons in general, with a preference for cob red patrons. An old aunty, with a mellow fifteenth century tin sh on her cheek bones, came in one piarketday and inquired, "You ain't got no eeml o' satin cut ii sipuntin, is yon?" "I didn't say I bailn't.j aunty." "Well, you m-edu't beso; smart, mister. I ain't arst you isn't you. I arst you mu't you. I your' Troy Times. A CUT PRICES I a In recent lime oiigil Wsler Supply Geods. H-liUSI 1 SFRWOTOI Wsier Supply waa sells lew nd hT tbrfor fUnCI -M rv1tMfJ v mm 10 off ail tOWr. tow prictl, ft band iib) loo - fjf J If risani a. 11 V4 1 1 t"' : " ". alJz. vr..r. t A lit laVal il II IaVt Cite. l ill r?'.'LZZ'?,7L V vraaai lUDfi C7iinirrs. wwtr was iro t If . VV w prrpa Daniiruiif mtiairai rataww. or nia apan i ai i r i' i -'.aaasajajjajl NnKKirr'ft aLU. . BY VIRTIE OF A S KXK'TTlON. order ol aala lunad out ol lha Count 1'oilri ol tlia It ia la ol Or((on, n lavor of Thoa. P. lliiiopbray and aainat J. H. Wilaun Idr ilia turn of tin 40, eoaia, and for ina luuher aunt of V. S. aoul ooin ith intarvat lharaou at lua rata ol 10 par cant par annum, Iroru tsa J I day of May, 1SHJ, aud lor tna coata aud axuanaaa ol aa and of aaid vnt. No, lharalora, by virtua anil In poran anca 01 aaid judnnt and axacution, and lor want ol turtiiiiaut nrjaoual proorrly, I did on lha Dili da of Augut, IM duly ay npon ttaa hrrainalter decribd roal i rjvarty and I will on Tu day. tha 't-X day Saitinbr, If!, al tea aouth door of tlia i'jurt llua, iu ilillaboro, Waahiniton Cjuniy. Orrgon, at 'ha hour of 10 o'clock a. in. of and day, arli al public auction tu tlia hicliaat blilJar lor eaali all ol tha un dividad intaraat ol lha abov named da ler.dunl ol in and to tha lollowing dra crilsKl raal proisirty, to-wit: Lying, being and aitilaia in WiMliton C untv. Uraon, to-wit: lUtriiiniug S "s" y. WM'i chain Iroin Iba N V corner ol the 1) I. ' or Wui. Wiiaon aud aula in T 1 W II S W Willamalia .Mari iian. tUrnc l.rS W 2l.2!, Ibanc 8 "So K SttM ci aina to lha aaat Una uf aaid D L C at tba northat cornr ol the laud of VV. H. Wiiaon. Ihanca north eal allli aaid aaat till ol aaid claim to tha uorlhanvt corner ol ant claim. lhnce north 78 W -t'l..")TS chain mora or laa, to tha place ot b KHininK, aicepling lliaralroiu Ibe tract lhat liaa on lha leu bank ol D iiry creek and that carlain tract aold lo Anton Planner by dead recorded rK- '.'-'7 ol boo a a.' ol daeda ol Waahiniton tViinty, eoiiiaing Ariacra. to .nly Hie hreiiii lore naiueil euuii, aud lor the coata and rlnlls-l of aaid alr. Siid roerlv b li- told aii iiw-t to ri- Iciiipiioii aa p r aiitiulw oi i iretMi. Wnn-a my hail I una pi II day of .Vug- nt, si W. II. IIKAIirDHD, Sli-r.tt ol Whingi.o fount), rnai ol Or. gon. II K. II. S ipiiinaio.i. Daunt r. Uao. It. llaiile . Any lor I'laintm. XUTlt'K OF KXF.t'l TOK'M HXt.V. OF llrl.U. PHOPKKTV. N TOTIl'K IS IIKHK1IY (IIVKS, THAT iieel by lu t'ouoly louri ef the Stale ot Oi'eKoi', lor Waabuiefon L'oumv.on the I tlh da ol January, IS'"i, iu In nial er oi llieeatateol William Jouy. dil, and to the eiecutora or tha lal will and tenia- lil'iil nl W iiiiain Jolly, de -eaaeil, directed. I will rl al auction lo tin tiiiiii bid der at Ihe a m h d hir i f the Court Houae in lltliaiioio, W .tali eton G-iunty, Oregou, o-l S iliirday, tile I lot day ol Setiteiulsir, !;, nt ihe boiiroi 10 o'clock in I lie lore noon 1 1 aaid day, on beliall ol III Han oi W I lam Jol y, deead, ail of Ibtit ir n-t ul land be.on 114 to tlia a!ale ol Wiliiiiin J illty, diied, lyititf be tie and all ti witiiin ml:in'hm lniinr. tire lion, a id more u iriicuiarly bounded and ueacrioeil aa lollowa, tiwit: C jni 1111 nuiiia; at Hie fiortbweat corner nl the aouiu bailof the dona: nin land elaiiu ol W iliiim Jolly and wile in rit in 14 town t in. rill, lanae Ihrea writ, Willamette meritlaii, an. I rilnut 14 tiiiiin antuh about 6 rliaina to a al ue at the nir li ef cor ner ol a tract ol Ian I convoy., I hrt'.M. Howard and liu-ilianil to II It. (ro hIiu. b lent recorded on pa.e7tloi IhkiK 44reooida o: devili lor WalllnlrlOll Ceuntv. tfreifon, and runniiiK tb-no. rial 21 !m cliaina. thence u.rtu 2l leei, ih-'ime east 22-Sft clinlna lo Ihe center o. Mckay crek, tnenca north var-t niou the center 01 aaid creek Willi the ineauderiim tliereol 1 Ilia norlll line nl the aouili hall nl the donation land claim ol aaid William Jolly anil wile, and thence weal 4'i chain, 111 ire or le. to the place ol lieitiiiuiii, coiuair, 111K 12 acre, more or lea. Said land will lie aoid upon the follow nn term ot aal: t n-lli r I ol the pur chaae price In lie paid cah in hand; our mod of tna purcliaeo price to be paid one year Irum tha day ol sate, and the re mainder ol the pnrchasj price lo be paid two year Iroin the day ot aa.; delnrred paviudiil to draw in ereat at iliarnteol per cent per annum, pa able anuiialli'. audio li a 1.11 red by mortfjaifj upon the premise sola. lo vyauos in be at purchaser s espense, WM. II. .IOI.LY. So1 surviving Ktecnii.rot the l..i Will and leataineiit of W 111. Jolly, deceaaed lil-17 NIIKKIFF'N HALF. IY VIKTITK OK AS KXErrritlS li l-snej out of the Circuit Court ol 'he State ol OieK'Ui. tor the County ol Washington, upon a judicium t rendered on the 17 h day ol June, A. 1. 1SM4, 111 an ai-liou Ualure J. I, krwiit, a Juaiii ol ;he peace in nn I for Ihe I'rei ini'l ol S,nlli ItillslHiro. Gmutynt Waahinirlon, In aaid Stale, Stela ol Ureiroii, piaintilf, and William Cowniah, di'tenilanl, 111 lav ir of the Staia ot Uri:iu, for Hi sum nl S,,H.). cusls, and the luriher sum ol HS.7 . L. S. told coin, and for the eo.ta ami e penaes of sale aiid of said writ, and ahioti said jmUment wasduly dock I d in t et'ir-uil court 01 the Miaie ol UrdKon. lor Wanh iiiaton County on the , h day ol Adkioi, trwi. Jo, tneretore, by v.rttie and In per- suanceof Saul luda-nient, and tor ant ul sullicient ts-raonal proiertv. 1 did on the m n nayoi Auiru 1, is'jii, only levy on all h Interest of the aaid William C.iwnian. d ifandant, iu t he hereinafter di :nb 1 real proee ty, and I a in, 011 .Momtay. th '21-1 day of September, 1H9H, at tbesouth door ul the loiirl Ui. use, 111 HillsLoro, w asning ton t'ountv, Oreeon, at the hour ol 10 n'clcrfk a. m. ol said day, sell at pu lie auction, to Ihe bivhest biuiler, lor cash, be lo. lowing ile-onlieil real property, lo-wlt: Known and des. rired aa the Homestead ol Chan. Uiwhiah, No. 77C. hem, furtbvi descrilied as 'lie nutbweat quarter ol sac lion It. I2NI1 2 W. Willamette meridian in Ihe disirict of lands sill.Jn I to sale at Oreeon City, Oregon, eju'ept ene aere "i.lil lo Kcluo! D.strict, No, , tor a site for a So'iool Home, and 011 which tlia School Hons now stands, Ihe tract nf land hereby fOivryeil, contiinn 1 W acrs, mora or i , also crmnnnciig at the anutbeast corner of tha homestead laud claim ot Charles , Cowniati and aifa thence rttnn tie imriii I P, rxls, thence west 1.' rods, thence sauih roils, I hence east VI rods to Ihe pirn- ol beitlniioiK, contatnir one acre more nr le-a. The above i in sect on 33 T 2 N K 2 V, a I situate iu Washington County. (Jreg.in, 10 aaiislv the hereinbe fore named sum-, and lor tha costs and expenses of said sale. Said property will be ml 1 subj cl to re 'leniption, as e- sfntiita nl Oregon. Witness in hand this 20 h ds nf Aug ust, l!i, W. l. )KADKOIll, Sheriff of Waihinglon County, Oregon, Gen. . HaUr, ' i:.7 Attv lor I' a'n' If, olre of Flattl Hettlement. NOTIPK IS HKItKBY OIVKN, THAT Ihe undersigned haa lilad with the County Court of lb State of Oregon, for V'ahington County, his linal account a esecutnr ol the iant will and testament o! Jacob Keim, deceased, and that said Court has appointed tlia nth day of Oct ober, is; 0. at pio'clo- k iu the Inren. on 01 nid day as ihe lime lor hearing ot.jections 10 such linal account, and for th- settle ment thereof. CAK1. I'KAIII.. Ksecutor of the last will and testament of Jacob Keim, di ceased. It l-i The U. S. Oov't Reports thow Royal Baking Powder superior to mil otbirt. Dr. Price' Cream baking Powdar WaeU'a Fair lllgaast Awer-i. St lb oa Is e eoloaunly reduced eri (lasted a aew Idea la Wiadmill Goods, fiverythlas taw la alas . w kav riidisrred dlaia wiaxtmili coMbiaaUoa. i aSaXCi t.sa.l 9 TbrootH cratiiod and bacaa w tr aric ajkakan. i ttiat awMi Off txtaaaH aw.aa.aaa kaa 1 atk.i L - ai who, ana wvouum arc id aota ona thai to4 is th moimn t') wiodrx TM WO MLB HAA tVIM Um MOM TM&H ffrtvde a4 llff a.. V poef acrrA Bran pa, wttil fc frfifbt f ae braax-b I oac Otar immmmr mmf i 1 1 we eeiie I ' Bass aeon I I im aesaslesa M 1 lack at f f sd aew 1st f I deas. mil aieaH y 1 'J NEW Having: rented the Warehouse at lias, eml of M.uli son Strett Bridge and Railroad Track, Kast Portland, for a term of years, I am prepared to handle Flour, drain, Mill Feed, Hay. &c. I WILL P0 A COMMISSION BUSINESS. Also Buy and Sell. Cheap Storage. Sido-tr.uk to building. 1 700-toot floor space. I I.oad and Unload Cars. Truck to any part of the City on short notice. I have as good a stand as there is in the City tor Husincxs. I will have a Chop mill in connection. I solicit a sh.ne of your orders. P. S. When Farmers put their load of (iiain, Feed or Hay in uiy hands to sell. I w ill ko ) tin ir horses over night free of charge. Xo Ftid Fi .. Thanking you for past Patronage, I Remain yours, A. 814 Hawthorn Araaar. 1MM fP lrll: ULiAA ... MAIM STREET, QPKCIAL ATTENTION to Quality and Accuractj in Dispensing. AT LOWEST PRICE. A Fine PACIFIC UNIVERSITY - - THREE COLLEGE COURSES CLASSICAL, r-H The Acadmey prepares for College and flices a thorough English Education, the test pre paration for teaching or business. All ex penses eery lotc. Board and rooms at the Ladies' Hall $3 to $4 per tceek, including electric light and heat. THE COLLEGE DORMITORY Under experienced management, icill fur nish rooms and board at cost on the, club plan, not to exaeed 1.75 it is hoped. For full particulars, address president McClelland, Forest Groce, Oregon. dlreotly and Inilinx-lly, by peupla who cannot dn tlmlr own flKiirinu. writu their own lettara, or ki thi-lrown Ixiok; and who do noi know oli.-u Iiii-Iim-.s anil li-irnl m.i rH which tlii-y musl liandln rv-rjr day ara mail nut rorn-rtly. AII ihi-sn tlilnirs. ami much morv, wa t4-a'h thniittnthly. Hundreds of our rraduatea ara In good positions, ami there will ho 0M-nln(rs fur hundreds more when times Improv. .Vi,ir tlia tliuu lo .re.nre for th.-iii. Iii-snli-n it biMlnosa rdui-atluii Is worth all II. r.ts. fr nnt ou n tur. s.-nd fur our nitalniriie. ti learn iil and hnw wn trai-h. Mailed frve lo any ml dress. Portland Business College, a. . Arm.tron,. riB. Portland. Oregon, j. . w..r0. B.rP.r. THE LEA DING TIXS HILLSBORO PHARMACY (Tarfflll siliiArvial.kn k atiuvlut.,,.! t. ... I..:.. I . . ; - ---i---t. icmni wtent and painHtakinn iliarniarlsti I Tha IlitlMlwirn tiii-m., ..r.lu !i. , , . -- - j I'H'i'iiiiir mis i reiiiniii' ni.'iiiiii.iriiireri only, and is thorouuhly aupplieil with crr reittisite nmiwar for .ini.i-r!v ci .In, t in(j a linitflaiM prescription Imsinea. The pmprietnn are -,r tcl,lnl' t luit Ida moat-approveil latest rrinedir are continually bein aI.Ii-. to ,e mh k n tiie ii ncei! I if 1X1, ill,. Ins a.l I . a -,...., ..I.. ... t .. : I r ,. ............ , ucihb; imaavaseu oi pecniijir iiilvanliii;i H in pur- chaaiiiK its siippliea, owiiik to its biiitnea rule of taking tm.le .Iimx.ihiI- i.m i iisIi from the Iwst houses, I he retail pm-ea are ronaeqnently lower than tin we of mit .Hm.. iiH.iif unig gtorea. ' " r,L-"r'"'" nt PRUOOISTS' SI'NDRIKS, iiicln.linK the KIXKST PKUKUMM, TOILET ARTICLES, BRUHIIKS, MKM.Ks, KTC, are on liM.l, A lanm anil rallenft ttfnrtm.nl nt KliUiTlCIt- ... i i-i-i-... , , --. also on baml. PATENT MEDICINES of all pop,,,r kiml. always in stock. The II ileal WINES ami LIQUORS supplied in rasesof aickm-s mi pr. M riptio THE HILLSBORO PHARMACY, Union Block L. . BERCKHOES, WATCHMAKER IF YOU WANT TO HIRE A GOOD LIVERY TEAM OO TO THE Cily Livery Stable Where you will Mini the llet Trams licit inn h J.al 1.1 IIILLttl.OI.O. EXEflYTlllfJG FIRST CLASS. f.oi Tctmt. Hood DwctIoh am) (Jood l)rlfr). feCMl mi Whinstn 8tta BUSINESS S. DUDLEY, KAST roKTMM, oi:h;o. IMITT fVtip UKUb MUKt HILI.SBUKO, OKJI.OX Line of Toilet Articles, Patent Medicines, School Books, Xc. SCIENTIFIC, LITERARY r-7T- i'.-.- FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMEER 10, ISOil. are lost fSS rsWSftJ'' annually. DRUG HOUSE fii J ail IBIin I Ari'lirillP IIIMIirtlMlli; liV Colli -,.. . 1. i, , , . w. . . -v . v i.i,.- nun J. i r.-i 1 1 . . . I Hillsboro. Orrpon Maraud m., ,r P. IlilKhoro. . WAT H JEWLERY. SP LOKS . A . Hm antl I eiupllralcd Match l!riiiirlnir. SATIjr,JJ GUARANTEED a nK