The Democrat. The Daily Delivered. 19 cents ween; in advance for one year, 44.0. By mail, in advance for one year S3, at end of year M.ftu. The Weekly Advance per year SI. 25, At end of year $1.50. After 3 yei-TS at 2. OREGONIANS ON A WINTER'S OUTING. Mrs. I. M. Kitchen of Stayton.Mr. and .Mrs. John S. Morgan of Albany Ore, lett tor ban Diego Sunday morn ing for a month. They enjoyed their four weeks of sight-seeing in and around Los Angeles very much. Mrs. J. W. Cusick of Albany is spending the winter at 333 N. Grand Ave. Mrs. Cusick is taking many de lightftil trips to outside towns and beaches and feels much benefited for her change of climate. A parly of Oregon tourists and few Los Angeles people enjoyed beach trip last Wednesday, visiting Santa Monica, Venice, Ocean Park and Ucvcrly before returning. The day was perfect and greatly enjoye. by all. The parly consisted of Mrs. .hllcn .Morgan. Mrs. Cusick. M Kitchens, Mr. and Mrs. A. I!.. Spencer oi i.os Angeles. Venice is the most completely equipped amusement and pleasure resort on the Pacific Coast. It has iinnicii.se concrete canals with gondolas and true Venetian arched driveways; Venetian villa city collon ades and arcades along Windward Ave. A large auditorium, Oriental ex- nimts aim I lie Great bhip Hotel arc located on the Pleasure Kivcr. Hand concerts arc heard every afternoon and evening. Mr. and Mrs. Morgan, Mrs. Kitch-, ens and Mrs. Spencer formed a jolly party wnicn went upon the lilton Trolley -Trip" last week. The trip lasts an ciay, leaving Los Angeles at 9 a. in. and returning at 5:30 p. in. Pasadena, The Orange Groves, Cawston's Ostrich Farm, San Gabriel Mission, San Pedro, Los Angeles har bor, Long Heach and Mira Mar were ihc points of interest seen enroute. 'One of the most interesting sights (Upon the trip was the old San Gabriel Mission, founded in 1771 by the Fran ciscan bathers, the fourth oldest mis sion in this country. A rose bush over one hundred years old was pointed out to Hie tourists, which grew over the old kitchen used by the Spanish Mwnks in 1771. It looked like a huge grape vine. The town of San Gabriel itself is a strange old place with queer flat roofs :and Jow plaster houses, very much like aji Old Mexican or Spanish village. Imagine the quaint low houses, the narrow streets and great towering snow capped mountains in the distance I behind the Mission town, the wonder-1 fill groves of oranges below, and the blues, blue sky above, and then, all i about the huge naluis. the nenncr ires. 1 and the brilliant red geraniums inas-e.1 in huge flower beds, the soft nerfunu of the orange blossoms am', all this liii January. PACTS AB' PAVEMENTS. The Various Forms in Use and Cotn- parison of Respective Features Costly to Experiment, y "There are but four' paving materials mat niigiit nc considered lor use ncro, j t..t in iei, et'lltieii, wimim iin,iiA .urn asphaltuni, says the Corvallis Repub lican of Irebruary 1st. Of these, brick iwears as long as bitulitliic under licavy traflic, but is more expense to lay, is hard to keep clean, hard to re pair when worn, and its uneven surface makes the streets paved with it ex tremely noisy. Wood blocks arc un sanitary, they wear oft unevenly, and when laid with the uopcr amount of -creosote they arc too costly. Concrete has been experimented with to a lim ited extent but is not popular where laid owing to its rigidity and the ac companying noise. It and other uu jiroven materials should be experi mented with in the way ot sampli such as in alleys where sanitary con- ...v. u n.ii. lie is not excessive. I icheap forms of pavement coming dii ithe market, but as with concrete, they should be proven before tried on large . work such as planned in Corvallis. ! Nothing could be worse for the city than to experiment with pavements Ilia! have not stood the test of years, and which might result in the proper ty owners paying every year for a use less investment. " 11 it ii I it li io equals asphalt in smooth ness ot surlaee, freedom irom noise, t ami in the case with which it can ne kept clean and repaired when worn: but it is much more durable, furnishes a livin foothold for horses and auto mobiies, is laid much more rapidly, and i-. ready for use as soon as laid. "When a balance is struck between th cr four materials as to expense, duraliiliiy, cleaning, repairing, and the lcmtth of time the streets are ob structed in laying, the result is clearly in lavor oi bitulitliic pavemnct." A REAL SAN FRANCISCO STORY Told by a Former Oregon Woman. San Krone isco, Keb. 4. Just up the lull Irotu niv home, and but a short distance therefrom, is another horn and in that home there is a little ticr- in.ui mother a woman whom nature de-iiicd as being only a mother and uiu docile, contented and maternal si ciuldien. (and, oh! pitiful fate, an other yet unborn), all under sixtec.l One oi them is a sweet faced crippled Kivl, but all, in manner and dress show the devolcd mother s care and each t:ic urouiii-c ot honest, circunispe and stibstaulial citizenship. One day last week, while the rain and win swirled in pitiless fury, that only those oi rtiKneil iomt should dare con front, there came a message to the home from police headquarters de manding the presence oi the little German woman thereat. There a kindly police sergeant told her that she was a widow and her children fatherless. Now the story, which is not altogether new but the telling of it will hurt neither saint nor sinner. This man (the German woman's husband) whose ashes were, so re cently consigned to the small bronze urn, nau Deci) a kind and provident husband and father and always Jiad saia: 'Mamma, til make money si that you may have furs and diamond and you and the children shall have an automobile to ride in." Together they had planned and saved until two years ago when they had a neat and comfortable home and thirty thou sand dollars in the bank. Then came the little housewife's first worry; the first cloud presaging the ultimate tragedy. When or where the Temp ter entered tne mans lite is not known but in some way conscience was (iniiea and lie became the owner of a saloon, and he, who had never gambled before, was gradually but irrcclainiably clutched by the fatal mania. Ihen the accumulation of suctomary disasters; the evening fire side knew him no more, his business frittered away until it was lost, the home mortgaged for its full realizable value, the Children, this last Christ mastide were without sufficient food, let alone the Christmas tree and gifts that the Germans love to commemor ate the season with. No' one knew their despair and need for they did not belong to the class where squalor and poverty reign and their pride kept the door closed to charity. At last the mother (in her solici tude for her children) reported to the police department the resorts, or so called clubs, where the earnings of years had been lost and where the meagre wages of the present were being lost nightly; these places were being maintained in open defiance of the law nut she was met by the extra ordinary assertion: "We can do noth ing." One thousand dollars (all he had left) lost in one week drove him to desperation and he determined up on its forcible recovery since he had no recourse or protection in law. Walk ing quietly into the so-called club rooms, where faro and roulette were running full blast, with his eye glint ing along the barrel of a revolver he demanded the return of his thousand dollars. He got it but the gambler's revolver barked in return and the tragedy attained its, culmination. When the broken-hearted little wid ow asked: "Why did I have to face the fury of this storm to be told this awful story; why could I not have been told in my own home? the com passionate sergeant replied God Knows, l don t; there was no reason I for your presence here." Once again ' she faced the storm-swept streets, the i kindly reporter shielding her as best she could Irom the rain but the black- . ue.ss -without could not be compared j "!c a"d darkness which nc.iri ami soui or uus ,Ulc woman whose home is no longer h". f,w"'. w.l,osc -bildrL-n even must !" - 'aps linil hdiiies with strangers some institution beginning life un- oer conditions which may hamper them mentally and physically or both, .... - .... .. . ' . J .... w iv ip lit t i mn iit wif- , r, 1 not know whv, 1 only know that I and my children are punished. And yet the man who fired the fatal shot said to the little boy who, in his despair bad thrown himself upon his father's bo ly and whose clothes and golden hai v ere wet with his father's blood: "il -, t in bad, my boy, but if 1 were you .'ouldiit think any more . iibout it. Compassionate and full-! aiiseratiou. To him it -dy and was undeserving lc;lrtct was no tra of aiivthiu more than such cold- blooded forgctfulness. Why? Sucn occurrences arc all too common and the obsession of gambling and drink shuts out from tiic human heart all consciousness of right or wrong, or sympathy for suffering in any form fur the gains of the gambling table are wrung from the necessities of its victims. Two years ago the man, who today ill death is dishonored, was a re spected citizen; he never drank, he bad never "turned a card," but he did dot know cither his strength or his weakness, neither docs any man. We know not m what disguise the temp ter conies to any man nor how velvety ., which tirst ed the wav, Dare we judge our fellow-man for 1 ' yf( vi..,s0 ' ,i foul within miter ir.-trh seems snotless as And ninny may be pure we think not He appointed a chief of police who was so. unpopular and his conduct generally Why must such things be and was of a character to call for a change., whither must conic the remedy? Will Great is the recall, it ever be different or must there ever Portland Journal) Mrs. Anderson M. be the irremediable suffering of wife Gannon gave a bridge luncheon compli ant! children as the vicarious atone- mentarv to Miss u'.h Wallace, of ',,,, f.i.r uie nt for the weakness and sin of the Is the blame to be placed at the door of the law be cause of the failure to enforce pro hibitory measures, or is the family en vironment and its inherent or ac quired tendencies to be held as the real culprit for moral weakness or vil doing of any kind? You nu n of clean hands and hearts: vou mothers and wives in tne homo tl'.at the drink and gambling curse never blights, ponder the dilemma well, for the settlement of the im portant query "WHY?" to these trag edies rests with you for its satsifac torv replv. l-'I.KK T. 1. MARQUIS. San Francisco, Cal. TUESDAY. At the A'agnolia. The Magnolia Laundrv has iiutaddm! tho machinery for the pressing r-vs'em of ironing shirts. Under it it require- tiv j piec s of machinery f r the differ- ent pnrta of the shtri. The shirt is put into tho midline and 500 pounds press- urn to the inch given it, stopping an tomiticallv. It dos eomplo cly tho' work mat actual ironing uoes. An iron r. thoug . a su boos over tho work to renui'v i-ny defects that might havo escaicl the prvsuro. A cp wrsher, (he latest in washing m -'hin-iy h been added. I'-x- t ffi is is busy place all the tin-. NORTH BENTON Mr. and Mrs. William Morgan ol Albany were gues's oi Mr. and Mrs. town Williams Sirndav. Benton county's tax levy for 1911 ai tieen placed a.- 13 2 mills as follows, bounty S.5; school 2 85; Hich school fund library fund .05; road 4. 45 of the heaviest trx payers of Soap Creek precinct met at Wells Saturda and signed papers asking the county dun, io take no action in the matter'of ouiiding a bridge across the Willamette at Corvallis without referring the mat er to a direct vote of the people Fairmount with some 80 of her heav ieft taxpayers are doing liKewise Other precincts throughout the county are taking action upon the matter. Charles Bailey of Palestine is taking advantage of .the short course at theO. A. C. Miss Lizzie Ridders is reported as being dangerously ill at the family home near Wells. Ben Stanton, and family, who went to Ashland some tnree weeks ago to reside, passed through Albany Saturday on their way to Hubbard to reside. Tin consolidated telephone line of North Albany is being extended to the corner of the T. B Williamson farm, maKing3 miles in all of the best con structed line in the country. The nolea are 25 feet long, 10 .in at the top and set five feet in the ground, with cross arms. All lines along the route have been merged into one. E. B. Williamson, of Cnrvallisi annnt the latter part of the week visiting relatives and friends in and around Albany, The Civic Improvement Club. The Civic Improvement Club met yesterday afternoon at the commercial club rooms and considered ways and means for raising some more money, needed to pay fur the trees and plants recently set out. Among other things there will probably be a big dinner gives this month. It will draw. Parties present mentioned the high praise of rienry Atterbury Smith of New York, recently in the city, for the park arrangement, and work no far done. Mr. Smith besides being a gen eral architest also has done a good ;t-al of special work as a landscape artist, making a studv of the sublet t. and his judgment is considered valuable. lhusday night was announced as park night ai the movine mctureshnws. half t'j go for the park fund. Funeral of Ed. ihea. The funeral of Ed. Shea, was held at the Catholic ehurch, this afternoon. with a large number pre ent . Father I.nno iMndni'lurl rho anrviWa T a n.,- i ral gifts were manv and beauiful ones I Following were the pall bearers; Jus. '. Weichman. ot Salem. Ueo. Doolev. ! Will Riley. Harry Siezel, Ed. Horaketr ;na j. i uonovan, ot Albany. ! i Many will have a kind remembrgnco ; 'J.. nj . i . . . in cu.. uiwavs mccain,. and pinuki The family have the sympathy of all in their I Died in Portland. On February. 3,-,at jtbe .residence 'of Mrs. Jas. MdHarguei. at Stewart's , Station on the Mt. Scott car line. Mrs. Dott Winifred Morgan, aged 28 years, i She was formerly of this county;-! daughter of G. W. Warmouth. Her, nusoaro was J . u. morgan. The funeral took-Dlace on Sundav at the Portland Crematory. 1 WEDNESDAY. DOINGS OF THE WORLD The bill introduced calling for mak ing ground hog dav a legal nolidav was a good one. At least it has as much sense as some or tne other Dills intro duced. At Seattle yesterday the women wielded their power and recalled Mayor Gill by over 4,000 majority. Gill run too open a city to suit dec-nt people. Pittsburg, who la spending some time with her Places were marked tor nine and tho yellow co'or sch mo of th- luncheon was carried out with tulips and phice cards. Miss Wallace is pass ing the winter in Salem witlt-her moth er and brother. Lights Torn, Down The long row of electric lights on First street, north fide, were torn down by accident this week, by a mm with a tall rigging, and they arc down yet, These light- are a very good thing when kept u ; but when allowed to run in a ragged way, a-5 they have, they are not artistic enough to affect one9 tyes seriously. The Par Benefit. Remember the civic improvement benefit at the Kmpiro tomorrow nicht. One of the films will be the County Fair, by Neil HurgesM, the tirst plav presented in the Schullz opera h,ose, when it was opened, in which a hurse appeared as one of the actors. U makes a fine film. . Most members of the state legislature nave nugnty little money themselves and care very little about the money of others. Tho National Sunday School Asso.-ii-tion will meet in San Francisco Jure 20 27. A big event. LEGISLATURE Had a Busy Day Yesterday, Yesterday was a busy day in the legislature. The single tax measure got a jolt it felt Chace's vermin bill pasaed the senate. Also; Sinnot, regulating the weight of grain sacks. Wood, providing for creation of new counti s. Gill, restricting sale of liquor in gal lon houses. Carion, for tax on water power de velopment. Burgess, regulating transportation of livestock. Bowerman, regulating investment in stocks by banks. By the house: Tne S B. appropriating $50,000 for the Astoria centennial. Reynolds, protecting ginseng indus try. Buchanan, providing for an assistant and stenog'apher in the attorney gen eral's office. The senate bill changing name of state reform school to state industrial school. Numerous bills changing salaries of county omcers over the state. The house tabled the report against State Food Commissioner Bailey and the senate deferred action on it. Both, are preparing to whitewash the official several bills were killed, the one creating a state auditor. 22 new bills were introduced in the house and 14 in the senate. One makes March 17 a legal holiday. One approo- riates $400,000 for branch asylum at fendletan. Lester of the senate has a, biH- permitting counties to spend J1.008-' a year to - dvertise tneir resources. Carson, exempting mortgages and mortgage notes. TEACHERS EXAMINATION. The quarterly teacher examination w in progress with the toHowing pres ent: Tagent,' Elni Blevins . Harisburg. Marion A. Harrison. Lenanon. Ethef Baker, Elva F. Care , Wrn. Pennoyer, Ruth A. Glea snir, Mattie A. Nedry,, Ruth A. Phelps, Fraukie Allen, Bes-jie M. Sawyer, Hal ben B. Hawken. Scio. Mi wired Burmester, Huber G. Lee ,. Chas. Channing. Thomas. W. J. Green. Mill City. Sarah Bradsh. Lyons. Bessie Carlscn, Zeta A. Porch. Harnsburg.-GrovetGleveiand Nance and Lorena UouRherty. Albany. -Etel-0 dn. Mm Rob- ?,r,ts- H,, . ,NA Williamson, ""'icllJ- "p i u. rtwi.-y, "'u?ne: . , , , P alnuiDW W 17 Hntta- - "- v - .-..- Brownsville.. Merle Foley. i r oster. iNora A. liomp. j Sodaville. Go. Lybtle. Shedd. Marv B. Martin, Waldo ' Mnro-nn KMith Olann Ma 5vr" t Sutherland. Shothnrn. EHn! Oulnahee. - - Halsey. Edna- M. Russell, jonesi Elsie iraowee. uum cmisn. Silver ThreadSi" Ricaord J. Joss-who brings, his own company in the rural' drama, "Silver Threads," will be-remembered from bis appearance as a minstrel star, also a feature with Denraan Thompson in the "Old Homestead." Mr. Jose- has en deavored for yeais-to secure a play in whiehihe oould appear before- tbe public to ar.advAntage. and after four years of staving Martin. V. Merle bit upon a theme- which he was successful in moulding into an interesting play. Mr. Juseappears as Ben Lamre, the sing ing blacksmith of & smalt New England townv. where the scenes of the play are laid. A.t Albany Wednesday, Feb. 15. Talked Walnuts. J. C. Cooped yesterday afternoon gv a walnut talk to an audience of thirteen; but art -were interested in the sobjiect and listened intentl to a pre seatation of tbe important topic, about which Mr. Cooper has made an ex Iwnstive study. Walnut culture is a aulendin thine when eone at right, and: it 19 to help those interrsted in getting; tno right start that Mr. Cooper is malt ing thesu talk. We can rise walnuts here; but must do it in the proper wagt or the attempt will be a failure. Morkmen's Ml Albany, Feb. 8. The Workmen's optional compensation act is deserving tne caretui perusual ot all employers and employees. Vr hat does the injured man receive from the employer, who is execution proof, is of vital interest to the man who is hurt. A measure be fore the legislature claims to selve tbat question The employer of small means who is in danger nf losing his all through a suit for damages, in also grea.ly in terested. The advocates of the measure claim that the state itself is out far more for court costs in trying damage cases than would be expended if the proposed measure becomes a law. The bill is H B 251 by Aboott, who claims that the state's, the employer's and the, em ployees interests are all guarded in the bill. The lumber industry in Oregon supports 69.000 people and it favors the meusure. The framersof this measure say in the body of the bill that it does not repeal or amend ths employers li.tbility measure passed by the people in November. T. The present legislature is evidently going to allow the state printer's graft to continue, the worst graft in the state of Oregon. The state is paying about double price for its Minting and it keeps at it. It is said to be equal to the palmy days of Baker, a fortune in an office by holding it terra or two. . MISFITS. Ifow- anwm will the Colleges get. The legibittore is swaihwing every thing. Read abouT &9 weather in the east and smile: This legislature-will make the tax payer wince. Anyway the TJ. S. is-not responsible for Jack London. Albany must have more? houses, need them in our business. We When the next tax levies ate made there will be some howling. These military men seem bound to make the Japs our foes anyway.- Twenty-six bills have passed both houses. None of very muei' impor tance. "Crook County, the heart of Oregon," is the way it reads in the Journal, of Prineville. The whippingpost is a relic of bar barism and should be abolished, ft is not ased anyway. It will now be dangerous for women to wear Chinese pheasant hats The Audobon Society of Portland, has or dered a general arrest of offenders. Campaigns are being made in eom&l places turamst advertieing fakers, fet- lows that slip in in the night and arc- gone, arerebants bitmtr without consid 1 aratioD. J'. Pi Morgan is orgaaizirg a news paper trest, one whose editorial policv will truckle- to Morgan and what he represents in- the financial world. Mor gan will peril tbe strings and the papers wni so Gne-resc. Things ana-getting interesting in Eu gene, ibe commission form of govern ment is agitatiag the people good and hardi The-Guard Is so much interested it calls Pro'. F. G. Youner.of theU. O.. once-of Albany College, a aair-brained tneonst, amttsin little cussv heretofore livine; in-obaeurity. Tmrcost of getting the soecial train of legislators and others to Corvallis to see the O. A. G. was paid, one half by subscription- f the commercial club, the other haif by the facuity of the O. A 0. As-there has been consider able said on the fc-ubiect the Democrat givesvthe straight of it. A SENATORIAL WORD DUEL. Senators Miller and Abraham terdttv; afternoon had an interesting. bout. It was over the bill doing away wnn numerous-senool noliaagisi. Abra ham is in favor of retaining the holi days and Miller of making fewer of tnenv something asked by the teachers themealve&ia.the-interest of-more com plete' work, a. holiday breaking in on the studies;. but public sentiment is the other way. Abraham referred to his own children and their home, when Millenre forced:: 'If the senator from Douglas allows as much, air; to. circulate around his home as. he does-here, I see no reason why his children, should suffer for want of itt" Abraham resrvindaH: "T?lw a-antla. maotfronx Linn, does not need air. He is so-driedup now if he were to be placediawiy as a mummy he would last 4,o09)yeats without breathing." Oily Polk; Monmeuih- Feb. 7. At the White. abac oil well- three miles, north of this city, anether pocket of gas nas been. ucuck. tnat made tnuigs lively for a. wans niu no carnage was done. . The well is, now 2200 feet deep, and enough aasinc is at the well to eo down to a depths- oj 3000 feet, hixperts in reoloay and ott fields aav th&L oil in nminrnpnth the regions of Polk and Yamhill count ies. The Myer's Trial. Judge Kelley returned from Salem Uus noon. The trial of George Myers lur oiuraer was completed tnis morning, the jury bringing in a verdict oi man slaughter, and the defendant will be senienced Satardaj. On a former trial Myers was found guilty of marder in the second degree. The case was ap pealed, and now instead of lite, he will have to spend only a few years in the pn. Tom Parker's t umor. Cottajo Grove Leader: Tom Parker is out with a new business card which reads: "Parker's Do Nut Foundry, thi large do-nut with the small hole, usi Parker's painless pastry, Cottago Grove Oregon, near the Police station." This should boa business getter. Another American heiress sold her-a.-it for on English title. The state legislature evidently thinks Oregonians are made of money. Misrcpresentatives is not a bad name for some of the members of the legis lature. ... The principal business of the legiala ture is h J, ing to boost tbe salary gral bu iness. ' " C ,H NEWS Deeds recorded: T. F. Fee to Glen CFollett. 40 acre j 4K) Geo. Griffis to Hattie 13. K:rk, 2 lots-. N. Brownsville .. ... 86) C. S. Harnish & wf to Haman I Shelton Jr., 300 acres 11-2 W.... 350) Probate: i Final account approved in estate a Wm. M. Hoag. i lnvsntorv filed in estate of Martil- Thompson. Total in Oreeon $12,873.60 In estate of Frank P. Bodwell. Lett tlonaikincr removal nf ndminititrnl-rv filed. . Deeds recorded: Daniel P. Morris to Alni3 T, ilor- ris, 9 lots, Lebanon i $ O. P. Ritan to Geo. K. Wentworth, 1-4 interest in 40 acres 15-2; w.. 10 New suit: i. S. Ireland agt. Emma Watts et al to-register title. Ee-witt &, Sox attorneys. In estate of Alpheua Nordyke,- final! hearing Bet for March 13. Real estate ordered sold in estate- of Chris Schubel. - jMauiage ueense. naosen jessen, of Eugene, born in Neb., aged 32, and Ros-d Wil U'X. 39. of FIl3?enp. hnpn tfoi lowa. Judge Galloway will hold am adjourned! session of court on Thursday. The Weather, Rang of temperaiuie? for 31 hours S0.:29; The river is falling andJis 6.Sfeet. Prediction: fair tonight and Thursday , REGISTRATION TITLED In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon far the County of Linn. In. the matter of the application of : J- S.. Ireland to register tile title to tlie land in. said application- described as follows.to-wit: Beginning at a point 325 feet south of the. northeast comer of the.-Di.L- C. of:'R-. S. Oiyle and wife, Not. 2338, Claim, No. 63, in Tp. 12 S. R. 2 W. of Will, Ifer., in Linn County,. Oregon: . thence northwesterly to a point 206 feet, west of. the northeast corner of said, claim Xo. 63; thence west 15.74 chains, to the northwest corner: of. said claim. No. 624. thence south 1.8 degrees w-est-.along the. west botindaivof. said claim. 38.30 chains; thence east 30.69 chains, to the cast boundary of said cl.-uin.no. 63;.tlieiKe north 31.45 chains to the. place o beginning, containing S9.83 acres, more or less, all in Linn county., Oregon, against Emnw.WattSi and all whom, it may concern, defendants-. TO- ALL. raOM IT MAY CON CERN: . .. 5'S- TjV nln tW tl, .t. .-.. iji,... ,oi'i t- J filed.' by the said J. S. Ireland in the Circuit, ("our.fc of Apwe. st.-0 r-.'.'(la- for Linn County for initial registration of tire title to.the-tuui above described. Now. unless vou appear on or before the-13lh day ot March, 1911, and show cause why such application shall not be granted, the same will be taken as coniessed,. and: a: decree will , be,-en? tered according-, to' the prayer: of the application, and you will be forever barred from.dispoiiing the same. WITNESS my hand and the seal of the said Circuit Court, this (Sfcdiy. a6 roruary;. lyi'i.. (Seal)) W. L. nfARKS,, County Clerk and ex-oflicia Clerk nf, the- S-ircuit Coort of Lian-.Gountj-, Oregon.. HEWIir&SOX, Applicants Attorneys. , I.- REGISTRATION TITLE. In the; Circuit Court of h ..Stn. rJ Oregon for Linn County. in toe matter ot the application! of Laura. E. FErtfe and R. W. Tripp to register the title to the following de scribed! premises, to-witL- Beginning at a point which is four, feet south and hTOiity-6ve feet wtsti from, the northeast corner of Lot No. Two in Block Not Nine in the town of North Brownsville, in Linn County, Slabe of Oregon- and running thence south one hundred and one feat to the-south bouiidary line of said' Lot No. 2; therrce west eighty feet to the south west comer of said Lot Xo. 2; thence south fifteen feet; thence west hfteen feet. thence north, one hundred and sixteen feet to a- point four feet south of the north boundary Bile of said Rlnrl- V 0- ,l. Ulllivt V.Ol ntnety-hve feet, more or less, to the place of beginning; all situated in unn county, btatc-of Oregon, against A, A Tussing, SL P. Barser, W. S Hok-omb. R. Henderson. Lester Craw- firic -)V- Baile"' aml Rein and U. S. Ruler, partners under the firm name of Reine & Rider, and all whom it may concern, defendant. s To all Whom te Mhv Concern: Take notice, th.v on the 7th dav of February A. D. 1911. an application u'aSi,-,Ici l-y saul I-:1"r: E- Pir,lc K. . Tripp m the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon lr Linn Count v lor initial registration of the title ti the lands above described. Now. un less you appear on or heforc the 13th day ot March. A. D. 1911, and show cause why such application shall not be granted the same will be tak?n as confessed, and a decree will be en tered according to -the praver of the application, and you will be forever b'7.c,'U-'" deputing the same. . , 1 1.N h" m" hand and the seal of said Circuit Court, this 7th day of l ebruarv. A. n 1011 1 r ", 'W- L- "ARKS, County Clerk and 'ex-officio Clerk of the Circuit Court of Lmn County, Oregon. " HEWITT SOX, s Applicant's Attorney.