The Democrat. The Daily Delivered,' 10 rents a week; in advance fur one year, $4.0!' iy mail, in advance for one year at md of year iii. ii. l'nu v eemy Auv.ince per year 11.23. Kl end ui year $1.60. After 3 ye--8 at PROGRESSIVE NATIONALISM IS DEMOCRACY. The Commoner: Ex-President TRooscvelt is writing a scries of articles for the Outlook on "Progressive Na tionalism" the title which he has sub stituted for new nationalism. The Jirit is an introduction and in it he .classifies the friends and opponents of his program atid asks opponents to present an alternative plan if they op pose his. His second article proposes five re forms: ' First, Drastic laws to prevent the corrupt use of money in politics. Second, Klcction of United States senators by direct vote. Third, Direct primaries for the nom ination of elective officials. Fourth, Direct election of delegates to national conventions, the voter to express his choice for president on the ballot for delegate. Fifth, The introduction of the initia. five, referendum, and recall. The first is a part of the democratic program, and is particularly desired. The second has been a part of the democratic program for nearly twenty years; it is almost here. The third is actually in operation in many, if not most, of the states and is not only democratic in principle but is favored by the democrats in almost .every state. .The fourth is democratic in principle and should be adopted, although it has not been specifically endorsed in our party platforms. The fifth is democratic in principle and is becoming more and more a nart of the democratic creed in the various states. In Arizona a democratic con stitutional convention declared for the .initiative, referendum and recall, while ;a republican constitutional convention An New Mexico rejected them. We shall await the proposal of other Teforms. So far there is nothing to justify the word NATIONALISM in the Outlook articles. .THE .RICH AND THE POOR. ' People make a distinction and hunt for the mansions of the rich, but not so with the birds. The following ironi the Kansas City Post is about 1 lis neat as anything ever written: t "hirst of the year, a redbird sang in 'Kwisas City yesterday. It had been' raw ;iihI rainy and chill. A gray driz zle had iiecn dispelled by the sun ! brcakini; through a great rift in the i clouds, when the redbird hupped upon a spray of bare hazel in a ravine. He j seemed tu catch the heat of the snn nhine in his heart, fur he lifted his bead blithely. 'Whealec; Wheatee! AVhcatce;' he sang. Not a trace of February 'dampness or hoarseness in ithr, Ik nc. it v.i- a'. and llute- ilike as if he vr carolling to his male in the , midline of June. I Wheatee! Whc . ! VVhcatcc!' If . you had one guess where would you say the fu st redbird of the year made its dcbtil f Out in the fashionable res idence dislrict? In the hedge or pre- ( serves of some millionaire? At one. of the parks, where lawns even now jire smooth and . sightly? Wrong, every guess of thciul A negro cabin jn a hollow was the only human abid ing place near the h.wl twig where :lhe first redbird perched and sang his lirst sonir of siiring. lu-t oil of Gill- haiu roail. and near ti e :.! rock (piar-- rv. where the boulevard curves around tiic edge of the cliffs is a ravine. It is almost a hide in the ground. At the bottom of it. completely hidden by the foliage of the thicket in siimnicr t hue am on v barely visililc tlirougu tho lealless twigs in winter, is the cab in. There is nut a iiicler or more se cluded place in all Kansas City. An 1 it was away down in this ravine at a iplace the sun's rays almost struggled to reach, that the first redbird of the vear 1911 yesterday sang his first: 'Wheateel Wheatee! Wheatee!'" $4,091,271 SPENT FOR GOOD STREETS IN PORTLAND LAST Yt A!, Improvements include Sixty-lhree Miles Pavement and 115 M is bidewalK During last your 6?.43 miles of hard suiiuce pavenienls were laid in Port iind. an incren.no of 43. 28 miles over the ric id in-.ii' in 1909, or 215 per cent. Ilitulithic Leads. Properly ownem f tho city have shown u mcicied partiality for bitulithic pavciiK ills. It luads all other pave ments wilh a total mileage of 64.03 to its credit Asphalt is next with 4l!,12 miles All i f tnoao figures are shown in Kiiginet r lianscn's report nnd were tho t.ul- nl each kind of pavement up to Jan. i ..iy 1. V.'il. During t tit) year, in addition to tho hard sii'-f'ieii pavements that were Inid and accepted there wcro 12.5 miles com pleteu wnieli have not yot been accept ed but will hi' veiy shortly. liiu report shows that 115.7 miles of ci'tiu'iit sidewalk wore laid in 1910 and only 6.7 milos of wood sidowalk Mr. Atwtll 11 re. II. C. Atw.dl, president of the Oregon . 'Horticultural Association, was in the city twiUy on 1'is way to the Linnhaven ! Orel ard. This wecK active worn wm ibo bei;un, uncer the direction of Mr. Atwell, in (limiting the first three hun dred at res t' npples. the start of what ptomii"!1 in hn ""ft of the beat orchard propositions in Oregon. Friendship is about !-kin deep Thrie are not im.ii; Uucnuia and I'yiliimuj. Tommy Beard, the artist, draws a p cture of himself, of his own. He is doing some good work ALBANY'S CENSUS. WASHINGTON. Feb. 27. The Don- ulation of Albany, thirteenth census, is 4275, 12th census 3149, 11th 3,079. Since the census was taken a care- fully taken local census showed 5465 in the city limits and 6,129 with the immediate suburbs, figures undoubtedly correct. fcducational Appropriations Will Be Referred to the People. McMINNVILLE, Or., Feb. 27 At a mooting of the Yamhill County tax payers nek in the Courthouse here Sat urday afternoon, resolutions were passed declaring the appropriations made by the ibuciii, tog mm ture luircgun b euucuuuiiai inmuuuois as exorouanc, ana prelim inary stops were taken to invoke the referendum on these measures The appropriations mentioned in the resolu tion where those to the University of Oregon and the Oregon Ao-ricnluural College, and the $59,000 approprintion for a dormitory at the State Normal School. A committee was appointed to prepare petitions and raise funds for their circulation. WEDNESDAY, DOINGS OF THE WORLD Senator Bourne has tackled the pres ident himself. A four quartered skirt is the latest for fool women. Prcano han gotten its bull-pen ready for the I W. W. An Indiun woman at Umatilla has , had nine luisnnnds, all divorced but one, 1 who coinnutt'irt suicide. I The WushiniiN n legislature yesterday rejected dir-ci 'ogislation by four votes. Tlioy will c ..'!. c i it later. Graham ' ;i. . jr. , son of a well known . Portland j i . .liter, has eloped with a girl back . Ho is a student at Harvard nuc. v. ill continae his studies there. Chas. II. Markham, president of the Illinojs Central, has just found a broth ur he had lut truck of for sixteen years, Iln n "i a d is 78 years old, llopkinsville, Ky , a bricklayer, who win nnw be relieved of further work. Mr. E i.,Al.un, who has been officiat- intr as accne Lebanon during tne absence of Agent Ford in California for a couuie ot inonuia, nas Deen i-ans- forrcd to Sherwood, on the west side. where he and his ostimnolo family will muvn this week. r Fid has just returned from his California trip. A dispatch in the Orcgonian today savs the deal for the Corvallis and Astoria loiul has been completed and it Is now the property of the Portland Eugene and Eastern and will be elect rified at once. In the meantime wonder when tho P. E. & E. is going to build the line between Salem ana Eu gene announced several times. BLOODED POULTRY J. A. Hoag arrived home from Petnl unia Calif., this morning, bringing with him 145 blooded fowls, some of tho finest birds to be secured at that poultry conter, many of them prise winners, some entire orizo winning ccops, a big addition to tho poultry interests of this city, aireaily well represented with blonded birds. Among them are Black Orpingtons, White Leghorns, Svhite Plymouth Rocks, Thomas Kiug Plymouth Rocks. Fi.ver alles nnd Kbode Island Keris. Sonio of the Black Orphingtons weigh ovor ten ounds. The White Leghorn coop took trst nrizo at tho Petaluma poultry show. A Rhode Island Red cockerel at eight inonihs took first prir.i, a nea ity. The Favoralles are a French bird, the cocks having double spurs, a solid bird ' of peculiar color. Mr. llosrr nnd his son will push the poultry tm-iini'-'S here, a splen lid in- itiixtry in a city. Nearly $1,000 was spi'tit for these birds, one oon alone of ' Black Orphingtons costing $110. CominiJ. . , . , KrnoKt I.. l.vlur, rield hretnry of Prohibition Sime entrnl t ommittee. 'i: sii.tk at 'h.' S. ' T. U. hall on Frulay. Mar I S. at 7:30 p. m. Ad - muMi. n f t - Mr. laylor comes highly rcc -'Hir..' n a ni a putiuc apeaKor and h- un oriit'-r, who has won high honors in in'eitti to and national oratorical com. -ts nf the Intercollegiate Prohi imi .n Asaucuiicn. Everybody is cord in ly inwitci t uitrrd this n.eetin . with some ideas AT THE COURT HOUSE Heavy tax payments:-- John Schick $242. J. F. Hadley $105 - 28, R. L Smith $169.46, John- Carnegie $163.30, G. C Jones and R. E. Moss $194.40, Frank Hyland $130.39, Western Or. Co. $919.13. M. McAlpin $123.03, John Geisendorfer $143.47, Wm. Felzer $122 22, Est. Thos. Brandon $136 10. ' E. A. Thompson $107.81. Marriage licenses: Chas. L. Master son, 36. and Francis Caldwell, 82. Ralph Wade, 20, BrownBVille, and Vera McClure, 19, Sweet Home. i New Suits: ' Atlas Brass Mfg. Co. agt. G. 'E. Metzgus, to recover $209.97; M. L. Kline age. same, for $1367.13, on ac counts assigned, Wright & Johnston attorneys. County Court is in session. USual : Dins allowed. In the circuit court the case of Egan agt. Egan is not yet finished. Rhgistrations of title were granted August L. Norman and F. F. Post. Nellie Jennie was granted a divorce from Wesley Jennie, whom the evi dence showed was almost continually drunk. Recorder's fees for February, a short and quiet month, $369.75, being $90 more than reuruary ot last year. Patent Jerome DeVine. CORVALLIS ' J. T some Live Ones from the arrv Frost, an A banv cement man. made a business trip to this city I yesterday. Dr. E. A. Taylor, dentist, had a narrow escape from serious injury to-, r'ay at noon, the vulcanizer in his office blowing up. The explosion broke out I a window and threw plaster of paris in an uirucuuiis. nr. iu,viorf wno was : standing near, had his face blown full of the material and was more or less burned by hot water. Wing Tang Foo. or something of that sort, and Mrs. ing Tang Foo, who once was Miss Minnie Nelson, ar rived in Corvallis yesterday to visit a short time with the local Chinese col ony. When they arrived Chief Wells went around to interview tnem, but they showed up a marriage certificate and the guardian of tho city's morals could do nothing but say "welcome to our city." A document recently unearthed in the olhce of the Benton County Ab strat company is convincing argument that an ot this mik about building a bridge across lh9 Willanvlte at Cor vallis is not only several years too late, but entirely unnecessary and uncalled for at this time. Said document, a plat of the city issued by Kuluton Cox in loo'j, snows inaL a onue across ine Willamette at this point was erected nrior to that date. The plat shows an black and white, or brown, that the bridge was actually there at that time, and as there is no record of that bridge having been washed away or stolen, it must be tliero yet. GETTING THERE. The receipts of the Albany post off.ee fer the short month of February wore S-175. l.-ist year they were $1735, a gain of $340. The fiscal vear will end tbe3lt of this month, and only about $1,000 is needed to reach the $2'),0l) murk. It will tie about SI,UUU. means something for Albany. Letter List. The following letters remain th AUmnv, Ore., nostotheo uncalled for March 1, 19U. Persons desiring any of these letters should call for advertised letters, giving the date: I H. A. Danford. A. B. Farer. Jus. : Fits: alrick. Joseph Herds. Ear It Holmes. U G. Lasscll, Abbv S. Lamb ctsoni Kva Macalac. . Mastasce. V I . Melvin. Owen Metiger. Hert Miles. 1 EJ. Miler, Mr. A. L. Morrison. Frunk V j.;. McKenna. Kuth Moore. Koy Prather. Stephen Powell, Mrs. Unie Richard, stover. Barbara J W Wi'ls n ' ' " """' j'c vm Wivi p u " VAN vy,NltLlt p- M- CIRCUIT COURT.1 1 Judge Galloway is holding an adjourn- j ed session of department number two. In the Albany Farmers Warehouse ' ca.-ea thirty days was given to answer, in nrouers net. L,icwiey leave was given to amend complaint in order to bring in additional parties. In application of S. R. Willis to reg ister title L. L. Swan was appointed examiner. Decree granted in Elenor J. Sommer ville agt. Wm. Thompson et al. to quiet title. The injunction suit of Martin agt. Brownsville, begun at a former session, is on trial. The case of Martin agt. Brownsville was completed so far as the testimony was concerned this forenojn. The plaintiff wants the defendant restrained from using her property for a public street, ordered by the council. In Dora Lester agt. Elmer R. Lester a divorce was properly granted. The evidence showed that the husband deserted the plaintiff, went east, was married again under an assumed name, and then when his real name was learned, again skipped out. In Nellie Wisdom nee Smith, agt. C. Li - At ,lmZ?A "ee was openud and one of their children given to the plaintiff and one to the defendant. A temporary injunction was granted in the new suit of L. A. Crandall agt, J. C. P. Mary, two Lebanon men hav ing a legal fight over three feet of land, each wanting the use of it. Arguments were heard in two Leb- anon injunction suits, on the docket for several terms, wherein C. B. Montague and G. W. Cruson ask for an injunction against the city laying out an alley through their property. i ' , . . , . . ' 1 he trial of the divorce case of John F. Egan agt. Agnes Egan was begun like a saw by this time. this afternoon, being contested, with the court room well filled with specta tors. A former case in which Mm Back oast Ex-President Roiuevelt s Egan was plaintiff was dismissed upon motion of the plaintiff before the com- pletion of the trial. Roosevelt an Eater. The Democrat has received the fol- lowing from Chicago, and according to it Portland will neld to take -warning and lay in a supply of food before Roosevelt arrives the 5th of April: Feeding Theadore Roosevelt is a se rious undertaking, according to the chief of the Union League Club where the ex-president wa3 a guest durine ; nis recent omcago visit, "ijol. Koose- i velt takes the prize when it comes to. eating and knowing how to order food." I he said. "From the tinne he lurried 1 here at the club until he left after getting outside of the biggest break- last i ever saw a man eat 1 was con stantly on the jump. He started right in when he came here and within thirty minutes I had sent some refreshments to his room Not many hours later he u.-i.;was ordering more rood to tide him over until the banquet of the evening nAk..lA n i -.-..I . .u. :k. c : ... the next mia Bbroakt;st. No soor-er had I finished that than I had tn beein in- calculations for the luncheon." That biggest breakfast consisted of the following: Strawbetris. broiled chicken, hashed brown potatoes, two orders of shirred eggs, wheat cakes and conee. COLONIST THOUGHTS. This is colonist day, and Albany peo- r Deo- pie who have fallen in line and written east with a colonist folder enclosed, IOU& "cu V" ,an have done well. We r in no risks when " Scroggm are defendants, the un we advise people to come to Albany dersigned, as referee in said cautc and vicinity. We came and we know, will on the 7th day of Apn at the hour of one oclock in the afternoon Orogon against the world for old peo pie. i The death rate in Linn county is only approximately 7 in 1000, about the lowest of any place in the world. Linn countv will soon be the center ot a splendid flock of fruit orchards. No better place for stock raising any where. We have the water and fodder. Albanv's progress is steady and re liable. No boom, just a steady get there This is going to be Albany's best building year yet, with improvement!! ahead ul permanent charae'et. Day Letter Service. Xew York. X. Y.. Feb. 25th. C. G. Rawliugs. Manager: We hand you i . . the following announcement from our tt :.. - -.1 -,, 1 Ti..-i.t Day Letter Service. We give such a fast day service that there is no occa sion for any deferred service, besides which we are XOT a deferred com pany. Wc rush our tratlic through to destination within a few minutes from the time it is handed to us. Wc do not believe the public has any use for a deterred day service be cause the present (lay service and niht nettergram service seem to be amply sutlicient and we do not think there is any demand for an iuteriue .ii.ite service which would be no dif ferent from the night lettergram serv ice, in its practical working. deferred day service would get haiZeHidcli, Fa regular day .service is what the public wants, not a 'deferred or slow service. . . ft.AREXCE MACKEY. ' President. ' The healthiest winter weather here ! stra'Kllt rain i Most people continue to ride in the lower oertns The 61st congress ends this week. Good riddance. A little tas'e of winter weather only in temperature. The average man is evil because thoughts are evil. his No sensible woman will wear a harem skirt. There now! Some men, like a hen, time they do anything. cackle every Hardly a family in town but what has been struck by the grip. The average victim of circumstances is simply the victim of booze. The Bowerman-Abraham gang is after West. Iheir initials spell BA. $3,000,000 will be snent in fortifying the Panama canal. Uncle Sam will run :t I ' I Some men when they trouble. are never so are causing happy as some one I If there was snow on the ground we i would think we were having winter Pictures "f " H'""ii 'irtn hove appeared! The U. S. is neither a laad ui harems or their shirts. . ' A picture of Governor West's veto nv .n..iH u ;nfn,a,tinn. Rat it- unL-a itinerary is called "the path or big wind." But the Col. gets there. People who praise the beauties of Los Angeles never see the 18.000,000 dent on the city and the 28 mill tax rate. - ... . ,. ,,i.m .k..u i. ?lty h4" q'JhMe should be settled in some shape. A c y H has been voted and tl e .uncil-iliouldd" the res . Lots of penpl.; in to wrld who can alwavs see the sins ..f oiner oeoie never take a good sq'l. in the giass. Judge Lorin C. Collins charges that President Taft rules fanama under a despotism as abr!olute as that of Kits- sia. building up a beaurocracy above even the courts. REFEREE'S SALE. Notice is hereby given tnat by vir tue of an order and decree of the cir- cuit court of the state of Oregon, for Linn county, duly made and entered ot record in said court on the 17th day of July A. D. 1906 in the cause pending in said court wherein' Perry Smith and Myrtle Smith, his wife, Thomas Smith, A. J. Smith and Lillie Smith, his wife, Geo. S. Smith and Emma Smith, his wife, V: M. Yank, George Yank and Ida M. Yank, his wife, and Charles D. Yank, George E. Yank, Vera T. J. Yank and Russell C. Yank (substituted for Ellen Yank), are plaintiffs, and Sarah J. Smith, Geo. D. Pecblcr and Julia Peebler, his wife, William Long and Eliza J. Long his wife, Chas. E. Scott and Cecelia Scott, his .wife, Charles Ensley and susan Ensley, bis wife, J. D. Smith and Mary Smith, his wife, C. M. Smith and I. T. Jones, partners un- . .. ' . f c-' o- t rJ"f "rm n?, 0V?m.""0' J uj' of said day at the front and main door of the court house in the city of Albany, Linn county, Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in hand, the following de- scribed real estate, to-wit Thact No. 2. Beginning at the northeast corner of Sec. 31, in Town shin 11 South. Ranee 2 West of the Willamette Meridian, . Oregon, and runnimr thence west on the north boundary line of said section 44.5S chains to the southwest corner of the Donation Land Claim of P. Baltimore, same being Claim No. 61, in said Township and Range, thence south 'S.29 chains to the north boundary line of the Donation Land Claim of James Tallman, same being Claim No. 63 in said Township and Range, thence east 3.40 chains to the west boundary line of the east half of said Sec. 31, thence soutli 11.44 chains, thence east 38.20 chains to the east line of said Claim Xo. 63. thence north 12.25 chains to the northeast corner of said Claim Xo. 63, thenco cast 3.0S chains to the east, boundary tine said Sec. 31. and thence north 27.90 chains, to the place of beginning, con it'.iniug 171 acres, more or less, all in '; 'nil countv. Oreiron Tract Xo. 3. Beginning 4.00 chain west and 16.S8 chains north fro null intersection of the east line of the Donation Land Claim of James Tall nun, same being Claim Xo. 63, with the south line of Sec. 31. in Townsln 11 South, Range 2 West of the Wil lamcttv Meridian. Oregon, thenc urth 6.07 chains, thence west 4.00 ains thence south 5.75 chains to th rorth boundary line of the right of iv.iv of the Lebanon Branch of th ( Vccon and California R. R. Co. tl-cnee south 65 degrees and 30 min ces east along the north boundary 'inc ot said right of way 2.61 chain i: -cc' north to a point due west of -e -nee of beginning and thence east to the place of beginning containing .v acres more or less in t.inn county Oregon. J. X. DUNCAN. . , Referee C H NEWS HeiVj tax payments: ' Henry Broders $157.62, W. H. Ander son $tO0-.?9, Laura Haight $152.45. Vin cent Pietrack $118.90, Jas, C. Porter $171 41, S B. Cornett Jr. $-151.84; C. vi. Gidinga $203.S0, J. . Crouch 121 85, Port & Buchner $139.5o. Final account approved in estate of G. W. Vernoa Deeds recorded :- Marv. Fixon tcrN-. N. Lindley. SOicres $1700" Ignatius Faltus to Fred M. Grimes & wf, 14.48 acreS ... 1250- Luther Chastain to C, R. Randle, 160 acres 3680' Clarence Ingram to GIc:iG. Follett 40 acres 10 Heavy tax payments: -W. H. McMahan $170.96: Est. A. P. Maxwell $103.97. Laura Hi Burkhart $302 41. W. E. Parker $137:53. L. J . Luper $118 27, T. F. Miller $160.94, E. D. Jones $106.54. J. R. MoTis $18476, John Sodner $172.18, C. Gis.er$112 55. J. F. Kerrey $326.21, J. C. Tammen $176 67, Margaret Hurd $114.02. Wm. and Maggie Stette. $144.34. S. C. Cooper $13013, J. U Burkhart $169.55, Thos. Froraan $163.15, N. K Conn $154.10. Deeds recorded: C Morton et al. to Fischer Lum ber Co. 160 acres $ 100 Dan E. Clark to Fischer Lumber Co. 160 acres 10 Chas. H. Chick to Fischer Lum ber Co. 160 acres 100 Chas. McKinney to John R. Powers 30 acres Ur Cora Mills to F. L. Smith 36 a 160 Est H. A. Mills co-F. L. Smith 36 acres 348 VI. Edith Leathermsn to J. C. Way & wf lot 4 bi 25 2800 J. F. Circle to Vince Circle 35.87 acres 287 M. A. Miller to Florence Gardner lot Lebanon 250' Lebanon Realty Co. to' V. 1). Loch ner & wf 3 lots.... 47& R port of Dr. Davis,, health officer;, for January shows 18' deaths and 311 bths. Man lage license: J. L- Harris. 26,. Shedd, and Kitlie Babcock, 18, Halsey. Now h is being charged that politics played in Governor West" bills, that he amed the bills of t.is fri-nds and vetoed, ihnse of his foes. This is rot. His so- alltrti foes wee .be gang that were- Vi-r to override the will ef the people,. areiess ot cost SJaiiial-rcpsm Capsules A POSITIVE CURE ForfnflaTnmaHon nrC'atnrrho! the Bladder and Diweasod Kid- iiojfl. no iiTjur. no fax. Lurpfl nut-lily and ucrmnnently the worst rnnea of finnarrhaflii 'niid Gleet, do matter of bow onn etaudinc. Absolute! r narmtees. Sold, by druggists Prico $1.00, or hj mail, post paid, 1.,3 bosea, $3.75. THE SANiat-PEPSth CL- BellefAntahie, Ohla For sale bv.Borlchrt A Lee EXECUTRIX' NOTICE. To all whom it may concern:. JNottce is hereby given to all whom it may concern that the.- undersigned- as filed her final account in the mat ter of the estate of Henrr A. CIcek. deceased, in the county court of Linn county, Oregon, and that said court has hxed Monday, the 6th day of Manrh, 1911,-at the hour of 10 o'clock ,. m, of said date as the tiine for hear ing and settling all objections to said acconnt. Therefore, all persons hav ing any objection to said! account are hereby notified and required to file the same in said court on or before said last mentioned date; Dated this 27th day of Jannary. SARAH M.. CLEEK, Executrix of said! estate. W. R. BILYEU, Atty. for Exectttr. REGISTRATION TITLE. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Linn. . In the matter of the application of J. S. Ireland to register the title to the land in said application described as follows, to-wit: Beginning at .a point 325 feet south of the northeast cornel of the D. L. C. of R. S. Coyle and wife. Not. 2338. Claim Xo. 63, in Tp. 12 S. R. 2 W. of Will. Mer., in Linn County, Oregon: thence northwesterly to a point 206 tect west of the northeast corner of said claim No. 63;. thence west 15.74 chains, to the northwest corner of said claim Xo. 63; thenee south 18 degrees west along the west boundary of said claim 38.30 chains; thence east 30.69 bains, to the east boundary of said claim no. 63; thence north 31.45 chains to the idacc of becrinniner. containincr 89.83 acres, more or less, all in Linn county, Oregon, against Emma Watts. and all whom it may concern, defend ants. TO ALL WHOM IT MAY COX- CERX: Take notice, that on the 6th Hav of February, 19T1. an application wis; tiled by the said I. S. Ire and in th.- Circuit Court of the State of Oregon tor Linn County for .initial registration of the title to the land above described. .now. unless you appear on or before the 13th day of March. 1911, and show cause why such application shall not be granted, the same will be taken as confessed, and a decree will be en tered according to the prayer of the application, and you will be forever barred from disputing the same. WITN ESS my hand and the seal of the said Circuit Court, this 6th day of February. 1911. (Seal) w. L. MARKS. County Clerk and ex-ofticio Clerk ..f . the Circuit Court of Linn County, Oregon. HEWITT & SOX. Applicants Attorneys.