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About Hillsboro independent. (Hillsboro, Washington County, Or.) 189?-1932 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 23, 1906)
UtitoilclBocUtf 6Mrr n Ml Volume 33 JIILLSBOUO. WASHINGTON COUNT V, OREGON, FRIDAY. FKIJ. 23, l'JOU. Number 41 1 AififiPifif Rillsboro Independent. 11 Y DaW. BATH. OFFICIAL COUNTY PAPFR. ONK IXH.I.AU PKB YEAR IN ADVANCK Republican in Politic. Advkhtiminu Katss: Display, 60 cents n inch, single column, fur four Inter lions; reading notices, one cent a word each Insertion (nothing lew than IS cutii ) ; professional carl, one Inch, 1 a month ; k-J;;e ear-Is, $5 a year, pay tie quarterly, (notice! and resolutions free to advertising lodges). PROFESSIONAL CARDS. E. B. TONGUE ATTORNBYATLAW Hllltboro, Oregon. Office: Room i 3. 4 and 6. Morgan BIk W. N. BARRETT ATTORNEY-AT LAW Hlllsboro, Oregon. Office: Central Block, Rooms I tad 7. BENTON BOWMAN ATTORNEY-AT LAW Hllltboro, Oregon. Office, in Union ltlk.. with H. B. Huston THOS. II. TONGUli JR. ATTORN KY-AT-LAW NOTARY PUBLIC JAiie : hooms 6, 4 and 5, Morgan BlocR Hlllsboro, Oregon. 8. T. LINKLATER. M. B. C. M. PHYSICIAN AND 8UROEON. Hllltboro, Oregon. Office, upntairs, over The Ielta Drug Store. (Mice hourt 8 to 12 J 1 to 6, ami In the evening from 7 to 9 o'clock. J. P. TAMIESIE, M. D. 8. P. R. R. SURGEON Hllltboro, Oregon. Rnldenrr corner Third sod Main; ofllee op (tain over Delta dru slors; hours, s.auto Wa. 1 to & slid 7 to p. m. Telephone to residence from Itflla drug nthre. All cslls promptly ans wered dejr or uixhl. F. A. BAILEY, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND 8URGEONJ Hllltboro, Oregon. Office: Morgan-Bailey block. Bp atalrt, roomt 13. 13 and IS. Reeldence 8. W. cor. Bate Line and Second ata. Both 'phonee. F. J. BAILEY, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND BURQEON Hllltboro, Oregon, Office: Morgan-Bailey block, up stairs with K. A. Bailey. Residence, N. E. corner Third and Osk sU. A. B. BAILEY, M. IX. PUYSICIAN AND SURGEON, llillsboro, Oregon. Offimont Halley's Kruf Store. Office hours from .: to li; t:uu to , end 7 to t. Hesldenoe third house north of oltr eleotrlo Usui plaut. fall, promptly attended day or Blunt. Both 'phones. ipO-H MARK B. BUMl', ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Notary Public aud Collections. HILLSHOKO, ORK. Tree Delivery Of the Iwst Fish, Game and Meats. Our delivery is prompt and in all parts of llillsboro. We have itiaugerated a new Schedule in Prices and this together with our de livery system makes this llills boro' s popular market. Housley J-Corwln, Announcement, Having purchased the Central! Meat (viaritci, hc i.-u ij to former patrons and the public, that we have established a free de livery and have reduced the prices on all meats. For the best cuts and best service possible we res pectfully solicit your patronage. EMMOTT BROS. DR. A. A. BURRIS, jVIagnetic Osteopath, Hills boro, Oregon Diseases cured without drugs or stir eery by magnetic osteopathy, the new science of drngless healing. Consulta tion free. Ollu-e over the bakery. ran Contracto m in m I am prepared to furnish plans and specifications and estimate on all kinds of buildings. Now is the time to get ye- fad? frr the building season. Thirty years ex perience; satisfaction guaran teed. S. M. HOLLAND, II ILLS BORO, OREGON. Between ad and 3d St., on Edson ROPE NECKTIES FOR ALL OF THEM DYNAMITERS MUST HANG. Outragee in Colorado at an En, Says Detective MeParlene).. Mere Arrests to Follow. Denver, Colo., Feb, 19. Hey wood, Moyer and Pettibone will never see Colorado again," says James McParland, head of the de tective aeeney employed by the State of Idaho to run down the mur derers of ex-Governor Steunenberg, "Their days are numbered. We have absolute evidence that will convict them of complicity in the foul assassination of ex-Governor Steunenberg and evidence that will convict a great many others too, of the same offense. They cannot escape in any possi ble way, and the legal knowledge of all their attorneys cannot keep them from the gallows. You can say for me that the day of dynamite outrages in the West is at an end. Ileywood, Moyer and others know that they are guilty, and they know that their time has come. The Steunenberg assassination was the final straw that broke the camel's back and was their undoing. "But it is no worse than the In dependence outrage, the murder of. Collins in Telluride, the blowing up of the Smuggler-Union mine, the Vindicator killing, the Stewart assault or the many other crimes for which they were responsible," J continued McParland this morning in the denunciation of the three men. "The anarchists at the head of the Western Federation of Miners will never trouble this state again. We got Vincent St. John in Burke, Idaho, last night. He has been there under the clumsy dis guise of John Vincent ever since he left this state. He will be prose cuted with the others. There will be a great many surprises to the people of this state before this case is ended and all the arrests have been made. 'I cannot state how many more will be taken into custody, or where these arrests will be made, but there will be enough of them before this case ends. "I was employed by the State of Idaho, not by the mlneowners, to run down the Steunenberg case. I went to work January 10, alter Orchard had been arrested, and I did not cease mv labors until last week. The evidence against all of these men is so strong that they cannot possibly escape punishment this time." Get a,ooo Each. The Southern Pacific' Company has compromised with the execu tors of the estates of Conrad Heine man and Henry Martin, who were killed below Carlton last month while returning from work on the "sink" near that place. Heineman and Martin, together with four oth er section men, were on a hand car when they collided with an en gine, killing both the men. The heirs of each have been paid $2,000 by the company. To Divide the County. A big mass meeting was held last Saturday afternoon at Hood River to take action on the proposal to divide Wasco county with a county seat at Hood River. The meeting was unanimously in favor of the county division and indorsed A. A. Jayne for nomination for represen tative to present the bill, if elected. Two proposals were before the meet ing looking to the creation of the new county. One is that the boun dary line be out between Mosier and The Dalles, and the other that it be placed this side ot The Dalles and extended down to the Big Sandy river in.Multnomah county. k 1 nil li Cood looks brings happiness. Friends care more for us when we meet them with a clean, smiling face, bright eyes sparkling with health, which comes by taking Hoi lister's Rocky Mountain Tea. 33 cents at all dtug stores. The Independent and The Portland Daily Telegram one year for IV Tillamook Means In tineas. A meeting ot the citiens of Til lamook and surrounding country was held last Saturday. The ob ject of the gathering was to discuss plans looking to the securing a railroad for the town and section ot that country. A company was formed having for its object the pur chasing of a right of way, to be do nated to the first railroad building into Tillamook. Eighty-seven shares of COtupauV atOCk Of iui Veil ue of 500 each were subscribed for that purpose by citizens present at the meeting. Save Yonr Rosebushes. If rosegrowers will follow explic itly the ditections for spraying em bodied in a bulletin just issued by the Oregon State Board of Horticul ture, they can eradicate the San Jose scale and other pests from the bushes. In view of the warning that roses will soon cease to bloom unless the San Jose scale is de stroyed, growers should follow the following formula for destroying pests on roses. For mildew, dissolve one ounce of potassium sulphide in two or thee gallons of water. For leaf spot, use three pounds of copper sulphate (blue vitriol), three pounds of lime (unslaked) and 50 gallons of water. Dissolve the cop' per in hot or com water, using a wooden or earthen vessel. Slake the lime in a tub, adding water cautiously and only in sufficient amount to insure thorough slaking. After thoroughly slaking more water can be added and stirred un til it has the consistency of thick cream. When both are cola, pour the lime into the diluted copper so lution of required strength, strain ing it through a fine-mesh sieve or gunny cloth and thoroughly mix. It is then ready for use. Care should be taken that the lime is of good quality and well burned, and has not been air slaked. Chewing and biting insects can be destroyed by a spray composed of four ounces of arsenate of soda and 12 ounces of acetate of lead. Dissolve in water in separate buck ets, pour together, and you have sufficient arsenate of lead for 50 gal lons of water. Then pour the ar senate into the water and stir well. This is also a splendid spray for the destructive codlin moth. For scale use a spray consisting ot 15 pounds of unslaked lime, 15 pounds of flowers of sulphur and 50 gallons of water. Slake lime in enough water to do it thoroughly and add the sulphur. Boil for half an hour at least, adding water if necessary. Spray warm through a coarse nozzle. There are black sheep in all cal lings, including the ministry, and they flourish most where least known. People should be very careful how they take up with slick tongued strangers. This town and every other in the state has at some time found out the folly of placing too much confidence in unknown persons. Treat all strangers cour teously but don't be hasty in taking up with such as might ure decep tion, Ex. W. A. Cox Resigns. W. A. Cox, general agent for the Chicago & Northwestern, has ten dered his resignation, to become ef fective March 1. He will leave Portland with his family on Febru ary 26, for Baltimore, Md., where he has accepted the position of gen eral agent for the Western Marv. land. Mr. Cox has been with the North western for the past eleven years, entering the service of that road at Cincinnati. He came to Portland about one year ago from Philadel phia, where he was general agent for the company. While he has been in Portland Mr. Cox has made many friends, and is one ot the most popular men on the railroad now. His new position will be a promo tion, and Portland railroad men are congratulating him and wishing him all kinds of good fortune in his work with the new company. Ore gonian. Methusala was all right, you bet For a good old soul was he, They say he would be living yet, Had he Ukea Rocky Mountain Tea. All Drug btores. JUDGE M'BRIOE SUSTAINED CITY CAN'T GRANT LICENSE. Forest Grove Can't Grant a Lloense to Sell Liquor, Says the Susreme Court. C1 s, Feb. 20. The legislature never authorized the city counci of Forest Grove to grant a liquor license." Such is the decision of the su preme court today in the now fa mous case of the president and trus tees of Tualatin Academy and Pad fic University against C. N. John' son, mayor of Forest Grove, et al, The higher court affirms the judgment of Judge T. A. McBride in the circuit court of Washington county, from which the city had appealed, Judge Hailey rendering the opinion. In this case the college author! ties sought to restrain the mayor and city council of Forest Grove from granting a saloon license to Albert G. Watson, ou the ground that the city council had no auth ority to issue the license. The de murrer of the city to the complaint was overruled in the lower court and the appeal was taken from this ruling. At the thirty eighth annual con vention of the National American Woman Suffrage Association in session in Baltimore, Md.. Mrs Henry Waldo Coe, president ot the Oregon Equal Suffrage Association mad a report of the campaign for equal suffrage in this state, of which the following is an abstract "Bv virtue of the initiative and referendum law of Oregon an amendment must be submitted to the constitution when 8 per cent of the voters petition for it. There fore, in order to &.cure the submis sion of a suffrage amendment, it re quired the signature of 7,489 regis tered voters. At the close of the National Convention in July about 1,000 of these named had been se cured. The total number of names secured was more than 12,000; the number accepted by the secretary of state, was 9.904; giving a mar gin of 2,415 more than the law re quired. The law provides that the associa tion filing a petition may accompany it with an argument in its favor, and that an association or individ ual opposed, may likewise file a document, and that if both are filed they shall be bound with a copy of of the amendment, by the secretary of state, and placed in the hands of each county clerk who shall see that a copy is given to each voter as he registers. The pro-suffrage argument, which is a masterful pres entation of logic, fact and philoso phic insight, all in 2,000 words, was written by Miss Laughlin and accepted and indorsed by the board of officers of the State Equal Asso ciation as their official document. Oue hundred thousand copies of it has been filed with the secretary of state and will be sent out by him March 1st; 20,000 extra copies of the argument have been printed for general distribution. On Labor Day a great celebration was held in Portland and three popular speakers, Mrs. Lucia F. Additon, president of the Oregon W. C. T. U., Hon. Avery C. Moore, of Idaho, and Mr. James C. Keller, of Cleveland, Ohio, presi dent of the National Letter Carrier's Convention assembled in Portland and a special invitation was sent to the suffragists, which was gladly acceded. Miss Clay represented a resolution which was indorsed al most unanimously. Indorsement has also been asked of numerous local and county granges, and in not a single in stance has it been refused. This organization with its 5,000 members will be a tower of strength in the campaign. The State Federation of Woman's Clubs, which hitherto has stood non-committal on the suffrage question, came out this year with a ringing resolution re commending the study of the ques tion to club9, and pledging the dele gates to the earnest support of the movement. The resolution was of fered by Mrs. Abigail Scott Duni- way, the pioneer champion of woman suffrage in Oregon, and af ter a brilliant address by Mrs. Duniway, was passed without a dis senting vote. At the same time the state convention of the W. C. T. U. was in session, the most cor dial courtesies were extended toonr national auditor, Miss Clay, and an equally strong resolution ofindorse- ment was passed. The Sacajawea Association also endorsed woman suffrage unani 1.. 11. a a uuuiy. me niga schools are taking up the suffrage question for debate, and the calls upon the head- quarters for literature are constant ly increasing. The governor ot Oregon has re cently emphasized his belief in equal rights by appointing Mrs. Clara Waldo, regent of the State Agricul tural College. Mrs. Waldo is the state lecturer for the Grange. The Equal suffrage Association has trebled its membership within the year and new members are add' ed every week. Others who op . a. posea us in the last campaign are quiet now, saying it is no use to fight suffrage longer for it is the Woman's hour in Oregon." We are therefore pressing for ward in the firm belief that Oregon will send its delegates to the next convention holding aloft the fifth star upon the suffrage flag." What Next? . a s wun our modern inventions we are enabled to speak to distant friends and though they have passed the great divide we cau bear their familiar voices in the phonograph We can see the minutest particles of matter and the most distant star, we can weigh an atom of matter and compute the weight of the largest planet. But the latest and greatest in importance to man is the recent discovery of the nature, properties, function and destiny of the human soul. Dr. J. Ewert Bartel, an unpre tentious physician, is the discoverer, and he has found means to actually demonstrate the presence of the soul. This discovery bids fair to revolutionize some ot the religious views ot the world, since the real nature and offices ot the soul are unknown today. Being unknown, how is it possible to teach regarding it? Dr. Bartel's views are coincided in by some of the greatest author ities on the science ot the soul. Hear him at the Crescent Theatre next Monday, Tuesday and Wed nesday nights. Tree Spray. When you want tree spray, take your can to W. O. Dopelson's. He has it by the barrel. Positively kills San Jose cale, and every other pest usually found on fruit trees, roe bushes, etc. There's a lot of Satisfaction in a shoe which wear, needs only like new." You'll ease and profit in Hamilton-Brown Shoes your children will want something pretty and good. Come and see our School Shoes Ohm ui& PICNIC LLACfc SH0E Cc3J WILL COST $1250 AND IS VOID THE ANTI-PASS BILL. Trie Supreme Court Will Have to Pass an It After the Law Has Been EnaotesJ. Salem, Feb., 20. It will cost the state more than $1250 to publish the governor's proclamation for the anti-pass bill, and to print 100,000 copies for distribution. The bill is void on its face tor want of an en . e . a . a acting clause, neither the governor nor secretary of state will undertake to decline to do what is necessary to submit the bill to a vote of the people, because the measure comes to them with all the requirements of the constitution and the law com plied with. The officials say it is not for them to pass on the legal ity of the proposed law. The only authority in the state that can deal with this proposed law is the supreme court, and the court cannot act until after the law has been enacted and the question as to its constitutionality has been raised. Let us be reasonable about the hop industry. It brings millions to Oregon and distributes most of it among working people and their families. During the hop picking season all are employed and all kinds of business gets the benefit. Let each citizen have his own views about religion, morals and politics, but let us not foolishly strike down industries on which the general prosperity depends, when we would not accomplish the destruction of the liquor business or take away any man s appetite for drink. Let us all be sober and vigilant and right-minded in our religious opin 10ns, and let us not condemn and seek to drive - off the face of the earth those who differ from us in habits or opinions or occupations. Surely the Lord in his goodness sends his rain on the just and the unjust, and the Good Book admou ishes us to judge no man after the flesh. Hold no man in condemna tion. Let us live and let live, and in the end we will have the confi dence and good will of our neigh bors, whether they are just as good and moral as we are and we will be able to have some influence with them for good in matters that are important. Salem Capital. Dr. Osburn Dead. Sherwood. Or.. Feb., 20 Dr. C. D. Osburn, a well-known physician and druggist of Wilsonville, died last night about 10 o'clock from heart affection and gastritis. He had been subject to periodic spells of faintness and pains in the region of the heart, and did not anticipate after month's ot polish to "Look find comfort, the Shoe.. No better made. No better can be made. Our guarantee goes with every pair. Our line of GROCERIES is the finest in the county. Everything usually carried hy aa p-to-!ate Grocery House. Our imraeone sales maks it possible for as to carry strictly Ireeli got Is. Not a shop-worn article ia the establish meat. JOHN DENNIS. Tho old Reliable Corner Grocery and Sloe Store anything of a serious natnre. Hence medical assistance was de layed until too late, if of any possi ble avail under such conditions. Dr. Osburn practiced medicine and conducted a drug store in Portland several years, removing to Wilson ville five years ago. He was a graduate of Jefferson Medical Col lege of the class of 1 836. A widow survives him. A fond mother in despair of breaking her little boy of swearing, at last threatened that the next time he used a bad word she would banish him from home. The very next day he exploded a big D. "I am very sorry, Thomas," said the mother, "but I have never brok en my word to you, so now you must leave home." "The nurse was instructed to pack Thomas' little toy suit-case, and he without a whimper, kissed his mother good-bye and departed. Quite a way off Thomas set his burden on the ground, and perched solemnly ou the curb, chin in hand. , fell into deep thought. The spec tacle was too much for the fond mother, who was watching him from a distance. Very quietly she started down the street and tiptoed up behind Master Thomas. As she was hov ering on the point of surprising him with a kiss, a pompous old gentlt man appeared. "Child," he said, "will you hum tell me where Mr. Franklin lives?" Thomas raised his solemn brown eyes and regarding the old gentle man coldly, replied: "You go to , I have troubles of my own." Harper's Weekly. For Sale or Trade. Grocery store and residence for tale for each, or might exchange for farm. For further particulars call on or ad droits J. A. Mesiinger, llillsboro, Ur. No Action Taken. Washington, Feb., 20. Solicitor General Hoyt did not return to Washington today, as expected, hence no action was taken on the Bristol case, which is still before the department of Justice. The ur gent deficiency bill carries $5000 for the widow of the late Senator Mitchell. The Independent and The Portiand Saturday Telegram one year for 'J. Roseburg Spokesman: The di rect primary law is confusing to the wily politician. He is like a ship at sea without a compass. He can not find his bearings. His voca tion is gone. He is doomed to plod along in the even tenor of his way or else go to work and earn an honest living. He may roar and rant, and scheme and plan, but all to no effect. A higher power has obtained control and he must retire into a state of innocuous desetude." New York state had 40 degrees below last week. "umrfn's. rj""- v. H