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About Hillsboro independent. (Hillsboro, Washington County, Or.) 189?-1932 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1900)
illLLSliURO INDEPENDENT Eutri U Ika pjaloOM at Hllteoo, UN bukMrtpttoa, ib rinwt ft Jr, tlM. uilujboro rvuauum Co. rnfw. D. M. C. UAULT, CUUof. KH1DAY, UCTOBEU 19, JftM). or frMlUMl WM. McKMLEI, Of Okl. tor VIco-froaMoat, TUEODOkS ItOOSKVELT, Of Hew Vork, For I'rowUontial i-.U torv T1LMAN i'OHL) Mark County J. C l ULXtKrON Dwulma Count; W. J. FL'KMSII UnkUlla County O. F. i'AXIUN Ualtuomaa Cuanly HON. Tiiub. 1J. TONUUE will add rem the cltlzeua of Washing ton uouuty ouce more before election lie will be at: iliilaboro at 2 p. oi. Nov. 8. HON. 8. U. HU8T0N will make three speeches in IIiIm county at which time he will ex pltun why he Intends to vole for McKiuley and Koonevelt. Times and place are: lllllrtboro, Tuesday, October 80. Foreat Orove, Friday, Nov. 2. Uruuuville, Saturday, Not. 8. .ur. itryan naa never uttered a word in favor of shorter hours for labor, but he haa emitted tons ofora tory in favoi of ahorter dollars for the payment of labor. Iudianapolia "Journal." The authracite coal strike is ended and the luiuers win. They tret a 10 per cent advauce in wages till April 1st next. The miners have been idle nearly a month and seeing that labor is a jieriahable comodity It Is not Just .plain where the net gain is. "Mr. Bryan," aays "The Water- bury American," "taunts the negro with beatowing presidents on the re publican party, which bestows jani torships on him in retuin. The negro seems to prefer this to the hemp necktie with which the democrats decorate him." Bryan the "anti trust" candidate for I'lenident is reported to be the guetof Crocker, the leader of the Now York Tammany democrats. Seeing that Ciocker has some of the New York ice true! will 'his hobnob bing have a tendency to remove the suspicion from men's minds that Mr Bryan's opKsition to trusts is only one or wind? "I dunno," said farmer Corntoseel "hut what I'd kindofinjoy runnln a rioe farm over In China." "Why, you'd be a Chinamau!" "Yen. But it would be somethin oi a comfort to live some place where your predictions that the country was guin' to pieces stood some show of coniin' true." (Washington Star This is the clans of paragraphs run uing through commercial paers. One reading it would not think there is great ott-aaion for Mr. Bryan calamity howls: "As America Is heavy creditor nation and haj more money seeking inTeatment than car lie profitably employed, It Is not un likely that a Russian loan can be ne gotiated in New York, provided the security and Interest offered are satis factory," Four years ago Sec. Carlile of I'res. Cleveland' cabinet wrote six pros Bilious In support of sound money Ihese were incontrovertible. Mr Bryan and his supporters tried In vain to anawer them, Bryan thl year thought to adopt and use the name system of logic, only he asked ten queations bearing on expansion He thought he had the republicans but next day Teddy Roosevelt ans wered the whole batch and pro pounded some for Bryan. Hon. H. B. Huston, democrat of former times, state senator from Washington county in the days be fore democracy had been converted or perverted, to populism, declares energetically for McKinley; says "the Bryan party is nothing more than a hotbed of revolutionary principles, and gives aid and encouragement to enemies of the United Htates In the 1'hilippine Islands." Moreover, "the election of Bryan would mean a flna ciai panic, ine signs or which are as apparent as if written in letters of Are." Mr. Huston see things plai ly, and states them forcibly. Ore goniaii. The opMwi(on press has had manj vituperative paragraphs of Senator M. A. Hanna "Mark llsnna," hut has the voter noticed the hard irood sense that runs through all his lit temneet,? There are no great flour ishes of oratory to he sere, but the hearer or render understands every thing he says. lie has, ton, great or ganising ability and sturdy honesty that gives him fine control over men. 1 le has been an employer of labor for many years, but his miner never strike. He plans hi labor in such way that his employees have no grie vances, but diligently do what they are hired to do, and leave to other the lorw that come through inter rupted lalxir. IRRlUATluN ASU THE LA W TUEAEOf. A queatioo that will anuoy K-gUt- lalors, courts and landowners more than any other in modern Ilium is the right to use water In the arid re gion between the Cascade and llocky mountains. Indeed trouble la already overtaking those uu the east side of the Rockies. The theory that has beeo the law up to this liuiv. indeed Is yet, la that the diu-b owner La also the owner of the water fiat flow therein. The old law was that water might be token .tl of a natur al stream aad used providing that the user turn it back again ou bis own la&d undiminished In volume. Using water for mechanical purposes permitted this, but when it came to be used for irrigation purismes the rule had to be mod ill ml and it has been mod ill d tc such an exteut that the holdings on parts of the river's course have been totally ruined. The doctrine was that he who came Orst was first served Now the greatest area or numlsT takes prece dence without regard to the brt far mer to use the water. There "are cases where irr'gatirit; companies who took water froiL the lower course of a river have tx en completely ruined and the farmers whom they served, by ditch . con panies who divert all the water fiom a Hjiut higher up on the stream. Hoiuetime there must be found a remedy for this defect in the law of precedent. The courts will protally not be able to do this. It will Is 1 It for Invislative enactment and I tie statute will have to vest the owner ship of water la the land it irrigates Thus If John Smith buys a quarter section of land and water enough to irriiMte it. the water is his in simple just as much as the land is. It ia the water that makes the land valuable, and to permit a wealthy litigant t go into the courts and take .Smith's water from him is robbery. To prevent this the ownership of the water will have to be by htatute vest ed in Smith instead of in the ditch owner. DONSEYT OF THE MIVEKXEO. The "Outlook," the ablest of the able weeklies boldly challenges the position of Bryan in the catch phrase "government rests on the consent of the governed." That authority holds that just government rests neither upon the edict of a few strong men, nor upon the consent of the many but upon the law of Ood. No gov ernment is just which does not con form to that law. Neither Is a gov eminent stable. The Outlook con tinues its reasoning in these words which the Independknt thinks are absolutely unanswerable: There are certain great nhtural laws as of light, heat, electricity. Man does not make them and can not unmake them. All material civilization Is based upon his under standing them, conforming his life to them, making use of them. So there are certain great moral laws of the social organism. They are inherent in the divine nature; and in man's nature because man ia of kin to Ood. They are absolute, eternal, indes tructible. Man can neither make them, nor unmake them, nor modify them. They rest neither upon the edict of one nor on the consent of many. They are equally divine and authoritative whether men consent to them or dissent from them. All mo ral civilization is based upon man's understanding these laws and shap ing his life in conformity with them. If the community understands these laws and conforms its life to them, it will be prosSTouH; if it does not, it will be unprosperous. In ti e for mer case the government will te just because it will be in accordance with these divine laws; in the latter case it wilt he unjust because it does not conform to these laws. Human governments are, or ought to l, attempts to ascertain what these laws are and to adapt the life ol the community to them. They are generally more ir lesa Awkward and blundering attempts. Some times, ierhaM we should say oftvn, no such attempt is made; the govern Ing power, whether monarchical, oligarchic, aristocratic, or democratic imagines that it can make laws, Disaster always has and always will follow such attempts. And th' dis aster will not be one whit less if the attempt is made by a sovereign peo ple than if it is made by a sovereign Caesar. The despotism of the Red Terror, which was founded on the will ef the majority, wss ss cruel, as unjust, and as disastrous to the peo ple as the despotism of the Old Re gime. "For myself," says Ie Tin-- ipieville, "when I feel the hand of Kwer lie heavy on my brow, I care but little to know who oppresses me; and I am not the more disposed to pass beneath the yoke because it is held out to me by the arms of a mil lion of men." History abundantly confirms I)e Toequevllle's sentiment, and dispose of the sentiment hor rowed from Rousseau that just got- ernmentsrest upon the consent of the governed. The rest of the philosophy of Rouseu has long since tss-o abandoned by thoughtful men; the imagined history on which he based it has long since been disproved by scholarly lesearch. This relic of an exploded philosophy is no hettr wisrthy of our reverence ts-catise it Is found Inserted In a parenthesis in the Declaration of Independent. An age which refuses to regard the Bible aa a final and Infallible author ity will not consent to regard inci dental phrases in the Declaration of Independence as final and infallible. Just governments rest on conformity with the law of Ood. "The scat of la," says Hooker, "Is ill the bosom of Almighty O.al." The Outla.k has said all this over and over again, but since the question Is still repeal ed irt-rhape the answer ought to be res-Mlcd. A righteous democracy is simply one w ay of ascertaining what are the laws of Ood, and of conforming the life of the community to them. In democracy a large prnpori ion of the community in America about one in ten participate in this endeavor. The ether nine-tenths are under the government of this one-tenth. This method has two great advantages over all ether forms of government. As all classes participate In it, Ihe dangers of class legUhttion are mater ially reduced: an I class legislation Is ore of the most fruitful causes of un just government that Is, or govern ment inconsistent with the divine laws. Moreover, the people who make the laws in a democracy are the ones most likely to suffer from bad laws; suffering Is a great educa tion; thus deiii(M-racy tends automa tically lo correct the evils which it intlicts upon itself; It Is therefore, of ail forms of government the most edueaiive. But when class legisla tion is permitted in a democracy, as it sometimes is ix-riuittfd, and when, dispite the evils which bad govern ment inflicts on the common ople, the common people continue it, the government is not made just by their c-oti-eut. The people of Pennsylvania for years have consent) d to a cor rupt rule under (Juay; the people of New York City consent lo bluckmail under Croker; but the public consent has not made Ihe government either of the Quay republican ring or the Tummimy democratic ring a Jot government. The principle here enunciated fur nishes a reply lo two other questions addressed to us by -orrespoiidents whose letters we publish on another p.ige. In the judgment of The Out- took, the destruction ol the Spanish fleet in Manila Bay and the subse quent treaty with Spain have, com bined to make the United States res- pousihle for the protection of persons and property in the 1'hilippim s. We are not responsible for persons and property in Finland, and there fore, however great our tympathy with the Finns, we have no call to Interfere with injustice perpetrated there. We are respontible iu Ihe Philippines; and this responsibility is recognized by the democratic no less than by the republican parly, since Its platform iu terms declares it lo be our duty lo establish there a stable government. But if we have any responsibility, it is to establish a just as well as a stable government that is, a government in conform ty with the divine principles of justice and equity. The worst thing we could do would be to establish a Fi lipino government without seeing l hut it is just, and then stand guard about it to protect it from foreign at tack if it is unjust to foreigners, and (as Mr. Foreman has proposed) against dt mestic attack if it Is unjust to its citizens. This would lie the worst thing, taycause II would pre vent the pt-ople from learning tiy ex- I erience. The lieyl thing we can do Is tu help the Filipinos to form a government of (heir own, and while Ihey are do ing so, under our guidance and di rection, to protect them alike from foreign and from domestic enemies This is what America is trying lo do, and this is uot imperialism, 01.11 Ofc.HOtKAlS rOK MthlM.KV Some of the Bryunites are express ing surprise that ex-Heeretary Cr lisle should have come over to the republicans in this campaign. There is no occasion for surprise, howevei. .Mr. Carlisle belongs to the old demo cracy. He is a disciple of Jefferson, Jsckson and Benton. He believes in honest money, the sort of money which will be worth 100 cents on Ihe dollar under all conditions. When he was in Cleveland's Cabinet he, as well as his chief and all the rest of the mi'iiilrs of the Cleveland coun cil, fought for this kind of money, and Rgaint-t the sort which is proiKX ed by Bryan and his co partners at t lie present day. V ery nearly all Ihe rest of Ihe Clevelanditca are for McKinley in this canvass. Kx-Secretary of Agri culture Morton, a democratic stal wart of the stalwarts, from Bryan's own state, has been assailing Bryan more fiercely than haa any repuoli can in Ihe country. He Is an active and pronounced McKinley advocate. So is ex-Secretary of the Treasury Fairchild. Kx Postmaster General, Don M. Dickinson, of Michigan, in an interview a short time ago pre dicted that McKinley's msjorily in the electoral college will he greater in I'.too than it was in 18"t. In ail probability Cleveland will also vote for McKinU y. There is not Ihe faintest ground fr surprise that all of these robusl old democrats are in the republican line in WOO. The republican paity is iMH-upying, on two of the great is "ue-, the ground which the democra cy held iu its great days. When the democratic party was the dominant power in the country Us two leading tenets were honest money and ex pansion. Everybody knows that Jefferson closed the mints t.i the coinage of silver in ISlHi because, un der Ihe ratio then prevailing, he be lieved It would he impossible to keep the small stia-k of gold in the coun try if the silver dollars were allowed t be coined freely. Everybody also knows that he was an expansionist of the most extreme sort. Those two j.-as the 100c dollar and the broad ening of the nation's area were car dinal deuiocnriie principle win ii ihe di-inocrali'1 party was tlje coumry- g real est political iTganiz i ion. N t- uraliy, nearly all Ihe old-time ilriu CHTHt are auportln to r publican ticket tins year. Ex-Senator John Sherman, of Ohio, is sick at bis resideme in Washington and his friends fear that this will be his last lllne. Is thk riKcmr count k the tttaut of Oregon. f r Wiu-liiii-i'in Coonty. llelM-cca A. Hurrvtt, Haiutiil, J . W. l'etti-y. Jeore H. Irwin. ll-ti-f Jan bmall mid Air. hi". ill her lius- hand. 1K-Ic:il:mt ; In the nitm Of the Stuta of lr. i;on: Vnn Miiii iu-h flf Villi Itrv tllTt-tlV rvoliiril! tMHiim-ur Slut HIlKWer 111 rollil'liill't lili'l BKitiul jou in tlioaUivei-iititli-d ourt, :tinl uil on or belur Hie 1C iluy of Uu- nine ire- x-rilssi in tlieoroerol iiulilit-uiioii ol tin Munition to-wit, uu or Is-lnrr tin- t-xnrit- tion o an weeks m-it truiii ami alter tlir dute of the lirst uut'licaUuit ot tins si'in- inona, the l.rul iiuDlliatlun Delln; tin U'- I'Jth day of October, llnio. And il you fail to to aiiear the l:iintiU wilt apply to Cite Court lor tlir relU f dt-iiiaudi-d in Hit- cum plaint t erein to-il;fora decree- anaiind Ihe defendants, lieore 8, lrin, He.-ier Jane Hiuall and Mr. f(ma!l her !iu.ihand, rel inning and rorrecthns certain deeds made by the a Id ueleuuaiilit, (Jeorne n Irwin and li-ater Jane Pinull lo ihe ulain litt m aa to en, reus the true lutvnli-ju ul the i-artica thereto and us to convey lo plainlitt all their richt tide and interest in the followiiiK deeerilied land tn-wd: All of the N W of the e t fc. I lie X K "f the 8 W X and lots numlwred one. two anil three of Kec. ti in TIN K 4 W of the Will. Mer. in ludniiirlon county, iiiepui and cuntaimiiK UoSsiaoren 1 itat p in- till Ihj decreed to lie the owner m lee of an undivided live-sixths interest in said 1 ud. The owner of the life estate of M liuyd in all of aid land and the owner of the dower nxht ol i-.lials)lh M. 1 '"jltey Hie same ih iiiK her lite estate in an undivided one ninth of ftaid land subject to the life e.-tale of said M. Hoy. I That said Celeiidmit, J. . lettey be decreed to Ihj the owner ot an undivided one-sixth interest in said land suhiect to said lift- estate of M llovd and dower Hunt of F.lixalietli M. I'ettey, and that aalil latin tsi som aim ine t rtH-eeo.-applied lirst ti the iav nient ol tliec tin aim disbursements of thi - suit and of said sale and that the residue 1st divided ne tweeu the pi intiff and defemlau ,J. W I'ettey according to tlieir respective slum- in said land, and that III" plaintill have such other relief as the Court may dee n jiiNt and equitable. Thia fjuinnions is served upon you by publiea ion iu the tiillslssro lndeiieiideni and tv day forappearance Is lix d by order of the Hon. L. A. Kood, County .ludfe of WasliiiiKton county Oreon Made and dated October is, p.iwj. W. Ji. KAHKK1 1, 22-2S Attorney for I'laintill'. VITATIOX. I N THE COUNTY t'Otar Id'' 1 1 1 K for the eountv of I State of Oregon WashiuKton. In the matter of the esta'e ofi H. C. Kaymond, decease I. ) To C. A. Kaymond, Mrs, A. A. Carter Helen M. brooks, Howard llrook-, and W. I Kaymond, heira-at-law of II C. Kaymond, deceased and to all persons in, teresled in said estate, (rns-tinn : In the Name of the btate o Oregon yon are he eby cited and required to appear in the ounty Court of the bt te of o ejron, for the County ol Washington, at the Court room tliereof, at nillsboro in the Coun'y ol Washington on Monday the fitli day of N- veinlsr, l!Jti. at 10o' loc, in the lorel.oon of ti-at day. then and there t- show cause if any ens', why an order of nle should not be in de. authorizing and directing the administrator of said estate to sell at public auction in the manner provided by 1 .w. all of the real property belonging to sa d estate as set forth in the petition of the adn.inistrutor. and tiled herein, and described as lollows to-wil: Lot numbered Ul iu Hills Cemetery, W wh mgton County, Oregon. II. A tract of land lying, being and situate within Washington County, t re gnn and twins more particularly known, designate-1 and descriis-d as the Kast halt of the bouthe st quarter of Section 8, and the West half of the N rthwest quarter and the Southwest quarter, of beclioti '4 Town ship 1. 8 'Uth Kange R West. Will. -Mer. anu containing Hju acres, more or less, lit. Tract lying, being and situate with in Washington otmty, Oregon and being a part of -eotion Hr, Township 1 hou'h, Hange 4 West. Will. Mer. and bounded by beginning at the Northeast corner of a two a' re tract of land sold by Joseph fiasUin tn 1lllian Hudson, ana running tnence boiiui J" at' We-t.'l. Iti Chs to the Southeast corner of said Hui'son tract o land, thence South f!"4V Ka-t l Chs, thence North V ai' Kast H. Iti Chs. thence south Ml" 4" West 3.11! Chs to the plac of beginning and colitullilng about oi e acre ot land, ex cepting the Northwest ntinrter therof. Witness, tho Hon. L. A Hood, Judge ol the County Court of the State of Oregon tor the i ounty of W shinglon with tin seal of said Court aluxed, this nth day of Uctobcr, A. V, limn. Att st: HEO. A MOIiUAN. J. W. Morgan, Clerk. lk'puty. 21 OASTOniA. .v. j The Kind You Haw Always The Kind You Haw Always Bigutara of CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of 2jffi&&J?Ui OASTOniA. Buith ItieKindYodHswAiwmBoiiga Call al John lVrinis' plai-e, corner Main an I Heeond stwts, llillsisiro, and see his stts-k of groreries and shisps. Dont Be Doped There hurw lnfn iiUmmI Mn nuirki t iwivenil rtitHt npnntn of hii Am -ht .oti of HtlM' lUrtionrirr.' 'Wws rv -'ni offered uiiior Vkiioun iihiik itt low priue By t a n-m flrr rnnnn n.itom, rroiir. mrMiM, pic, htm In t fw inftimv it a innnuiu uritilrttjr tlonn to tnicm. Worthless fpprlntu nn wt niiUitlinir : f'r fn-iinnc-. thvy re ft.lvrt"i"t1 tt If H mil-ti it: qiivHk,nt f a hiitrhcr prittt I.., w'i n. rtnliM', fllT H HI' kuuW Mint t-ili'' lu-) are all, from A to Z. Reprint Dictionaries, phontv(e cpf f f-ik of ( ii t:ft t'r a'ti whi h Ui HfiAav iu M l"i i"'r' i i-t. and whit h wm, hum m ni,,r"'r 'it iin-t pnnt, and him) in to (Im i,iiiti:i.n fst iii ibon a Wf k ff tno nwrn ntii-:t l m "m Long Since Obsolete. Tho itiptrfmfnt rf lii.mii sM.-ti.lt1 nt word," which wuiie if ! l-r I 4 . - .m ! ImmI to rontnin. wn rtiii'iu! I a uimi. man who dNl ovrrr forty fm-t nir's ni l pnhlUlH-d Iw'r'.n' ln di-ntti. tti'nT iiuiMir tditKtM aiv lanUil'ly .f n''tr'( t i- . .n h Th Vthvrcr't Unhrldrd IHMntry 1 tit. bah1 ly our htmn i t ii only tin tuorim one f that nnni fitmihar to din w-fnint mh It rontaina oviT Rrca, w rh il'ictrn tkma on twarly ev-ry itHtra, and rnr n Imprint on the titk n'. It i prnlf'iil hv vyr0b1 frtm rhaii imitation. Valnahle nn thm wirk i. we have a r?t xpenwe puMtr-! a th.trtirfMv r -vt-.t ailPMr. known t irtinfhtit 1 world Webster' Ififerntionl Dctionary. A ft dictionary l-t a .ih tiiief yu jouI Get the Best. flhietrntt-il iminpiik-t fr Addn O rMElM ;. SoriacficlO. m booa w F O R (. ; 1 w 1 E N 3 9 p- WU LACE MADE AT NEW suNLlGHT FACTORY. My slock of Ituhbors is such anybody T n i 0 Furniture for sale AT PORTLAND PRICES. To prove this call at the corner of main and Third streets and get piice? P. O. BROWN, Furniture Dealer. THE OLD LINE Bankers Life Insurance Co. OF NEBRASKA ISSUES The Policy of the Future Semi name, address, ml age and get full particulars of the bcs plan ou which Insur ance was ever written. J. It Mur iini Itiiilillnir, HAVE YOU USED BUTTER PARCHMENT? t t t t . All gilt-edged butter put on the mar ket by crcameiies is wrapped in paper. The product of the private daily would reach its market in much bcttci condi- . tion if wrapped in Butter Parchment than it does when wrapped in cloth. Parchment is not only better than cloth but cheaper. . Cloth sells at 6 cents per yard Ironi which 27 sheets can le .tit 2 7 Parch ment wrappers cost cents. 500 ShePis 8x11, 500 Sheets. 8x.3, The s'andard Me lor I oiinl rolls Is 8x1 1 inches; -p tiiiil blocks are wrapped in the 8x13 sie. One reason why paper has not been generally used heretolore, farmers could not get it at ibe antral More It ia now lernt at Hip Tm1i'n.ti1nt r(. fice cnt to nier onue si A Good School Shoe. 6 SAY! Hits Coin' ter Rain Umbrellas and that I can suit F. COirfPTON'Gen. Agent 1'ortland, Oreiroa. 50 els, 55 cts any size wanted. 1 8&S2sSfc i ratent zvrucies n; Wo cany all tlu )oiular rem odics and anything not in stork h wo will gladly ot for you. r; j Drug Sundries Consisting of combs, tooth, hand, nail, hail- and cloth brushes, tooth powders, pastes, soaps and i washes, chamois skins, purses, hot water bottles, -nipples, etc. Stationery Our lineis complete, consisting of the latest styh'S, colors and shajxibox papers, tablets, envel- ojies, visiting cauls, note, letter, fools cap, legal ca paper, pens, inks, etc. I Perfumery Wo carry a large! assortment of all tho popular odors of the best I f iiiaimiaciiu eis. The Delta Drug Store. j& SprifBarps! A Rare Bargain! We also offer some bargains in our cluthing "" pile and broken suits at 50 jx-r rent rcdm-lion. 1 Schulmerich & Soul JOHN DELLAR Cor. 1st and Yamhill Sts. NOTE THE FOLLOW I MJ I liK tSO Ol It M'KI Hl.l IKS: Ladies' Shoes, Kid or Kangaroo, Lace or Ilultoii, $2.50 value ,J1.7." en's Clothing, Cheviots or Worsted, Latest Stylo, 9. 00 value 7.f Boys' Clothing, Uurable and fashionable, - 4.50 value 2.T1O Crescent Suits, .75 value .lo PORTLAND. ORE. JOHM DKLUK. Prop ft J. P. DAVIE8. rnasioa T. St. Charles Hotel HHORPORATICII r'royt and Mirrlson"M rpi-ts. I'ortlaml Orriroii. tleclrlcJMtjIitH, Elwtric IIc-IIh uml Hy.lntulic Klcvttor. 150 Raanti at 23 to 64k1, Sullen, J5, to ft. ;mmI ICislnurni.t hi lomiprtioii. Give us a call, DAY THREE COLLEGE COURSES CLASSICAL, SCIENTIFIC, LITERARY Hi PACIFIC UNIVERSITY The Academy prepares for College and giccs a muiuuyii cnynsn taucacion, tne test pre paration for teaching or business. All ex penses eery loto. Board and rooms ut the Ladies' Hall $3 to $1 per ttetili. inrhniinn electric light and heat. THE CCLLEQE DORMITORY Under experienced management, trilJ lur nish rooms and board at cost on th? club plan, not to exceed 1.60 For full pai iculars, address PRESIDENT McCLELLAM), Forst Croce, Oregon h ii We 1it: some of our fine stock of Iidies wrap m which we will sell at greit'l y ilr,(l ri" CLOTHIHG GENT'S FUKNLSIIIXCS SHOES C. T. BELCHER. KaC'V AND TRIUK. I!KM;III-:k, Maiiiirs FALL. u:i:m ,7-.Y,7A-.s SEPT. 19.