Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, March 31, 1911, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    4
OREGON CITY COURIER, FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1911
Oregon City Courier
Published Every Friday by
Oregon City Courier Publishing Co.
WILLIAM A. SIIEWMAN.
President.
GRACE J. SHEWMAN,
Associate Editor.
Entered In Oregon City Pontofflce
Second-Clam Mall.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
Six months 7
Paiu In advance, per year II Bl)
WHY EXCEPT JUDQES?
The constitution of Arizona has
been soverely criticized beoauso it
contained a provision providing for a
recall of tlie judgeB of the state
conrts. Now if Arizona wants to re
call thoir judges why not lot them do
it? Why should people in other
states object to a clause in the Arizo
na constitution providing for a reoall?
If judges go wrong, and they are not
infallible, why should they not be
subject to the same law that governs
other Btate and county officials?
Judges are supposed to ;be pure and
incorruptible, but it not infrequently
happens that a judge is tiied for some
kind of misdemeanor and is im
peached. If a judge is found guilty
of dereliction of duty why is it not
proper for the people who elected him
to have some voice in the matter of
his punishment V Judges are not
above the people. They are of the
people, and as such tiiey are entitled
to no more consideration than other
mortals. It often happens that rich
and influential criminals receive im
munity from tho higher courts. A
powerful political organization may
elect men to judgeship, and it may
happen that some member of this or
ganization will be brought before a
judge who has been elected to office
through the iiifluenco of this organ
ization. Now is it not perfectly nat
ural that an oflioer so elected should
be slightly biased in favor or tlie men
who put him in power? This is the
class of judges the recall is intended
ntnat nnd urit.il ft rftP.ul I llfOVlHion
in the o'enstitntiou'speedy punishment
wouiu oe maae pobsiuiu.
Former President Roosevelt, usual
1v nrnorfiwiivH and un-to-date. de
nounces the recall provision in the
Ari'.nim nniiHtirntinn and hones that
oouaress will not accept of il. It was
this provision that caused the resigna
tion of Senator liailoy of Texas
Judges will protect the rights of tin
people provided the people want thei
rirrlifa nrntnntnH The nnnnlft are tht
sovereigns and thoir will is the law of
tfie hum.
iCAKRYINQ CONCEALED WEAPONS.
Hardly a week passes that we do
not read aooounts In the Portland pa
pers that another atrocious murder
has beon committed because uion are
allowed to carry couoealed weapons
There is a law in nearly every state
in the uuiou against carrying . con
cealed weapons and yot no attempt is
ever made to enforce it. snerins,
constables and police officer take an
oath to enforce the law. always with
the uiontal reservation that they will
enforce the laws that they think
ought to be enforced. People make
laws and thou place men in oflioe
whom they knoiv will not enforce the
laws thoy have made. For many
years in nearly every city in the
Untited States there was an ordinance
against the opening of saloons on Sun-
v, and yet no one ever tnougiic 01
uforniug it. It finally dawuod ou
the Law Eutoroonieut League that
there was a way to have the law en-
foroed, and they carried the matter
to the higher courts, whore it was do
elded that tho oity ollicials who did
not euforoe the law oould bo removed
from ollloe. There was no difficulty
after this docision in sotting tho sa
loons to close up on Sunday. Now
there ought to be some way to en
force the law against carrying oon
uoalod weapons. Probably one man
out of every ton carries a murderous
instrument in his hip pocket and in
most instances the ollieerB of the law
know who they are. Let us have
another law enforcement league, and
have all suspicious characters exam
ined, and when thoy are found to
have ooucealod weapons ou thoir per
sons do not let them off with a small
line, but compel them to serve one,
throo or six months in the county
jail, and after a number of them have
been compelled to serve out their sen
tences there will be less inclination
to defy the the authorities, and con
sequently thero will bo a fifty per
cent donroaso in tho amount of crime
committed.
Thoro is good reason why every
man in business should carry on that
business with the greatest possible
ellleienoy. We are hearing a great
deal just now about the need of effi
ciency in railway management in or
der to reduce the cost of doing busi
ness, aud farmers may learn some
thing from theso efficiency experts.
To produce a thing at the lowest pos
sible cost consistent with quality, to
sell it at tho best attainable price and
to uBe the proceeds to the best pos
sible advantage is the standard of
efficiency which every business man
should aim to reach, aud theso throe
A Friendly
THE OFFICERS AND EMPLOYES OF THIS BANK
;triytoseethaL patrons always find here afriendly
atmosphere.
You are doing usji good turn when you bring business
ofoi yjiature to this bauk. We appreciate it., and want,
you feel at home here, and find it, a pleasure to come1.
Don't stay away because your transaction Is a small
one. It'sthe sum of small things that makes this
bank great.
The Bank of Oregon City
The Oldest Bank in the County
essentials apply with peculiar force to
agriculture ; and yet in some respects
farmers have been the most wasteful
and careless. They have worked
bard, and too often they have care
lessly allowed others to reap the re
wards of their labors; and the time
has now come for us to conserve not
only our resources but our strength
and industry, in order that we may
get all that is coming to us, and that
mere jobbers in the products of our
toil may not get the greater part of
the reward.
WHAT WILL CONGRESS DO?
Apparently the president will have
an uphill job in convincing the in
coming extra session of congress to
pass the proposed reciprocity bill in
its present form. It is true that the
house passed the measure during the
last session of congress, all the Demo
crats but five voting for the measure.
Bat the incoming congress is com
posed of different men aud they may
have different ideas about the mattor.
The president wants congress to pass
the reciprocity bill and adjourn aud
let the regular session which meets in
December, pass on the proposer! re
duction in tariff duties. The Demo
crats are not inclined to do this aud
they now propose to revise the entire
law, quite a number of whom are in
favor of even side-tracking the reoi
procity scheme and pass the tariff for
revenue measure only. No party ever
went into power under more favor
able conditions than the presout bouse
ot representatives. They have a
chanoe to make a record that the
party will be proud of. If they can
succeed in relegating demagogio
measures to the rear and pass laws
that will relieve the burdens of the
people they can "point with pride"
to their record during the next presi
dential canvass, but if they insist on
debating the tariff laws nutil the
regular session of congress meets and
do not accomplish anything, they can
rest assured that many of their num
ber will be permitted to serve only
one term iu the national house of rep
resentatives. The country is getting
very weary of this everlasting taritl
talk. It interferes with business.
Manufacturers and importers are pre
vented from making arrangements for
future trade, and they are in hopes
that the time will sometime come
when tlie whole tariff question will
be submitted to a body of experts who
will be ablo to settle tho subjeot in a
scientific manner. There is a bill
uow before congress providing for a
permanent tariff toard, but both
bodies Beem to be afraid of it. They
are afraid that if the measure is taken
out of their bauds they will have
nothing to talk about. The present
tariff commission can only recom
mend. What is needed is a regular
tariff court with the saino powers as
are possesssed by the interstate com
merce commission. They would be
in session at all times and whenever
Importers and manufacturers thought
they were being discriminated against
the matter could be brought before
the oourt at ouoe aud settled, with
out waiting for two or three years of
congressional debate. This is the
measure President Taft favors but
there is not much likelihood of its be
coming a law. The probabilities are
that the country will not Benure any
relief during the coming , session of
congress, but it will get lots of poll
tics, and that is what tiie country
don t want.
IMPERIALISM.
The question of imperialism is again
coming to the front auu is to be made
an isBue bv the Democrats in tho cam
paign of 11)12. The subject will be
discussed at the extra session, altho
there are uo'uew developments to be
brought to the attention of th country
A vast majority of the party are iu
favor of getting rid of tlie Philip
pines. Some want immediate inde
pendence, while others want to place
the time of independence at five, ten
or fifteen years. Our occupation of the
islands is said to be a constant menace
to peaoo between this country and Jap
an, and if we should grant tlie r Ui-
imiio iudopoudeuce the country would
save millions of dollars annually, now
necoesary to keop np our navy. All
the political parties iu the isliinds
want iinuiodiate independence, but if
thoy oatinot secure that they want a
date set fixing tho time for the estab
lishment of an independent republic,
The revelations of a congressional in
vestigating committee, which riiselosd
the tact that American sugar interests
liavo purchased an immense amount
of rich farm lauds, which thoy consid
er is a violation of the organic act,
has strengthened a feeliuir that has
boon growing ou them for some
time, that powerful American euuar
interests are influencing ? the Philip
pine policy of the united btates. Tno
f Ultimo docs not want to see a few
gigantic corporations hold all the bi'st
and ou the island They want it di
vided up into small tracts so that the
common people nan eventually own
their homesteads. That they have
good grounds for believing that 'tho
government is holding on to them for
tho purpose of permitting wholesale
exportation there is no doubt. Tho
American speculator is everywhere
present, aud Amerieau ingenuity has
developed so many schemes to enrich
themselves at the expense of the nat
ive that a rebellions spirit is being
mauifoHted anda!seriou8 outbreak may
occur at any time. INow that the Uem-
omcrats consider that there is no
doubt but what they will be trium
Atmosphere
phant at the next, presidential elec
tion, they are investigating the matter
with the view of presenting some plan
looking toward the gradual evacua
tion of the island by our government.
The Democratic platform of 1901,
1004 and 1D08 declare our possessions
of the Philippines an inexcusable
blunder and demand that immediate
stetsba taken for their relinquish
ment What they will do when they
have possession of the government aud
are confronted by the powerful inter
ests is a uiattenhat can only be decid
ed when the time for legislative ao
tion arrives.
The Wisconsin solons think they
have discovered a way to improve ou
the Oregon initiative aud referendum
law. A bill now before the legisla
ture, and which will probably beoome
a law, provides for a reference to the
people ot any law passed oy tne legis
lature when it is petitioned for by
eight per cent of the vot rs. Any
nersonal amendment to the oonstitu
tion must be referred to the voters
Petitions for a referendum vote must
be Hied with the secretary of state
within ninety days after tho adjourn
nieut of the legislature and voted up
on at the next regular state election
occurring not less than thirty days
after filiua of the referendum peti
tion. or at an earlier eloctiou called
bv the governor in not le6s than nine
ty days after the petition has been re
ceived. Anv measure shall beoome
effective upou reoeiviug a majority of
the votes cast on the subject at the
election. The governor cannot veto
measures adopted by a referendum
vote.
Just because Uncle Sam thought it
would be a nice idea., to have dress
parade down in Texas the yellow
journals thought they saw 10,000 air
ships loaded with Yankees soaring
towards the Mikado's domains. In
stead of flying artillery the next war
is to be fought with flying infantry
When the mighty hunter started
out on his latest swing around the
circle he announced that he. had
"nothing to say about anything."
Well, eight or ten speeches a day
isu t much, but 'twill serve.
Northern Democrats will have to be
satisfied with few chairmanships iu
the honse of representatives. They
don't like it, but they will have to
grin aud bear it.
A college professor says the most of
the college girls haven't got sense
enough. to boil potatoes. They could
probably give the professor pointers
ou Saratoga chips.
In Mexico the government owns and
operates the railroads, but just at the
present time the divi lends are not
largo, ,
In many places in northern Culi
fornia numerous farms have been en
tirely washed away by the disastrous
floods in the Sacramento valley.
Champ Clark is said to wear an ac
ceptance smile when asked if he has
decided to beoome a presidential can
didute.
Disease Lurks in Free Text Books.
The danger of disoaase infection,
the lack of any pressing necessity,
aud the satisfactory terms of the pres
ent law are the basis upon which
Prof. B. D. Kosslor of tho department
of education at tlie Oregon Agricultn
ral College rests his conviction that
the Btate has lost nothing vital
through the defeat of the free text
book law proposed in the legislature
tins year.
"We have had the free text book
question under cousidoration in the
past two or three legislatures." said
Prof. Hefislor in discussing the mat
ter, "and thore is now a provision in
the state statutes that school districts
may vote free text books, in case the
pupils are unable to provide them
tlieuisolves; or the board may provide
them, upon written recommendation
of the clerk ot the school board, for
indigent pupils.
'Personally I am not in favor of a
compulsory free text book law, so I
do uot mourn the demise of the one
presented in the legislature this year.
1 think the optional arrangement in
the presout law is sufficient to meot
conditions in Oregon as they now ex
ist, unr text boosB are not frequently
changed. They are adopted for per
iods of six years at a time, and at the
close of such periods thore are not
often many ohaiiges, the old books be
ing coutinued Thus the matter ol
expense is uot a great one.
"Somo people, I know, feel that the
presout provision is a sort of charity
law, and therefore make undue sacri
fices in order to avoid the atinearauoe
of accepting aid not required by their
uoiglitiors sacrifices they would uot
have to make if all were alike fur
nished with free books. But we buy
the looks at practically wholesale
prices; I do net think school boards
oould buy them in largo quantities
any cheaper than tho iuidvidual can
now secure them.
"The sense of owuershii) in bnnta
aud their care is, I think, an imnor-
taut matter for tho child's develop
ment, and is not possible, of course,
where there are free text books.
"More important than this, how
ever, is the very real dauger of dis
easo infection from books handed
down by tlie sohool district from one
geueratiou of pupils to another,
Thorough fumigation will, it is true,
minimize such danger; but that is not
an easy task, and few sohool districts
would be likely to attend to the mat
ter as faithfully as necessary.
"The danger of infection is great;
the need of free text books is certain
I; not a pressing one; and the present
law mnkes snlheioiit provision where
there is necessity. These, it Beeuis to
me. are reasons for a fair degree of
satisfaction with the present Btatus of
tlie free text book question iu Oie-
J JU."
FIFTY YEARS AGO.
President Uncolu's cabinet, by a
vote of"6 to a, decided to send sup
plies to the relief of Fort Sumter.
Secretary "of State Seward de
clined to conduct negotiations
with the so-called confederate com
missioners, declining to admit that
they were the representatives of a
foieigu power.
Tho officers aud enlisted men of
the U. S. army numbered 10,403,
but it was so scattered under the
order of Secretary of War Floyd
that it was practically worthless
The IT. S. navy had been dis
patched to foreign countries, Hnd
no war vessels were available to
come to the assistance of the be
leaguered garrison at Fort Snmter.
Ueauregard expected to fire on
Fort Sumter at auy moment.
WEEKLY SUMMARY OF NEWS,
GENERAL AND PERSONAL
All . winter loug the New York
legislature has been trying to elect a
United States seuator. Day after day
the legislature has met in joiut ses
sion and voted with the same result.
Hofs Murphy has voted the Demo
cratic majority every day and at this
writing they are no nearer an election
than they werejon the first of Janu
ary. Uncle Jue Cannon will not consent
to be minority leader of the house.
Russia's latest demand on Chiua
will be acceded to and there will be
no war.
The constitutionality of the Oregon
initiative and referendum law will
probably uot be passed upon by the
supreme court of the United States
until next year. A
James J. Hill, called at the White
Elouse and informed President Taft
that the reciprocity idea was gaining
ground and he thought the entire
country would soon favor it.
Former Secretary of the Interior
Ballinger returned to Seattle on Fri
day last aud was given a great recep
tion by the residents of his home
town.
A terrible calamity ocourred In a
tall factory building in Mew York on
Saturday last. One hundred aud
forty-eight persons, nine-tenths of
them girls, were crushed to death on
the pavement, burned to a crisp or
smothered by smoke iu the worst dis
aster known since the Steamer Slocuni
was buured la 1904. Nearly all the
victims were employed by tlie Trian
gle Waiit Company on the upper three
floors of a ten-story building at 23
Washington place. The partners in
the concern, Ieanc Harris and Max
Blanck, escaped, carrying with them
Blanck's two young daughters and a
governess. There were no fire escapes
on the building, and that acounts for
the terrible loss of life.
The California assembly passed a
bill 45 to 18 preventing state officers
from plaoing their relatives in oflice.
Treasure to the amount of 11,250,000
was discovered iu au old bouse in
England which was constructed dur
ing the llitli century.
The federal authorities have notified
postal clerks that when they join
labor organizations they violate their
oath of office.
Eight persons were killed in a rail
road wreck near Tifton, Ga., on Sat
urday last.
Chicago is having the most exoiting
municipal campaign in the history of
the city. The riug candidate is Car
ter Harrison and he is opposed to by a
uuiversity professor named Merriam.
Lorimer's friends are quietly support
ing Harrison, while the Central Labor
Union has declared for Merriam.
A Santa Rosa, Oal, Grange has
adopted a novel plan of increasing its
membership and securing a more reg
ular attendanoe at its meetings. To
the boy under fourteen i.years of age
who produces the best yield from a
Bingle potato a prize of $'3.50 cash
will be given and the girl under four
teen who shall write the beBt orchard
story will be given the same amount.
The Mexican cabinet all resigned and
their places have been tilled by young
er men.
A blinding snow storm in Chicago
on Monday last caused blockading of
roads and mauy collisions.
Bryan proposes to read the standpat
Demooratio senators out of the Demo
oratio party.
A terrible electric storm in Philadel
phia on Monday last destroyed a large
number of buildings and caused much
loss of life.
J. I R. Walsh of Chicago and Charles
W. Morse of New York, both serving
in federal prisons for violation of the
banking law, have been refused exec
utive clemenoy and will serve out
their time. '
The Taooma people are evading the
new anti-treat ordinance by providing
themselves with extra nickles and
dimes which they slip into the hands
of the friends they wish to treat.
The Steamer Rose City was quite
severely damaged when trying to
land at Sau Francisco on Sunday.
The passengers were pauio stricken,
but fortunately no one was injured.
Portland representative at San
Francisco brings information to the
effect that Oregon will have first
choice in the selection of their 'build
ing at the Panama Exposition
OREGON NEWS NOTES
Twenty- two days from the time
peaches leave the orchards iu eastern
Washingtou and Oregon and nor
thern ladlio nutil the fruit is placed
on sale in Loudon aud Liverpool Mar
kets is the fast freight service prom
ised for this season by a travelling
representative of an eastern railroad,
who is in Spokane ou an extended tour
of the Inland Empire. He says Hie
transcontinental railroads and con
necting lines already are preparing to
handle the crop of the distriot.
Cauhy people claim that more
freight is reoeived and shipped from
that town than at any otner place be
tween Salem and Portlaud.
as the center of a great fruit grow
ing section. Salem people think the
state should establish a horticultural
school at that place.
Large numbers of colonists are
daily arriving at Uorvallis aud nearly
all of them are so favorably impressed
with the location that they arc pur
chasing homes for themselves and
families.
McMinnville people say one tele
phone service is all they need.
The Polk Uouuty Itemizer wants
the county to issue $30,000 in bonds
for the improvement of the , county
roads.
'Rooms all taken is a Bign dis
played at the Sheridau hotels almost
every night.
Albany proposes to speud 1200.000
ou street improvement this year.
Work will soou commence ou the
new $60,000 federal building at Al
bany.
Silverton is going to have a brass
band.
Thirty tourists from St. Paul and
Minneapolis have invested f 4:2,000 in
lands iu the Linnhaven Fruit Com
pany.
Many towns in Marion couuty are
discussing the question of closing
the postotlices ou Suuday.
Forest Grove expects a building
boom this summer.
The Oregon game warden is making
arrangements for tho propagation of
pheasauts throughout the state..
Oregon'! naval militia will get the
Cruiser Boston for use iu training the
members in the ways of the uavy.
The vessel will be available Mny io
and will be stationed at Portland.
Cruises will be made to sea aud coast
points to give tlm membership pracri
cal instruction iu bandliug a fighting
ship. The Reserve is au active or
gnuizatiou that promises to become
more important as time passes.
North Plaius is one of Oregon's
newest towns aud oue of the first
things it did was to organize a com
mercial club and line up with the pro
ureasive spirit now t-o not enable
throughout tin state Portland Com
mercial Club omciuls, lailroad men
and others made an excursion to
North Plaius during the week and nt
euded the "olirUtening" of the new
town.
Oregcn is gritting Its full share of
colonists who are crowding the west
bound trains. A telegram from Louis
W. Hill, president of the Great North
em, to Mamger Chapman of the Com
mercial Club bore the information
that over one-third of the passengers
on the Orinetal Limited one day out
of the Twin Cities were bound for
Oregon This raiio is probably true
of practicaly all of the colonist trains
coming to the Northwest.
Instead of the usual foolishness that
at'.uids April 1. one Oregon town is
going to accomplish something useful.
Gaston, under the direction of the
women's auxiliary of the commercial
club, will clean bouse that day.
Everybody wi'l help, end it will be
known as the cleanup day.
Oregon Postmasters will hold the
nnuuul convention iu Portland June
7, 8 and 9. Selection of the place rf
meeting and the dates were made dur
ing the prist week Postmasters of
Califoiuiiu, Washingtou and Idaho
will be invited. Matters for the bet
terment ot the service will be dis
cussed and many suggestions made
that will very liUkoly be adopted by
tho department.
Cove, the beautiful fruit growing
city of the Grand Round valley, has
taken steps to organize a commercial
club. One or the nrst projects in
view is the holding of a cherry fair on
the nrst week ot July.
Iu a head-on colliison on the south
bound train from Portland to Sau
Francisco on Saturday last, between
Ashland and Grants Pass, thirty peo
pie were injured but no one was
killed.
The mayor of Salem was arrested
for being in a saloon at one o'clock on
Sunday morniug last. The arrest was
made by the chief of police.
upon Mayor .Laehuiuna e promise
that the next time he has a good time
he will have it in somo other city
Chief of Police Hamilton will no
press the charges of disorderly con
duct against him, but has adviser
that Julius Pincus, Conrad Krebs and
Kola Neis voluntarily plead guilty to
mat charge ana pay their lines.
The old town of Canyonville lias
been asleep so long that people had
forgotten that there was such a place
ou earth, but the people living there
have awakened from their slumbers,
says the Myrtle Creek Mail. They
have got together in earnest and are
going to make the old town boom
They have organized a commercia
club with 21 members at the first
meeting. They intend putting in
water system that will protect them
in case of fire, and to use for irri
gation purposes, etc. They are also
going to have elect! io lights, and
they now have one of the best flour
mills in the country.
It is just possible that there are
places where the winter climate is
trirJe more agreeable than in the
Grand Roude valley, and whore pub
lio spirit is at a higher tension, but
there is no better all around laud on
the coast than light here, says the
Union Republican.
Eight thousand acre feet of flood
water which otherwise would have
pursued its way unmolested to the sea
is now held in the big Furnish reser
voir at Coe, says the Echo Echoes.
For the first time since its construc
tion last summer, the dam tilled early
Friday, and water is now pouring
over the spillway and finding its way
baok into the old channel of the river.
Oregon is invited to be one of ten
western states .to be extensively ex
ploied in the northern and Atlantic
coast states next full and winter by an
exhibit train of ten cars. The train
will be thrown open to the publio
wherever it stops during the two
months of its travel. Descriptive lit
erature will also be distributed from
the cars.
The Western Development Assoeia'
tion, which lias just adjourned its an
nnal meeting at Salt Lake, Utah,
will be bebiud the movement with
the various development leagues and
associations and commercial organ
izatiocs, if the tentative plans are
carried out. Within the next two
months a meeting will be held in
Portland by delegates from the ten
states when plans and a program for
the campaign will be adoped.
PORTLAND ITEMS.
The live stock show in Portland
last week was a decided sucocss
There were 810 head of cattle, 760
head of sheep and 120 hogs and they
were ted to the highest state ot per
fection. This fine showing left no
doubt in tho minds of the many visi
tors but that the Pncifin Northwest
was absolutely able to take care of
itself iu the matter of supplying
wholesome meats if our farmers should
take sufficient interest iu the stock
industry to meet the demauds of the
market.
R. R. Howard of the Pacific month
ly staff of Portland, has been de
olared the winuer of 11000 in gold,
the nsrt prize in the IjOOO contest or
ganized by the Portlnud commercial
Club, for the best article on Portland
or Oregon published in some news
paper or magazine outside the state
between November 1, l'-i09, aud De
cember 81. 1910. The winning article
appeared in World's Work under the
title "Railroad Fight for an Empire "
want to talk to to 7ou
about the repairs on your
Auto, Launch or Farm
Gasoline Engine,
We are engine experts
can locate the faults, cor
rect them and make you
happy Price O. K.
Broken Machinery Made
New
Ward & Ward
Machinists
109 fourth St. PhonMre?i
OREGON CITY
w
BAKING
Absolutely Puro
Jakes Home Baking Easy
AVE
FLOUR
BUTTEE
EGGS
And makes the cake
more sightly,
freedom
Royal Cool Book-SOO Receipts
ROYAL BAKINQ POWDER CO., NEW YORK.
"Your Albert is going bald, nln't
e.
Mrs. Smlthers?"
"Yes, Mrs. Peters, 'e certainly Is get
tin' 'lgb 'ended, and It makes It very
awkward for the pore dNir. When 'e
washes 'e 'as to keep 'Is 'at on Ms 'end
to tell where 'is face finishes!" Lon
don Mail.
Utter Waste.
"AVe all sigh for something unattain
able." "That's right. My wife bus never
been able to find any good use for the
burned matches." Washington Her
lild. The Way of the World.
"Isn't it awful? According to the
papers, there Just seems to be one rev
olution after another."
"Yes. That's the way the world goea
round." Judge.
ea
For Sale
"At Live and Let Live Prices"
INVESTIGATE THIS!
FARMS IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
Three miles from Oregon Oity Court House. Near macadam
road. Two small houses aud one large dwelling, new barn,
new fences, stream of water, spring by barn, SO'acres cultivat
ed, all tillable, family orchard, school mile, north slope,
no rock, wood for household use, sightly location, Boil all fer
tile. Prioe $110 per acre, half or one-third cash, balance
terms.
All tillable, at head of Dickey's Prairie on Molalla River,
trout oreek running through it, spring by barn, 5 room house,
small orchard, 10 acres clear, somo timber, li)() acres level,
fertile soil, good stock range adjacent, good roads, near power
station of proposed Molalla Railroad. Price f25 per acre, half
or one-third cash, balance terms.
All tillable, none cleared, mile east of Needy, good road,
stream of water, good farms adjacent, small brush and timber
easily cleared. Clear land adjoining worth $100 per acre.
Price $30 per aore, half or oue third cash, balance terms.
At Mulino, near Molalla road and river, 1 acre clear, small
barn, sightly building place, on macadam road, saw mill and
flour mill J mile, all rich garden land, small Btream throngh
it.vpart on bench and balance along stream, R. F. D. by door,
timber for household purposes. Price $C0 per acre, halt or one
third cash, balance terms.
Adjoining city limits of Willamette, 8 acres clear, 5 acres low
75 ACKES.
200 ACRES.
40 ACRES.
23 ACRES.
14 ACRES.
aud Dalance sloping on bench, no buildings, all rich fertile
land, building up all around it. Price $250 per acre, half or
one-third cash, bnlnuce terms.
HOUSES AND LOTS
Falls View, sightly corner, new barn, good condition. Price
$804), half or one-third cash, balance tertUB like rent.
Oregon City, 10th and Jefferson, two stories, good condition,
close in town. Price $1100, payable $',00 cash, balance $15 a
month, 6 per cent interest.
Monta Villa, corner lot 50x105, outbuildings, all good condition,
5 ROOMS.
8 ROOMS.
5 ROOMS.
worm uuu. nice iouu, nan or one-third cash, balance $15 a
month.
FOR. TRADE OR EXCHANGE
(SO ACRES. Near Scio, Linn county, 8 acres clear, old house aud barn
spring, two county roads, some timber, good fruit land, all ou
north hill slope. Prioe $35 per acre.
W0 AGUES.
Near Merlin, Josephine
R. R., good timber, no
160 ACRES.
Near Clackamas River,
worth $1500.
160 ACKES. . Trinity couuty, California, 2,'a' millions Sugar Pine. $2000
The above prices have been thoronal.lv tested
is positively a boocI bargain aud if not
the property cheerfully refunded.
JOHN W. LODER., Owner
Stevens Building. Ore eon r.itv Ore
Both Telephones
President, TITLE & INVESTMENT CO.
The Clackamas County Abstracters
Plumes Cleaned, Dyed and Curled
HATS CLEANED
Portland Cleaning Company
and HaL Works
LADIES' AND CENTS' CLOTHES CLEANED, PRESSED
AND REPAIRED
Ladies' Work a Specialty-Phone Main 1512
Dye Works 14th and CUsan Streets
lighter, finer flavored,
and insures its
from alum.
Free. Send Name and Address.
We can walk into trouble with our
eyes shot, but it is often impossible
to back oat with both eyes open.
Yon must rub a match the wrong
way to make it go off, and you must
treat a bore in a like manner, to pro
duoe like results.
Kills a Murderer
A merciless murderer is Appendici
tis with many victims, but Dr.
King's New Life Pils kill it by pre
vention. They gently stimulate Btoin
aoh, liver and bowels, preventing that
clogging that invites append'eitm,
curing ooustipation, lieadaoho, bil
iousness, chills. 2c at all drug stores.
UTAH LAND PLASTER
$14.00 Per Ton at
W. A. HOLMES & CO.,
PARKPr.ACK
Co., stream of water, 3 miles
clearing. Price $'2000.
of S. P.
some timber, good soil
'
near sawmill,
found so all
Garments called for .nd ama
AND BLOCKED
Main office w.k:. c.
SDstat
' X ""Jlvll wW