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About Albany democrat. (Albany, Or.) 1900-1912 | View Entire Issue (May 11, 1900)
lie mrat. Mr. Daly'H Record. Dr. Daly'a record on the money ques tion lg well known. . Ke wan an ardent Supporter of Mr. Bryan in 1890, and con t.-ibuted lrrgtly to the result in Lake county, hie home, whereby the county gave Bryan a good majority although the county is stronglv repub'lcan. At a member of the Legislature for a period of six years, Dr. Daly's vote and voice were always recorded in favor of every resolution a-d question relating to the free and unlimited coinage of silver, and as chalrmun of the Democratic commit tee on Flatform 10 I89S at the s'ate con vention, signed and endorsed the con ference report on platform, which was adopted by populists, democrats and b!! ver republicans. Abb member of tie senate, he was on two evasions given the complimentary vute of the populists and democrats for president of that body. His record as a legislator is clean in every reepest; he is the author of the Homestead Exemption Law, ae well as of the act repealing the Railroad com mission to which the republicans point with pride in their stale platform. He aleo introduced and had passed the bill requiring county clerks to take acknow edgements in peneiou matters free of charge. It was he who introduced sen ate resolution No. 12, which passed unan imously, as follows, to-wit : "wbereaB, the people of the State of Oregon, regardleis of party affiliation are desirous of expressing their deep feelings of gratitude to and their rdmiration tor the courage of the Oregon soldiers who have so nobly offered their lives in de fense of oppressed humanity, in aveng ing the Iobs of the Maine, in behalf of civilization, and 10 maintain the honor and prestige of the American flag; and "Whereas, the heartB of Borne of our people are bleeding as a result of the loss by sicknecs or in battle of some loved ones to them niOBl dear; therefore, be it "Resolved by tho senate, the llouee concurring, That the congratulations vnd admiration and confidence of the people of the State of Oregon, be and the same ie hereby extended to the Ore goo soldiers in the Philippines, and that the sympathy of the people be, anj the same Is hereby, extended to the mourn ing frlcndo of the heroic dead. That the Secretary of State, be and is hereby re quested to transmit a copy of these reio utions to the commanding officer of the Oregon regiment at Manila, and that said officer be, and be is hereby request ed upon receipt of such copy to cause the eame to be read in each company of bis said regiment." pvUlt vote on every proposition coming bebre the legislature was on the side of right and justita; He settled in Lake county in 1887, and by industry and economy has accumulat ed Borne property . He has some inter in the Bank of Lakeview, a private banking institution, but the bank has never foreclosed a mortgage and lias .Beyer forced a co'lectlon or B'led any one, He Is a thorough scholar, "a pleasant gentleman, and will faithfully represent the people of the first district in Con greBB. The splendid record made by the prosent farmer judge will convinco any one I hat a man dosen't have to be a lawyer to bo a county Judge acceplablo to tho people. A low tax levy with tho inloroats of the county well taken euro of is what ie need ed, not tho oxlravagant. povernmont of it any counties run by men entirely oit of joint with the poople. Mr. Palmer is otitirely in sympathy and in toujh with the interests of the people of the county, be will promoto those movements already begun for tho betterment of the county roads and county institutions. With him at t'io head Iho one mill tax for road im provements will bo kept up and (he plans already under way advanced. Ho it throughly in favor of keeping up our brid ges and roads as they should be, And will continue to do so with n low tax levy. The interests of tbo county cannot bo plac ed in bettor handi than those of him and Mr. Sprengor, the efficient candidate for commissioner, and tne hold over commis sioner Mr. Swann, who has in a marked manner shown his filnoso for the position. 1 TnaiKwtB --rr.r.H!' Slinrp Points. By BquiBBB. Tl.e gist oi the Clark senatorial decis ion ie that lomo things come too biu to be good. : Possibly Mr. Quay may manage to shove a few boultiers in ibe way of (he McKinley triumphal car this ta'l. He aays ht Mark and Mac "did'' him and he doesn't care v.uo knows it. By the way, General Kitchener haeen't added very conspicuously to his reputation in South Africa. He should have stuck to North Afiica and kept away from "the grave) ard of reputations '' Qieja friends now announce that hit influence will be thrown to defeating the ship subsidy bill in revenge for his exclus ion from the Senate. This is almost too good to be true, it is eery seldom that two such rerutible birds can be killed with one Btone. By a majority of one, the Sanate has decided !o adhere to precedents and ex clude Mr. Quay from a seat In that body. While ail the older Democratic Senators adhered to their position in the (Joruell case, about a dczen Republicans deliber ately reversed themselves, partly outof lik ing for Quay personally and partly because they feared his vengeance if thev voted against bim. Senator Wellington of Maryland, has bolted the Republican ticket and platform in advdee of the convention. The Demo cracy, however, is not very proud of his accession to its ranks. Wellington is about as small potatoes in eveij Bense as a Senator could well be. If Russia and Japan intend to fight, they had better go ahead and do it. The preformance is already a good deal behind hand and the gallery is getting impatient. Washington is struggling to get rid of a school superintendent whose methods have been shown after a long and careful prac tical test to be worse than useless;, but he happens to be from Illinois, and both the Senators and Representatives from that stale have united in an effort to keep his job for bim, despite the fact that the Washington schools are far behicd others of the same grade in other parts of the country. This fall for the fifth lime in history, the occupant of the White House will be opposed for re-election by the candidate whom he defeated four years before . It is a significant that on each of the four former occasions, the man in the White Houso has boen defeated . After Novem her 8 there will be fiv e cases of ttis in stead of four. At Secretary Hay's request, the Sultan has renewed his note for the American ditnngea, adding that when the paper is worn out he will be pleased to renew it or.ee more. Our Washington correspondent says The broad streak of yellow down the backbone of the McKinley administra tion, the exhibition of which disimsled bo many Americans during the neeke which immediately preceded the war with Spain, .Is again in full view of the wo: Id. The present exhibition is con nected with our relations with Turkey. Only a few days ago, all of the well known disseminators of semi-official news, in Washington, were sinning a song of jingoism and filling the nnwepa pei men with thrilling stories of the red hot demand the administration had made upon the Sultan of Turkey, to set tie those longstanding missionary claims at once, and intimating that if the spon dnlix was not at one) lorthoouitng, an American fleet would be sent into Turk iih wators to forcibly collect it. These stories were duly sent out but they did not fire the country even a little tiny bit, the people not being in a jingo hu mor. But they did something else. They brought an intimation from Russia in the politeet diplomatic language that there were reasons which made it in cumbent upon Russia to object to any forcible collodion of claims from the Sultau. That threw Secretary Hay into a blue funk, almost as bad as would have followed a snubbing by an English lord, and straightway the ye low Btreak in the administration backbone was un covered, to add to the gaiety of nations and to the humiliation of Americans, and the official announcement made that til i a government had at no time intended to go beyond diplomatic insistence in trying to make the Sultan pay that claim. r 1 ne tuners and Prospectors' f A Unaffected by cold cr l.oat. Winchester Am- vi ;u; it ion h used l-y every 0:1a and sokl everywhere. Send name and address on a postal card for i4S-pagc illus trated catalogue. It is free. Winchester Repeating Arms Co. NOW HAVEN, CONN. 418 Market St., San FrancUco, Cal. Around the World. There are seventeen Irish regiments at the front. .' . t Nesrly400new laws were passed . by ibeNew York state legislature this ses sion. Married couples in Norway are privi leged t'j travel on railways at a fare aod half. Thres turpsntim plantations of J 10,000 acres eich will so in ba started in the south. It Ib estimated that the people of Eog- lond epead 250,000 a day in furniture moving. Tne railroad time between New York and Boston has been reduced to four hours and twenty-three minutes. According to the London Chronicle tl.e telescope which Napoleon I used to cany has turned up in Turin, Tne longest canal In the world is the Erie, in New Yoik, extending from Al bauy to Buffalo, a distance of ,'381 miles Mannbeim, Germany, barbore 834 millionaires (in marke) a millionaire be ing one wtose income exceeds 17,500 a year. A child was seriously poiacned in Mid- dlotow'n.lCt., recently by eating sample p 11a left on doorsteps by a distributing agent, Glasgow and Edinburghjhave 1,000, 000 invested in electric lighting: Aber deen, Ayr, Dundee, 3ovan, Greenock, Paisley and Perth 300.000. Mrs. Nancy Washington, a colored woman of Boeton, celebrated her 105th birthday on April 21. She baa been married elx times and is now a widow. Edinburgh is noted for itslaristocracyj Glasgow for ita engineers and shipbuild ers, Dundee for ita jute merchants and Aberdeen for its "canny going bodies,'. According to an interview in the Tele gram with Dr. Daly, the onion candidate for congress, he thinksjhe will cany every county in the district but Tilla mook with Marion and Clackamas as doubtful . This reads rather strong, but it need not surprise the people of the district if this prove true. The more that is learned of the record of Mr. Tongue the lesa become his chances for re-election. He is just the kind of man the country does not need at Washington, a man ruled entirely by the bosses above him, answering to every paity lash re uardlesB of bis honest convictions. In stead of gaining influence by Iris two terms in congress as a etrong man would he is as weak as when be entered con gress. His position on the liver and harbor, committee does not seem to help him any, judging fiom the manner in which the Ysquioa Tappropria'ion went bytheboarda. There is a ttrong eblU mont among the people ttiat he ia con trolled by Portland influences, though representing the people ot another dis trict. The man against bim is probab ly the strongest who could bave been named tn the diitrict, poeesBing a mark ed personality, Bpleodld judgment and absolute integrity, a scholar and a ae bator, one of the people, the kind of man the district r.eede. The following from the Oregonian is a sample of the republican argument ot the day : "Every man -that votes the F-ieion ticket June 4 votes tn tie a millstone about the neck of Oregon industry, to throttl trans-Pacific trade, to continue the subservience of tbiB Coast to the in fluences that have hitherto held back its progress. Every man ti.at votes the fusion ticket June 4 votes to kill busi ness in every Pactfic Coast city and sad dle hardship on the .blldreu he will leav behind him."' Every word ot which is untrue, either as to state or county government. Tarts. Linn county. Under the BO-cal!ed fu sion no county in the state has shown a more progressive spirit, a fact testified to by the new court house surrounded by a cement walk, Ihe county infirmary, a $1100 rock crusher for road improve ment, etc. It would be the same in state affairs but on a more economical basis than under the extravagant republican system . Thia kind of talk uo longer frightens intelligent people. It is staled that in care the English win in tho South African war the Boers will come to the United States for homes. A sturdy, honest, Chrieiian peop'e, we hope they will. We have pleuty oi land left for thorn right horo in Oregon with out going to the Philippluo islands. They would mike good citizens. Has ( ny one ever recti a word ot sym pathy in a republican pnp-r for the struggling Boers in South Africa, in their efforts to letaiu their liberty. Tlil-s Is significant, and s..ow3 where tho ten dency ol the party is . These are the days when the lega tf candidates for office are pulled. PATENTS: DESIGNS TRADE-MARKS . AND COPYRIGHTS Ud I flINtU ADVICE AS TO PATENTABILITY Notice in " Inventive Ago " Uook"UowtoobtinlatnU't FREE Ctarp moderate. No fe till patent In itecured. 1 iu?r Btricuv conmienuah Adtlresc, E. g. 8ICGEH8, .lUnl Lyyif. y?tj'nton7o.C. From the eantiam News. W. F. Hammer, Demoeratic-Peoplee Party Candidate lor County Clerk, hss bees a re:ident ol, Albany tor Ihe past 18 years, and has held numerous positions of trust and responsibility during that period. He was nominated fur county clerk on the populist ticket six years aao, and although be waa defeated be polled very large vote. Bis defeat at that time waa owing tc the fact that the entire republican ticket was elected. He is a very popular young man of much ability, and one in whom all have the greatest faith. lie ie a good busireES man, and thoroughly qual-fled to fill the position to which he aspires. His nomination was almost by the unnniraoi a vote of the convention, and waa made so upon mo tion of his opponent belore tbe conven tion. Should he be eucceeeful in beiog elrcted be will doubtless hand's the affairs of the county in a busineas like manner, and to the thorough satisfaction of every voter of the county. Daring his campaign B'x years ago there wis lint a single utterance made against aim or his abilitv to properly conduct the affaire, of the couny. Senator Wellington gives tbe teasons wb) be will not support McKinleyism anv longer: . "I bave been opposed to tbe acquisition of the Philippines as a permanent colony, I was opposed to the 15 per cent on the Porto Rico imports into this country. This being rnv position I do Dot see my way clear to euf poit the Philippine pol icy of the president and the policy of 1 1 y Ing a duly on Prto Rico when they' are embraced in a national platform, I do not intend tu support a platform that is against my convictions in such import ant particulars. 1 do not intend (0 10 uain a member of the national commit tee, nor do I intend to attend the repub lican national convention." It is not generally known that a great deal of Ihe paper money that ie couBtai.t ly circulating ebout gets fnquent wash ings, in the same way that tbe house siio or maid goes at tbe dirty clothes on a Monday morning, In some banks there is a regular wash day every month, usually at the beginning when a clerk may be seen bent overatuband rubbing real money up and down a washboard. ThiB week has been marked by one cf woret disasters in tbe bietory of the United estates, nearly three hundred men entombed in a mining accident, almost passing tbe comprehension of the mind in the terror of the details of it. After ail life hanga by a tbtead, and no msn can afford to live without being prepared tor death at a Kecond'a notice. The House, frightened by the Porto Rrcan outcry, has attempted to restrict the granting of franchises in that island, but the Senate, which drew the original bill lor U otine ihe island, objects, and will block the attempt to reform if it is possible to do so. - i Here's a New York man who beat bis baby into convulBiots and blacked its eyes until it was nearly blinded. Yet some people object to the whipping post for women and children beaters, because they say it degrades a man. And still the Intentate Commerce bill hangs fire for some reason or other. Possibly mind, we Bay only possibly therailaays have served not'ee on the Republicans that they object and will show cauee this fall if their objections are not heeded. David D Hill thinks the Kansas City convntion will be harmonious. Well, he ought to know, fur a good deal depende on him. Where is Aqulnaldo. Manila, May 2. General Funston lias discovereb a rebel warehouse near Cahanutaan, province of New Egija.'con tainiug all the archives of the Malolos government. Aquinaldo's correspond ence up to the time of his flight and much valuable nistorical matter. The belief is growing that Aquinaldo was killed by Igorottcs. Manila, May 3. The Filipinos organ i?.'A cavalry bands and harassed tho Americans at Leambnno, Island ot Pan ay. IheAmoiican infnutry were sur rounded nnd four killed and sixteen wounded. Remainder narrowly escaped. London, March 3. Generals Hamil ton and.Brnbant, have driven tho Boers from Moutnek. Puktoma, Mnj 3. rhe Boers attacked the British at Brnndfort, the latter retir ing with losses. London, May 4, The Boers eyacuat- 1 Thabancbu Hill and are believed to b retreating. The Brit!eh tooi Brand fort with but little opposition. Thia iB considered a greit victory. The Boers are retiring toward Winberg. The Lon don populace is gratified. Kobth Yakima, May 4. John Cole m n, a wealthy farmer and rancher, was robbed and thrown off freight train near his city. On Juue 1 there will be a big picnic ti Orabtree, at which it is proposed 10 have all the candidates. Also a horse race. Let Geo. McKnight bave hie scrapping match and the affair -n he complete. huyler's Chocolates And Bonbons At F. H. Pfeiffcr'a. The ttneat tlnnga oi the day. SATURDAY MIGHT THOUGHTS This week ends with tbe South African war in favor or the English, though not materially. The band though is point ing to ultimate English victory in a manner that is quite emphatic. One feature of tbe war that is of interest to the United States is a statement that if the Boers are whipped they will come to the United States to take up their home. We will welcome them. Wo have people among ui now of theii sturdy character, aud they make splen did citizens, God-feaiiug men and wo men, industrious farmers who make everything count. Sixty thousind of them in Oregon would add materially to our wealth and prosperity, aod we would have nothing to leal from them, a f eace- able Cbri-tsan people who would reaper t our laws and take up with our method p. Our own war in the Philippines hae b-conie if more importance than for SJme time on account of a email Filipino victory aud the new methods beiog em ployed by I lie KilipinOB, of a character to indicate that we bave an interminable conteV on hand, something cloBe observ ers have eeen ahead from the beginning when we first tackled tbe elephant and tried to tie lilin down. V Io cor g-o'S this week has eeen the Nicaragua bill passed In Ihe house by an overwhelming majority, but it is already being rqueized by the m'dliouai res above them, and there is little hopes of it be ing a law this cession. It simply means that the railroadB have a grip on 'he critt-1 and ptope to hold it, f bis wi" he in keeping with tbe (general conduit of tbe prteent adminis'ration. No invention of these wonderful days strikes ens more forcibly than the kenet eecope, which lias made noesible pictures in which tbe characters in them move true to thf parts they acted in life. In life size one sees acted events which it was not poBBible to witnees aa originally performed. A squad of men enter a trench and begin firing at the enemy be yond, two men -fall as tne rest attack '.be enemy ahead of them. Then from behind the red cross men and women ruBb forward and take charge of the dead or wounded with the oullets flying around them. This portrayed just aslit happened brings the reality vividly into one's mind. Scenes of the life of Christ aa portrayed in the Passion Play seem very realistic, and yet they aie only pic tures of aclore representing the reality. They may help one appreciate the reality and yet there is something lacking from the experience. Mr. Daly la dci'y growing in popular ity. The people are learning that he is a first-class man, with a clean record. He is fort3--t wo yeare of age, a graduate of the Ohio Normal university and of the medical department 01 the univer sity of Louisville, Ky. He was a teacher in the Ohio Normal university fo awhile. He located in Lakeview in 1887 He has been representative and senator from his county, carrying the county in 1896 for senator by 247 votes where the republican state ticket was 150 ahead. His standing in Lake county is attested by the fact that he has been mayor, pres-1 ident of the agricultural society and school director lor nine years, being ttie present chairman. Congressman Tongue is sewing on a bis patch when he tries to fix up his vote on the Porto Ricai tariff bill. Put- J ting a tariff on people of the U. S. who ' have no reoreBentation even, whether 15 1 per cent, 1 per cent or a hundred, is un constitutional and nearly every newspa per in the United States regardless of politics has protested against it, where not underthe party lash. Mr. Simon is entitled to credit for continuing to stand by his original proposition. Ei'genn Guard: Dr. Bernard Daly, the Union nominee for congress, is the man who made tbe long 125 mile ride through the snows of Eastern Oregon, with the temperature below zero, to at tend the sufferers of the Silver Lake, Klamath county holocaust on that awful Christmas Eve of 1895 that bereft not a few Lane county people of friends and relatives. His personal sacrifices in or der to minister professionally to the un fortunate victims of that occasion en deared him to all who were familiar with the circumstances. What's tho; matter. A year ngo on Dewey day all tho flags were in the air. ThiB year nearly everybody forgot to raise their flag. Wonder if it is because "Dewey is a democrat." One day thia week the Democrat re ceived a pro-ifoman sufferage article, the next day the women themselves an anti womon's sufferage series of pamph lets red hot against women voting. 0 it goes pro and con. Lawyer Newport is not the only per son who has lost a dog, Ed Davidson's water spiniel was recently Doisoued by some one, whom be things he could lo cate easily. He has sent to San Fran cisco for a blood hound, and will have a dog that will look alter his interests. Councilman Dannals recently ex tin guirhed a fire at a residence on Washing ton streot in a very effective manner. For particulars call at the corner of Sec ond and Washington streets. Mr. Dan nals should bo made permanent chair man of the fire and water committee. The Journal makes the sarcastic re mark that tbe Marion county ticket be gins with a banker end ends with a (1400 a year constable. An English Victory. Bkandfort, May 3. Brandfort was captured by a 'combined -morement of Cbionel Tucker's and General Pole Car ew's divisions, on th the east and center and General Hufon's Mounted Infantry on the west. The British surprised the Boers, who retreated hastily- Four thousands of the euemv moved herd yes terday evening'in order to oppos9 our advance. ' Colonel Tucker's artillery had a sharp dvel with the enemy's guns and put two of them out of action. Run by the Railrond' Wabiii.votol, May 3. The senate will not abandon its amendment to the Hay Pauncefote treaty, and the Hepburn amendments tr the Nicaragua canal treaty aie considered practic illy in line with tl.r treaty. The canal billjwill not pasa fhe Senate, however, because the amended iraaty ia not sat s'actory tn the partias negotiating it, nor is the bill in its pjesent torm satiffaciory to the Ad ministration. Nt.t Llkeil. Tun Dalles, May 3. The laying up of the steamer Albanw py government in spectors on account ol carrying too high steam pressure has caused 'some excite ment here, Many think that this was the only hope of completing the por'ago road ;or Spring and bummer trad, thus keeping from them tho bulk of one year's business, resulting in great finan cial damage to the corporation. Mr. Molir, tbe promotor of the road, says that the Albany incident, while un fortunate will in no way interfere with construction and suppiy 0 material. Proposed Fenian Raid. Windsor, Ont., My 3. Colonel Holmes, commauding officer of No. 1 military district has received instruction from Ottawa to have five companies ready to march at two hours notice. This stepihas been deemed advisabU by the military department cwind tn infor mation that baud of Fenians intend in vading Canada at some point along the Rivers St, Claire or Detroit. The Scofield Disaster. Salt Lake, May 3. Tho latest dis prtch lrom Scoffeld say that the extreme essimate of dead is now conceded to have been too large, and that it is impossible to place the loss of life al 300 ns there were not that many men in the mind. The probabili ies are that 250 will be about the total number of dead. Another lacrease. . Wasiii noton, May 3 The senate com mittee on postoffices and post roads to day completed the post office appropria tion bill, and Cnairmnn Wolsott will re port it tomorrow. Robert Plans. London, May 8,4:10 a. m. The imme diate objective of Lord Roberts is to es tablish a line of British posts from one frontier of the Free State to the other at right angles with ,'he railway, thus pre venting Boer raids southward. It is es sential, therefore, that tho Boers should be expelled from the rugged Thabanchu district and be forced to retire to Lady brand. The Canal Bill. Washington. Mav 2 The Hnnw in. day, at the conclusion of the most stormy debate of the present session of CongresB passed the Nicaragua canal bill by the overwhelming vote of 225 to 35. All at tempts to retain in the bill the language of the original bill for the fortification of the canal, and fo still further strengthen - tne language on that line were balked. A Terrible Catastrophe. Salt Lake City. Mav 2. A special to the Herald, from Scofield, Utah, says-: " It seems that at least 250 men have been killed in the mine accident. Ac- curatE figures cannot be given, and will not oe Known lor some days.- Ihe mine managers say it will be impossible to secure a list of the names until the dead bodies lave been brought out and identified. A Si Bill. Washington, May 2 The suidry civ il appropriation bill, the most important of the general supply bills and 'the last on the list, was completed by, the com mittee on appropriations today and re ported by Chairman Cannon to the House. It carries $51,586,715, being $9, 709,140 more than the appropriations for the current fiscal year. The Pi oper Thing. Buffalo, May 2 A settlement be tween the Ne York Central Railway and its ftriking car repairers was reached tonight. The men claimed to have gained the wage commissions demand ed. 8928) REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THB FIRST NATIONAL BANK, AT ALBANY, IN THE STATE OF OREGON At the close of business, April, 20, 1000, RcHOurccs i Loamnmt discounts $257,203 f& 0verilr.itts,8uuurtni and unsecured 14,118.44 U. S. Bonds to secure circulation 20,090,00 L'. S. B-nids on hand., - 00 Premiums on U S boms 00 Stocks, securites, etc 35,707.75 BapkinjT house, furniture, and fixtures.... 14,000.00 Other real estate and mortvaires owi.el 10,010,05 Due from National Bauks(not reserve aff jnra .00 Duo from State Banks aud bankers 2,SS0.I0 Duo from 'npproved reserve agents II9.0M.&3 Check and other cash i tenia 8I.5S Notes of other Nitioual Banks .00 Fractional paper currency, nickejsHiid oents 3 )3.10 Lawful Moxby Rbsrrve in Baj.k, viz; Specie 32,100.9'j Lejjnl tender notes ,t0 Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer (Ave percent of circulation.) 1,000.00 Total i $ 10,370.50 Liabilities t Capital stock paid in $30,000.00 Surplus fund .. 10,000 00 Undivided profits, less cxptnsos and taxes paid 12.037.21 National Bank notes outstanding , 10,5.0.00 Due toother National Banks 1,41-7.03 Due u State Banks and bankers 5,251. W Individual deposit subject to check 318.634.SO Demand certificates of deposit 63,480.34 Total t510,37.60 Statu or Orxoo.h, County of Linn, ss : I, E W LiN3Djs, Cnh'.er of tho above named bank di solemnly sweir 'that the above statement Is truo to the best of my knowledge and belief. E W LANG DON, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to liefore me this 3rd day of Ma , 10,0 J R WYATT, i ) Notorr PuWicfor Oregon. Corhrct Attest : L FL1NN. S E YOrXO Directors. PA GOODWIN J