HILLSBORO 1XDEPEXDEXT fcuuved to the p,j.wfnrwet Hlllaboro, Ogoe. mm wubd'Jia aiIUrr. aauei-riplloa, la advance, p. year till fBuHO ht'BIJBHISU CO., rroftfar. U M C. O Al'LT, Editor. itttn i tL r Armor rum crr HtlDAY, Jl. NE, 197. ijl in Cuba Is i9 per cent, above I'Hixt currency, and is still going ' C'laus iSpret kles has sued Woo. R. Ilurit publisher of the S. F. Examln . r for liUl laying bU damages at $1,- UOU,tlOO. WVyli-r hat ordered the two east ern Cut provinces to be depopulated fit. All the inhabitant must more to the fortified towns. Siiii t'lii'e'S'uffah oi Turkey o6fectr' in r.f-ivinf Anicvl because be tn!!;'.'- with MlTarle, perhaps tilt serene hTjjhnei would not ot-Jeot to alMiut Ave war ships going Into hi ixirt some tine morning. It would le an act of patriotism f.r the senate to luiMen the adoption of the new tariff bill. With present iimtiiioim we mav never hope to have the balance of trade in our favor and it U suicidal to buy abroad what we can produce at home. If the dt-uiiM-raU have a better aug ar M la.lulc than that of the Dingley bill or the amendment proosed by the aetmte linance conimittee, by a means let it be '.he section in the new tariff bill and let (lelujte I stopped. The bill ouht to la adopted without further pother. It is found thot the Hawaiian re ciprocily treaty cannot l abrogated till the iMjwel desiring such abroga lion shall have Riven one year' no tice. This puts at rest the scheme of the siiL'iir trut whii h Searlea was expl jiting vt hen he was out here in April. Tho Wejit-r government in Cuba seemed to lie well pleased when con-gre-s appropriated 'a),tHHI to relieve ourcitizi-ns who are destitute In Cuba, but now that they And that Uncle Sam will take the supplies from hi own store house, they are angry and propose to collect a heavy Import duly. The more need of ending a warship into Cuban wnt- era. Free raw material and taxed man ufactured articles, which was the plan of work in the tariff, reform of the democrat, and which has prov en so dii-an!erous to the country, Is nought to be perpetuated by those democrats, in spite of the verdict of the people at the polls to the contra ry, by delaying action on the new tariff bill until the country ahall be Hooded with imported raw material under the free li-t and goods under low rates sufficient to make the ap plication of tho new ratea nugatory for the next four years. Businea prosperity can go to the dogs just ao demo-populist success is secured. There is a hit of a war cloud at Lame iM r Indian reservation, South Eastern Mountain. A sheep herder was killed by the Indians and on the demand of the civil authorities Capt. Htouch refused to surrender the par tita concerned in the killing. It Is really at tlrst more of a conflict be tween the civil authorities and the agent than between the Indians and the whites. Hut there is reason for alarm for the Northern Cheyenne, a tribe of the gre:it Siout family an fierce warrior and the. equal, man for man, to any soldier who ever went to war with like equipments. They handle a ritle with great skill and sit a horse a though they were a part of the animal. They have no artilery, and in that arm alone are they inferior to U. S. Troop. If hos tilities lrt sk out there will tie a nasty lilit ami live will be mat, though of course the Indiana ulti mately Mill ! worsted. WHAT PARTY USES? A snmber of the moat widely cir culated organs of the Bryan demo rracy have announced that ' the con- teat at the nest prwaldedtial election will be on the same tinea thai of last year free silver coinage. Soma soand money paper are now taking tb same view of the situation and arc accepting the tariff legislation as HnaL If these views are adopted by any considerable camber of party leaden there will without doubt be a rearrangement of political Uaea, The New York Tribune knows to change but rerely prints "ihe follow ing leading editorial on the" prbable new grouping of elector: "What constitutes the real, differ enoa between the great 'parties 'aa they now stand? It certainly la noth ing that relates to the war of the re bellion. Those difference by com mon consent are disposed orafTd- do longer disturb or separate us. Is it the tariff? Whoever stops to think wutVeAWaw thai rft'e'fibV ortweeu" 6w great parties on that subject wblcb irr, y tntforHanre fyyp the ante bellum period and grew to be dis tinctly drawn at tha end of the recon struction perioJrYjtrMtiejie for a okange ftaa?arjj:lMe ifr.a scientif ic system of revenue and finance, has - Total....10,43,S19 $1,496,673.10 William F. UrinneL Consul After reading the above is It difll euit to account for the export ot gold now going on? This Is one Item, been growing dioi and shadowy wltni Wool imports is another. How long of The "Scientific American" discus sing the iron and steel imlustiy of the United State, find that it is much more active and profitable than (he same interests are in Kng land ami that we are a Me to invade some of the markets that our British neighbors have heretofore claimed. They account for this by the lower freight rate ruling over American railroad compared with English transportation. Hut while the F.ng lish Iron ma-tcr suffer the English road for the present is making mon ey. On the other hand the Amer ican road must be content with dlvl. dents far l loy the tij or "i per cent received from hngli-n railroad aee-iment uritie. This discu-sion coming from a traffic stand iiit rather than poll tical would seem to indicate that parties who now declare that Ameri can transportation companies are robbing the people by unreasonably high freight and passenger rates are talking f.r I uncombe. But the English road while they Just now enjoy gn at prosperity are on danger ous grounds, fi r if by their high freight the iron industries of tbat country ure ruined, their own occu pation Is gone, hile the American road though les profitable will hare a steady trade with the certainty In the hut eight, years. We have been passing through the experimen tal period. The country has been trying to And lis way to a sound basis of taxatloo.; It wanted encour agement for its own Industries in com petition with foreign labor, and in 1SSK the McKInley tariff furnish ed It. It was not absolutely perfect. There was a revulsion. In 1892 the pendulum swung to the other ex treme and there was an apparent ver dict In favor of a tariff' for revenue only. The party tbat 'advocated it and made it a campaign shibboleth, having come into power "upon the strength of It shrank from the re sponsibility of putting it In the form of an enactment, paltered with it, and concluded by passing a bill that was neither one thing or the other. Itl did not afford ' revenue enough to carry on the government, ana was so far from protecting anything that for four years all our Industries lan guished and only general d 1st rem pre vailed. So, then, with another swing of the-pendulum .the-repubM can party came back to power upon the issue of protection. It Is now charged with "the" resporrsibiliHea thereby devolved. - It is endeavoring to discharge them a we believe, pot only with sincere conacIijtfitasbeM in reference to the general principle to which it stands committed, but with what la better if possible, a thorough comprehension of changed conditions and the capacity for meet ing them In the broad spirit of states manship rather than the narrowness of parizan bigotry. "Meanwhile, nothing Is more ob vious than that with the changed conditions the relations of parties have chage4v,vJej.xTrteBjse;of both parties In the making of Sarins haa: brodftht wisdom. fceptvTor party traditions they are not so far apart upon the details of w hat may be called tht. revenue, .functlpna of me guveroiueui. Auuinn, -71vc crept In and has twlftiy beeome the most prominent and most potent In all our pollUca. That Is, in brief, whether the nation Is at bean honest; whether it means to do busineaa honestly, to discharge its obligations dollar for dollar and coo duct its affairs on the high plane of honor and uprightness, Or descend to the trickery .of scaling, our debts and buying np our obligations at a discount. We need give ourselvea no further trouble about the tariff. We shall have a revenue measure that will give u Income enough to meet our outgo, and all our indus tries wilt be prosperous. Now comes the ue. Shall we be honest? That Is the next great question. Let us not disguise It. Beside . it the quest ion of free trade or protection is an empty a bat taction. It will presently engrosa the whole Held of politics, and we shall beVhort-aight-ed and unwise to Ignors or belittle It." A30TMEB LOSS T9 CB LiBOB. Another IdsUdc of robbery of the Americas wage-earners for toe grati fication of the free trade Mess aa akowa la the following report from United States Consul William F. Grinnell, at Manchester Englsnd. Here it one line of goods, cotton velvets, cords and fustians, of which the British maoafactarera have ship ped oa to value of nearly 1, 000,000 to American wage-earn era If these goods could have been excluded from the United States by a protective tariff. As It Is oar workers lose a million dollars: United States Consi latk, Manchester, May 1, W7. QuaalUee sad values of cot tun velvets, cords, fustmlo exported heoce to the United States duri ng the per iods named below : Value U. a coin, 1897. Yards (Ubsst.) N.8665jL January 1140,643.07 Eebruary.... 1,124,3), 173,501.19 March i3,786i 340,575.09 April 2s,857 941,859.75 territory, and Spain herself indirect-' is e!dom that u-b msrkej lw ril.l thta when she trsn-fVrre I o.vur lurin any u-lt in Fiord ia to the United Sutes, but sht changes 'eiern etre'on. lue o iy t-inp-raturvis sver-s.'t-.l T.;,- an, I II, l.i 'hi Tha has often said that money v. ill not t.j,)Ua.oe wa s.igiitly in ex.-ess of ind use her to part with Cuba to any 'the average, though Thursday and mtllon Friday tre s-rtn-tly cloudless. Suo- -The Cuban question, therefore, ' "Vf fc?V. 'l?? , . , . !cl"udy and oe-l. Li sht frosts, with becomes extreamly simple, .-pain , twmiUM of froul ab. tl, will deal directly with the insurgents I t-,:rr,-,l in many . lions about sun and on the ba,is of war instead of ; ri-.- of the i":ii aud 7th. The am diplomacy. Her terms to them are ; t ;H "rainfall varied; it was as a , - . . rttla light ttid geueral y less than a surrender flwt, and your grievance ; r, M ,u ini.h b ill be attended to afterward. Nee f ' Crop AH vegetation would be emarily a settlement of these condi-' i;'r.-'Jy ts-i.tiited by a good rain. The tions would be a forfeiture of all the " -1 hiir-.t .y ami t riday was ex- advantage which war has gained for cessive and it dried the soil very the Insurgents, for Spain's promise acrt ex.pt i few localities not of reform now would probably have 'even tender vigeutiou was affect as little Influence on her conlui-t a;eK r. they had after the war of lstw.T,,: 'r-Jwl imr svwii grain U , , . v , jrruwijig raiU!y and it will make a This h the only settlement she will .ijl, tVp ..vt Ihoi,KO mofe mb offer at prtsent an this will .j's not fcU'; it is heading and a fair not be accepted. Thu the war will ! crop U us.-urnl, but it would be Im haveto go on, unless the United I proved by rain. Spring sown grain, States interferes by tore., until ou or other of the present combatants is ! it- (U n.it yield over ten bushels per beaten. This is thesituation, and thearwunjraiji fall.. ..T.,Ae.y..CTopJ United State iroverenment will do Altai:. ts t?ing .cut: clover well to recogniice it promptly NEW GOODS! NTEW PRICESI Our Stock of Spring and Summer Goels is now complete, consisting of Do' cu- (lTO ips. Boots and Shoes, Ladies' and Gents' Furnishing Goods, Glows. Hosiery. W aa Embroideries, Shirt Waists, in LATEST STYLES. Dffjr fep?UlIo in any C,ri-eries, Hats, Lace. and all lines. We ask YOU to see our Goods and Prices and Compare them with others before Buying We also offer to all w ho purchase goods amounting to f IS a Lifc-Sixe Portrait made iu Crayon or Water Color from any Photograph, in Elegant Frame like sample in window for $3.85. We can save you money. If yeu are not trading with us. Come and get acquainted. BRYAN-UIDLAW CO. Cash Store llillsboro, - Oregon. 1 1 : . I . , .. ;ll I .. it;. i in 0100111 aou vm oe-renuy will.lt take to drain this country its current funds? - O. A. C. REftJIT. President H. B. Miller haa render ed to the board of regents a detailed statement of the noancial condition of the atate agricultural college at OorvalUs for the 10 months ending April SO. The regenta have given the report to the public and It is the first that haa been publish! outside of the official reports made to the legislature ao far as la now rem em be red. The actaal eipendlturea of the different departments, together with the balance or deficit against the estimate Is shown as follows: o. a. a PKHsmnscY. Several papers of t'ne state hare an nounced thai ' Prof,, flly "late of Washington is an applicant for the presidency of the Slate Agricultural College and that he is being recom mended to the lace by politician who deidre to Tpay Srtu debt. H that Is true, the board ol regents should not for a moment consider theappllcatlcHi. It is not tit thatour schools should be offloered v by profelonal loylst. Nothing fur ther need be said of the appoint- But Is there to be a vacancy? . Lst year the board of regents canvna1 the needs of the college' thoroughly. They found that above all others, a man of executive ability is needed at the head of the echo!.- Instruct ors are numerous but the men skilled In buslncm and management are few for If a good man for superintending bulnea develop, the Industrie at once call him to a good place. Yf the men who were roealkmed last year, President Miller was ' adjudged the most am I nent. He had handled large Interests, waa accustomed to Printing- Atrii'tlllur. . Uurtiouliur. bocaay nd around Chamialry , Emomolo SklatiM aeitald Up MsctiaiilcaU. HouMboM acouunr afUiiara4 ball Satlry,.. Trafnii.s tip itorUcult'l iuhi Woa4 .... liuavUsaaoua, h r raal IscidsDlati Jt adfrrilsiM Obaralnkl braalcam Ground impro'm'U Other lotprumriMla Ixrandwl .1 L M 3,Crl TO 4. H 5. N 67 a.iia ft i.ib HO 1.8U 44 Ml SI 163 7 1,101 21 I0t M (110 M II 7T 254 9S i4 oa KXDMtM A drk t.WU 1 .. 830 75 - i 84 Bslan'w I 237 52 1.174 21 l.ftVI 41 2M J7 51H 21 J, .'44 S SI . 44 7 4 7 96 110 i 21 4W 00 417 S3 3H 38 147 19 343 04 Dadcil 73 4 .113 43 1 10 Psotofrrfhjr, as Ioiursnca Librsry ....... Total spad(lmra 337, SMS 14 The statement of receipts and ex penditurea by fund la as follow: -.. . ... KtsMlota turn Morrill fund . . .1 22.am on air rr.4 ma Hatch fund 11.U0O) il.Wj w Htl inumt XS97 31 7.07S 21 Improrcinaal 1.UV7 13 41U 02 Chduicai brwkwt., jhO 91 13 47 Acrleailurml roo'pu ' ,130 SO I siry rwclpis - rm 10 Tauw's ps re ao Tolal I 43,a U7I 14 Bataoe on hsad f 3,838 is In addition to the Itimlaed re ceipts 3,750 la reported aa yet due from the Hatch fund and there la over 13,500 In the state treasury of the atate Interest fund, subject to draft, of which I1.034 la due In order to make up the estimate of the fi nance com mil tee. TDF HBAS BlTCATlO.f . The St. Louis Globe-Democrat which haa kept abreast of affairs io Cuba givea the following explanation ot the situation In that unhanDv W W 97 Island: . "Those who have had any hopes that Cuba could be obtained from Spaio through purchase will now see the folly of that notion. 'Hoeln ys Premier Canovaa, 'is not a nation of merchants, capable of sell ing its honor.' This ought to end this purchase protect. Hevfral times In the past Spanish officials have either said In words what the present premier has said or have revealed the same propose even mtre empha tically by refusing to consider pur chase proposition or to express any opinion on It one way or the other. At one time when the democrats controlled the government In the old slavery days 1100,000,000 waa Indir ectly offered for Cuba by a represen tative of the administration, and a few years later the men who drew up what was called the Cstend man ifestoBuchanan, Mason ami Houle thought thit 1120,000,000 would be a fair figure to give, and that If Spain refnl to sell the United States should selae the ialand, but nothing ewme of these pmposl Uoos. "Within a very abort time Spain has clearly revealed her attitude on ! the Cuban Issue on every 'oolnt In which that question louche Ameri can diplomacy. She will resist in tervention or Interference of any sort, and she will not al. This oaght to make the sit nation plain ao far aa II iovoleea 1he United States government. It ought to end the projects of all aorta f deals or dickers between this country and Spain. Appeal to Spain's humanity or her cupidity by us are alike vain. The country wan'a to hear of no more attempts by any Amer ican administration to ne its 'good oBoe' with Spaio Is this Cuban matter. Appeal to Seein on the chascca iccm to b ia fa; or of Cubans, and it Is evident from (he With itl len da vs. to cut A good rain would I tie ot ureal Is uetit to the hay croD, In.' : Tho k';trdi n irui k is growing nicelv: it ;t'H-rs to withstand the dryness iiiucii letter than the Held crops. IV.is, ieans ami e.irly potatoes are in tIHii (i.irlens are as a rule, very prolirie and I lay promise well this political disturbance in Spasn that this truth ia beginning to le grx-pot in that quarter. Spain will probably be forced to get out of Cuba even tually by the insurgents single hand yenr. ll" s arw growing rapidly, ed or by the aid of the United Slates! ! ll,'' "v 'K''"g tr"iue.i onto t tie cross ruit ahe nn never tie eonYi-,1 np-nni iu- out she can never be emxe-,1 or UicitU all IVP1I, h(11 cr,,p. bribed to get out by anybody." is growing rapidly and doing much i ueucr iimu usuai. .-sira woerrien are ripenini; raiiily tin y are a full crop I anl or (.'"ol size. in icklrt-rrie aud and ra-il .erriea are iu full bliatiu and way and the markets are dull and j j.roinU- a heavy crop. Inactive. Congress fools away the,. The fruit prospects are ditlljult to Uroeandthe people must pay the determine. The prune crop is In u,,, t m i ! .i , some sections reported to be full, in bills and suffer ia at ence. Portland . ,, ,. . J,,,,J . . ' ! other section it is reportejl to be Chronicle. iMimll, The prune crop will be small Ltoo't get anxious, Brother White, j itr tin' majority ot or hards, though You are getting what you calle.1 Usiu"f'w lo-aiities for unexplaiued anarchists for voting against.-U ". a fair w.p w ill result. Cher . . riesare ris iiin and they are not a uunt neiew. full crop, though some varieties of Our Douglas county neighbor would trees are as well tlllej a they should have us believe that it is republican! be. The pa h crop now promises WHOSE FJtlLT. Tariff legislation makes no bead- uperlnt ending men and had given that rii incrva-ed volume of business 'especial attention to political econo 'ground of humanity, of course, would will bring greater profit. by reason my a taoght In the books. He haij have very little chance for a bearing ottne pn -perny ot trie American ruinilea the expectations of the.Niard. furnmv. It i always suicidal to! The school haa never been sn. prts- pcroua as during the past year and it would be real misfortune to replace President Miller with a man having a political pull. kill the go that lays the golden egg, and the policy of the American traffic manager are wiser than the like officials acros the water. under any el rcti instances, and exper lence haa shown that even cupidity haa ' to step aside when eonTron ted with territorial pride. France, Mexico and lUiaaU have accepted ajooey from tha Unite State for who are hindering the passage of tl tariff bill. In truth it is the free sil ver democrats whom this same lie view heled to elect. The republi can house did its part of the. work' with enough promptness. It Is the senate with Its large free silver min ority that hinders. XAT10ML APPEAL. It is estimated that the govern ment is loosing three million doll.-trs a week In revenue by the delay in the passage of the tariff bill. The people are loossog ten times as much In work on account of the delay. We earnestly ask every one of our read ers to Immediately write a postal card to, at least, one meintier of the United States senate at Washington, urging and demanding the immediate passage of a protective tariff law and sucn a law as win give adequate pro tection to American labor and Am erican Industrie. Address your pos tal card to O. W. McBride, U. S. S., Washington D. C. One of the leading commercial agencies announces that the sale of goods for the month of April last nearly equaled the amount received for the same month in the moat pros perous year the county experienced during boom times. It is tiot at all wonderful that this statement should have fixed the attention of the bus iness world upon the fa-t that ther? is a genuine revival of business. In truth there would be reason for satis faction at the conditions but lor the one fly In theolntm?nt the importa tion of merchandise that ought to be furnished by domestic producer. If the senate will hasten and lift that peck out before the whole jar shall be defiled, then all will be well. As good and as graphic cartoon as has recently appeared I one that was in the Inter Ocean, Chicago, last week. It represents Uucle S-ini In the driver's seat of an army ana 'in lance loaded with supplies for Cuba and drawn by an enormous elephant. A cannon hung from a suport is a bell which Uncle Sam is vigorously ringing while he urg the elephant to jump over the straits of Florida on to the island of Cub. Sp iin I rep resented by a craven who hss just dropped the torch and knife of mas acre while bis knee seem to tremble with a great fear. ' In one corner of the picture appears the words: He will probably know enough to get out of the way.'' The alienation of the sound money men of the democratic party I- to be made permanent in the coming cam paign. The silverites, who have control of that party everywhere, are refusing to permit the gold democrat to participate in the primaries, and are demanding currency platform npon which they know that these men cannot renew political associa tion with them. Thee silver jeo ple were quite successful last year iu driving away the gold democrat, and no good reason can be seen why they should not be quite a successful at the next campaign. to lw gosl; Intnd pruning in the southern counties has eommenced. The apple and pear crop will not, as a rule, be full. Owing to the varia tion in report, it Is not possible to particiihiii.e where tho fruit promi ses well and whore not, but it is cer tain that, taken as a whole, the prune cherry, apple, and ar crop will be larger than in Is'Jii, but not so large as in lsi.-,. K iin would Is? of benefit to all veg etation but it is not probable tbat suf ficient rain ill fall to be of that ben efit which is desired. KASTKKN oKHioX. ' Weather Hain fell oil Mouday and Tuesday list, and on Sunday the ."itlth." It was heavier over the Plat' eau ri L'ion than in the Columbia riv es valley; over the former about three fourths of an inch fell while over the latter less than one quarter of an inch Ml. r rosts occurred over the Plat eau r.egiou Wedresuay morning. The tnetn temperature for the week was ti:r which is l lower than during the preceding we-ek. The jday temperaturvs ranged from 62 to uu- me niyiii ironi iili" 10 i . VMT ing Friday and Saturday very warm Weather prevailed, and on Sunday it as much .cooler, which continues foday." (.'mps More rain is needed. The vegetation is luxuriant in its growth Init the unnnUi on Friday and Sat urday rapidly dried out the ground. Fall and winter wheat and oata are heading: they continue to promise good yields but wou'd be benefited by rain. Spring sown grain will sleivv the l.u k of rain within the next week. It isunusii tl f ir general and copious ram to inll-uudt r Hie general atmospheric conditions which now prevail, so th.il except from thunder storm disturt'iuices, little or no rain can lie exj-i c e I. The spring town irrmii ran not be expected to make as good a crop as it was in 1891, but it will most likely be as good as It waa in lsi'ti. " ., .Uuying hn commenced and very good 'yield are U-ing obtained. Corn is making good grow th, and so are hop.' i'he fruit prospect continue to be exnllent. Some dropping of fruit i r'irted, but not sufficient to les sen the mount that should be bourn by the tret-. S'rau berries are ripen ng rapidly. I roni the Hood river railroad Mat: . , twelve carloads of strawbeiries were shipped during the six days (tiding Saturday last. Lirjje numbers of cattle and sheep are being sold and driven out. Stock is in g'xxi erudition and the ringe furoirhes ukI food; trie major por tion of the stock is on the summer mncs. The hay crop f very prom ising. The w.iti r is plentiful for ir rigation Tuesday, 8 p. m. Exercises of the Associate Alumni. Wednesday, 10 a. m. Graduating exercise ot the University. Wednesday, 1:30 p. m. Corpora dinner to Alumni and invited.; uests., ''viWoiiiay, a p. uY. Commence ment coooart. Those paying full fare to Forest Grove over the Uaaa of the Southern Pacific railway In Oregon, and tak ing receipt from the agent where ticket la purchased will be returned for one-third the regular fare. UlUTSBTO.xT PACIFIC UNIVERSITY - - - THREE COLLEGE COURSES CLASSICAL, SClEHTiFIC, LITERARY re The crops axe ail looking tine this! The Academy prepares for College and gires a thorough English Education, the best pre paration for teaching or business. All ex penses eery lot. Board and rooms at the Ladies' Hall S3 to S4 ier week, includina THE COLLEGE DORMITORY Under experienced management, toill fur nish rooms and board at coat on the club plan, not to exceed f L50. For full particulars, address president McClelland, Forest Groce, Oregon. spring, Last Frldae the thermometer gistefed 96 in the shade. Memorial exercises were held at the school house on Monday, begin iug at 10 a. m. Consisting of many rJ001 v?(l.,rwivr,ion1 "f,7 ' electric light and heat which Mi-a Mollis Mimel aud " Maud Deletla raised up ihe new school flag. Rev. Mr. Tigart made a fine address also Mr. McKoun. There were preaott 133 people anion whome were.aosne of our old soldiers who saved "our country. In the afternoon wagooa were arranged for and many went to the cemetary to decorate the graves of dee-eased friends. Beaverton la a floe location for a flour mill. Good tlmea are coming ao invent money In a paying busi ness. There were lour people of this place who took the teachers examina tion. They all passed, these were Annie and Once Dudly, Earl aud Mary Fisher. Monoora Churchly A Go. of Port-) land are getting out many cords of wood at this place. There were a good many went to the picnic at Reedvllle the other Sst- urday. The Congregation el choir will practice on Friday evenings after The boys have begun to play ball again and aje fixing up their grounds In anticipation of having a game. Who wants to play them first. Through the efforts of Mr. McKoun , we have a nice flag for our school I bouse. Mollis Wetsel and Mand I Deletts took up the subscription and j raised the money ao thank them . an. SPRMG TERM BEGINS MARCH 31, IS 97. are lost annually, dlrrsMljr ar.d liutlroetly. by popU vtto aaaaot ia their own Gtfiirni:. write their own letter, or keep their own buoke; b4 vto do hot know wh-n Imi-Ii,.--.-, n,l lriral pnprr which tbejr miut handle erery def are ia4e out correctly. r-.i ihtus thluirs. arid much more, we b-ach thummjtUt. Hundred of our graduate are In rood puaitlona. and thero will be opening tor hundreds more when time Improve. .Vow 1 the time to prepare for tl m. Il-i.l- a buslnes education t worth all II eueu. f m urn tut. Send f..r our -atnl.ue, to learn tchnt and now w teach. Mall4 free lo any addreas Portland Business College, Portland. Oregon, j. . ... 8r..r, A. . Armstrong, Prln. SCHULMERICH & Again wish to call attention .. to their .. LOW PRICES SON I difci Caras Masks aae eves IS farts all silt FUfe Uars Hhjrt Waist sets . . Peaall Taaleta, t far Yaraa Bleached lasUa . i Psaers Pies Bettls aellara 6sa4 Shse rashes Clothes Brashes Caa Opener . . Lac, per yar . , Bibbea, all widths, per yard" i rts. 8 : to & 1.00 f rts. & " iu 12 i 5 10 8CHULMIRICH A SON. Xetlce ! riatal Mettleawent. TOTICE IS HKRBBY GIVEN. THAT t Joaep Hardweieer admlni.iralor ol tnetaiaar A lot MardweiRer deoaed. ha this day Bled his Bnal arsons! in aid ttaiela th eoualrrourt of lb ataie ol Oregon for Waahlaglos eoanie and that Tuesday UisSthdayot July ls7 at lo o' clock i a a at for the haarin and deier mlnlof ol tha Mm. All peraan interni d tn aid fatal are hereby notified in be and appear la aald court oa aaid day an t mak ohjactioo Ifaay tby hav to ttir ilowaar of aaid aeeonat and the ili eharfr of tld administrator. ;' Dalwd JaasX, 17. Bl P. COKNEI.tl'!', Coonty Jadet of Wublngton County, Oregon. ji Do YOU need an ENGINE. THRESHER, HORSE POWER, or in fact any newiMachinety? li yon do write us for Cat alogue and Prlees. We can save yon money on your purchases. TeJ I . mm. t-m. 'ml- A. H. AVERILL, Manager. RUSSELL & CO.. Portland, Oregon. OREOOH STAfrg NORMAL SCHOOL MOWMQUTH. ORECON A TRAINING SCHOOL FOR TEACHERS. Mr. A. O. Brown h is one of the cunsistent populists of Ihe county, net Ihe chairman of he central com mittee lat Salurlsy to nhom he made aome plsiu ststements. The difference heta-een the two frn Hu meri seems to be that Mr. Ilrown h a populist while Mr. Kelly I a a o i-ist. A three lsyV rsin would have a iihi(kI rfffct tinni nil vpjfptation aii'l wniilil creitiy improve it. FORTY TIURIf (OMMEMKUFSr. The'f irty-third cotiiTt-ncpnient at FHt-i rli I'tiiviTtity, Fort drove, will aiK-ur on the urek cfimmencing jtitli Juaf l'h. Theordt-r of exer cies f"' r tli.it wi'i k are i tticially an notintV'il on otl card which reads: Ntturd.ty June IJth, H p. in. An Divt rary of coim ratry of music. Sutiil-.iy, II h. in. llicctlaureate irrinon, Hcv. J. It. Viln, 1). I)., of lNirtlur.il t)ri iron. Hundny ri the Cnri-timi V i I hi . ' " M"ti'l iy, p. in. -A'l'lr.v tx fore the I.ltcrsrv s-K'ieti, j;.v. W. c. Ksnlnfr, 1). I of Stli'm i irfjin, Tttdjiy, p. ni Anniversary Kxt r-i-H-s of tin Aiiidsruy. Hew art ervtataicaU far Catarrh that Caatala Mcrrarj, At mereary wlU nr4r deatroy the wnw of melt and -mplelljr derange thr hole rioi wh.a anterin it ilirongl, Ihe inueou turfare. Hich article. hoilid n.rer ba aard eicept oa preernn llon from rsnaiabl pkyairiaaa, a ihe damate ther wtll tn tea fold o the wnoa yon caa fwiaeiniy Uerlr. rrom ihem. Hall' Catarrh Cr. manntarlnre,! hy K. ! I. ( beaej A Ca Toledo. O.. contain n I mercury, and ia taken Internal!, arlinf I directly ar-oa the Mood and aiucrn ur taces M tha it im. In l.arina Hi.i p. til. Address before I atarrh rtra ha aura you ft th fnuine A'tfhttnn, ltv. Ur. It I taken lavraaltv.and mad in T..I..I Ohio, by F. J. Cheney A Co. TettlmoniaU free. Hld be Draawiai. fries 7.Se. r-r r,ii,. Hal ' Family Pill ar kk aev www aa a a m 5 1 A lilllr W my hair bt W fulling out. more than a year afo. began turning gray, and and a!thouh f tried W ever mint ihtne to prevent a continuance of thre c-Mi'litioa. t obtained no .attraction until 1 tried Aver i Hair Viiror. After nin( one bottle, my hair w restored to a WlU 1.1 HOP Kt I.LFTM. I'ortland, Or Msy .11, t!7 ! WMTKRJI OHfiMtX. Weatht r The et k had a mult r ' Isl ctiat'ie in tempt-ratur, frotri co- .1 1 t srarrn and ciosiog nfth cool ngm j and a few showers. Tln-m-in tctn-i peature for the week avcrsirt-e ;.'; ! the higheat was 92 on tho 2t h ami I the lowest was .18 on the 2th. It ! How Old are You? it ! whether makae no difference you eaewer or I not. It ia alwaya true that .,t........tn.r,S "a woman ia a old aa ahe locks." Nothing sets the aeai of age upon a woman's beauty eo deeply, aa gray hair. The hair loeea lu color generally from lack of nutrition. If you nourish the hair, the original color will oome back. That ia the way that the normal color of the hair ia retrtored by Ayer's Hair Vigor. . a Tin. tr.tlmonial will he (oaad ia fall la Ayer -Cai haedrrJ other.. Free. Add re.. J. C. Aear C. Lewell, Maa. k" with a Regular Normal Cawra f Three Yp 1;lilnr Vfir In. ill nr,.f.., , ars. T 'annus .: pn inimt ol nn.e m le with rhMrlren IM I 1" f N a'lii't; litn nma Ar. I. i,nc ,r-i le anantad fra a Hia wekaal t a.oar . ti- rt.i ly tent na appitrauan. M m a 'or n t r h , It I l:L'.il tr ADDRESS, or U . . WA5N, St'C of Facnltj. ca WfM- P. L.CAM1M.KLL, I'niilont. i t