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About Hillsboro independent. (Hillsboro, Washington County, Or.) 189?-1932 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 30, 1906)
1J HILLSIiOKO. WASHINGTON COUNTV, OREGON, FRIDAY. NOV. 30, 1000. Volume 31 Number 20 fiilkboro Independent. CIRCUIT COURT IRVING BATH. Fuiususa. PROCEEDINGS OFFICIAL COUNT V PAPER. OH1C DOLLAK J KB YKA RIM ADVANCE I Republican in Politics. ioviBTisisa Katks: Dixplay, 60 cent a inch, single column, for four Inser Uoni ; reading notices, one cent a word ich Insertion (nothing Icm than IS cent) ; profeasional carlit, one luch, $1 a inonili ; lodga cards, 5 a year, pay 'COURT OPENED MONDAY. Large Nnmtr( Cim Disposed of Ceyrt Adourna to Monday fos Thanksgiving. TLa Circuit Court for Washington count rnnvitnn.1 lust MondsV morning. llo quarterly, (notice and resolution JuJ ThotnM A. Mc Bride presiding. Tba following caaei were disposed of up to Wednesday averting, when court ad journed to next Monday morning to give everybody an opportunity to eat Thanks- giving turkey and plenty of time to re cuperate after the feast. The following juror were excused for the term : E. A. Eddy, V. K. Newell, Aloia Bcimrohr, Francis Gnstio, Charles K. Adam, R. M. Kyle, W. J. Wiaroer, J. llartweigher, Martin Keiling, Adam Ilergert Jr., John K. Bailey, Win. A. Clapp, John M. OverholUer. All other jur or were excused until Monday, Incum ber 3, at 10 o'clock a. ui. Jonea vs. Jones, continued. Graves vs. Graves, continued. T. A. A P. U. vs. Miller, et for Decem ber 6. T. A. A P. U. v. Wagner, set for De cember 7. free to advertising lodges). PROFESSIONAL CARDS. E. B. TONGUE ATTORNEY-AT LAW Hlllsboro, Oregon. Office: Rooms 8. 4 and 6. Morgan Blk W. N. BARRETT ATTORNEY-AT LAW Hlllaboro, Oregon. Office: Central Block, Rooms and 7. BENTON BOWMAN ATTORNEY-AT LAW Hlllaboro, Oregon. Otllce, In Union 111k.. with H. B. Huston THOS. II. TONGUU JR. ATTOKNKY-AT-LAW NOTARY PUBLIC .Mice i Rooms i, 4 and 5, Moritan Block Hlllaboro, Oregon. S. T. LINKLATER. M. B. C. M. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Hlllsboro, Oregon. Office, upstairs, over The Delta Drug Store. Office hours 8 to 12 ; 1 to 6, and In the evening from 7 to 9 o'clock. J. P. TAMIESIE, M. D. 8. P. R. R. SURGEON Hlllaboro, Oregon. Raaldanr. corner Ttilrd nj Main; omoa op ....i.- .i ... ........ I...... m !bi I'J m I IVliriUTir ifituiy ' .. - I M 6 auil T ( p. ui. Ti'laphoue to rrauleut. rrom iwua urns antra, ah van warau u.j ui u h ii . O. A C. II. II. Co. vs. L. J. Schaeffer et al., order to amend complaint ;delault and decree. State vs. Chat. Larsen, return not a true bill ; defendant dismissed. KsUte of Wui. Porter, order to tell real estate. Bledsoe vs. Bledsoe, default and re ferred to Hunyon. State vs. Chas. Briggs, information filed charging assault with a dangerous weapon, waives time and pleads guilty. Sentenced to four years in the peniteoti ary, but sentence is suspended upon the express promise that defendant abstains from the use of liquor. IliWnia Havings Bank vs. James O'Heil'.y, ditmiisxed. Lincoln vs. Lincoln, delault. Every hearty laugh tends to prolong life, a it makes the blood flow more rap idly and gives a new and different stim ulus to all the organs of the body from what la in force at the other time. The laying, "I-augh and grow fat," has there fore, a foundation in fact. i ! a a t Cant. William II. McKittrick. son-in- law of the late Gen. William U. Shatter. has filed a petition in the superior court for letter testamentary in the estate of the deceased general. The petition states that no will of Gen. Shatter ha been found and property at f 15,000 ia named. Mrs. W. E. llotchkiae, a probation offi cer in Chicago, says that the wealthy do lot go about helping the poor children In the right way. The boys, she said, need clubs and playgrounds to break up the 'gang into which they form themselves ucb clubs as the Y. M" C. A. have they can not afford to attend, but they need them more than da the young men who can afford it. BOYS AND GIRLS REMEMBERED LITTLE FOLKS MADE HAPPY. Hlllsbere Psse'a Sand Good Things to the Bars and Girls Aid So. eletvl" Portland. The child r. a of the Buy d Girls Aid Society at Portland were remembered this Thank giving I" very mbatantial way, and our citizen who tent their gift will be pleased to know that the management of the home are very grate ful for the kindly offerings, as are the little people for who lnefit they were sent. All these g'i Unrigs were pack ed by the tefchers and pupil of the public schools stm by them sent into Portland, the Southern Pacific making no charge for trunNrtation. Follow ing is a list of the article sunt from here last Saturday : One doxen glanes of jelly. One hundred quarto canned fruit. Four tack of potato?. Fifty pounds dried prunes. Eighteen can vegetables. Eight large pumpkin. One dozen cablutge. One sack popcorn. One sack of carrots and beets. One sack onion. Ten pounds beans. One barrel spiles. One box apples. Crackers, sugar, oatmeal, honey, soap. Child's coat. Eighty cents In money. !ig enough to insert the finger and thumb. Now draw the turkey, taking care not to break the gall. Turn the fowl over again and cut away the oil bag, a tiny gland that lie right over the tail. Few people know of it exiiitance, and it often spoils the flavor of a fine bird if not removed. The turkey should then be washed again and is ready for the dress ing. Drop in and look at the hoh lay goods now being received almost daily by Mrs. Pillsbury. Do your Christinas shopping early before the good are picked over. One of the most hopeful sign of the times is the changing attitude of the lumbermen toward the science of for estry as fostered by the federal govern ment. They are brgiuning to see that their indiiHtry is doomed to an early ex tinction unless the wastage is checked and the forest is renewed for future generations. And more than this, un less the forest are preserved vast tracts of fertile and prosperous America will become desert in the next century. This is a lesson taught by such countries as Tunis, now a part of the African desert, which in old times was a smiling and populous garden. An Arab chronic ler relates that "in those days one could walk from Tunis to Tripoli in the shade." The Arab conquest destroyed the forest, and the desert swept over the face of the laud. Maxwell's Tallesman. First class line of Boy's ami Men's heavy work shoe. Will stand all kinds of wear and tear. J. C. Greer. CITY TICKET NOMINATED ELECTION NEXT MONDAY. No Change In the Head of the Ticket CarUleand Schulmerich New Names for City Honors. Mrs. Pillsbury is showing a nice line of ladies' high grade leather hand-bugs at tempting prices. Just the thing for a Chrlstmat gift. Just arrived, a new lot of hanging and tand lamps at R. II. Greer's. A large crowd filled city hall last Tues day evening, pursuant to a call for the nomination of city officers to be voted for next Monday. . The meeting was called to order by Mayor Cornelius, who was nominated for chairman, and I.. A. 1-ong named as secretary. Win. Nelson moved that all nominations tie by ballot and that it takes a majority to elect. Dr. F. J. Bui ley and II. T. Bagley were spMiinted tel lers. L. A. Long nominated B. P. Cor nelius to succeed himself as mayor and his nomination was made unanimous. It. T. Bagley nominate I F. C. lUUard for the council; Joe Downs named A. M. Carlile; L. A. Long nominated Ed. Schulmerich, and Mr. Schulmerich put the name of I A. Rood in nomination, all (or the council. Mr. Rood declined. II. T. Bagley moved that the nomina tions be raado unanimous. Curried. II. T. Bagley was nominated for city record er by acclamation. For city treasurer A. C. Shute and E C. Brown were put in nomination. The vote resulted as follows: Shute, 44; Brown, 14. L. A. Long and D. W. Bath were ap pointed to have tickets printed, and L. A. Long, D. W. Bath and Dr. F. J. Bui- fey were named as a committee to fill any vacancy that might occur, and to se lect candidates to fill such vacancy. No further business the meeting adjourned. The Homestead law of 1!2, signed by Abraham Lincoln, and the National Ir rigation law of 1902, sinned by Theodore Roosevelt, each bad for ita inspiration the purpose of dividing the land in small tracts among the people. The one has been jmrverted by trickery and dishonesty into an instrument for creat ing great estates and barring the borne muker from the land. The other, as it now stands, is invulnerable to those who would use it for such purposes. In no way can it be manipulated in the in terest of inordinate land hunger or monopoly. Hence the incessant attacks made upon its revenues and upon the work of the Reclamation Service, in the hoe of so embarrassing or crippling it that private"seculators may absorb the opportunities now held open to the many. Even more than the Homestead Act is the National Irrigation Act "The Poor Man's Law." Kept in force, it will forever maintain the subdivision of all irrigated areas into small holdings; whereas farms acquired under the Home stead law may in a short time bo ab sorlied in uumber into single holdings. But a man may acquire wealth on an irrigated farm of 100, 80, 40 and even 10 acres. One of the felicities of the sys tem is that it is teaching thousand of people tliut a small tract, irrigated and intensively cultivated, pays better than the big farm under old-fashioned meth ods. Maxwell's Tallesman. Wanted Man and wife to work on or rent a ranch, beginning November 15th. For further particulars inquire of Attorney M. B. Bump, llillsboro, Ore. F. A. BAILEY, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Hlllsboro, Oregon. Office: Morgan-Bailey block, up stairs, rooms 13 and 15. Residence a. w. cor. Baa Line ana necona sis. Both 'phones. v F. J. BAILEY, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Hlllaboro, Oregon. Office: Morgan-Bailey block, up atatrs with F. A. Bailey. Reeldence. N. K. corner Third and Oak sU. A. B. BAIUSY, M. D., PUYSICIAN AMI SURGEON, llillsboro, Oregon. Olflosover Hattry'a lrug Htors. Offlos bourt fruiu .) U U; :uu lot, ami 1 lo I, Kealdenoa I bird bonne north nf ally eleoinu lUhl plant. Call, promptly auautlvd ilar or uilit. Hoia phonsa. aspliW-Ot MARK B. BUMP, ATTORN KY-AT-LAW. Notary Public and Collections. HILLS BURO, ORK. Tree Delivery Of the lst Fish, Game and Meats. Our delivery is prompt and in all parts of IIiilsloro. We have inaugerated a new Schedule in Prices and this together with our de livery system makes this llills boro' s popular market. Corwin & Heidel. Announcement. Having purchased the Central Meat Market, we wish to announce 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 patrouage. EMM0TT BROS. KURATLI BROS. Uorokl Estate AND AUCTIONEER. Residence 4th and Oak Sts., llillsboro Money to Loan. Jlem IVIeat Jlarket I S. J. GAI10WAT, Proprietor. aa.. aa A..eMSMskSSasttKB KaMt Itsall I ha. mat t affords Ita. loo ll!n prtr. .11 p "r..L -k.m intir OK tt will t da IV. .nawhara la lh. tnj Umlu. rinmi . la arMCiallJ aolii-itad. Utn St., recond Poor West of Har- trampfe Feed More. iht HM 1M " Ml iM . SPOT. SS- BY eJ.A.eDGCRTON Jv rf, -r- amn wfcl' 1 MC-" ' ,t il0rf ... rV . i. ... aw SMrfl.wL. - - i in aa.j T. A.&P.U.ts. Hallett.sct for Decem ber 10. Miller vs. Hart, dismissed. Foote vs. Sew ell, dismissed. Baseline Lumber Co. vs. Bernard, dis missed. Ward vs. Aleiander, dismissed. Newton vs.FitiizcralJ, confirmation. P. R. A N. By. Co. s. Dooley, dis missed. Shute vs. Hawthorne, order allowing plaintiff to withdraw papers from the files. Oster vs. Outer, dismissed. Crop vs. Crop, dismissed. Beamis v. Beamia, dismissed. Hannon vs. Ornduff, dismissed. Fowler vs. Fowler, default and referred to Runyon. Roberts vs. Roberts, default and re ferred to Runyon. Stream vs. Dethlefs, set for December S. Luther vs. Tompkins, demurrer argue.) and plaintiff allowed to file amended complaint. Klgervi. Hughes, defendant allowed to amend answer. Three days given diatrict attorney to file Information In state cases where de fenders have been held to answer, on motion of K. B. Tongue, deputy district attorney. State vs. Joseph Holdrn, pleads guilty ; sentence suspended during good behav ior. Haynle vs. Hartratupf, motion over ruled. Geo. Miller vs. J. W. Shute et al., de fendants given until December 1st to ap pear In this case. Pruseer State Bank vs. Kindt, set for December 8. 1 lereaftir the "opened by mistake" ex cuse will be a niixtake that will cost $200. The pontolRce department has ruled that mail must lie looked over before leaving the office, and that any letter put in your box by mistake must be returued before leaving the potttoflice under a penalty of f 200 for failure to do so. The free seed distribution by the gov ernment costs $2(2,000 a year, besides the coot of handling in the mails, which costs about as much more, or half a mil linn dollar a year, total. This sum of money wisely uej would teach farmers the correct plan to market and build the machine fjr marketing, which will com pel a profitable price for every farm crop grown anywhere in the country. The machine once built will not cost the farm ers anything directly to run it, but will pay great dividend every year. Up-to-Date Farming. The readers of a newspaper should make it a point to patronixe ita advertis ers, for if it were not for their patronage the subscription price would have to be doubled in order to afford the publishers any prollt. Moreover, those who are not afraid to advertise their wares liber ally must have faith in their value, and the buver can be reasonably certain of getting a good article. The rule of shrewd advertisers is first, to be sure you have a b.k1 article, then advertise liber ally. hi. Tore Buckwheat Flour and Toboggan Maple Syrup for pancakes at R. II Greer's. After hor-picking if you are going to purchase a watch you will find a good assortment at living price. E. L. McCormick's Jewelry Store. Since to be without turkey on Thank giving Is to fail to pay proper respect to the great American festival, it behooves the good housewile to be well up In tur key lore ; for there are turkeys and tur keys, some as Juicy and tender as a spring chicken, while others also remain warriors of the barnyard to the bitter end and are as tough and stringy and well nigh aa hard to swallow as India rubber. To bavs the turkey tender and delicious on Thnkgiving day, '-first catch your hare;" in other words, first select a good bird at the market, and then see that it i cooked and basted properly. It Is the best plan to shop for the feast at least two days beforehand, for if one wait until the day before all the best birds will be picked out and on ly the tougher lowls will be left. A y jung turkey shoaM have smooth, black leg and a white ikin, and should weigh at least 12 poamli to be juicy and of good flavor. Very scaly, rough legs Indicate age, as do also leg that are bard, for a young fowl' fct and legs should be pliatile. Another good way to pick out a young tukey i 10 examine the spur, or, rather, th place where the spur grow. A year-old turkey baa no spurs, but on.y a flat knb at that place. A turkey has a spur between a quarter and half an inch lo is a last year's fowl, and one with a Mr developed spur Is over 2 years oU. To prepare the bird, first singe it thoroughly over a saucerful of burning alcohol, then bold It under the faucet and wipe dry. Tbeo make a gash down the turkey's neck, cutting to the bone; lolJlh skin back over the breast and lift out the crop carefully Then turn the turkey on Its back and make a cut at the end of the breastbone There's a lot of Satisfaction in a shoo which after month's ot wear, neeils only iolish to "Look like new." You 11 find comfort, caao and profit in the Hamilton-Brown Shoes your children will want something pretty and goou. Come and see our School Shoes ar 'V. ?A'.ail)N-BluTW! lj j ism'. . j a No better made. .No better can bo made. Our guarantee goes with every pair. m -aaaaaaa-a......aSalSlSlSlSMialalalalalalaalaMaaaataMaiaa M?.,,,,,,,aaaaaMMillllllMilSaiaalaaataMiWMaaS Our line of GROCERIES is the finest in the county. F .. tiinir nsuallv carried b aa eiMo-date Grocery I loose. On immense sale- mska it possible lor as to carry strictly lreeb goods Not a shop-worn article in the eetablisbmeat. TOHN DENNIS. The old Reliable Corner Grocery and Shoe Store i