rU'clc" nv HILLSBORO, WASHINGTON COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 21. 100o Number 49 Volume 32 fiillsboro independent. BY I). V. BATH. OFFICIAL COl'NTY I'Al'KK. ON K IHM.I.AK I'KK YKAK1N ADVA NIK Republican In Politic. an inch. Hinif le culuiiiii, (or four inner turns; reading notices, one cent a woid wuli insertion (iioiliiiiff 1 than la rents) : profexnioiial carU, one Inch, $1 a iiionili j Ih1k card, $5 a year, paya ble quarterly, (ootices ami lesolulioua free to advcrtiniiig lodges). PROFESSIONAL CARDS. E. B. TONGUE ATTOHNLYAT-LAW Hilltboro, Oregon. Office: K(MniB 3. 4 and 6. Morgan Blk W. N. BARRETT ATTORN E Y-ATLA W Hilliboro, Oregon. unite: Central Hlock, Koomt I and 7, BENTON BOWMAN ATTORN EY-AT-LAW . Hilliboro, Oregon. OUice, in Union l!lk.. with H. B. Iluaton THOS. Ii: TONGUE JR. attoknky-at-1aw notary public OUii : Kooms d, 4 and 5, Morgan Block Hilltboro, Oregon. 8. T. LINKLATER. M. B. C. M. PHYSICIAN AND 8UROEON. Hilltboro, Oregon. Office, upstairs, oyer The Delta Drag Store. Office houra 8 to 12 ; 1 to 6, and in the evening from 7 to 9 o'clock. J. P. TAMIE8IE, M. D. 8. P. R. R. SURGEON Hilltboro, Oregon. Residence corner Third and Main; offlw i Bp I tain oer Delta drug More; hour, a.Wl u W m. I to6and 7 U p. m. Tvlephou lo resident roin IMta ilnie "tor. All oalU promptly aue wared day or iiUhl. F. A. BAILEY, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Hilltboro, Oregon. Offlce: MorRan-Balley block, op ttalrt, roomt 1'. 13 and 15.' Residence 8. W. cor. Date Line and Second ate. Both 'phones. F. J. BAILEY, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Hilltboro, Oregon. Office: Morgan-Bailey block, up italre with V. A. lialley. Residence. N. IS. corner Third and Oak it. A. 13. BAILEY, M. D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, IIillsl)oro, Oregon. Office over nailey's lru mora. Orllo boon fnim ;lUi I'i; l.wi lo If, and 7 lo 9. Keatdeuoe tblrd hmiw north of clly electric llKht plant. Oil promptly atteuded dar or uIkIiU Holb 'phone. wpta-Ot MARK B. BUMP, ATTORN KY-AT-LAW. Notary Public and Collections. HILLSBOKO, ORE. free Delivery Of the lest Fish, Game and Meats. Our delivery is prompt and in all parts of Hillslwro. We have iuaugerated a new Schedule in Prices and this together with our de livery system makes this 1 1 ills hero's popular market. Housley (EL Httnshew NOTICE Of Intention toWJthdraw In suiance Deposits -by the- THURINGIA INSURANCE COMPANY. To Whom It May Concern I In ecrnr.lanre whh the law of lh at at of nrriiin, relative in In.urance t'nmpanle, notice l hrrehy (Wen that III" I MCKINdIA INHl R A SCK t'OM I" N Y, delrme, lo ceeae dulns hul niw within the Male of on-iron. Intend to with drew It" dttHill with the Treasurer of wld Stale, 'id will. II no rUlma lnt wld rnmpany ahall be hied with the Inturauoe t'nmmnxloner within month from the 4th day ot SoTemher. the same being the riaienf the flrat publication of till noili-e. withdraw lu deptwll from the Slate Treasurer. TIU'RINOIA 1NXCRANTK COMPANY Hr W. II. Kellnec. Menaier. Pted at New York. N. Y., Ihia Mib day of Oolobrr Iwi maya-wa We can print your horse hills on cloth or pir, any sine. Prices range from $1.50 to l er 100. We have a nice lot of horee cut to select from. Winter Rates to Yaquina Bay. la order lo acenmmndat tb man people wba wlih to make a winter trip to Yatilna Ber th Soother rarlfla Railway company will tell oa Wedaeeday and Saturday of earh week, aa til March 11. I'), round trip tlckeu, at low rate, to Yaquina Bay and rvtnra, limited to lit dar from data of al. The who fleetra to tat advantage nf thla rat boo Id apply to aeareet Soathera Paolflc twtet aarai riKi WHEN EAST MEETS WEST THCY NEED AN INTRODUCTION Th Lewis ana Clark fair Will Be the Introducer at Portland, B finning June 1tt. The East needs an iutroduction to the Middle West. Both East and the Middle West need an in troduction to the Far West. That introduction is going to be made, formally and informally you may take your choice this year, and the Lewis and Clark exposition at Portland, Oregon, will be the in troducer. This exposition, which will open June i, will be success ful in many ways, but in no way will it be more useful to Americans than In making the tar-divided sec tions of this great country acquaint ed with each other. What does the man in Augusta on the Kenne beck, for instance, know about the man whose home is at Salem on the Willamette? And the Walla Walla Washingtonian what is his conception of the Washingtonian whose residence is in the District of Columbia? Between San Francis co stretch 3,000 miles of territory, and the middle does not know the ends, nor do the ends have the proper acquaintance with each other. The exposition at Portland will bring together both ends and the middle and make them mutually acquainted. The East ought to know more about the West than the West knows about the East, for Easteiners travel in the West more than Westerners travel in the East; but these touring Easterners do not seem to diffuse their know lodge of the West when they re turn home. Or perhaps the home staying Easterners refuse to believe what their travel-wise neighbors tell them of the West, because some of those tales are tallish, so to speak, and appear unbelievable to the eye of the conservative East erner. On the other hand, the East has gained a mighty misconception of the West by placing credence in tales entirely to tall for the proper statute of truth and veracity. The "wild and wooly" West is the only West which much of the East wots of. The tamed and tranquil West they refuse to believe in and they entertain also in some quarters, a notion that the West is incapable of complete civilation. The exposition at Portland will do much toward giving the East a proper attitude ot appreciation toward the West. The thousands of Easterners who will take advan tage ot the reduced railroad rates and attend the exposition, see the western country and its people, study conditions and take note of achievements, will return home with minds cleared of very much haziness that had beclouded them by reason ot the acceptance of fic tional caricatures as gospel fact. They will find all along the Pacific coast a civilation far advanced splendid cities with skyscrapers, church spires, public libraries, uni versities of learning, and tele phones! It is related that a Boston woman who visited St. Louis last year was amazed to learn that the telephone was in general use throughout that city. What will be her astonish ment to find in Portland not only the telephone that talks, but the telephone that sees? At the Lewis and Clark exposition a device whereby one talking through a telephone may see the reflected fea tures of the person at the other end of the line will be exhibited in practical operation for the first time in public and strange to state it is the invention of a Portland man. The east and the West will be come acquainted at Portland. This will clear up many misconceptions on each side and will serve the stronger to cement the several sec tions of our land. ...it v.Immi n. IK . 1mm salt herring, 15e per down at New Plan 1 Adopted. The grand lodge A. O. U. W. last week by a vote of HI to 43 adopted the new rates recommend ed by the supreme lodge after one of the warmest contests in the his tory of the order. The new insur ance plan provides for a reserve fund, a guarantee fund from which 3 nqrt rf h Itrt Irw . well a the assessments of members over 55 may be paid, and optional assess' ment plans from which new mem bers may choose that which best meets their needs. A new member may take the level rate plan, which fixes his assessment at the same rate throughout the period of his insurance, or he may take the clas sified rate, under which he ad vances every five years to an older class with a corresponding increase in the amount of his assessment. Centennial Notes. "Hit the Trail" at the Lewis and Clark exposition opeuing in Port laud, June 1. Sites have been selected for the Philippine village and the Homer Davenport pleasant farm. These will be located near the experi mental gardens and the grand es planade. The experimental gardens at the Lewis and Clark exposition have been abandoned, inasmuch as the remarkable demand for exhibit space necessitated the utilizing of this tract for buildings. Hundreds of magnificent vases have been profusely scattered about the grounds. In these have been placed beautiful palms which will be in full bloom by opening day. A test has been made of all the electric lighting effects at the Lew is and Clark exposition. This proved exceedingly satisfactory, and after a few minor details have been attended to the exposition will be ready for public inspection. Reports from Wisconsin would indicate that the legislative body of that state is making baste to re consider its action in killing the Lewis and Clark exposition appro priation bill, An allotment of $24,- 000 is now assured. The enormous Ionic columns for the Oregon state building at the Lewis and Clark exposition have been placed in position, The building now presents a very im posing appearance. Work upon all the other state structures is pro gressing with much rapidity. Thi great crowds which throng the Lewis and Clark exposition during the pre-exposition period have necessiated more turnstiles, which will be installed immediately. Plans for the permanent entrances have been prepared; and work on them will be started shortly. Work upon the Hungarian chad- ra at the Lewis and Clark exposi tion has commenced. The struct ure is situated on the East Side of Lakeview Terrace in front of the Utah, Idaho and New York state buildings and faces the Grand Es planade. In speaking of character, Presi dent Roosevelt said a few days ago: "A man who is a good neighbor, a good husband, a good lather, is the type of man who makes a good citizen. The person that you want to have as a neighbor is the man to whom you can tie, on whom you can count, the man who is a game man in the time ot trouble, but who docs not seek trouble; the man who does not brag or brawl, but who makes good; the man who is decent and square in his dealings with others. That is just the type you have in public life. You cannot afford to let any man represent you in public life if he is crooked; I do not mean whether he is crooked on your side or not. If he will do something that is not exactly straight for your advantage, he will do it quicker for his own advan tage." Who Was Out T A man wanted a ticket to Olathe, and had only a two dollar bill. It required 1 to get the ticket. He took the t'2 bill to a pawnahop and pawned it for $l..V). On his way to the station he met a friend to whom he sold the pawn ticket for I1..V1. That gave him $.1. Now, who's out that dollar? Kansas City Ktar. THE ABATEMENT FULLY ARGUED HENEY WAXES SARCASTIC. Court Will Announce Its Decision en Monday NeMt.-Technlcality of Defense. Oregonian, 19: The second day of argument in the Mitchell abate ment proceedings has been ended and the question has gone to Judge Bellinger for his decision, which will be announced upon the open ing of the court on Monday next. Throughout the day a . itent crowd of interested spectators and listen ers packed the little courtroom on the third floor of the Federal build ing, and in spite of the dry discus sion ot the legal niceties stood un shifting from the beginning until the close of th session. At the opening of the morning session United States District At torney Heney asked permission to introduce citations which he had overlooked the day before in sup port of his contention that the pleas in abatement had been filed too late to be of effect. The permission was given and he cited the Cob ban case, by Judge Deady, and the Agnews case in 165 United States to maintain his point. He showed that by these decisions he stood on solid ground, as in the latter case it had been held that a plea filed in six days after the return of the indictment had been filed at too late a date aud the plea should not be entertained. Attorney Bennett argued his side of the plea ot abatement, and oc cupied the whole ot the forenoon in discussing the question at issue. Senator Mitchell's attorney ar gued that the common law and not the statutes of a state governed the selection of a jury by federal courts. The common law recognized the plea ot abatement as the. proper means of testing the legality of a grand jury and upon this fact the defense based in part its claim. The defendant, argued Bennett, had the right to a trial by jury on the questions of fact as raised by the plea. The irregularity alleged in the creation of the grand jury brought out questions of fact, aud therefore the defense claimed the right to try the case by jury, and not before the court alone. It was also contended by the speaker that the court had no right to allow Peebles and Buffum to be sworn on the jury after that body had been impanncled and that this act invalidated the actions of the jury. "This case," continued Bennett, is a technical one, and involves no direct chaige of motal turpitude, other than that Senator Mitchell might have unknowingly taken money as a member of a firm for services done by that firm which were not according to the Federal law governing members to the sen ate. In those other cases we have waived all rights of demurrer, even though we thought we could over turn the indictments, and are ready and willing and waiting to go to trial. If of all these cases this pres ent one is the only one in which the government is ready to try, then it would seem that the moun tain has labored and come io the mouse." "I deny that Mr. Heney was a de facto officer or that he was right fully one. A man cannot be a clerk or an officer unless he resides in the district. The law was passed in the latter part of Grant's administration when men from New York went to the South to accept government offices with their car pet bags in their hands and their trunks In their hotels, who held office until the term expired and then left again for their former home. This was recoguized as un just, and prohibited by law. and it has been so long since the law was violated that its existence had been forgotten until this case brought it before the people again. I do not think that President Roosevelt would have appointed Mr. Heney if he had known that he was break ing the law. I do not know how Mr. Heney holds his office. Heney argued that the laws in r lation to pleas in abatement were in great confusion in the different states and that citations from state cases could be found to fit any con tention and condition. But, it was to the state courts for all of the contentions had been settled by the United States supreme court in its decision in the Porto Rican case, and this decision was in favor of the government's contention. In touching on the part ot the plea which alleged bias and non qualificaiion on the part of Mr. Heney, the speaker said: "The effect of the plea is to try me as to my bias and my residence, I hold that if the case should be tried as to whether or not I am, or was, prejudiced that it may go down into history but as an inci dent more to effect the risibles of the bar of the United States than as one to cause sober thought or con sideration. "The point is raised that I am not a resident of this district, that I am an 'alien who has come here, and that there is great danger from bias and prejudice in trying these cases. I was of the opinion that I was an American citizen, a brother American, one who holds to the democratic doctrine that when the United States took the Philippines the constitution followed the flag into the islands. And yet- it is ar gued that there is great conse quence of evil in my coming here to conduct these investigations, that I am prejudiced' against these people whom I had never . seen, whom I did not know, and who have been indicted by their neigh bors and friends. "I, an alien, should have brought my grand jury with me from Cali fornia, and here entered into secret conclave to work my spite on those whom I do not know. "It seems tome," concluded Mr. Heney, turning to Bennett aud speaking in the direction where sat the silent figure of Senator Mitchell, "it seems to me that instead of wishing an early trial and an im mediate one, as has been claimed by some oi the defendants here, there is a great desire to try out questions oi technicality rather than either guilt or innocence of the charges brought under the indict ment." Call at Cate's for your hop-wire and fertilizer. Priot.-s right. e The protect-the-birds women of Germany have formally resolved to pull the birds from the hats of wo men who wear them. We may confidently expect to hear some thing from Germany in a short time which will make us forget the war in the lar East. Galveston News, There's a lot of Satisfaction in a shoe winch after month's ot wear, needs only polish to "Look like new." You'll find comfort, ease and profit in the Hamilton-Brown Shoes your children will want something pretty and good. Come and see our School Shoes rTDH-BROWli PICNIC JAM! lLACfc 6H0E aw BBmSV mmimk jm. DEVELOPMENT LEAGUE CALLED THE OFFICIAL CALL. ,Will Meet in Portland April 26 and 1 27--TH Program an Eaoellent One--Bi Crow) . The official call for the Oregon Development league meeting in Portland April 26 aud 27, has been received. The program is an ex cellent and comprehensive one, and the meeting promises to be valu able for the best interests of the state. During the forenoon of the first day several addresses will be delivered and the afternoon will be given np to meetings of the several sections for discussion of conditions and reports to be made later to the league will be arranged. On Thursday, the second day, the sec tional reports will be placed before the convention and a number of in teresting addresses will be deliver ed. It is expected that the league convention will be the largest gath ering ot the men interested in the material progress and welfare of the state ever known in Oregon. Ex tensive preparations are being made in Portland to care for the visitors from all parts of the state in a prop er manner. A. Conan Doyle, whose new Sherlock Homes stories are just be ing brought out in laook form by McClure-Phillips, under the title, "The Return of Sherlock Holmes," has been stricken with the same malady that has so seriously affect ed Kipling and a number of other popular writers in recent years. He has gone automobile mad. His frenzy is not, however, likely to prove fatal, to himself or to others, because of the good care he is, hav ing during the first paroxysms of the disease, from his mother. Mrs. Doyle is a quiet little woman, who has been passing a sweet and peace ful old age in a vine-covered cot tage in Yorkshire. She has a fathomless admiration for her fam ous son. The successes of "Ar thur" are her life; the bread and meat of her daily conversation. When the automobile mania seized Dr. Doyle, she felt that duty called her to his side. She left her vine clad cottage and went to her son. When he wanted to take a spin in his machine, she took her courage in her hand and climbed into the front seat with him, and placed a cautioning finger upon his arm as he opened the throttle. And now the chickens, and the sheep, and the cows, of the country round live in peace, lor they know that they have nothing to fear from the snorting machine with the sweet faced, gray-haired little woman by the driver on the front seat, for No better made. No better can bo maed. Our guarantee goes with every pair. Our line of GROCERIES is the finest in the county. Everythinn usually carried by an tip-to-date Grocery Honae. Our immenae sales make it poill for us to carry strictly fresh goods. Not a shop-worn article in the establishment. JOHN DENNIS. The old Reliable Corner they will have plenty of time to get out ot the way. Cod yW ants New Trial. "Buffalo Bill" Cody has filed a motion for a new trial. Mrs. Cody was recently granted a divorce from the scout. Cody's attorney states "that our chief plea is that the women's clubs of the entire coun try were aeainst Colonel Cody and that the combined influence of these clubs so wokred on the public that sentiment in favor of Mrs. Cody was to a fever heat. Uses of Lemons. Gargle a bad sore throat with a strong solution of lemon juice and water. The juice of half a lemon in a cup of black coffee without any sugar will cute sick headache. Lemon juice and salt will remove iron rust. A strong unsweetened lemonade taken before breakfast will prevent and cure a bilious attack. Lemon juice added to milk until it curds and these curds then bound upon parts swollen with rheuma tism will bring relief. Lemon juice mixed very thick with sugar will relieve that tickling cough that is so annoying. A hot lemonade taken before go ing to bed will cure a cold on the lungs. A cloth saturated in lemon juice and bound about a cut or wound will stop its bleeding. Lemon juice added to fruit juices that do not jell readily, such as cherry, strawberry, etc., will cause them to jell. This is Repudiation. The prospective action of the A. O. U. W. of Oregon in raising the monthly assessments of the older meml)ers to a prohibitory figure and thus forcing them out of life insur ance, amounts to cold-blooded re pudiation. Whatever the excuse or whatever the necessity for the action, this fact stands unchanged. The older members of the A. O. U. W. are the men who have been the bone and sinew aud life of that order in and throughout years past. Their efforts and their money have supported the order and kept it on its feet. In consideration of the payment monthly of certain assess ments and certain dues the A. O. U. W. has issued certificates of life in surance to these members. In good faith, and in the expectation that the order would fulfill its contracts with them, these members have made their monthly payments regu larly and constantly throughout the years. Now their assessments are to be raised, without their con sent and against their protest, to a figure that will be prohibitive to nine in every ten of them. Thus they are to be forced from the or der. Thus their life insurance is to be taken from them. Thus their families are to be left without the protection of life insurance, because they are too old now to get insur ance in any other; order or in an old-line company. It is indeed a very serious step that the A. O. U. W. of Oregon is about to take. Evening Journal. ..r.llLA a a pom- ,IM;t W4 WATfH IPf rnp 1 a 1 WjYmfkj ' f iui ' Hi t 1 Made at our NEW mr) Grocery and Shoe Store