A bill hu been Introduced la the Ortvjo bvialature (or the absolute repeal of the Oregon para food Itw The member who introduced this bill hittf surely never conhldered what be it propdnK to do. The adulteration of foods and drinks bone of the moat K-rsi.ittnt crime with which we have to cmj at thin time. Kvery civilised nation ha token up the fight against tun form of fraud. We have already checked the evil to a material extent, hut even yet the people of the United Btates are by means of adulteration robbed of more money annually than the whole coat of running our nation al and otate government. Tard inert In enacting and enforcing laws agalnt adulterations has deprived us of a valuable foreign market for cheese and discredited our butter in many foreign market. Oregon has the honor of being among the flint of the (dates of the Union to take up in a vigorous way the fight against food frauds. To repeal our pure food law at thin lime would bring disgrace up on the atate. In this particular it would aign u to a position In the rear of even Spain. The reiieal of the pure food law would fill our mar ket with bogus butter and adultera ted chtne. It would compel our creamerie to seek a market out Hide of the Htate for a large share of their product. It would compel the own ers of cheeae factories to become awlndlers or go out of business. It would mml eifctSvely arrest the de velopment of thegreat dairy industry In this state. It would be a waruin to all intending immigrants of Intel ugence ami honesty to keep away from the state. The pure food law of Oregon is not enforced a well a It ought to be, but it ha In a very large measure insured the purity of dairy product sold in the Htate. It ha aaved the dairymen of the atate from the competition of fraudulent pro duct a form of competition which I Inevitably ruinous to the producers of honest products. If the gentle man who introduced the bill to re- jK-al the pure food law will carefully look into the matter of food frauds and pure food legislation, he will withdraw hi bill and apologize to the legislature for it introduction. Oregon Agriculturist. MlSJUMAtiEHtSr 1 II EKE, TOO. It i argued that there must be in competency and mismanagement in our War Department unless we lml tite the nations of Europe in keeping underarms hundred of thousand of men"atid Commissary, Quartermas ter and Medical Department ready at ail time to erform efficient ser vice," This view assumes that all the suf- ..a il-iiiiKf, ui our men are aue to our fuiluru to keep a large landing army and mat when such armies exist the eomuii.-wHriat and the quartermaster anil the medical service are all that could m desired. Before traversing these assumptions directly, it may lie premised that the Santiago campaign was fought almost entirely by regu lars, and that we ought to have had a commissariat and other depart ments, adequate to the want of the regular army, before the war began. Hence this line of defence! only available with reference to the volunteers-amps, and this is far too narrow. Hut the assumption with reference to the readiness of the auxilllary de partment of the armies In European countries is not true of some of them. When Napoleon III. declared war against I'russia, he supposed that hi army was admirably equipped, but exTienee uhowed that it was far otherwise. There was, perhaps, less or ignorance and incompetency than I apt to be found in volunteer armi es, but there was far more of unfaith luiness and corruption. It has been supsieeit that under the republic the evils had tieen weeded out, but recent development have raised the suspicion that they are still preva lent, and men high in the army are reported to be trembling at the pros pect of an investigation. It might turn out, in the event of war, that the gn at army of France is a badly aplKiinled as it was in 1870. cpam is one of the nations that maintain large standing armies, but it is well known that there is a great deal or corruption and mismanage ment In the supply departments. The same is mor or less true of some other countries that maintain large armies. It is, therefore, very wide of the mark to assume that a large standing army is a guaranty of com peteni-e and fidelity In furnishing it with suitable quartern, food, clothing, arms and ammunition. Unless there are competent and faithful men In command, who will enforce fldelty from their subordinates, the service will be bad, whatever may be the intrinsic merits of the system when proerly applied. It is far from true that countries with large standing armies are free from the evils of In competence and mismanagement. Courier Journal. phere. In Vermont tbe convention ODTMjaed the t,linoeria!isfic policy of tue republican party." In Ohio th democrats declared that they did not want the Philippine annexed ander any conditions. On the other hand, the republicans in California declared that nation welf.ire demanded the retention tbe Philippines. The Vermont con vention op (sifted the surrender .Spanish misrule of any territory nou or hereafter acquired. Tbe Colrad republican declared unqualifiedly in favor of keeping forever in place th American flag wherever it has beei unfurled. Ohio approved the prel dent' policy. Illinois declared tha the United State should hold such oossessions In the eono'iered tcrrilo ry a would lie advantageous to it interest in time or war and la-no- New Hampshire declared in favor of such disposition of the Philippines a.- would extinguish the sovereignty of Spain and make good our obligation to the people of these Maud. Neu Jersey declared emphatically in favm of the expansion policy of the admin istration and the New York conven tion, to beheld this week, will speuk a positively - - At first there was disinclination on the part of the democratic managers to grapple with the war Issue. The campaign on land ard sea was so suc cessful and the results so great that they could not, as in ISO I, say that the war whs a failure. But within recent week the. yellow-prps cam paign, enlarging on the horror vt war, has influenced democrat to make the conduct of the waran issue. The democratic convention in Con necticut made the astonishing decla ration that, while the war had baen a great success and had brought new honors to'the American people and fresh glory to their flag, the manage ment of the war "has chilled our ex ultation and brought home to u a sense of shame." It charged the ad ministration that ha conducted the most successful war in our history with incompetence and venality. In Illinois and in New York the demo crat are taking practically the same position. Everywhere the word has gone out to dwell on the horrors of the war in an effort to make the peo ple forget the glories of the war, The democrats are making the same mistake in 1898 that they made in 1864. Then in the very crisis of the war for the union, just before the Atlanta campaign, when the great Issues of the war were hanging in the balance, when the union cause need ed strengthening and the union soldi era encouragement, the national dem ocratic convention declared the war a failure and asked for a cessation of hostilities. Thousand of war demo crats in the army and out, turned squarely against the Infamous and treasonable platform of their party nd supported Abraham Lincoln against GtHirge H. McClellan. Me- Minnville Importer. Mr. 11. C. Judson, the industrial agent of the O. II & N. Co., believes that in the Blue drama he has found the coming grass for the range of eastern Oregon and eastern Washing ton. On the experimental farm which the railway company is carry- cocoanuta 8,000,000. FERTILE PORTO RICO THE ISLAND IS AS BEAUTIFUL AS IT IS PRODUCTIVE. It Mm Thlrtcaa Huadrad Straw Wealth f statloa, Ulgbljr CaltlvabU toll a Tat II..-O.IU ml Mioarauv-r. Kept 11m, bat Maay Inaawta. Mr. Frederick A. Obcr, late coranihv rimer In Porto Kioo of the Columbian ixpouriou, contribute to Tbe Ceutnry u article on "Tbe Inland of Porto Kioo." Mr. Otx-riayn: In the extreuio northeast rite tha fcltfhwt peak of the ceutral cordiMerj iu the Luquilio sierra, known a "El VuiKiua, " or "The Anvil," variously ratiiurted at from 3.H00 to 4,600 feet in height. The bills are of lesecr elevation toward tbe went and aombwe.t, bat tbe whole uortb central country U rug ged and uneven. Hctwtcu tbe spar from tbe main range lie innumerable necludod valleys, where tbe il is of great fertility. Tbe itupreiwive feutureg of tbe landscape are the rounded raw uiita of tbe multitudinous hills, wbicb leave the ooost in constantly rising bil low that finally break against the cor dillura vertebra ; yet all ore cultivable, and cnltivated to their very crests, though the higher mountain peaks are forest clad. More than 1,300 rtrearus, it is said, of which number ptriiap 40 or 60 at tain to tbe dignity of nv, .-, rice in the bills and seek tbe counts, u t of chein running northerly, though tbe bent bar bora are in the west and south. But notwithstanding tbe great river flow portions of the island iu the southwest are atnicted witli elrougnt at times, owing to the precipitation of tbe nortb east "trades" agauibt tbe northern hills The higher bills are coth"d In tbe exuberant and diversified vegetation of tbe ' tropical forvat, where tree ferns flourish, and great gum trevannd moun tain palina tower aloft. At lower levels are tbe cedar and mahogany, walnut and laurel, with many oibers noted for their useful woods. Throughout tbe island are found tboe tree and shrubs valuable for their gums, as the niamey, gnaiacum and copal, while the list of medicinal plants includes most of those, invaluable to our pharmacopoeias, wbicb tropical America bos given to tbe world. These are tbe silvestrea, na ture wild children, but of cultivated plants there is no ipecies peculiar to the tropics that does not flourish here. In the littoral levels, between the mountains and the sea, grow tbe sag ar cane, which may be cnltivated np to an altitude ot 3,000 feet. It was Intro duced here from Santo Domiugo, hav ing been brought to America either from Spain or the Canaries. The ounn al yield of sugar la estimated at about 70,000 tons. In these fertile lowlands also tobacco doe exceedingly well, and the aunu.i prodnctioa is said to be quite 7,000,000 pounds. It may bo cultivated on the hills, bat the trae mountain lover is the coffee, which doe not do well below 600 feet and is at its best 1,000 feet above the sea. it was first brought here from Martiniuue in 17:22, and now yield to the extent of 17,000 tons an nually. Maize, the true Indian corn, is indigenous, as is the yucca, the aborigi nal "staff of life, and both grow ev erywhere, a well as the piueupplc, which la more reliable and more uni versul than tbe peach of our north tern peruto zone. Cotton and rice ure found at Hourly all elevations, the latter, which is the chief food of many lubor era, being what i knowu as the tnoun tain variety. Bananas and plaintains are wonderful ly prolilio, bearing frnit iu ten mouthy from planting. The plants virtually last 00 years, being equally long lived with the cocoa palm, which product uuts in six or seven yours aud there after during the spuco of an ordinary life, it yield being reckoned at 100 nuts a year. Tbe annual product of banana is given as 300,000,000 and of The entire range 1 1 igiirnvii) a ! t A mmm AVeCctaWc Preparation for As similating UieToodandBegula- ting 'hg Stnmnrha. and HtiwpU of Promotes DigesUon,Chrerful- TtessandBest.Cootains neither Optum.Morpbine nor Mineral Not Nahcotic. gmfm tfOU DrS.HOiTirusta Aix.Jmim JfmmUUSA' inc A perfect Remedy Tor Constipa tion. Sour Stotnach.Dian hoea, Worms Xonvulsions.Fcverish nessondLossOF SLEEP. Tax Sinai Signature of TEW YOHK. Tcr Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of AiK The Kind You Have Always Bought. tXACT C0PV0F WRAPPEB. mm TMC CfMTAUl eOMNNV, ! 0 OfTV. THE REAL lSl'E. Th democrats are pushing war la mieatothe front In their state and ciinirnwdonal rampairns. Nearly every democratic stato convention held up to this date ha adopted reso lution antagonistic to the annexa tion Milicy of lreldent McKinley' dntin istration. In New Hampshire the demia-ratie convention declared airainst the acquisition of any terri tory except for coaling and naval Mationa. The same declaration was made In the Iowa convention. The Mitawi ivmvNition declared against ttaiwiatiof the riiilippia,, or trtfaf Wtif telltitem hernia- ink-on at Walla Walla, this erass has 01 tropical rrnlta is represented bora, 1,,..., .......l,l.l ..1 t. "uu uni Kuuvi, nuiu, uruugu, nguu- ..uu .rU.a..n...c vigwi. iirniiini- , lanodilla aud avocado neur whiln ly nuracieu uie Hiieiiuon oi rroi. all mbtropio vegetables may be raised, Lamson-Hcnbnor, Agrostololst of including tboso of the south temperate the U. 8. Department of Agriculture. "ona uch- for nstauco. as are grown -1 . I.-1 . . u K ..r - .. i i... norma. ...c- . ... v.su, .:.. oe Tfle mlneral klllgdom uni a pnoiograpii laaen n (tne plot on which this eras la growing. It is a rich grass and very valuable for pasturage and has great drouth-resist Inc K)wer a well a ersistence. Th grnniax, unlike me bunch grasses, cover the ground quit? closely. If thisgrasa proves a valuable as it prom iaea to tie, it introduction in the Pa cific Northwest will be a great bless ing to the country. Three Doctors iu Consultation. From Benjamin Frnnkbn has not been bo exhaustively exploited as the vegetu ble, bat more than traces have - been fonnd of copper, coal and iron, as well a vast deposits of suit The rivers at one time ran to the sea over bed of golden sand, and from the streams to day (as iu the neighboring island of Santo Domingo, wliero tho first A men oan gold waa discovered) tbe uative wash out nnggets by the erode proc esses of that distant day when Aguey nuba went prospecting with hi false friend, Ponce de Loon. There are no native quadrupeds here larger than the agouti aud tbe armadil lo, bat bird are relatively numerous, with a few of tine song and aomo of "When you are sick, what you like brilliant plomaga All domestio fowl best i to be chosen for a medicine in ao wuU nero' and ttie at Purcs of tue uormeaai auu soumeast suppotl vast h.Tdsof cattle aud horses, which suffice not only for tbe need of the Island, but the first place, what experience tell you I best, to be chosen in thesecom place; what reason (I. e.Theory)Jsayg are exported to all parts of the West I best ia to be chosen in the last place. Hutifyeucan get Dr. Inclination, Dr. Experience and Dr. Iteason to hold a consultation together, they will give you the best advice that can be taken." When you have a bad cold Dr. In clination would recommend Cham Indies, being held in high esteem. There are no txilsouous reptiles to be feared, but insects of questionable char acter are too numerous for comfort This island indeed were a paradise without them; even with them tho inhabitants seem to eipeneuce little trouble The worst of these are the scorpions, ceutipeds, tarantulas, wasps mosquitoes, some specie of ants, ticks, berlaiti' Cough Remedy because It is chigoes and Hens. The lie.-;t of a tropical Dlensant and safe to take. Dr. K.. climate like that of Port.; Rico, which. rorre w-.u ntinuini-iKi n ihtsu CnmilinnuJ, is conducive to tbe breed- It never rati to effi-el a siecdy and in of insect net of all n' permanent cure. Dr. Ueaon would recommend it because it ii prepared on acientinc principles, aud acts on 111 HjntAJiWr tll hh 1P3 nature's plan in relieving the lung-, opening the secretion and restoring the system to a natural and healthy -.1. Il l. . . u'uuiuuu, rurssie ny ueua Lrug Store, J fppvOrir Supplies IUw U I'reveat Croap. ltt a . .... we nave two children who are subject to attack of croup. When ever an attack I coming on my wife given tnem Chamberlain's Cough Itemedy and It always prevent the attack. It is a household neepwdtv iu this county and no matter what eis we run out of, it would -o do to be without Chamherl Itemedy. More of it is sold her.' than of all other cough medicines cemnined. J, M. Nu ki.K. ofNi.kle Bros., merchanls, Nickleville, Pa. For sale by Delta Drug Store. RtcfvI r T S,, Ka, Casoawts C'sn.Ir oerful mrdu-itl nimimnt ti, ... ... ant ant) rrfisnlnr.. i.. ...... i r,j lni hiupv. nvrrand newria, CH-ansinir the rntir vt-m, dunl mlds, rur hfloh, frvrr, hshilusl cnnioinatioa r - t-iras niijr and try a boi s i. mv; l. A, frn rent. Hold a uanuiteial u uie uy sat anguBaV Oil, Paper, Carbon, Ribbons. lost of Kvorytliinir Independent fficc ra-4 Twice-A.Week COURIER Si.oo a fear. Issued odnesday and Saturday Mornlii-s. RAILWAY TMK TABLE. EAST SOUTH - - : : j IV anixn j ufl. s-i rv . THE SHASTA ROUTE Of TH Beginnlnc Januarv 1. ls'.i? ilm U'uki. Coiirier-Jiiuriial a changed to the Twice-a-Week Courier-Journal Publi cation days are Wednesday and Saturday Th Wednesilay liir will tie devote.1 u, new ami im.IUicuI loi.in Tlie Saturdav ssu will lie devilled to gturien, uiistvl Uny, pictures, poetry, etc a perfect fam ily paiier tach issue will be six pages, or twelve page, a week an Increase of two pager a week, 104 pngei or 8.11' columns a vear The Hilii of tha uaner will ...(' iu changed and th battle for pure iieiiuM ,,,y ""J "'e lViuoeratiu principhw. -in tp iiiuiueu miccetiKiuiiv in the In ture as in the iast Id none of tb ev. uenm involved in the .ii. .. .1.- n- ! ' ... . .. . ' tun iiiiivui him 1 W H-e-M- 1 tli I juiriur. I.... - Ml . . ' """""i ""i remain me saute, ?l a veari it i. n.urc iiuring uie coining ye.-ir w il lie th editorials of Mr llenrv Wutt.-r ion, on (Mimical and. oilier topics of the mv KOUTIIEKN PACCX). Ctrsnsi ;Tiaib Lsavs roaiuan Pau.1 I Mont .) r I 1-. a.m Lv Ar fortlaod Han rauoiaeo Ar I 1-vl Abov trains atop at all station, between I oritauJ Aitii a.tnn, Turner, Marion, .iiuauy, lunitenl, titieUila, Ual-M-y, iiarri.ouurg, I uucuon t'Uy, Kureue t'oiiajre lirove, Uruin, Oaklauu, and all lutiou Iroiu Koavburg Iu A.hlalid, lt IUMTV, ItOhEHLKU MAIL DAILY i Lv Ar Portland itoauburg Arl Lv 4: - sJr a JM a . ANDY CATHARTIC a4 CUMC0.15TIPATI0H ALL DDUGGI5T5 ABSOLUTELT GTTIKSSTF.KT1 !? re .a-orr:mllwrli. Tawarrt. .re IK, Ur.l Ui.4 , - - ore. n,vr rrip nr eniM.t,Hl raaw raay aalaralnwallap a. plf.aS IWKiHal Int. STUH IM) UPS 1:11V t O.. I Ki, r.v. noir. t:,a.. or Si-w tiira. ( Uallr Conrler.Jonrnal, 1 year lally aud Nunilay, 1 year, . . SuMday, alvue, 1 year, . . . (i.(HI H.(H e.(M) ut Portland, Oregon svw A. l armstronc, LL.B., Pnncipal. J. A. Wksco, Penman & Secretary. THE BUSY WORLD OF BUSINESS gives profitable employment to hundreds of our graduate, and will to thousand more. Send for our catalogue. Learn twj and hr,o we teach. Verily, A BUSINESS EDUCATION PAYS TWICE-A-WEEK COURIER-JOURNAL AND TH SlUtbcpcu?. cut. ONE YEAR FOR ONLY $1.60 IUM I'AIW t 0.lEX KUL'TE. FULLMAN DUFFET SLEEPERS .. 4SD . VruniMiufc Merpiug Cars ATT40USII TO Al t i lllUtU.IH I S41M West Side Division. ItL'l WttN POHTLAN1) X OOitVAlXlh. Mml Train Daily (Exoept Honday). 7.:i0 k M a M 11-65 A M l.T L Ar Portland Hillshoro Uorvalli Ar Lv 6:AU r l:2JpB - At Albany and Corvallin connect witli train, ol tlie Oregon Central A Kast ern Ky. Ki(irew. Train Daily, (Kioepl Sunday . IMPS tilOpM 7uW. H H-.Wru Lv Lv Ar Portland HillHburo MoMmnville Iniiepeuiltiiice. Ar H:25 a M Lv I 7:13 a a Lv ! A:A0 a a I 4 M AH Extraordinary! The regular subscription price o1,Thk Independent is $1.50 And the regular subscriptio price oi the Whskly Oregonian is $1.50. Any.one subscribing'tor Th Indenendent and paying one year lnf'ad -auce can get Iwth Th k Independent and Wkkklv OregonianjcFyccTESlOO All old sub.scri?ers paitig their subscriptions for one year in advance will t en titled to the same offer. HILLSB0R0 PLELISHING CCfVPANr NORTH PACIFIC CLAY WORKS Dirm-t rpBim-liuii at 8an Franrinoo Willi Orculenlul i nU Urirnial and l'arilm Mall t-am.hin linva IV.r JAPAN ami I' It IN A. .Sailinu rime. .,n Kuia Hint lir-nel" E...rn point, and Eiirop-. Also JAPAN, CHINA, HONO LULU ami AlIMTKALIA h. ..i..n..i Iruiii A. H. l'enoc. Tb-Hei Avrnt Hill.l,.n U. KOEHLEK, ,L "AV anaer. Portland. rj4-t tlltllKltl.lfetl'Afttaai.aisaakakaaaaa-a tw niTininrrTHmT run i n numm : IfAtr vnn norr z nMvc iuu uotu BUTTER PARfiKIV.FNT? 3 jj ' ... All gilt-edged butter put on the mar- ZLaw ty Licrtiiicim ia wruppcu in paper. The product of the private daily would reach its marVet in much bettei condi . tion if wrapped in Butter Parchnieut than it does w hen wrapped in cloth. Parchment is not ouly better than cloth but cheaper. . Cloth sells at 6 cents per yard, from which 27 sheets can be cut 7Pa rch nient wrappers cost 2 J- cents. Vte have made a niipr-inl rlulihiiii; arrangement wnn tnn 1 ice-a-VYerk Coiirior-Joiirnnl, and will eend that pa-r iki inn i.iuii-i:sii.m tor me prn-e nam J to all our ubiK-ribera u ho a ill ami pay in advance "ample coiuen of the Courier-Journal neiit free on application Mutacrlptloua ander tliNofTcr must be f ut to the 3 INDEPENDENT 2 HILLSB0R0, OREGON 3 RIBBONS AND Denver and Rio Grande KAILItOAl). Scenic Line of the World A Kull Ituuk of DRAIN TILE Oonntantlv ou hand Orders Solloltod. JAS. H. SEWELL, Hillsboro, Oregon AA4j B0 YEARS' 'V EXPERIENCE 500 Sheets 8x11, 500 Sheets. 8x13, 55 cts, 60 cts CARBON PAPER Th standard size for-pouud rolls is II inches; 2-pound blocks are v.- ipped in the 8x13 size. One reason why paper has not been jenerally used heretofore, farmers could Jnot get it at tbe general store It is now kept at the Independent of fice cut to any size wauted. ruu 2 I TYPEWRITERS ?aiuiuuiuiuiii!uiiuiuiuiiuiaiuiu AT INDEPENDENT OFFICE (is b to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to : A to to A to IS i School Opened Sept. 19. And you need writing and pencil tablets. We have them with the picture of your -liol building on at five and ten cev.ts. flillolutvut 3nleyenivnt. 11 1 VI f VI M W NV v vv 0 "50 YEARS' IMPROVEiyiENTS IN FARMING." Published by the New York Tribune Second Edition. 32 Pages, 18 by 13 Inches. A general review of the advances and improvements made in the leading branches of farm industry during the past half century. Special articles by the best agri cultural writers, on topics which they have made their life study. Illustrations of old fashioned im plements, A vast amount of practical info tnation. A valuable aid to farmers who de sire to stimulabj production and profit. Extremely interesting and in structive. Only 15 cents a copiy mail Send your order to TO THE Upholstered Tourist Sleepers Inihureof expc riimt-d comluitora a portent. To KanMwCity Cliirag) Itnflulo, lioNton with out transfer, via Halt I-ike Mo. I'ai-ilic and Chicago and Alton Ky. To Omaha, Chieapo, Btiflitlo, IWnn i fl out change via Halt I .like, Chicago, Kok Inland A 1'iu ilic Ky. To St .Toaepli, Kaiinan City, Ht. liouin, without change via Hur lington Koute. I To Kaniuis Citv anil Thursdavs llnl MMM J M .V Mi-auuri Purine Kuilwav. A day stop-over arranged at Palt Ike and lienver. Mondays Tuesdays Wednesdays A. Tradc Marks Dcsions corvrights ac AnTon ftn(1ln. n nkctrh n1 A,nrrixAUm rnrtf qul'-klr niMirtnin our opinion free wiitihtr an liiTntlon t prohnltlf pHU'titdhlf). f imitniiiitm. tlonta aincf IjrftmttdniitlHl. HandlMiok on f'nlotiU etit fre. Oldettl mtMu-y fur nfi-iimitf paif imii n. It(hti trtkffi thntiitfli Munti h Co. rucelr wpteUU tvrfir without tlifirwa, lit the .Scientific American. A hndomtlT HlntrfitM wtMk1v. 1 jru1 rlr. CuUtton of ariT m tcntitlc Joiinml. Trttia fi m TPir: four moiitha, ai. Hold by all ntiwulHlcr. i Co.361 New York Bmuch oiBc-u, iSt f St, .7uhUiiluu, U. C A ride through the Scenerv. famous Colorailo Ai-k your ti ket ajrent for a ticket on the Denver A Kio ( irande excursion, tor rates and all information, rail on or addreu K. C. SM-IIOL, E. R. Ifrr, O- 1 If L- - a , 1111 AKV11U WMhington Mreet, I'ortland Oregon. Uen'l I'm, A T ket Agent, Ienver Colorado. Itepart for IME SCHEDULE.1 From Portland I Arrive Krom r. . ., Talt Ijike, Ilenver, h"1 T 11 ' Wort! nulia! Fait mail 0 P " Kansas Citv, M. 7 :iOa. in. I.oiiih, Chii ao, A Kal. Walla Walla,Swk-! Biie, .11 imriilt St. p.-iiii, iniiuth, Milwankei''liiciiuii ilc eaxt SiMikane Flyer 2 p. III. Spokano Vlver .m I 8 p. in. Ocean Stcamsairs. All .ailing datf-9 .nhjei t to liHuge. j For San Frani-w-o ' Kt 2, 5, 8, 11. 14,' 17, :o, a;i, ,;, -m. . I p. m. WHEN GOING HAST Cue a fir.t-cln.. line in traveling hetwaen Minneapolia, St. Paul, and Chicago, and the principal town in Central Wiacon.in. ....... 7 p. m. ToAla-ka Sail Sept 17 8 p. m. Fx Sundy Saturday II) p. ni'. P. I 1 i r- LOlDfflDia KlYCr -i p. m. To Anuria and av,,'x-Su,"'-T I JOlili "g Willamntto Diuon I 6 a. m. I " "luiiionu iiirui Ki Sundv Oregn ( ity, Xe ex, Siindy herg, Salem A way-, lamliiig. ' J Willamette & Yam- 7 . ... T.,e.lay! lUll RlFfiR M . . W. Tlinrwlav r , , . ,. and Sntur (r,m( Ity, I lay ton ' l "li I and way lan.linK , rnllman Palace in Service. . S) eeplng and Chair Can. The Dining Cam are nperateil in the inter- ent or iu patron, the inot elegant er Vice ever inaugurated. Meal are erve.l i In Cnrln i UTillninnHn rt,'AW 6 a.m. I WUIflUICllC filFLT 4 -., ., m Tlle.Tluir orva!li. and av Tile. Tt ii n.l Sat. 1 landings " 1 nd Sat I Kipnria 1 4f, . m Mon Ve.i Kiparia UiUwi-t-iti and Fri i To ohlain rint-'lan .liould read via. . erice your ticket HE f ISCONSIH CENTRAL LINES. Snake Riycr I l.v Lew ii. tun "1 :4'i a. in Sun Tnr. ami Tluir Hl'KI.ri'HT. I'a. Agent. Aitilrena, n. II. eu'l lxlell ( arlill t o. Uru'l .tt. r. pgr. !X. . f 'rlland. "regno. Ihrrct eniinec'tion at Chicago and anki-e forall Kantcrn Kiinu. . . Mil- on yonr aenrv-t For full Informal i,,n rail ticket agi-nt, or wnte ...... Ja. C. I'osn, or Ja. A, Cun t, tlen. I'ai. Agt., (eneral Agent, M iUaiikie.Wii. 24 fu,rk St, il l ortiaad O , HILLSBORO HOUSE . lOtTI tor. rrori-nr Corner 2dai J Uakirt Sf