FEED STORES. - . r r : '. - 1 - BREWSTER & WHITE No, 9 . Court Street 'Phone 17 $ SEED FIELD CORN. SEED SWEET-. CORN. A complete stock if seed corn on hand at the lowest prices-in the city. Land Plaster on -hand, also -complete stock of NEW SEEDS-In BULK Special prices on HAY. I J i DEALERS IN, GRAIN. WHEAT BOUGH F 1 . i or cxhangcel for flour and feed1 at branch office, cf Aurora Roller Mills, warehouse on Trade street, "'near High! Salem, Oregon. ' i BICYCLE REPAIRING G. A. ROBERTS l Bicycle Repairing ... ' New and Second. H ml Wheels 103 STATE STREET SALEfl. OR TINNING AND PLUMB INC? T. S. BURROUGHS TINNING" AND PLUMBINCJ .Gas., and Scam fitting Manufact urer of Hop and Fruit Pipe. 103 States,.. Tel. 151. Salem. Or. BLACKSMITH iNG. M. F. R. SMITH KORSESHOER JUD GEHMl; BLUCKSIIIH Carriage and W'agonmakjng, social attention pakl to- interfering anI lame nts. 01 lwrscs. 1 ' ; . 185 Commercial' SU Oppj prewery PHYSICIANS. J. F. COOK, M. D. BOTANICAL. DOCTOR Cures Consumption ' Cancer, Tumors, Gravel and K:dney Troubles, Afthm;., Skin ami Bone Diseases, without knife, Rasters, pos.301.-s or pain, j Also Blind-nis- j Salem, Oregon. D. D. KEELER VETERINARY SVRGEON and STOCK INSPECTOR.... Corner Center and jFront streets, foot of Steel Bridge, Salem Oregon. LIVERY STABLES. LOUIS MILLER & SON Proprietor of the ...CLUUt STABLES... Best Singe and Double j Rigs in the city. tBet.t care given to boarding and transient stock. j . Tele-phone 241 Cor. Liberty ami Ferry S-ts.V Salem. -, - -i ; ; II. R. PXGE W. A. STEPHENS PAGE f STEPHENS Horses well fed, good accommoda tions. Fine Rigs. ' Oo t Rigs for commercial men a Specialty. Horses bnrVed by day, week or mwi:b. M FBI liver,, feed end booho statue 164 Commercial St.; Tel. 851. Salem WILLAMETTE STABLES South Commercial St., Salem, Oregon Having bought V. J. Hii(Tiiian"s 1 eed and Livery business, wc l-.ave re moved it to the Willamette Stables.' sii'li t the bridge on Ct'umercial strtx-t, where we Avilj lc found prepar ed tr serve he public in the best oofc siWe tnar.ner. We furnis-h rig- for driv ing, (ientle teams for ladies and gco 1 accommodation fori transient teams. ; Barl horse'Si by lay or week. A blacksmith shop will be run irr connec tion with the barn, where you can get yotir horees shod ajl all kinds of re pairing done.. All ; work guaranteed satisfactory. j ; HAROLD & RHYNOLDS HARNfiSSf MAKERS. If You Want a fir-cliass HARNESSi Cill on IV. IV. JOHNS I am making the best ever turned out in Salem. Call ami see for yourself. RESTAURANTS. 20c PER MEAL ' at the ' i .": 106 State street. Salem. M'KIUOPA 1UIRKHART, Props. Dr. Fenners KIDNEY and Backache Cure. For all Kktwr, lu-t-r "l'J""rJ llurasr. t. .-. mi-i-m. IU-I W fliint.rtft Unfailinr: in Female Weakness. M MS FOR SALE From 0 to"25perhcic These "lands are1 fn Marion county. O.econ, and are offered on easy term erf payment. They were ! taken umler foretclosure by nem residents, be nee re offered for less than isimdar farms held by resident owners. (For fnll par tieulars and description rati on or address JM ar master Brrc!L .311 .Worcester block. Portlaal. Oregon, or J 0Z0RTH J? OTHERS l'inc lu'itinif. Statc-.in.i-i Joo OfHce. u n roNz-pN (- n A . V A I Ml M7 I I A 1 uuvay ... , j for Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signa ture of Chas. II. Fletcher, and lias been made tinder his .personal supervision for orer 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you In this. ; Counterfeits, Imitations and Jnst-as-grood.rare but Experiments, and endanger the health of Children Experience against Experiment. The Kind Ton Have Always Bought .Bears tne In Use For tXC CtWTVW COMMI tt LEGAL. ADVERTISEMENTS. CITATION. In the County Court, for the County of Marion, State of Oregon. In the Matter of the Estate oi Helen Mize. a minor: To . iMrs. Stella. Mize and all other persons interested in said E-tate: Whereas, application having been made in due form to fhe above-nameU Court on the Hghttenth" day of April. 1000. by John H. Scott, giiardian of sa-id minor, for an order and license directing, authorizing and empowering him to sell the Real Estate belonging to the said minor, and described as follows, to-wit: -East of lots 5 and 6 in Block .1 in -Southwest Addition to the City of Salem, Marion County. Oregon. j And, whereas, said Court fixed on the twenty-third day of -May. 1000. at 10 o'clock a. m.. at the Court Room of this Court in the Court. Hoiie in Ma rion County anil State of Oregon, as fhe time' anl place for hearing any and all objections to said . Petition and the granting of said order and licence of sale. Therefore, in the Name of the Sta:e of Oregon. You and each i you are herefly cited, directed and required to be and. appear at .iid time anj -place then and there- to show cause. ,5f any yu have or if any exist, why an order of sale should not be made, as in the Petition prayed for, and why said Feti ion should not be granted aud aid order ami license shoulj. not isstie. Witness. I'he Hon. i',. P. Terrell. Judge of ?aid Cuirt. with the seal' of aid Coirt afrtxed this eighteenth day of April, A. D.. fooo- W. W. II ALL . t ierk. w-4t. Hy A. McCttlliK-h. Deputy. SlTlMONSy. In the (Circuit Court of the State of Oregon tor Marion -County. rDepart ment N. 1. i A. S. Cow. plaintiiT, vs. B. V. Cone, defendant. To B . F. Cone, tl-r alove nahied de fendant : ! In the name of the State of Oregon, you are hereby required to apjK-ar and answer the complaint filed against yon in the nlovc entitled court and. cause within six weeks from the date of the first publication -of this summons,' to wit: the sixth day of April, 1900. and if you fail so to 'a-ppear and answer said complaint, or otherwise plead, plain tiff wilj take judgment agnms.t you for She sum of $79. with interest , then-on at the rate rf 10 per per annum from the nineteenth day of December. iKo.t. less the sum of S.?x paid on ac count thereby on July 24. l&Mt for the sum of $75 special attorneys fee in said action, and -for his costs and disburse ment incurred therein. No! ice is 'hereby further given you. that this summons is served Uon you by publication thereof in the Oti g .n Statesman, a weekly newnner 't gen eral circulation . ir Marion Comuy. State of Oregon, printed and published the city of Salem in said county and state, by ordr of the Honorable. Geo. H. Burnett, judge of'the alovc cnr titled court, made on the thirty-firt !ay oi March. 1900. and the btc of the first publication of this suni-mons in thi newspaper is April 6. ijoo. H. J. B1GC.ER. Attorney for Plaintiff. 4:6-7tw. , 'dmTnTstrAt rix's n Ot i c: e. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been appomtcd by the county court of the state of Oregon tor Marion county, administratrix, ot tin estate of Peter Mauer. deceased., late of Marion county. Oregon. All. person i.-.. in.r claims against the Estate ftt sai 1 Peter" Mauer arc hereby -required" t-, present the same to me duly vcnhe.l as rruiureil. at'mv rr-i'lcncf. one in 1 1 . n 4 f Mehama. in said Countyi ami State, within six months from th- date of this notice dated April i Administratrix of the estate of Peter Nlauer. de-ceased. 5:4-5t- Kill FENCE POST. c-a.e-i with ..Carbolineum Avenarius.. Wilt nut wear r-.1nr It Is -. Radical RemPfly ABSinst Chicken Uc. Its application t the itiwt whII!. of poul try houspa vrill pTro:tn-mly x- tfrrnliiat- BlI I-ICK- . . i,..-.i.- n.uhv cbiik. n-ltptuy ei?KS. Writ tor circuUrn ami prices d men tion this ppr. ft. M VA1K & C.. AKenta. - ; SALEM. OREUOM. SAIEMIRONWORKS I QUI Work Solicited. GEORGE E. SLY, Sup't - . - t 1 t j, - W'ANTKIJ. TO Bit A, . rt" wn owp also eom yearline ana -yefr-el is. for whi h tb bU'hsWt marKet Ir in be pail. Thon-VVatt f,nM isal-m. - -(---. ' rTTp: r.ARGAIN The bfst stock , w :n fJnn county, Too Oregon. 5l4l. 1 -ine "irintiii&' Statesman Jeb Oflicc. SEKLY . OREGON STATESMAN, FRI DAY; MAY' 1 1 , 1900. 4 4 SI 4 Signature Over 30 Years. wuwway tmctT, wrw Town enrr WILL TAKE ACriUiN INDIAN Hl'BEAC. TO LOOK AtTEK KKSEKVATION JlOllSKH. And Take Mtrps Toward I'roU-rtiac Set tiers Stock From .Mngy I u dijn I'unjr llrrdit. From Daily Statesman. May 9.) Gov. T. T. Geer yesterday received answers from United States Senator George W. McBride .and ' Congressman Thomas H. Tongue, relative to the complaint against the LJmatilla Indian horses, recently sent to the Oregon delegation in Congress by the Gov ernor., in which communication was set out the danger to horses in Eastern Or egon by reason of the fact that the mangy Indian ponies Were ranging ui will throughout the -turn try, sprtadmg the disease among the healthy stock the st-ttlers. and urging the Indian Bu reati to stake steps toward suppressing the discard. The letter from Se-nator McBride is a. follows: r "1 beg leave now to acknowledge ic eeipt oi your letter of ,25th uitimo. di recting my attention to the spread 01 d.s- ase a.nong horses owned by Inu ai.s on the Umatilla reservation, and re qet;ng me to have ar. inte-rv ie w ,wit:i the ot'ticer having jurisdiction, and as certain whether or not the United Slates Government can and will Under t;4ke the matter of exterminating- s'K-h di?e-:isc among the Umatilla Indian hor-es. "1 concr with your view that it is the duty of the United States .authorities to prevent the pread of disease anting horses upon Indian reservations, ami I sha'l have pleasure hi joining with Senator Simon in -a lel'er to the Com missioncr of Indian Aff-:rs. as king 1m immediate attention" to the inatter pre sented -in .your ictf.r. I b.uyi -onferred with Senator Simon in regard to, t he matter, art'' he is preparing a leitvi which we shall -sign ami forward to morrow. I" shall, at the eai'ie-t oppor tunity. iersonally cxll upon the -om-miss'ioner and urge him to give the matter his best attention." Congressman Tong-ie's letter. ' brief and to the point, is given in the follow ing: "Yours of the 25th ult.. in reference t the 'disease of the Indian ponies, ha jii t been received.- I will com in i-'icate-at once with the Commissioner of Indi an Affairs, and nt if someth ng cannot !e done to remedy. this. These oi;l-.-. are .absolutely worthless in tiiemi.lees. and are ati encumbrance up.tn- i;ic tange. To now allow them to sp-e-ad m'ectious at d contagious disease would be exceedingly unfortunate. I certain U think and hope that some way can be found to prevent such an unf.inu nate condition." WILL BE A HUMMER A SI.KN'1II kosk show to k OIVKN 8MN.; Ijtdiea r the Salem Ftorlealtarsl Kwieljr , Are Ijlortit Faith folly For a arcrral Kshibltlon. ( From Daily Statesman. May .) The ladies of the Salem Florieuku'-d Society are laboring faithfully and with untiring energy that tlae Rose Show t be given under ' their auspices in th-s city on Fr;day evening. lus t8:h ins.. may be an unquilined success in every particular. The 'floral exhibition will 4m? held in the vacant storerfom on C miner vi iS stre4, formerly occupied by John G. Wright. The prctirnn list i In'tng revised ar-1 will soon be ready io' pub lication.. The society will this year gi .e many substantial prizes and the Sale n Bicycle Association will also give a. nnnd-cr ed priyes for the In-s.t decpratcd wheels' in the !rvcle parade that wll le given during nhe evening. The'Iadies are arranging for nuuie--r ns eapital attractions and - will make the event the most successful affair of the kind ever held in -this-city. Tke Chcmawrt band, and a string orche-tra will furnish the music; there will le ke cream and earwly to be disnse'd from bor.ths. There will in-, -a hi y de- parade in which the fraternal societies of the city will be represented by a propria'e floats, and prizes will re ,ajnt! for the Iest elemrated wheels. The object for which the Rose- Show ii to be j?iven is a wortny one ana ine ladies in -their untiring efforts are le serving of a unaniinsius pwnaw o he. Salem Dubbc Hie lunus sienveu frceni the function will be addrd to the society s existing reserve ; tuna 01 s 7 j! ...:ii k --,l- tj Sine! tile enure antwuui nm v.s...-js. for a public drinking feuiotain ol orna mental design. o be established in ait appri-.priate place in the city. At tM time of bonding the show, the rose-s wi. be very plentiful and " in their prim- Linsuring tne nccess ei ire rvv point of display. - - ; THE BL AME HIS O WN - .v : -; i. - ' )- - - ' . ..- 4 THE RECORD or J- A- JtrKEt IN OlTIlER OREGON. J f Sk" That II Waa Larklag l; Legal 4 1 Ability aad Thereby Hampered Jolirt lUUrUUy. j; ; Front Daily Statesman. May 9.) The Statesman has been publishing some oi the official records of ,Ir. Jeff-j rey, ashe made them during Itlhe two! years hej acted as district attorney In ; Jacksoa county. He seems tee be of-j fended at this and wrote the; editor a letter, which was published in jthis pa'-j per yesterday morning. In this letter he cojrapl.tins because the Statesman d.d not publish the trial and naai con viction 01 the defendant, in thejease of the State of Oregon vs. Frank Law lence. He concludes his letter! by sar castically saying: "It was rejilly too bad, to ctjnvict a man of murdslr ini the rirst dergree after indicting hf m four times.' etc. 'What nonsense. ; That is not the , point and Mr. Jeffrer knows that it is not. Tje record was pub lished to show that Mr. Jeffreys possess es so little legal, ability that bje bad to make four attempts before fie could properly prepare an indictment lor mur der, which is so simple in frm that any law student could readily! prepare it properly. ? ' L "ii ; Mr. Jeffrey s statfment that Lawrence was iradrcled "four" times is jnot cor rect. Jeffrey made "four" attempts be fore he got, the man indicted ONCE, vis what the record sfhows. Thjs is what run up the -costs and made the alleged troi4le of the state in the Lawrence -ea'st.'. Perhaps, if (Mr. Jeffrey had not commenced to blow about his pretend ed grvat legal abilities so soolf after the state conventions, and got it into 'print that he was a lawyer of "ttfn" years standing ami had "four" year' experi ence as prosecuting attorney. Swhen the truth was. he was admitted ti ptactice law onhf" five years ago aid never served h prosecuting attorney but one term, his Southern Oregon 1'opulisfic and l)emocra;ic friends, who claim that he sold out the People's party in ' that ditrict itwo years ago." might not have gat he-ted up his oflieial re-cord and forwarded them 'to the StatCMnan for P"b!icalion. One of -Mrj Jeffrey's i'rien!sj in Southern Oregon f'sends for publication the record, made hy htm in the criminal case ot the State ol Orc on ,vs. Sherlock, indicted for mrinU-r. and tried inLake eounty. Among the vidc.Kret introduced, as pttblirl-.cd in the Valley Record, was ihe fo!liwing: "T prove the killing by j defendant w.t-s ;.i paper. sjjtil by deceased., pur porting to be a dying declaration which Jeffrey introduced iiLev idencp and' sub mitted 'to the firry "without ho'ving that the deceased evrr siw u or tHat the sig- naO're as genome. "Tile defense did w itneses . am' did any f the witnesses not infrtHiiicf any not eroSs examine of the -it ate. "After Mr.- Jeffrey had ad-Jressed the jury elorpictrtly for about , tvo hours, the defendant's attorneys caUed the at tention of the cotr-t to the fact that there was nothing to show that the de eca1 had -igned the paper purporting to bp a dying declarai ifn. and that no ev'd'rnce lial been introduced t show that the crime 1h1 been conimittels in Lake coun.'y. or that the detr.dant was ever i'i that county, and askrd the court to direct the jury.tr bring in a re-rdict of not guil'y. " V "The- court waited about rtve-nnittiies to itfive the district attorney an' Oppor tunity to open up the cae" andl supply these oniissioiis. hut as he did nt know enough to do this, the court was,' under the -circumstances, compelled to; dismiss the.: -aUe. n I' ' "It Nvould seem by this eniperieii.ee .he district attorney 'would have : learned the necessity of proving that a crime hid been committed in the county where the indictment wa-f U'oumL but not tvfii weeks later in Klam'ath cruinty. in the; case of the State aga-inst Cfttcl. for larceny, he rested with'i"t : proving this nrcessary fact, and jfudge Hale railed his attention to it iihat he had failed to prbve that the crime had been committed in Klaniarh; county." MtJ Jeffrey has no right' to complain of the Statesman for publishing these records. When a man leaves one dis trict and goes to .another.! and inside ii two years attempts to get . office there, the people have a right to know the official ' record, he left - behind him before voting torhim. : READY rOR BUSINESS. Three Ne-w Co rjo'ra lions Filed Articles in the State Department Vesterdiy ' Mining 'and Irrigation., In - the State Department, y ester lay. ihreeinew ro.-,orali.ns fded articles f incorporation, and. received .ri'liority to ioperate in the tate. a!foT.v-: The Webfoot -Mining; Co noun vt'.'A ojK-rate. gold mines in Oregon Wa-h-ington and AlasJ.3. Thr- ;rin -ipnl ed uce wi'I be i.-.eve 1 rn rorti'.in 1. The company has a capiti! tr!e -f $2rt. divided into ttventy-fivc thar, valued a: $100 each.; J. B. Ease. H. Stut man. R. Sinto,j.nd I L M. -LiTbcri are for incorporators.- 5 The Tratt Ditch Company w?d con struct and operate, irrigating ditches. ami take the water rcqtiircJ from the Si'vcjr lke ditch, for the use an 1 b?n efit ri 'fie s'ocknouirrs rin mis rum- pany The place of Imsitir- will ie lo on the farm of In I'r-t t. on the 1 cau line of the ditch, in -Wallowa cot-nty. The ( company is capitalized f&r $oo divided into ten shares. ; Elzie O. Ma kin. ! i Leonard Baker. I. D. Crader. Ira Pratl, Grace Pratt. Clyde Pratt. J. C. Pratt, Peter Olsen, and JJ. C. McFet ridgt are the incorporator. The Monarch Mining I Company will engage in mining and pr m- ct i b 2 throughmtt Oregon. The capital stoek is fixed at $iooo. divided i.v.i share aiuie"d at' $10 each. The principal of fice will le located at John Day. Clar ence Johnson. J.' II. Fell and John N. Geiikr a-e the incorporators. LIQUID AIR IN WINE CELLARS. T, possibiiitie of liquid air are of , r interest to tlc' makers of cJiampagne; By the heip ot it they can rrfPlate cellar temperatures to a nicety. How important that is may be athered ftom the fact- that at orie itage half a degree. tr much of heil will ruin a whole vintage. ' l.otthng is done pretty soon after lh iirst' fermentation ceases. Then the bot tles are laid on their sides upon shelves along the cellar wall in little light racks. The shelves arc so arranged that their angle can be altered at will. Ev ery other elay 4hcy are depressed a lit tle mere, then ihe bottle is lifted, light ly shaken with a whirling motion, so as to detac. all sediment from the glass, and replaced. - f By the time the grapes begirt to bloom kthe bottles are standing upon their corks, with all the lees in the neck. Men walk up and down the rows of then., cut the cork wires, keeping the bottle still upside down. . let the dreggy wine escape, then reverse the bottle and set it on a fiat table. Ctner men walking behind first fill up the bottles with clear old wine. If it is to hold sweet champagne 'he .ld v iaie has been made. syrupy with ro.k camiy. For dry wine the candy is omitted. Then tie bottles are corked; wired and labeled. They only need geir to '.: them for the market. Bn: rooncr ae they sealed than the danger begins. Unless the cellar can be kept for six weeks longer at exactly the right tem perature two-thirds of the bottles will burst, and of those that stand the strain very .few will hold' really, good wine: Washington Post. FOR MEMORIAL D'tY. Local Grand Army Post "and Sedgwick Relief Corpvlajining for a Proper Observance of the Day. (F:om Daily Statesman; May .). Tlve general committee of the Grand Army" and the Wo mens Relief Ctirps met at the office of Dr.-B.--H. -Bradslpvy last evening ti make arrangements for the -proper oliservance of 4the coming Memorial Day-r-M ay jexh. 1 It is learned that commendable and satisfactory progress was made. and the cemmirtc-e feels assureel that the public exercises em that day will be interesting and instructive, and prob ably more so than on any such day he reto fore. Special invitations will be given to the Spanish War Veterans; the Indian War Votcrans. the local tate militia and to the pupils of the government Indian school at Cheinawa; also a cor dial invitation -will be evteiuled to all fraternal and civic organizations, to: the pupils of the public school and to a.11 eitizens te join with them in the exer cises. Simc of the sub-committees, th se vylu se labors should commence at tmce, were named. Among them were the, fin ance coinmitte'e. and the committee to priKu re speakers. -A more extended fetont will appear later. BELGIAN HARES. Eugene Guard. 7th inst.; Will Yoran and 'A. 1'". Wheeler have each received friMii California a pair tl Belgian hare. These gentlemen are -going to raise hares 9oth fer pleasure and profit. FOUND ON A COPPER CENT. I went to a rent party the other night, am' it certainly was interesting-i-Each guest was giveiu-a card. Fas tened to the card with ribbons was a cent with a hole in it. and a pencd. At the- top of the cards, in Taney letters, was painted. "A penny for . your thoughts." Underneath this were: the names ef fifteen objects which can be found oil a cent. Tlie guest who 'prop-, erly filled his can! received a pric of a cent dippe-d in gold for a watch charm. The ladies' prize was a hat-pin on the same order. The following- are the articles to be searched for on one cent: f. An animal...., 1. ..Hare 2. Serpent Copper head 3. Somhern irnit ,, Date 4. Emblem of royalty... ...Crown 5. A spring flower Tulip (t. -Part of an ancient armor. .. .iiiebl 7. Another term for matrimony United 8. Part of a hill . 'Brow 9. Plenty of as.-urance. . . . Cheek 10. Found "in a school... j. ....Pupil fi. Ancient place of worship. ; . Te mple 11. Early American settlei In bah 13. Emblem of victory.. Wreath 14. 'Part of a river'....-., Mouth 15. A messenger...... . One cent What to-Eat. The moon is: a silver pm-head vast,, That holds the heaven's tcnt-.iat.g-ing fast. We invite your inspection of An Elegant Assortment. All prices.-!" Figured lawn waists 25c, 50c. 7.Sc. smd $1 Black and white striped percale with- jdain white lace, lace striped yoke. $r.-?3. Pink, blue and lavender percale, Fleur De Lisc pattern, trimmed with inserting, t.V. Our line of whie lawn waists expected seo-". ; UNDERSKIRTS All that y u c ould wi.vh for in this line. Satine in. black and gray, 75c, $1. $1.25. i Mefalli c stripe satine. '.$1.25 and $-t. Mercer ized Silk, all colors, with knife, pleate d ruiHes $2, $2 50, $J. $3-5- ' j ' Silk moreen with 12-inch aecordi on pleated ruffle $4.50. ' HOUSE DRLSSES AND WRAPPERS From 50 rents "to $2.50, made of calico, lawns, and percales, with se parate waists and skirts. W. H. H OBS QN, We have just received a carload furnish our patrons anything they" wa - -v Ii is now the oropcr time to use on hand. W"e hive everything in thci line of logue. " - SA VA QE & REID, Seedmen i 322 and 324 Commercial Street, North or P O. Ma TV. MM Mma4 .la tiaVMna ,s jv - s -1 ernnf ol eilDrr tmi, bwo m nmnn rrownnion, r ailing or Lrfmt Manbexid. r-. Jmrx"tcy, Nichtly alsiioBai Yonthf ni Errora. Mental Worry, eseaalva tina a i 1 1 j i" of Totmceo or Orrfura. which Usui to Omstunptlem and Inanity. With err-r ATlLf U4l9 6 boics for a.OO. HI. WCrTX"I UililllClL CO VUvilmmJ Ottiel FOR SALE BYALL DRUGGISTS. FOR AMENDMENTS PROPOSED CII1KGES IW TUB STATE'S , COSSTITCTION. Ordera t Coaaly Clerk a ta Submit Them lo tha Voer en th Official Itallot la Jaae. t (From Daily Statesman, May 9.) Cpv. T.. T, Geer yesterday sent out notices jto the sevsisounty clerks in the stase. orderingsdiemi to submit te the voters, on. the official ballot for the June election, the." proposed amende ments to the Constitution. The letter -of the Oovernor to the county clerk fol lows; J """ ' ;" ;.' ' "By j, jrtuc of an act entitled :n Act -submitng to the clccters of the State of Oregon at tlic general election 'to be held oi the first -Monelay iin June, 1900. the pcfiJi-ig proposed I constitutional amendments,'- approved . ; February 18, 1890. hereby direct that you cause to he subanitted to the legal -voters. of the. State hi Oregon, at the general electiem to be held on the first Moillay in June, 1000. the proposed, ameneliftents 'to the Constitution of the State of Oregon, as set oitt in the "Election Iaws of the State i Oregon' (pages no. IJ7). com piled nd published by the Secretary of Slate in the year A. D. 1890. hy caus ing the same to. appear on the eilficial ballt to be vote-id at said election." Thej several ainendment"" arc set out in .'the! election laws as follows: Senate jeunt resolution No. 4- session iSo.t. ihe municipal indebtedness amend ment. I . ' ! "' '. - ' ' Senute joint resolution No 1.?, ses sion $)S, -elating to. the election ,ef snprniie and circuit judges, - lionise joint resolution No. 10. scs sion jAt. rel;iting to irrigation "Hojse' joint reso1utiu No. 2, ses sion! (Si),t. relating te the abrogation of section J5 of article I" of the 'Conslis. tution. . ! - J Senate joint resolution No. 7, session ' d i.siJ5. provitling that the elective franchise shall not hereafter be lro-J hibitcd to any citizen on account ed j sex. j . ' ' ' ' j - 1 i ! Hill CO TO CAPE KOMC. I . -.j ; ' ... . I Couijmiy of Salem Prospectors Perfect! an "Organization IThose u he ill f Go te the G Id Fields (From Daily Statesman, May 9.) ij Twenty-nine Salemttes, who eonlem-j p'cate't going to Nome, assembled at t Hej W. iip. T. U. rooms in this city Mow elay i-vening and perfected the organi-j s-atioii of the "Salem and Nome Soci-j ely'i for the inulual iH-ne-fit and proter- tion j of its members in all legitimate? ways! j ' '- . , ' - . j The- followiiHT officers were elected: President. J. H. Fletcher; vicc-prest dentj Ben Tayhrr; secretary and tresf nrer. M. E. d'ogtie, An executive eomtnittee vas named, consisting il R. B. Duncan, J. Harding and A. A. Bashor. ; ' I The p.trty, or at lea.-t. a majority of the- menvbers. expect to start for the gold fields frti the l6lh inst. i Those iKetuning uiem-bcrs f)f the eiety w-re : II. Fletcher. Heitry Brown. So-. i P. Gwinu. S. Jokem. C. (i. Hdt, Tliomas Holmaii. t). F. Taylor. G. A. Robert. Frank Kaiser. .John W. West. L. T. George. B. C. Ward. Mrs. D. L. FieU ter, Mrs. W. D. Ingersoll. Fred II.' Geer. A. W. West. J. I larding.' Fred Locklcy Jr.. B, P .Taylor, R. B. Dun can. Jesse George. W. 'B. Duncan Jn. Marion Summer. 1 1.. H. Fletcher. M. E. Vogue. l4 A. Kaiser. C. G. -Wolz, A A. Bashor, J. Morlock. j Til E N K W HA N DS II A K E. The new way of shaking hands" in Paris is to raise the elbow as high as the ear and thin take the hand of your friend in yours, very, lightly incrJ is'iig the pressure as the hand - descends 'to its. original position. Lven hand-kiss-ing is being revived among a certain ct. ; - aAscrti Twice-a-wcck Statesman. $1 a year. our .SPUING ARRIVALS in Shirt Waists No. 297 Commer cial Street, Salem oi: Fertilizers and are" now prepared to nt in this line. j Land'" Plaster., We have a large stock Bee supplies. Send for eur Bee cata .r: - - .: J '-''--. MMMlftmV ftHil akll rffaMHM A km aa..all I