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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1914)
OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE Published Every Frldy. E. t. BRODIE, Editor nd Publisher. oivinv niTY KNTEUPItlSE. V1MDAV. VKHU1TAKY fi. 10H- .. - , - - r--J MUWWJ..j. I II 1 lred at Oregon City, Orvgon. l'ostoftlee a. second class matter. Subscription Rates: One year .. 81x Months AW 5 lowing their name. If last payment u mu the matter will receive our attention. Advertising Rates on application. THKRE WILL BE some new issues in the concessional campaign fall. Of course, no one can now predict the issue that may arise during the regular session of congress, but whatever they may he. there is a ceitaintv that two new elements will have considerable intluence. One is the demand for a constitutional amendment extending the suttrage to wom en and the other is the demand for a constitutional amendment providmg na tional prohibition. At present the fight by the women does not appear form idable. It is certain that one section of the country will be unaitected by it. The South will lend no aid and comfort to a movement that takes avvav from the states the determination of qualifications for suttrage. Mich an agitation will revive the old fear of "fore bills." But there are several states where women now vote and it will be a brave candidate tor confess ... states who does not pledge himself to support a constitutional amendment tor ifrr., The fact that the candidates ot Doth parties m oc .- iected to the amc influences and the further fact that the number of such states is smaii, may make the effect on the political complexion ot the next consros negligible , But the agitation for national prohibition will be nation-wide. I he success in passing the Webb bill over President's Tail's veto encouraged the prohibition forces. There is no question which appears more important to an ardent believer in prohibition and the overwhelming vote for the Webb bill shows a keen appreciation of that fact by members of congress. Hob son realizes it and tries to force it as the principal issue between h.m and Underwood in the Alabama senatorial race. With this question eliminated his race would appear absurd. In case he should carry the state it would put l .u. .,,.,mk;t,v.n fr,n- fhmni'hnut the country, it is not iu.uv 111 Hit I'luiii.'i.i".. ha been in Washington, dnfming with senator, with the end in virw of ask ... . - I :,,f;1.,.ti,iii .if his case. It Is not ni purpose . imu .,..., to health investigated. This U the chief my.trry to the nuhlic and the new Bureau of Health might find that sort of inquiry of great -i... lie .Ui.e. coturrevi to probe the conditions that resulted in Ins a.rest . ' ., 1. . i ... :...;.... There i i Intimation that he has in contemplation trial ami vi'in im ,, , r ... ...... - IvnUrs in New York. But this must be an .njuduums Mil! Hptm . , ( L...L the invest ical ion itself, tor the tornier nan P1I 01 moc union in - , . . rr would surelv not admit that he aks congressional aul tor a nrmi.c ,...- , . . i i.. ii,..r hr violated the law. This matter wa MT. .Worse uoc- im. mi" .. , .1 ,;,. his trial. Hit Plea is that other bankers were guilty of like ot ti.. 1...1.1.. . ..,,1 It k reL-ret.ible that they were not prosecut tenses, i nrv pnnwi; - - . , ... k,( I,r .,t.enes wete outlawed. The bank...,: rules are the result of ; e,nrriemr. Thev a.e for the ptotcction of stivkholdrts and de The observance of some of them is necessary.for ihe examiners to determine the condition of a bank. When an executive of ticcr of a bank cm dudes that he is above the law, and that he may safely nuke false entries to . -.. .'... .J.tt. 111 ill Whether nil v Niilv sutlers deceive cxanunns, it is time ui u.hiim.mi i... .. i i,. . ,! ,r;,m the banking laws immaterial. I heir olxrv lit rii nw win mi ' i . . . ) i.i ,;..l u.h.11 that every bank olt.c.al will trei mat uc , go to prison if he violates them. .Mr. Morse s attitude shows a strange o! liquity. that a majority of the house elected this fall will be pledged to national pro hibition. But it is probable that the advocates of a constitutional amendment will constitute the balance of power in many congressional districts and even in a few senatorial contests. The vigilant activity of the prohibitionists is causing no little concern to many members of congress. O I T IS TO BE HOPED that the supplemental legislation prescribing specific acts which shall be deemed in violation of the anti-trust law will be made so clear that even the wayfaring man may interpret it. The ex perience of the country with the Sherman act shows the harm of vagueness. The authors of that act were not harmonious in their interpretation of its terms. Lawyers varied widely in their views as to what it forbade and the supreme court itself was forced to introduce a qualification in order to up hold its constitutionality. The purpose of the supplemental legislation is double. To clear up the debatable area and to stop specific practices that are against good policy without the necessity of a general suit for the dissolution of the corporation whose offioers or agents have offended. The president has wisely indicated that he does not want the proposed bills loaded down with extreme legislation. It is a subject that is attractive to hobby-riders and already some chimerical proposals have been made. The prohibition of the sale of any article below cost is an example. If the sale is for the purpose of destroying competition or injuring it, the prohibition would be justified. But conditions often arise in the business world where it becomes necessary to unload stock on hand, regardless of what its original cost may have been. There are also practices which are legitimate in trying to get a foothold in a new market which would be blameworthy if designed to crash out competition. The provisions of the decree of dissolution of the tobacco trust were care fully drawn and might serve as a model for part of the supplemental anti-trust legislation. Whether this decree has been rigidly enforced or not, its provisions were ample, even though there was a community of interest in ownership of the various corporations. The prohibition of interlocking di rectorates and the possible prohibition of ownership of stock in competing concerns doing an interstate business will cure whatever defects there may have been in the tobacco decision. Tliere is a general agreement of public sentiment as to what practices should be prohibited. The proposed hearing will elicit little that is new or valuable on this phase of the subject. But the wording of the legislation offers greater diffi culties and calls for the most careful attention of the lawmakers. In pre scribing specific offenses the law should be so clear that there will be no pos sibility of long court delay and no confusion in the minds of business men who have a sincere desire to obey the law in letter and in spirit. And provisions that have little but novelty to commend them should be avoided. O CHARLES W. MORSE, former ice king of New York, does not seem to appreciate his luck. But a few days ago former President Taft deplored the unreliability of expert testimony as to the physical con dition and vital probabilities of patients, using the case of Mr. Morse for il lustration. Mr. Morse, who was serving a sentence of fifteen years in the United States Penitentiary at Atlanta, Ga., on conviction of violations of the banking laws, was represented as dying. The army surgeons found that death was certa;n within six months, whether Mr. Morse remained in prison or was released. It was on such a finding that executive clemency was ex tended, after every legal recourse had been exhausted by ingenious counsel. Soon after Mr. Morse's pardon he went to Europe and within a few months he was almost miraculously cured. There was a note of regret with a color of suspicion, in Mr. Taft's recent comment. But Mr. Morse now wants vindication. He does not intend to seek it in the manner that proved so attractive to William Suler. He has nut an nounced his candidacy for any office of trust, honor or profit. So far as Irnnwn he ha? entered into no contract with a chautauqua bureau. But he T? r7ARMOMt'l. 5 V. IMM M.A I l U'e rwrou.i. ... jJ Ore . Citv, as well as for every other municipality in the Ntaie, and 11 ii ...,.. ,lmllL.h the generous support of every faction in the town ran those thin.-s be done that make for real progress and advancement along lines that promote the genetal weltare. The speech of William Andresrn before the city council alter he had been selected to head the commivion for the pipe line to the south folk of the Clackamas touches the keynote of the water situation. If the people of Ore gon City ant to vote the bonds for the construction of a new pipe line, if they n-ally believe tint the beet interests of the town will he served by the tapping of another source of supply and the construction of a line to bring the purest water of the mountains down to the cit's mains, then all tactions that have divided the city upon this issur should get together behind the proposi tion and work until the new scheme is completed and all the details put through. Recardless of the merits of the present source of water supply for the city . , i' I -L - . ......... I.... . In niirltc tl,. ll l ill ftir and tne cotUMence mat a Krl '"" "l !'""? " past few months, that the typhoid demon has stalked over the town, received a Hack eve in the advertising that has been given to it and some cure ought to be devised. No better cure could be invented than the plan of the league to construct a line and tap water that is as pure as the best that flows through the mains of Portland and comes from the much advertised and highly Haunted sources of Bull Run. The south fork of the Clackamas rises in the same mountains from whence comes the mighty water of the Portland reserve and the chem ical and bacteriological tests have shown it just as free from contamination and filth as is the water of that city. Too, it is better protected from the advance of man than is the reserve from the metropolis for the mountains at that point are more rugged, their walls more inaccessible, their hidden springs more concealed from the curios ity of man. From such a source would come the water of the city through the proposed tunnel that is to tap these reserves and bring into a giant reser voir on the hill and within easy reach much more water than the town can want in many years and a supply that will furnish all of the cities round about without in any way injuring or affecting the delivery here. Should there later, in the growth of the city, be a greater demand for water than the present proposed line can furnish, the city has but to tap the east fork to get the same water in the same quantity as its original source. o ROGRESSIYF.NESS of the first water is the determination upon the part of the voters of Columbia county to rid themselves of the nvud and sloughs with which their highways have been filled since time immem orial and to do something worth while in the way of roaJ construction. Monday the voters, by a large majority, determined to issue bonds for $360,000 to be used in the hard surfacing of the roads of the county and to construct permanent highways that would lead into the farming districts along the main lines of travel. Trunk lines that provide a means of communication between all points in the county and the final link in the passage to the sea are to be built by the issue that has been carried by such a majority of the people at the polls. Hard-surfaced roads for Columbia county, paved highways for Jackson county, plans for improvement in Marion county, bond, issues for Clatsop county and a general agitation for better roads in every either county of (he state is the way that the light of progress has been shining in the Oregon sky for the pact few months. The people have begun to awaken to the condi tions as they actually are, not as the politicians tell thrm they are. They have begun to realize the tremendous expenditure of public funds that have brought little in the way of results; the vast waste that has been going on each year in the v.vinus counties of the state; and the fact that the high taxes of which they have complained so bitterly have been due, to an extent at least, to the big levies for roads that have done so little actual good. Were the money that has been raised for the highways of the state turned info the hard surfacing of the trunk lines and opening the main lines of travel, every county of the state would be intersected with hard surfaced roads and the mud tax would have dwindled away into insignificance years ago. ( It is a notable f i'.t that the farmers have shown in every county the spirit of progress that has permeated the state, that they have borne the burden of taxes and paid their hills at the office of the tax collector, that they have marched bravely to the polls and added to that heavy burden by the ad dition of other taxes in tl: vain hope that they would thereby get good roads and have highways over which they could travel in the rainy season of the year. Thev have now begt i !' heen working is wrong, !t r rea.ly permanent work can not be done under the dir"ctioii of the dozens of supervisors who pervade the county, that the districts mil ' be reduced and a man expert in the construction of roads given genera! '; rv-sion over the work. ;ir (! is nu f taken by many of the most progressive farmers of the re ROYAL Baking Powder Saves Health and Saves Money and Makes Better Food FORUM OF THE PEOPIj, help a little on that amount. As tins help was not foidnoming (he people again paid the bill. Here would have been a beautiful opit (unity for a prac tical application of Mr. Sence' theory of "generom roiiliibuliont by people mast directly benefitted." Puriug the following years. l'H)') and PHO I itrii t No. .1') w appor tioned jVdK) and 7lM) le'prrtiiely, as its hre of the county oad money. During those two vrars however Mr. Speme's district saw lit to expend 4S40.83 and certainly a good healthy margin over and above in llowance according to awved valuation. Nor wa there any rrviit to special levies during these years. History repeated itself in 1911 and 1012. running do t.i f'(MM) and WOlM) during those rars without special resort to the private po. ketbooks of the district member. In District 3') slowed down a little and pe'' the sum of $l,72.VOt incidentally without special levy. Now, after the taxpaver of the county, a a whole, have furnished Mr. Spenceand hi neighbor with fairly good road at a rather fancy figure, Mr. Spence opposes the bond issue, which in all probability would le utilized in building permanent road in other district which have not fated well a No. 39. Mr. Spence, in hi letter, goes a tep further, and thus deploie (he rem ing backwardne of othrr district in resorting to the pecial levy: "Until two year ngo some of the district along the highway never voted a peoat tax. I am pleased to see that they are learning the benefit of elf help." In view of the fact that Mr. Sence and hi neighbor have received in seven year the sum of jH5.826.CHl, or probably the largest appropriation of any district in Clackamas county, without once showing their appreciation to the taxpayer by helping along with a special levy, that gentleman's views on the benefit of self-help are, to ay the least, a wee bit immature. How Pastors Would Manage Newspapers NOTHING OPENS THE GATEWAY TO SUCCESS SO QUICKLY AS MONEY IN THE BANK And nothing gives you more satisfaction than the feeling that you are independent. It adds to your good cheer, brings contentment, and makes your whole life easier to live. These happy results do not require a big bank balance. Begin with any small amount you can spare, and add to it regularly from your surplus earnings of these prosperous days. Every dollar saved and deposited in bank is adding just so much to fortune's corner stone. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY Thi; state ' rr-; ! s; SN VILW OF THE LETTER from lishid in the Enterprise, in which tha less forcibly suggests that a system of (BY REV. T. B. FOBD) In answer to your request to write somethlna on how I would rim a nnws paper, I would say first of all, ! do not know. I have iifvi-r been the iniin ikt, or editor of either a weekly or dully puhlleatlon. I have had no ex perience whatever In the. business, or art of cnndiirllnK a paper. I used to Klve advic e more frequently ami urgently than I do now. I thouaht I knew a great many things that I now see I did not know. 1 learned some things, however, In this way. A fellow whom I advised a young woman to turn down as being entirely un worthy, threatened to give inn what my father used to give me. a "licking." when she told him. what I had said. She. went ahead and married him juxt the same, and was soon left alone, with a child to care for. Hut I learned my lesson, and have not been so free to give advice niece. I never tell a blacksmith how to weld Iron, or steel, nor a carpenter how to build a house, nor a nrulpter how to earve a statue, nor an artlMt realize that the system under which they have! how to paint a picture, nor a school master now to tencn, nor a lawyer now to conduct his case, nor a physician how to treut his patient, and I feel some hesitancy In telling a newspaper man how to run his paper. Newspaper men are born as well as trained. I was not so born, nor have I been so trained. I would he. as much out of place In the office of the man ager of a newspaper, or In the sanctum of the editor, as some newHpuper men I know would be In the preaeher's study, or In the pulpit. A newspaper Is a public servle.e en terprlxe, and a newspaper man Is a public servant. The enterprise has commercial hauls, but Is not run wholly for the money there Is In It, nor for a mere llvllhood for the men who do the work on the paper, editor lal and mechanical, but as an occupa tion, as a business, as a mentis to an end. with hlKh motives, and for the public good. I believe the occupation of die newspaper man Is sacred, ami Involves gravest responsibilities to society and to the state; that no man Is "fit for Ihe Job" who does not so recant hint calling and work. And my observa tion leads me to believe, that most rneu who are conducting Hie newspapers In the smaller and larger centers of our population are men of Intelligence, fnlrmlndednesH, devotion and sincer ity, earnestly striving to make them selves useful and honorable citizens of he commonwealth, and their papers IriHtruments of good will and service to mankind. They have faith In their enterprise and work. They have con victions which abide, and find expres sion through the medium of their pa per. They have real passion for do ing good, and a vision for larger things for their constituents, for their fellows and for their country. And If I were running a newspaper I would try to run It along these lines. have v in many of the counties, for the abolition of the :.,,') the construction of main lines in a way that will last. As l'ow such a program, as long as they concentrate their - . li v: e c clfor. "-r tvan attfr tlum over a vast territory and get no results, just th? ' ill they !i cover that a dollar in rash can he made to produce a '!oi!;i) -.v- th of road v,rk, if the man at the head knows his business. The action ot the other counties of the state and the farmers who have voted at the poli-i i,i these district f'irnishes plenty of food for thought in Clackamas county and indicates what may be done when the people awaken to the costs of the pre-;' nt system and the present kind of highways. Let C'.ckamas county get in the good roads band wagon and permanrnt highways v ill he built in a permanent way that will do permanent good. o VILW OF THE LETTER from Charles V. , . t hat well known gentleman more or generous contributions by those di rectly .Ktntfitted in permanent roads, would be the ideal plan to bring about the results, rather than bv a issue, it might be pertinent at this time to encpn're into Mr. :V net's philanthropic scheme, as applied in his own district since 1907. Mr. Spence, is a resident and one of the most influential farmers in Road District No. 39 which begins at the city limits of Oregon City and runs out along the Mo'alfa road to Paine'i School House, a distance of about seven miles. According to assessed valuations Mr. Spence'j district in 1907 should have received $502 as its share in county road work ; the district received for that year $4,000.00; this amount was not raised by "generous contributions," but was paid entirely by the taxpayers of the county. In 1908 his district was entitled to $532; that year $10,000 of the county funds were spent, and it cer tainly would have been equitable for the people of Mr. Spence' district to ara li win require auoui one monin 101 t,r a Tyrvurftit. complete uc joo. i iu (BY REV W. T. MILLIKEN) Having had considerable experience with professional life, both In educa tional and In ministerial circles. I have learned to be rhary about saylna what I should do were I In another public man's shoe. I have found thai the man who Is most dogmatic about another man's business usually Is the least qualified to criticise or to advise Still I have a few Ideas which I shall venture, with some diffidence of spirit, to express. I think my Ideal of a newspaper Is that It should be under Ihe dictation of no Interest or class It should be the moulder of public opinion, not the mouthpiece of class Interest; the strongest educational force in the com munity, not the exponent of sectional bias and Ignorance. It would be a great humiliation to me to have to swing in behind the moral sense of the community, when such had swept overwhelmingly beyond me. think I should endeavor sanely and wisely lo lead the van In every movement for moral reform and social better ment. There are ton many Maeppas In Ihe newspaper business, hound hand and foot upon thn backs of political or financial wild horses. t hope I should have a word of praise for every statesmanlike act, whether performed by a man of my party or not. I should endeavor to test men and measures by merit, not by money. I should wish lo be as fair to my personal enemy as to my personnl friend: to the man who advertised In the columns of my rival as to the one who supported my own. Thus I should hope to make my paper so fair and so Interesting that one would he com pelled to read It whether he liked me or not. Were I an editor I should probably do Just like Die majority of editors (present company excepted.) I should be sure to send th skirting editor or the office Imp to report religious gathering, or should select some city guy who would not know a hay-rake from a horsepower to edit the agri cultural column. I, Ike a Juryman, Ihe less a man knows about a Ihlnr Ihe UII ROAD! PROPERLY INIIITI MR, NlWILlf tllir.OON CITY, r, yu lor of the Hiilerprlsnl A Iralflo u, thai Is effeellv! Is liece,ary : contuse Ihe noi lo speiiil money for belter roads sin tojJ where I secure tile opinions of m? ........l Mini mII vmi niillniM.i-,1 ' M -1.'. t -.....-.niC ftW builders will find It mm It r,.i.. 7 aevure road funds If Ilia land on ' knew Ilia mans wr- m lis iriilrl,. ..--.I rl,.... la mil hum - - i"'i"ia wfo opposes neiier rueon n is Ilia a, nds l pursii! uiai eenps i tin full, of which llllla will ruins until L traffic Is regulaled. To space i"l tiresome what we all already know I win : explain how the beat hanlsatf roads are being misused and iinty when once well constructed. I am confident cannot i , Ing method through until a 'rlrfl( fie law Is enforced and yu aa un the people where every dollar 0( borrowed money Is lo be tis. Where we hate voletl ID inllli llnuously for several ynara ami b. subscribed much work, It Is Just where Ihe fund will be u4, l Ihere has been a weak lllllinrlt, jf All you euthuasllcs, and I sign, I hem. gel busy and enforc law tliul will encourage Ihe (r- ' owners, then there will be liUse-fl lieed-'d In secure large sums id) for road construction willing! v lime bonds Mr. lUmbk tried hard to security pasnnge of a traffic law seversl Jnn aito wlih Utile support and I am the from what many property mvn It'll me (liny will do their part W It la Impo-slble for a few lo ilrsirq Ihe hard made lalr of the many. A. C. NKWKI.I. PROGRESSIVE CENTER The Women'! Civic Club niel tl Itosa jin, Ilia home ot Mrs tl Craves. The day was to be di-o(l lo sewing for the needy, h' me Ihrw ladles cut and prepared gariueiilt t the forenoon for (he club to work upa In ihe afternoon. The roads helm bat the attending was not large, but i large Ihii of clothing was made up at d strllniilon. tor lit. b tlx, donors Us received sincere thanks The president being nbseni, thrrltt waa called order by Mrs Cameron, tfc Vice president. After B short toil leresllng sessln the club adJotirtir4k meet In two weeks at 'Hiuull qu tcra." (he home of Mrs. (tpeni er. Nn Craves then served a royal aprea4 t good things such as sh is famous hr preparing. If Ihe women of the rural romana! lies would iirganlie a rlun of kind, and get together as ofisasi a., venleul and discuss current uAn anything except gossp. they ttuuM Dud more lu make life drsiralde 1' would make them more up tlss sni prepared to solve the problems Ihr confront their community, the tounU and slate Women need more Msu lion from (he dally work uf the fart household. They need greater op (unity for social diversion and thd! russlon of matters affecting Ihe fare of their community. As te have Ihe right to vote, they shot prepare themselves to vole ntelllti ly. HONS. CLUB'S NEWHONE i IS NEARLY READ! COMMERCIAL ORGANIZATION Tt OCCUPY QUARTERS NEXT WEEK FORMAL OPENING 10 BE OOT he In to apeak with better uuallflcd authority. I think I should totally Ignore all perional attacks. The only man who needs to defend hla dignity Is the one who has ao little that you would not know he possessed the article at all unless he made a fusa about It. The man who kicks back at a mule usually get his feeling! hurt. lastly, I should endeavor to be an optimist. There are three classes of people In the world, pessimists, opti mists, and plain fools. The pessimist always think! the gun Is loaded. The fool always Is sure It Is not. and la willing to demonstrate. The ptlmist ever hope! for the heat, hut wait! 'un til the fool has made the demonstra tion. Me sees not only the opportun ity, but speaks out with no uncertain note when warning Is needed. Now, the probability li that ! should make an unmitigated nuisance out of myself, and a failure out of my sheet were I to undertake to run a newspa per, but I have gotten this cluster of opinions out of my system anyhow, and feel better, whether tha editor doei or not. President Sullivan Annouecss tM Standing Committees to terv Club Until End of the Present Yesr The new quarters of the Oregon (TO Commercial club will be ready for cupancy within a week and by m Wednesday (lie club will move Into W elegantly furnished home on th fl tier of Main and Klghth streets. At a n ting of thn hoard of govrrtion Wednesday Ihu committee on enl talnment and reception was suthor liied to arrange for the formal openlst of Ihe club rooma, and a biinipii't or I smoker will probably be given "" ' ter the removal to the club's ' home. President Hnlllvan has Ju nounied the standing committees 01 the club for the year, as follows: Kxecutlve T. W. Hulllvnn. eh"1 man; M. I. Latourelte, Jos. K. lied" Dr. I.. A. Morris. K. K. Hrodle a., .ini.,., I.. l if...i..a chslrmM. K. K. Htanton, M.'j. Ilrowii, Itaymori ' am 1 i 1 l t 1 1 a V o II P li n b li fc tli In l M ty di ve Oi he Wl to ot la i Tl ta wl Oi w wl ao 8c be toi Of ho I bei Ct: plu Inn roa ! hai hot at Itei her 1 cen bav Caufleld, K. J. Meyer. Transportation II. T. MeB chnlrmnn; (1. II. IHmlck, T. W. 8" van. Theodore Osmund, Kd chwl deception and Entertainment- I). I.atourette, chairman: H. T. ''. Unl it. W. A Mulvey. C. W. Evans, V Adams, , . Membership E. E. HrcH". .. man; (). 1). Kby. K. I- Holman, Ham Andresen, O. I. Hedge!. bou fori C bon lng par thli bli ed i V mo' llouse-Hr. I,. A. Morris, ohnlrrnai ent Dr. Clyde Mount, M. I). I.atoureli J , ., .... . ...... i..ir,iin: i th. i-uuiiciiy ti. ii. r.ny, t ' - -(J W. Sullivan, II. T. Mellaln, Wl'11" " Andreaen, T. I Charman. PBr' Under tha by law! the memt K ship of the executive commltte H W" W a nt lha nr..M..l nt thn cllt . 0101 Ihe chairman of four committee sjj the publicity committee la epftw the board of governors. MRS ROBERTSON'S FUNERAL IS HELD AT CHUBC eve Feb his fron ton. M chlh er Mr. M City Shei pent two O. The funeral of Mrs. Bybel B" son was held Tuesday afternoon 2 o'clock at the Presbyterian rnn Hev. J. R. lamdsbornogh nd , J. Montgomery, of Portland, ofc Ing. Interment was made In Mo""1 View cemetery, The pallbearer! were: E. . arews, i a. Muir. J. IJ. ,""1 :, (t- the I-odor, Hamue) Francis and DavW . llama. Hhe li !orvlred by three mfif, ters. Mrs. W. O. Mulr.of Dellsle, , Mn. I.. It. Andrewi. of rot-tin"15- Mra. P. C. Miller, of Powell Rl'er(), ws C all of whom were PrM'nt. class i nnere I Mrs. Knneneuu Thursday while visiting 8askatchawan, Canada. reIu.t.v""", Take Hsu a Family Puis for aeaatlpaUoa. ' all dealers. (Adr.) We rear that a man propose pui-ia im in aiteuw ' 14! m