OREGON CITV COURIER, FRIDAY, OCT, 11 1912 SCHUEBEL AND HEDGES TILT. Legislature vs People Was Main Live Wire Topic. There was an interesting little lilt between J. E. Ileuses and G Schuebel at the Live Wire lunch eon Tuesday. In discussing th matter of combating the divisio of the county, it was asked if th argument in the slato oampaig hook would not he sufficient Mr. Hedges stated that in h judgement the hook was not much read; that the propositions there in were confusing to the voter an . thai, it was of little benefit to the state. Asked the remedy he advis ed that a legislative commute , present these propositions, thoy might he made clear to people. Mr. Schuehel vigorously de fended the stale hook and con demned the legislature. Ho sai that not one man in twenty in th legislature knew of the joker the legislature slipped through i the many hills at Salem; that th legislature of 1909 lost to Clack amas County $00,0(10 in wale power taxation through juggling that it was in the "dark corners of the legislature that these jok ers were named up and pu over; that he challenged anyon to show a single hill (with th exception of the Australian hal lot law) the stato legislature had passed in the interests of th people. "The hook may he overburden ed witli useless propositions, bu show me a bad law the people have passed, concluded Mr Schuebel. President Sullivan "reported that the locks canal matter was progresing and would soon he shape to he taken over by the government. Mr. Too.c miged that the con dilions in the puslofllcc building be improved and the front rooms be vacated to tho ollice, and that residents up in the vicinity of bixteenlh St., be given Ireo mail delivery service. DEMOCRATIC OPENING. ic GAINING. Equal Rights Movement Fast Gaining Advocates Here. .the Equal Suffrage Move ment was given a great impulse on last Sunday evening when .ludgo C. Jirownell of tin's city spoke before a large audience in the open forum of tho Methodist church. . Judge lirownell spoke lucidly and conclusively, ' showing how the vole would help to equal izi laws that at present are unfair to 'women.; how work has been taken out of the home and is be. ing done, in the factories so lliat working women .and girls need the protection of the ballot in this factory work; and how the mother in the home needs the vote to protect her table from ad ulterated foods and her family . from evil environments. lie showed how in equal suf frage slates there arc- better laws protecting the child, the mother and tli o home and how the woiweu there are treated with deeper courtesy and respect than else! where. "We have no I lemocraey," declared Judge lirownell, but a govern incut of half the people by half the people and too often for half the people. With adult suf frage, child slavery will be done away with in the great factories, and every child will have a chance to obtain the play and schooling so necessary in building up a vigorous constitution and educat ed brain." . At the close of the address Dr. ..Ford, pastor of the church, asked all those in favor to stand, and almost' the entire congregation rose to their feel, It was a splen did demonstration for right and justice. Hear Walter Pierce, at Willamette Hall Saturday Night. Saturday night at Willamette hall at eight o'clock, lion. Walter E. Pierce, of Hot Lake, will open the Democratic campaign in Ore gon City. Mr. Pierce is one of the best publio speakers in the state. Ho is a man who reads, who studies, who has brains, and he will give you an address that will be some thing besides abuse. ' Regardless of your policies. turn ouland hear Mr. Pierce, you owe it to yourself as a voter; What do YOU Say? uive me district scnools a little more coin and vote down that half million appropriation for the stale university the last legislature plugged through Don't YOU say so? "JOKERS" KID REVISION UP Aetna! Raising of Duties Effected by Payne Ei!L COTTON AND WOOL SCHEDULES Both Indefensible, and President Taft KneW It Suppression of Facts by the Tariff Board Statistics Employ ed to Mislead the Public By ROBERT KENNETH MAC LEA. (Formerly consulting expert of tho tariff board. J New York, Aug. .On not a single one of the ninety-five all cotton sam ples of fabric tukeuxts the bnsls of the tariff board's Investigations of the cot ton schedule was there au actual re duction of the tariff by the I'ayne- Aldrlcn-Iaw. The Buuiples were selected with great care by the combined Judgment of the board's experts, indorsed by the lead ing Jobbers of the Onlted States as being representative of fill classes of fabric lu use In this country, each Bample being chosen because It was typical of the most used material of vastly better bill than the DIngley bill. If I had refused to sIku tho Payne bill It would have muliitidned the Ding ley bill with higher rates than the Payno bill." When Mr. Taft made this statement he must have known that It was un true. As for the wool schedule, he knew that the rates were uot blglmi Id the Dlugley law than In the Payne- Aldrleh lew, for right after signing the latter bid did be not denounce lis wool rates us "Indefensible'" And. as foi the cottou rntea of the Payne bill,' he knew they were Jusi us "indefensible" ns the wool rales, for at the time he made this statement in Boston be had . the tariff board's report ou cotton be fore him. It Is true that the cotton report of the tariff hoard did uoi make this lu formation available at a glance to Mr Taft or to congress or to the public The tariff board carefully imudcd giv Ing this Information In a getaluble, uu derstaudable form Suppressed the Answer. "Was the tariff raised or lowered V has been an Insist on l ipieslloa ever since tho Payne-Aldrlch law was en acted three years ago The tariff board avoided answering It. In making my olliclal report to the board I submitted a table that did answer this question. In respect to each one, excepting three, of the 100 cloth samples around which our months of Investigation centered. After much side stepping and discussion this table was expurgated and published In Its emas culated form. Tho board's excuse was that it was not Its duty to answer the Gilbert L. Hedges Wins $50,000 Damage Suit Gilbert L. Hedges has been in Portland the past week trying the case of Minnie Hough, by her guardian, Emilie Toedtemeier, against Herman Iderhoff, all of the parties being residents of Clackamas County, Oregon. Mr. Hedges represented the defend ant, Herman Iderhoff and the case was submitted to th jury at 4 o' W'ednesday afternoon, October 9, and they returned a sealed verdict for the defendant Thursday morniifg. "Uncle Josh Perkins." At Shively's opera house Mon day, October 14. With a splen didly selected cast of players, an entirely new scenic production, and a record of being the most successful of all rural comedy dramas, "Uncle Josh Perkins" conies to Oregon City Monday, Oc tober 14, lor his annual engage ment. This is tho play that has outlived nearly every other dra matic offering of New England rural life. Probably because its story is so human and true to the instincts of men, women and children, and more likely because the playwright has constructed a story of immortal interest to the world in general, does "Uncle Josh live on year afte ryear to demonstrate that in the end love will find the way." Saturday night W.llamette hall. big Democratic meeting. .Come out and hear Mark Pierce, the best talker In Oregon. : AND A CHILD SHALL LEAD Ten-Year Old Girl Sets a Demo cratic Example ' When a i 0-year-old girl will tako fifty cents out of a dollar's savings (a dollar that probably looks as big to her as u washtub), and sends it to the Courier office to help elect Woodrow Wilson Hut we won't say it. Just you good democrats look over I ho list below and see iho places where your names should be, and then enquire what should have fol lowed the dash above. Leuora Heafie, litllo daughter of Judgo II. B. Beulio, sent the Courier a bright half dollar and told tho editor lo send it o Gov ernor Wilson. And here's telling the little miss it will surely be sent to him. There are only-two weeks more when the dollars' will do K00d Look over Urn lisl. 0 want to siring it out. next week, want to make it a long one. Help. Judgo lleatie, Oregon C.ily, $10.00 J. W. S. Owens, Oregon City $1.00 O. 1. ltobbins, lloule 3 fu.00 A. li. Frost Oregon City . . . . l .no K. E. Baker, Parkplace. . . .$1,00 W. II. ' Tinimons, Gladstone 1.00 A. 8. Brown, Oregon City, ..$1.00 M. K. Gal'l'ney, Gladstone. 00 J. V. Green, Oregon City ..$1.00 Miss l.cnora liealie ij .TjO S. II. Green, Oregon City ,.$i!()0 ... . .v Ay 1 . t Clarks. The Clarks principal school started on Monday, October 7th, with Mr. Eloyd Webb and the pri mary school with Miss Ena Stout as instructors. " Mr. Charley Harrington and Mr. Charley Bryan and Lawrence Grace were helping Mr. Bucher shingle his new house a few days last week. Mr. G. Marquard was in town last Saturday. Mr. W. II. Bottcmiller started digging his potatoes Monday. Mr. Wolfson and family were in town last week. The Buol brothers are clearing land. ' , The Timber Grove school has started. Miss Zella Johnson is the teacher. From uiiMing by -Seymour Thomao. Tolal $10.50 CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. Tho Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of CfMZ For any pain, from lop lo toe, from any cause, apply Dr. Thom as' Eclectic Oil. Pain can't slay where it is used. Its particular weave or class. Ninety five all cottou and tlvo silk and cotton samples comprise the 100 that appear In the tariff board's cotton report. Forty-sovon of tho nlncty tlve lu the an cottou class pay 83.00 per cent high er duties under the I'ayne Aldileh than they did under the DIngley tariff. Payne-Aldrioh "Jokers." Of these forty-seven classes of ma terial On Which the tariff vvna In. creased nine are the fancy weaves made In three or four Now Kughuid mills commonly grouped ns the "Up pi! t-MoColl Interests." Tills Is the clique of New Knglnnd manufacturer politlciaus'who note permitted by Sen ator Nelson W. Aldrleh to Write the cotton schedulo to suit themselves. Of the nine LIppltt-McColl fabrics tho rayne-Aldrich law jacked up the average duty from 30.57 to 00.33 per cent. In other words, the promised "revision downward" on these goods was really a revision ninvardnmounting to 0-1.07 per cent of tho Dlnclev rates. The remaining thirty-eight classes of all cotton fabrics ou which the duty was increased were not generally ttie product of the favored New England ring. Under the DIngley law these thirty-eight fabrics were assessed an averago duty of 35.3(1 per cent. Dnder tho l'ayne-Aldrlch law they pay 44.58 per cent-a revision upward equal to i!0.07 per cent of the former rate as compared with 01.07 per cent Increase on manufactures of tho favored few. Ou Just three among the loo samples was t'lere a decrease In duty. Theso were the silk ami cottou fabrics (silk mills) that pay more than 100 per cent dety. On these three samples the re duction averaged 5.00 per cent ou the lormer auty-a reduction from 110.70 per cent under the DIngley law to U0.-14 per cent under the I'ayno-AI-drieh law. On one of the silk and cot ton samples there was an increase amounting to 21.08 per cent. Tho fifth of tho silk and cotton samples wns left unchanged. Ou the forty-five of the uluety-flve nil cottou samples there Was no change m auty. On the threo remaining samples (completing tho total of 100) no com parison Is made because of apparent lack of authentic foreign prices. And sUll President Taft said in his speech at Huston, April 25 last: "It (the rayne-Aldrkh bill) was a question; congress could make Its own computations. The olliclal explanation for refusing to publish the table show. lug whether the tariff had been raised or lowered was that the market fluctu ations made it of no value. This was only a quibble, because the respective tariff acts wero so arranged that the Increase lu duty on a sliding scale kept pace with the price fluctuations. The tariff board chose to print tables that would show only the assessment of duty under the two acts and left It to nnybody who desires the Informa tion to figure out for himself the slg nlllcant facts above set forth. Benefit Only to Privilege. From every polut of view of -Hie tariff grafter It Is no doubt highly de sh'ablo that such facts, staggering as they are to the dishonest pretensions that tho cotton tariff was really lower ed, should be buried as deeply as pos sible lu a mass of unexplained statis tics. But It Is to the advantage of every honest manufacturer and mer chant who Is seeking stability In busi ness and fair opportunity to make a reasonable profit that tho truth should lie uiado known. Just such policies of olliclal evasion and suppression have made possible In tho past the Juggling of tariff legislation by and In behalf of the privileged few. It Is undisputed that the cotton schedulo as written hi the house ways and means committee by Representa tive Sereno E. Pnyne of New York did not provide tho full measure of "revl slou downward" that the Republican party had promised. Still It was not until after the Payne bill went to the sennto finance committee, of which Mr. Aldrleh wns chairman, that the "Interests" got In their most deadly work. It Is well known that Senator Aldrleh freely consulted, if he did not actually permit, the I.lppltt-McOoil In terests to writo Into the amended bill the duties affecting their own products the fancy weaves made by only s few of tho largest and richest New England mills. New York World. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORI A Few, if any medicines have met with the uniform success that has attended the use of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera, and Diarrhoea Remedy. The remarkable cures of colic and diarrhoea which it has effected in almost every neighbor-hood have given it a wide reputation. For sale by Huntley Bros. Co. For Sale 5 or 10 acres good land near Clackamas station. P.rico $300 per acre. Address C. Cramer. Clackamas, Oregon. I havo good live dry wood for sale at reasonable prices. No water soaked down wood. Address N. C. Westerfield, H. F. D. No. 2, Box 18. tf APPRECIATION. Editor Courier: i read with much satisfaction ana pleasure each week your able and fearless editorials. I note your advocacy of the single tax proposition. One of the best ar guments ever advanced for this proposition was the statement of Tom Johnson, one time mayor of weveiana, unio. He said the farmer paid 60 per cent of the taxes and only owned 10 per cent of the land values. This statement has never been successfully de- uieu aana was inserted in the umgressional Record of last August. Of course the Oregonian fights this proposition because its principal owner is an extensive owner of land held out of use and corporation owned lawvers are hired to fight it and will fight for it n tney were paid a bigger price rue poor "Uinks" who vote against are simply fooled and llim-flammed. It rs amusing to read articles, in the Republican Press about the re-election of Taft. No persons with brains enough to feed a goose believe for a minute that laft stands any chance whatever ihe hired orators are simply trying to keep him from being nurieu entirely out of sight. Your article .in regard to the brainless specimen who uttered a foolish remark about the Social ists was scathing hut true. Prob ably the brainiest and best edu cated man in" the land, Woodrow W ilson, says, ' We are slowly drifting into Socialism." The writer can well remember when a boy the abuse and ridicule heaped on the abolitionist before the war. Both press and clergy vied with each othef in denouncing those crazy fellows. The writer's father was publicly denounced by a Methodist minister because he was one of the promulgamators of the underground railroads and helped many a runaway slave. CORNELL AVERILL. Summons. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for tho County of ' Clackamas. C. A. Chambers. Plaintiff, vs. C. J. Chambers, Defendant. To C. J. Chambers, Defendant: In the name of the Stato of Oro gon: You are hereby required to appear and answer tho Complaint filed against you in the above en titled court and cause on or be fore the 26th. "day of October, lini, and if you fail to so ap pear and answer, for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the above entitled court for the relief prayed for in his 'said complaint, to-wit: That the h'bnds of mat rimony existing between the pla intiff and the defendant be dis solved; that the custody of the minor child of the parties be awarded to the plaintiff: that the plaintiff have such further relief as may be equitable. Ihis Summons is published by order of the Hon. J. U. Campbell Judge of the above entitled court, made and entered on the 7th. day of September, 1912, and the said order directs that the publication of this Summons be made once a week for six successive weeks. and the date of the first publica lion according to said order, is September 13th, 1912. SARGENT & CLARK, Attorneys for Plaintiff, 918 Chamber of Commerce Bldg., Portland, Oregon. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the Stale of Oregon, for Clackamas County. N. P. Hult, Emil Lind, Oscar Lind, Robert Olson, Lewis Pendleton, Olof A. Forsgren, Oregon Swedish Colonisation Company, a corporation, Plaintiffs, vs. William P. James, Stella James, his wife, Anna M. James, Sarah .E James, Clackamas Abstract & Trust Co., a corporation, as Trustee, Victor Lundeen, Anna M. James, administratrix of the estate 6f Dudley A. James, deceased, and Sarah E. James, executrix of the estate of John H. James, deceased, defendants. To William P. James, Stella James, Anna M. James, Victor Lundeen, Anna M. James, admin istratrix of the estate of Dudley A. James, deceased, and all persons unknown, having or claiming an interest or estate in the property, . the subject matter of this suit:. The above named defendants In the name of the State of Oregon, you and each of you are nerecy required to appear and answerthe complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit within six weeks from the date of the first publication of this Sum mons, and if you fail therein, for want thereof plaintiffs will apply to. the Court for the relief de manded in their said complaint, viz: For a decree that the deed made by William Perry James and Stel la James, his wife to Sarah E. James, dated May 19, 1911, rec orded in Book 128 at page 211 of the Records of Deeds of Clacka mas County, Oregon and the de scription in said deed be re formed so as to read: "North half of the SE& of Section 32," in stead of "West half of the SE of said .Section," as described in said deed. For a partition in severality amongst tho parties to this suit according to their respective rights in the premises of the real property situated in the County of Clackamas, State of Oregon described as follows, to-wit: The N of SE and the SE SE of Section 32, Tp. 4 South of Range 3 East of the Willamette Meridian and the NEW of said Section 32 except therefrom a 30 acres tract of land bounded as follows, to-wit: t SUMMONS. Intlio Circuit Court of tho State of Oregon for Clackamas County. Bernice Raimer, Plaintiff, vs. George Raimer, Defendant.. To George Raimer, the above named defendant: In the name of the Slate of Oregon you are here by required to appear and ans wer, the complaint filed against -you in the above entitled court and cause on or before tho ex piration of six weeks from the date of tho first publication of this summons, to-wit: on or be fore tho 15th. day of November, 1912, and if you fail so to ans wer, for want thereof, tho plain tiff will apply to the courl for the relief demanded in her complaint on file herein, to-wit: that tho bonds of matrimony now exist ing between plaintiff and defend ant bo dissolved, that plaintiff have awarded into her care and custody, her minor child, Elton Raimer, and for such other and further relief in tho promises as to the court seems equilablo and just. This summons is published by order of the Honorable R. B. Beatie, Judgo of the County Court for tho County of Clackamas, Oregon in the absence of the Cir cuit Judge from tho said County and said order was niado and dated the 3rd day of October, 1912 and the date of tho first publi cation of this summons is the 4th day of October, 1912, and tho date of the last publication of this summons is the 15th day of November, 1912. Jos. II. Pago. Attorney for plaintiff. FOR RENT 7 room house, three lots,- Falls View, $10 per month. II. L. Roll, Falls View. PIANO for sale, or will trado for cattle, milch cows preferred. Ad dress Jennings Lodge, Box 57. Phono Oak Grove, Black 757. W A NTE I ) G e n e ra 1 h o use wo rk, no cooking, a Scotch lady. Grace Graham, Gladstone, Pacifio phono 1995. SPAN OF HOUSES Weight 1200 four years old. Ross Shepheard, Willamette. The Courier and the Sunset Magazine, both one year $1.75. Tho regular rato of both publi cations is $1.50 each $3.00. Dyspepsia is America's curse. Burdock Blood Bitters conqers dyspepsia every time. It drives out impurities, tones Ihe stomach restores perfect digestion, normal weight and good health. No. 71 Hcport of the condition of THE CLACKAMAS COUNTY BANK at Sandy, in the State of Oregon, at the close of business Septem ber 4, 1912. RESOURCES Loans and discounts ..$20,787.20 Overdrafts, secured and unsecured 188.31 Hanking house 1,846.50 Furniture and fixtures2 ,379.00 Duo from approved re serve banks ....... 9,073.77 Clicks ' and other cash items ... 6.00 Cash on hand ; . . 5,441.83 Expenses 1,841.02 Beginning at the southeast corner of tho NEU of said Sect ion thence North 60 rods, thence west 80 rods thence south 60 rod thence east 80 rods to the place of beginning. Also the west half o the NE of Section 5 Tp. 5 south of Range 3, east of the Willam ette Meridian. Or if a partition cannot bo had without material injury to those rights, then for a sale of said premises and a division of the proceeds from such sale, and for such other and further relief as to this Court may seem equit able. This summons is published by order of the Honorable R. B Beatie, Judgo of the County court, or tne state of Oregon, fo the County of Clackamas, dated October 3rd, 1912, which order diiects that this summons be published once . a week for six successive weeks Date of first publication Oct. 4 1912. David E. Lofgren C. A. Appelgren Attorneys for plaintiffs Chamber of Commerce Total 41,563.63 LIABILITIES Capital stock paid in . . 10,000.00 Surplus fund 1,579.07 Individual deposits sub ject to check 24,292.77 Demand certificates of deposit 2,343.69 Time certificates of de posit 3,348.10 Will Campaign In New York. New York, Aug. ,-(5ovrnor Wood row Wilson will tnnke his tlrst Inva sion of New York for campaign per poses when he will be the guest of honor at the Worklngmen's Woodrow Wilson club of the lower east side at a dinner to be held at the Cafe Roule vnrd on Sept. 4. (iovernor Wilson will deal. If Is expected, with the problems of Immigration and the false Impres sions that have been put upon his views by 'the quotations of tsolated sentences from bis different books. Skinny' Bad Break. One of the Scottish golf clubs gives a dinner each year to the youngsters It employs as caddies. At the feast last year one of the boys, a tough young ster, disdained to use any of the forks he found at his place, but loaded his food Into himself with a knlfo. When the Ice cream course was reached and ho still used his knife a boy who sat opposite to him and who conld stand It no longer shouted: "Great Scott! Lock at Skinny usln' his Iron all th way round!" Total 41,563.63 Stale of Oregon, County of,Clack amas, SS. I, M. A. Deaton, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and 'belief. M. A. Deaton, Cashier. Correct Attest: A. L. Deaton, W. A, Proctor Directors. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 11th dayorSept., 1912. A. L. Deaton, Notary Public. rt FOR MEN I A QUICK SAFE AND PRIVATE TREATMENT Thousaois have used and found it the one best remedy PrilV Kflf Discharges, inflammation and Irritation of the Kid I I ILL JUV neys, Bladder and Urinary Organs, permanently re The RftY nf heved in 2 to 5 days. Warranted harmless, Non-injeq r n p tive Stricture impossible. Bona-fide Guarantee to cure 50 CapS or money back Sold by JONES DRUG CO., (Inc.) Oregon City, Ore. or aeut postpaid in. pla in wrapper SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Clackamas County. Bertha Guimont, Plaintiff, vs. George Guimont, Defendant. To George Guimont, the above named defendant: In the name of the State of Oregon your are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled court and cause on or before the expiration of six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, to-wit: on or be fore the 15th day of November, 1912, and if you fail so to answer, for want thereof, the . plaintiff will apply to the court for the re lief demanded in her compiaint on file herein, town: that the bonds of matrimony now existing between plaintiff and defendant be dissolved, that plaintiff have awarded into her care and cus tody, Ursulino and Audry, minor children, and for such other and further relief in the premises as to the court may seem equitable and just. This summons is published by order of the Honorable R. B, Beatie, Judge of the County Court for Clackamas County, in the ab sence of the Circuit Judge from said county, and said order was made and dated the 3rd day of October, 1912 and the date of the first publication of this summons is the 4th day of October, 1912, and the date of last publication of this summons is the 15th day of November, 1912. Jos. H. Page, Attorney for Plaintiff. STATEMENT. of fiiv, ownership, management, circulation, etc., of the Oregon City Courier, as required by Act of August 24, 1912: Editor, M. J, Brown; managing editor, M. J. Brown, business manager, A. E. Frost; publishers, M. J. Brown, A. E. Frost; owners of stock, holding more than one per cent: A. E. Frost, M. J. Brown, Oregon City, Oregon; persons holding more than one per cent of bonds, mort gages or other securities, J. V. Murphy, Portland. Ore. M. J. Brown, Editor. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 4th day of October, 1912. T. P. Randall. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of tho Stato of Oregon, for Clackamas County. Lula Honk, Plaintiff, vs. Dorr Ronk, Defendant. To Dorr Ronk, the above named defendant: In the namo of the Stato of Oregon, you are hereby required to apear and answer tho com plaint filed against you in tho above entitled court and cause on " or before the expiration of six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, to- wit: on or before the 15th day of November, 1912, and if you fail So to answer, for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in her complaint on file herein, to-wit: . that the bonds of matrimony now existing between plaintiff and de fendant be dissolved, that plain, tiff havo awarded to her, her maiden name, and for such other and further relief in the premises as to the court seems equitable and just. . This summons is published by order of the Honorable R. B. Beatie, Judgo of the County Court for Clackamas County, in the ab sence of the Circuit Judge from said county, and said order was made and dated the 3rd. day of tober, 1912, and tho dat of tho, first publication of this summons is the 4 th day of October, 1912, and the date of last publication of this summons is the 15th day of November, 1912 Jos. II. Page, Attorney for Plaintiff. SUMMONS. - In tho Circuit Court of tho Slate of Oregon, for Clackamas County. Blanche Wilson, Plaintiff, vs. Harry J. Wilson, Defendant. To Harry J. Wilson, Defendant:, In the name of the State of Oregon, you are hereby required lo apear and answer tho com plaint filed against you in tho above entitled suit, within six (6) weeks from tho date of the first publication of this Summnos, to- wit: On or before the 16th day of November, 1912, and if you fail so to appear and answer, for want thereof the plaintiff will take judgment against you by, default and apply to tho Court for the re lief prayed for in her complaint on file herein, to-wit: First: For a decree of the above entitled Court dissolving , the bonds of matrimony now existing between plaintiff and defendant herein; Second: For a decree of the above entitled Court restoring to . plaintiff the name she boro prior to her marriage with defendant, viz., Blanche Buker; Third: For such other and further relief as to the Court may seem just and equitable. This Summons is served by publication pursuant to an order of Hon. R. B. Beatie, County Judge of Clackamas County, State of Oregon, dated the 3d day of October, 1912, said order di recting the publication of this Summons in the "Oregon City Courier" once a week for six (6) consecutive weeks. W. P. Hibbard, Attorney for Plaintiff. Date of first publication, October 4, 1912. Dale of last publica tion, November 15, 1912. M. li A. LODGE, Meets second and fourth Thurs days, at 8 p. m., Willamette hall S. R. Green, President, B. F. Sheehan, Secretary. When you have a bad cold you want the best medicine obtainable so as to cure it with as little de lay as possible. Here is a drug gist's opinion: "I have sold Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for fifteen' years," says Enos Lollar of Saratoga, Ind., "and consider it the best on the market." For sale by Huntley Bros. Co., Ore gon City, Ore. Itching, bleeding, protruding or blind piles yield to Doan's Oint ment. Chronic cases soon reliev ed, finally cured. Druggists all sell it.