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About Hillsboro independent. (Hillsboro, Washington County, Or.) 189?-1932 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1907)
Ulllsboro Independent. D. .?. BATH. Editor and Proprietor. SSSSS) I 1 I I 1 l II 1 I 11 If II 1 I . P4 1 J ! a " J 1 U 4 ' II II M D. M. C. Gault, formerly of ttiii city bat now publisher o( the Western Ore goo at Cottage Grove, was among tbe newspaper Luuch at the Taft nitwtin last FrUay niuht. II carried a "re- erred" seat ticket, but stood up la tli pit with the reet of the sufferer!. II was not laying much, but bit thought! would fill book and none of them were very complimentary to either Kicbard on or Wilcox. Mr. Gault, who it in ill Leeltb, accompanied her husband Portland, and will remain several weeks for treatment. William Randolph Hearst is being groomel by the "Interests" fur nomina tion for the iresliJeucv. He ia devot ing bit yt ilow aheeta all over the coun try to laying wordi ol praise lor men of wealth, and tiny will put up a cam iaitn fund of tlO.OuO.000 In their at tempt to land Llu. It it getting quite fashionable f'r nun who have ti ere to- fore wuvel thu populistie rla and ynllea against the aJtninlstriUion to make l grab for the ivpubluNin baud wagon. The ruling U easier and a good deal ' er, but thcit tacticts will uvt win. The Cliff House, one of San Francis- co't first attractions to tourists, burned to tie ground last Saturday evening. The loss it said to be :0.000, with :1S-, OIK) iniurance. The structure was built twelve yeart ago, was known from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and ha been viaited by thousand! of tourists. The origin of the lire it a mystery. The i'liff House waa ranked at one of the best-known resorts ul America. IxK-at- ed on a rocky promontory beyond the Golden (iate, directly above the lashing wave of the Pacific oceiin, ami affordin a close view of the seals distorting on the rockt near shore, and from its broad porches hundred of thousand of eo ple ohtaintxl their first view of the mighty water. The magniliclent Sutro Hatha, near by, were not damaged. With the state legislature bucking the newspaper business in Oregon and the United State postollice department competing with every job printer In the United State, it begin to look a thouiih protection ouu-lit to lie the watchword of publisher of country newspaper everywhere. An exchange ha this to tay : Postmaster General Mev'er will ask congress, at the next session to provide for a 10-pound parcel post and the pos tal laving bank. The government might a well take in everything else every postmaster In the Union ia now a eolicitor for job printing, "to keep up personal lalurie," at the expentn of lo cal job printing ollices, aided by the free delivery system of the POD establishment. T. B. Wilcox, president of the Oregon DeveloDtaont League, and Tom Kicn ardson, secretary, are entitled to the sincere and everlasting thankt of tome hundred or more Washington county re publican for courtesies extended at the Taft meetina held In Portland lasi rn davniaht. Thirty reeerved teat ticket were iued to lllllboro people and twenty to reeident of Forest Grove, and a many more to other along the line. When the reserved atat ticket holder reached the Armory and preaented the bit of cardboard they wero told by the cigarette aoldier In attendance to "fad away," and go to th pit or out-of-door. It wa certainly very poor management on the pvt of those having th meeting i in charire. and an insult w peopie had traveled twenty and thirty milea on a special train to meet and bear the Secretary of War. But Washington county wa not alone in the nub. Per eon from Eeatern Oregon itood in the i.M waving reserved seat ticket in th air and laying real nice and couipleiuen- tarv things about Wilcox and Kiciiaru ... . . .i .i ... :.. son. Jl is ai w aay i" Portland want a crowd from the coun- .... itl try it will not be aafetoiieue "reserveu seat tickets. We all prefer to go-as-you- please, and take our chances in securing eat, we observed mat wuue bolder aud the "Portland hog found no difficulty in getting seat. Thirteen dollar pea month U mighty mall pay for an able-bodied man, yet that i the pay Uncle Sam' private are getting and have been getting for year. Many of the meo -re educated, nne civ il engineer and draughtsmen ami out side the army cou d command $100 per month or more. This iniall salary, and being deprived of the "canteen," ia glv en as one of the chief leaaon lor ao many desertions. A toldier't life in time of peace it a dog'i life at beat, nio- notonou in the extreme, and few eo lUtment are made. At Fort Steven a cou Die of week ago the writer wa told by a largeant, who wa receiving the magnincient luin of 1 17 per month, that while he liked the service many of the .. ' . . .1 . ( . . II men were diisaiisneu wun me siusu pay and that It wai difficult to get men enough to man the gunt and do garrison duty. He laid the absence of the can teen was anotherjreason why the toldiert disliked the navy. When pay day came around the men would take a day't leave of absence and spend their time at nearby groggeriei and return without a cent, while if they could get their drink on the ground, aerved by men of their own kind, there would be lea drunken ness and mora content among the men for army life. Whether the canteen I again permitted to run or not, it i cer tain the pay of the aoldier should be in- created, for a common every-day office boy would not work for $ 13 per month, nd a good, healthy, active man ought not to be asked to do to. Give the sol j County Correspondence j 1 W. want . reporter 1. .w.r t.WB. j Oregon Agricultural College has made the enrollment of 1000 students in 1007 one of th t attainments to be recorded thi year. If this were the only pur pose one might weU wish It would tail, but it isn't. The Agricultural Colleg not mem a good year' training alter it gut them. The heavy appropriation made by the legislature last winter will enable the school to care for a much larger number of students than ever before, and in a much better manner. What ever occupation one may follow, be will find the iort ol education bo gets at the Agricultural College a practical aid to him. May the lOOO mark be passed as soon as the farmer boy get their sea son's work at home completed. Port land Oregonian. bherweeS. Bsiulaf CunHwulal. vi.. k ir.u iull agent for tiie mu 7 . r:. . . i ir.. insurance mat jvrswi.w - , i. Hnrlhurt. an assistant, were iu . L. I! .itlnri limiir a .ln.if, flat HrlK KJ H'ltiui ance and succeeded in taking a number of application for th company. The first oulon of thi season's crop .r,iv.l at the warehouse here rnaay, r.:.. n.n....ltht umier Tualatin ue- i. .l niit intbt market. Thill the foreruuner of an unusually heavy and excellent yield that will ultimately be brought in for shipment at thit sta tion. The Mutual Telephone lines here have . . uniform tarin on an mes sages of 15 cent each transmitted after 8 o'clock in the evening, a bwuch charge, which go to the local operator a part compensation for her services. Th latter are scarcely yet, overpaid, by any mean. Cha. Hall and wife left for the Bal rivp mui.trv. Wednesday for aa outing of indefinite duration. They will probably visit ilie Tillamook region De- fore returning. a it vr-il.l son ot Wm. and Mr Trutfof MWJletoa died SuturJay after nnnn after a short illness of about two rfava. Tha nature of the disease that proved so suddenly fatal wai not ascer tuined. The parents of the deceased have the united sympathy of the whole neighborhood in their unfortunate lots and bereaveiueut. attendant to the most sad affair. The residence of A. W . Hall wai en tered Saturday evening while the oe cupants were away and ransacked lor valuables. A watch chain and other small articlet were found missing. It it believed that some local artist could ex plain mattert were it Ksible to give him the "cold water treatment" a la Philipluo. dier what he it worth. Land and Mineral Decisions. The following tynopsit of Land and Mineral Doclsions is furnished this of flee by Woodford D. Harlan, Und At- . I """Jl ft womiiibiuu) V l IIV4Cf o,.,, ,eK. ue iiuaont. out give. ,hi nMj wiIJ pubiil)hej frola wwk i a good year training after it gut ..l ,i!.:nn. ... , ""w aw. iiiwiis w i i v aa in nj vi terest to our leaden: Settlement Priority of, ia protected only under legal assertion of right. Kighta claimed under settlement should be asserted within the statutory period to be effective aa against the Intervening entry ol another. Stare Decisis The doctrine of Stare Decisis is recognized and followed in tli epartraent in cases that involve prin ciples well established by a uniform line ol decisions. Survey Marks The law provides a penalty for the destruction of survey mark. A section of land Is not survey- ed until every line of the section ! been actually run and the corners established. Timlier and Stone An applicant for the right of timber land purchase must show that the land applied for ia free from adverse occupancy and that he hat made no other application to purchase inder the timber act. Until an applica tion it anally allowed the applicant has no right to or control over the land. Timlr Cutting The owner of a min ing claim in the Colville Indian Raser vation, Washington, hat the same right 10 use and remove timber npon his claim as the owner of a minino -lain. eisewnere. The country editors and publishers ol Oregon were knocked out of fully $I0, ow last winter by the slate legislature, business that the preHs of the stale have been getting lor years and should con tinue to receive. The Oregon Press As sociation has taken on new life and at its winter meeting iu Portland some thing will tie doing which is Iwund to lead to the lietterment o( those who are depending on the income ol a printing omce for their sustenance. For years the publishers have sat nuietly by suck ing their thumlw, while every incoming and outgoing legislature has taken crack at him. The curtain has dropped on this club wielding act and from now on me country iiewspaHr men are not only going to claim what is coining to them, but they are going to get it. W do not believe there is a newspaper pub lisher in tills state that is "on th graft," a intimated by the Portland Or egonian, but there are some things they are entitled to that the legislature can grant, things both honest and right, and if given, will I a benefit to every lax payer in Oregon. Th Armory at Portland was packed to overflowing last Friday night, and is estimated that fully 10,000 peopl were present to hear and see William I Taft, secretary of war. He was late i arriving at the great hall and It was with dilliculty the band succeeded keeping the large audience iiuiet. The Secretary rode up in an automobile i company ol T. 11. Wilcox, president of the Oregon IVvelopmenl league, at just tweuty minute to t o'clock, and hi ar rival wa greeted with deafening cheer. He held the attention of bis bearer for an hour and ahalt and his remark were well received ami pist what wa to hsv been expected from a man who ia iu position to know of wlut be speak. II i a large man, a heavy weight, gonial and brainy, and will receive a cordial welcome by everyone be meet in hi clrv'lo around the woiM. Mr. Taft, who is accompanied bv bis wife, bis so CbarVs, Gen. Fd'tards, military ade W. W. Mischler, stenographer; It. Murray, representing the Associated Pre, and Koberl I., Dunn, photograph er, left Saturday morning for Tacoma where they will take the steamer Minne sota for th Philippine. Mrs. tier man Smith it slowly recov ering from tevere attack of hop pois oning contracted through washing clothes worn by her family while work ng in the bop fields. The inlection oc curing through abrasions ou the hands The Oregon Quarry Company located above Middleton now hat a force of twenty-seven men employed and the output daily of pavement blocks amounts to about 2,000. The daily average per man is about 200 and the rate paid ia t'i0. Harry Urambaugh, late of Se attle 1 mperiutendent of the works, a veteran of the Philippine war. Dr. Schroder it fitting up an oflice and drug store in the "junction" town be low on the line, and believe Tualatin will make an ideal suburb of Portland, since two road pat through the town. We sincerely hope so, and If landscape and town lots will justify ths deduction nothing more need be said about iti future outcome it it assured. Theodore and Carl Mohrmann have leased the farm of Clam Borcher the old Wilton place one mile west of town for a term of three years. A few acre! of tha finest beaver land in this neigh borhood ii found on the swamp and the Mohrmann boyi being adepts in the art of ouion raising, will no doubt succeed financially in taking on the lease. Try th City ftakery for Cream bread Onlongrowers Are Heard. v ommissioners Aitchison and Cauip- oeu oi me uregon Uailroad Commission gave a bearing SaturJay to the onion groweri of Washington county on the Southern P cific, who complained re garding the rates on onions from Ilea verion, iiiiiiboro, Keedville and Tuala. tin to Portland. The rates on this com modity were raised the first of the year by General Freight Agent Miller, of the Southern Pacific Oregon lines. The change in the rate wa effected by mak ing a class rat instead of a commodity rate. J. G. Thompson, an oniongrower of Tualatin, wa a witness for the com plainants, and R. B. Miller, general freight agent, took the stand for th rail road. He said thi advance is reason able, lor th former rate wa far too low on thi cla s of business, but wa made to meet wagon competition. He quoted from the tariff ot the company to show th onion rate 1 about stpial to freight rate in other district where water competition has to be met. W. D. Kenton, attorney for the South em raciuc, appeared lor th company, and Oglesby Yonng was the attorney for the oniongrower. It wa agreed that the two attorneys should prepare brief on th subject and submit them to the commission by September 20, which would decide the case on that basis. Coupled with the onion rate to Port land is the complaint of the growers that the Southern Pacific baa raised the fer tiliier rat back to the onion field from Portland. Thi i a crease ha been from 6 to $9. Portland Oregonian. Beaverton. Regular Correspondent. W. J. Stitt had the misfortune to se verely cut his right foot while working in the logging camp of W. N. Daniels just north of town one day last week. Upon examination by the doctor it wai found necesaary to amputate one toe en- tirely and the greater portion of anoth er. The past week bat been a record breaker in the way of fires in thit neigh borhood. Last Saturday the barn on the Frank Bernard place wai destroyed. The fire probably wai set by the child ren of Mr. Bremmer w ho has been farm ing me place during the pasl year. The barn contained nearly twenty-live tons ol hay, a new wagon and all of the farm t'lauieiiis. i ue loss win run up to quue an amount. A year ago lust spring when Mr. Premmer a as living on the Purser place the house burned just aflnr It i,,.-,UA.f l. i ... .. ,u alm u seems as tnougu he lias more than hi share ol n res. n last wundav Fnti Strobel' barn on the bcholls lerry road caught fire roiu a urusn lire. Thi barn also con. tained quite a lot of hay and farm tool, On Monday Grossen' threshing o., inwinr to llaynes' straw pile on the jonnson place and it was only bv ouh-k -oi nim uie separator was saved. Tl. . i . . ... Annual r-weet Tea Show of the "'"I" s neia in the hall last Wed .urrQiun, ine nrst prize wai awarded to Mis Ann Xilson. The -range win nave a corn and pumpkin w urn caiurday. Albert Weidner, Mr. and Mr. A A a. .,.' R' W- lio?'1 L" to i n i - CP,,er n'lne 10 U' ...... ... r,on county lor a two week "jouru. i . . . i i ... , ... "n,1",e" ''own an .levator ...... in iorMan.1 last Monday and fwtw ai i .V'"" V'w vacation nursing a tirilisaas.1 t.w.k lWIs Aunt Sally. Rural Route One, Beaverton. Regular OorrMpnndent. Hoppitking is about . .. way Tb Ste.nl.off y.,J M - b Monday and Ih. Feeler yard was Bnilh. ed Tuesday. There are two or three day mors picking in th HeUger yard About half of th, UttafH 10 1 left on account of the a1' onlT best being pickjj, xt Hatl J" be don by Saturtt.. OuiU to. toese were left on aceon" Some one mad t ia the account of C. F. Tigard , ,1,1 B should bavs read two- thirds of an a" fl ' stead oi oue-tblrd. Mathlaa Koeru,, d ,UrUJ Wednesday for , thre sJtbJ' vUil 10 hi old home in imnoit, isturnlag by way oi ct. umU and Oklao,,' wou-" place be has relative Mr. Koerner i a retired farmer and on tial citiien. of TigtrjTlUi. As a reminder of old tisrtt. A. A. Mor rill waa down thi. ..u . eooyl of days .last week, locating the particulsr part of th earth's urfac which i covered by II. W. Frewlng' fifty The Downing boyi return" urday, but we examined tbr Bn n vain for any elk or bear, eomeon bad always been just ahead of theut nnd either killed th gatt M frihUned it away. Mr. Gaarde, the nevr-ull blacksmith, has had a new (org and tbimaey built. Mrs. O. II. Andrews, ol Portland, pent laat week with bet parent, Mr. and Mrs. II. Rshberg, of Bull mountain. Mis Cam Weinman has been rusti cating a few days with br parents near Tigardville. Miss Mary Erickson, of Portland, is pending a few days picking hops near Progress. J. G. Cherry, who Ii building John Hualagn's houie, had th misfortune to fall down the stairway soi dislocate hit left elbow, In consequence of which h wtu have a lew day of enforced idleness. Pet Olson is repairing Mr. Gaarde's house. Prure drying 1 under way at Mr. Leis'i and also Herman Rehberg'i large orchard. A. D. Brandt also began dry Ing this week. Andrew Johnson, of Raleigh, who owns all ot the land surrounding Raleigh station and who was nominal postmaster there until th office wai discontinued, has rented hit cultivated land compris ing about 125 acres, to some Japanese for $800 per year, for five years, and will retire lor awhile from trenuou labor and perhaps visit th scene of bit early hfe in Sweden which he left some thirty yean ago with just money enough to get to America. Miss Cora Johnson leave Friday for Ashland, Or., to attend school until next Jane. Aunt Jemima, v Along- Route One. Claui Fortman, relkjioua and deeply interested in th ecclssiastlcal discourse of th Portland divine dealing with our ubterranean friend and brother, prayer fully suggeit thi following ai helpful hints for the manufacture of further hebdomadal ooxe. to wit : What would Satan do if h wer : A FlorUt he would raise plenty hel- heliotropes. A Montana man hit home would be Hel-IIelena. A Mineralogist he would prefer Hel Helitone, Wales. A Llngulit h would ttudy th Hal- Hellenic dialect. A Dutchman he would spend the summer at Ilel Heligoland. A Bigamist be would be married to the Hel Ileliades. A Spartan he would keep a crowd of Ilel-Helot. A H'engliih reporter be would spin yarns by ell. A Pugilist he'd knock Ilsllouteryou On Monday Mrs. J.C Bechen return ed from a fly week's visit with relatives and friends at Hsndrum, Minn. An attentive scholar at Sunday school and a student of human nature. Fred Pieren tries to solve to bis own satisfac tion through personal experience some of the graver nmi.i . tha aerlnture present. 11 has 0fu nondered on the uepravuy ol the callout wretch of whom u is aaid that ha .ill leav hn father and mother in order to deav to aom enure sirangsr, ths cut of whos gar menu differi radically! from that of hit u mvire. trJi not thinking bimseii capable o( such vill.... oroceeded to in .. ,i . . ... -r.in.io and ascertain first, wherein lay me peculiarly irMi.,il,la ooUncy and charm of the cU.vinj.and in th .econd I'v that he could and would conquer the tmpU.ion to leav and cieave and I . ..i- iu nnirkl - Tinaiu. t found a luilabl ,nJ -iiiing object for experiment and if nrent indication re any reliable, criterion as to future u-ve,opments, tb reporter may ssfely mougi. diy wh,n hii mustache ha. Uttl , r grown, FreJ ,eren ' leav. ki. father and mother and do th .leave itunt with the V uu "ndoa of the moet harden ed sinner. ....At Mrs. Bath's Millinery Store.... A splendid line of Ladies' Shopping and Vasle Uaskcts 1 a nuiiiber or sizes and all colors. Mexican Hats and Hop-picker's (i loves. Something new and pretty In Heads. Small Heads, all colors, Tor the forget-me-not chains; the Hawaiian Shells and Fancy Indian Heads. The best line of Ladles Neck Wear and Hack Combs in the city. A course at ti 0 c ia all right, Oonnell has been V'ereonese.aa.a.r.. ha farms with a Jim JiUu ri . tfi grin .i . sinful tn tha touch But h;. .ue. "T. vheDrUm Arthur, consider .JtTnnt'' lighter than himself, Abe llo M by hit f.a,y,eLl7UkoloI, l" X.n?ft r ub: untl tiraJ orchMd "J WBrk". fistta, UBder lb old appl BUTTERICK'S PATTERNS I will from now on keep In stock a full and complete line of the Celebrated HUTTEHICK PATTERNS, all slds. No pattern more than l.i cents. These patterns are conceded by every bodo to be the best and most popular made. tree, be seeks recuperation and plays Frin-go-bragh on the harp that one in Tera's hall. George Kreb'i corn doe not show thrifty growth, looking ai though young Growling Bird's crow, Aundak got away with half the seed. His potatoes, plant ed on th fifhb oi July th morning af ter the glorious Fourth look flne.stand ing in lines geometrically straight. If one of us e flute city feller had attempted to plant potatoes ia the cold gray dawn ol the morning after, when the inner man insistently demands ic water and the cranium the scene of a Kishinef massacre, the field might show traces of spuds bore and there, but straight lines would be conspicuous by their absence. Everybody picking hops but dissolute hubby, who driuki them; poor little wifey ilaviog and earning; dissipated wretch squandering and carousing. But when half a dozen or more starving in fants cry for nourishment, what can poor wifey do but pick. Our sheriff has a model dairy farm, 45 cowl taken car Of by two expert dai rymen, imported IS wis. Mr. Couoell, when out on the, farm talka Swis and he can alito yodle like all llel-IIelvetia. Mis Iletsi Smith, from Portland, and her bosom friend, Mis Alice Kewall, also toil in the hop-yard. Satan, were he reporter for the Independent, would here insert a diverting yarn, but depo nent, being a dunce, further sayeth not. The name tells-tb story everybody knows it; everybody likes it; everybody uses it; I. W. Harper whiskey. Sold by F. E. Cornellu. adv Hickory Bark Cough Remedy made by The Hickory Bark Remedy Co., of Salem, Ore., guaranteed to be pure; guaranteed to cure your cough, or money refunded. Guar anteed to make a friend of you For sale by the Ilillsboro Pharmacy and first class dealers everywhere, A genius is said to have invented pants without buttons, but there must be some mistake about that Every man at some time in his life has had a pair without buttons. Didn't Irritate Him. Her Is a glimpse of th seamy aide of life In Cornwall from th Cornish afagaslne: "I'm afraid, Jenny, you Irritate your husband with your long tongue." "Aw, no, my dear Mlas Vivian, I'd never aay nawthen to en. T'other day I waa 'ome waltln' forn to com 'om to aupper. Eight o'clock come, an' no Jan; 9 o'clock come, an' no Jan; 10 o'clock come, an' no Jan. I put up me bonnet an' shoal m' went to very klddly wink In town thout Dyke Wlnsorl. When I com there, there wor Jan. Saya I, 'You ugly murderen vetlan, theest killed the fust wlf an' now theest want to kill me, too,' an' he up an knacked me down." Saved Him Trouble. lie wa about to atart on a week'a trout fishing. Rods, reels, gaff, creel everything wss In readiness. But his wife, smiling Joyously, hurried into the room, extending something toward him. "For goodness' sake," he exclaimed. "what on earth are you doing with those old fly papers V "I saved them for you from laat summer," she answered. "Ton said you alway had to buy file when you went a-flshlug." London Answers. A Cool Convlot. A life convict in the Andamana had served some long period when an or der recently came for his release. All the time he had been In the band and bad evidently ao far forgotten that he waa a prisoner that on hi release he put In a claim for a pension on ac count of his long and faithful service a a government servant Madras Mall. A Valuable Offise Bey. Th employer wa bending over a table looking at the directory. The new office boy allpped up quietly and poked a note Into his hsud. The sur prised employer opened It and read: Honored Sir Tsr panta la ripped. Ladie Home Journal. The Speedier Term. Englishman In England w "stand" for parliament, but In America you run" for congress. American That a because you are slower than w ar. New Tork Tress. who In Ptolemy's time aay one tilled a cat waa put to Ceeth. Kansas bakers are forbidden to kneed their doueh with their feet. though they need their dough with their feet as much as with any other The Newest Modern Commercial Hotel in Portland Opened July 1st, 1H07, Til A r? f f t CORNKK V I KTII AND llfKJjSIDK STS. Main Entrance on Burnsule. 11. M. 1'iekck, Proprietor. afsaTTake strei-t car at the PimhiI. Only concrete Kire-I'roof Hotel inlhecity. Five block from Union lVpot. r.urusi.leaud Fifth street fcN car pas the door. Steam bent, electric lights, hot and cold water in t . every room. Kates $1 per day and up. Special rates by the week and tfU month. Free butli on every floor. Hillslioro ieople are cor.li illv invited to irive lintel St. Phillip a trial J j when in the city. Your comfort nul 8;Uifuctioii is assured. (14 B U t-lE T I N Great Northern Railway Low Rates to the East UUULVU SElTEMIli:il AM) OCTOIIKIt. The Great Northern Ry Will sell Colonist HckeN from nil Eastern points lit greatly rod need rates. New York to Hillaboro Boston to Hillaboro Chicago to Hillaboro St. Paul . Minneapolis f. ..... . Ouluth l0 Hillaboro 25 Sioua City ' ....$50 OO . . . . 49 45 . . . . 33 OO OO Proportionate reductions from other points. Now is the tiweaio send lor your friends. Orders for tickets will receive prompt attention. Additional information on application to II. I'U'KWIN, C. I'. AT. A. (iri'ftl Nurllirrii Ky, IJ2 1 Wl., I'urtlaud. W. A. KOSS, A. (i. I". A Heat r;c, tMli. J.J. WUNDKULICH O. C.CHWAUZ Wunderlich & Schwarz SIGN PAINTING PAPER HANGING AND FRESCOING DECORATIXU XATUItAL WOOD FINISH (JHAlMXi UALCIMIXIXtJ LIXIiUSTA MOKEStJUE AM) PLASTIC HE LIEF DECORATIONS CARRIAGE PAINTING ' Doth Phones UlLLSliOIlO, ORE. Mdif Materia Shingles, Lime, Brick, Fire Brick, Cement, Gravel, Fibred and Unnbred Plaster. Sand. Will meet Port land prices At all times. Climax Milling Co. part of their anatomy.