Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, October 18, 1912, Page 6, Image 6

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

    6
OREGON CITY COURIER, FRIDAY, OCT. 18 1912
ABQL S 5100
SUPERVISOfi II
ONLY A USELESS EXPENSE TO
THE STATE.
Let County Superintend Take
Charge their Work.
in
To the Courier and its Readers:
As a candidate for school sup
erintendent of Clackamas county
at the coming election, I desire
at this time to slate my position
on some recent school legislation.
Jt seems to me lhat the Rural
School .Supervisor stands at the
list as the most unfortunale and
useless hit of frivolous legislat
ion enacted in recent years. The
good tins law is supposed to ac
complish can and should he done
by the County School Superin
.londant himself.
If a I earlier falls to do his 01
her work riy lit or neglects to es
tablish order and justice among
the pupils, no one can hotter as
sist in doing this than the di
rectors and also the Superintend
ant.
, The cost in dollars is not great
of course for these useless of.
ficers, but it is that much of the
lax payor's . money mis-spent
this law is undermining' the in
legrily of the rural district in my
opinion. The safety and welfare
of a community is belter olf in its
own hands us a rule, and c
should use our inliueuce and alerl
jiess to prevent any innoviilion
that will take away our indepen
dence t The results of some of the
supervisor law in our county has
already proved injurious. Now 1
don't directly blame the supervis
or. One illustration will serve the
purpose. A new idea is to re
move the, seats not in actual or
immediate use from the school
house to make play room for the
children in rainy weather. Now
this would not ho so serious if
some school child had proposed
it, hut eomiriK as it does from ed
ucational headquarters in stale
and counly, makes it almost trag
ic.
do, kind reader, through some
of our rural districts and you will
see once beaulil'ul seals 111 their
proper places, now stacked in the
woodshed or the front porch of
the srhoolliouse, and some scat
tered over I he grounds. There are
other new fandangle propositions
Ihcse supervisors are trying to
hand around to us, that aro jus I
ns absurd as the above.
I wish to state, however, that
no seals were removed from my
sehtml room, and the gentleman
who was supervisor in my dis
trie! agreed. While I do not de
sire to take up too much ofyour
space at this lime, let mo. say in
conclusion. (hat while the legisla
lure makes Ihese laws, I he super
iniemlants are Hie mainsprings
oflllieir existence, for it is they
wdio work lor these laws Unit we
have.
And were 1 elected, I, for one,
would use my efforts to have these
useless laws removed from the
slatule hooks.. Let us use this
money in slead to build high
schools in our rural districts and
I hereby g ive the county boy and
girl a good education at home.
II. will pay.
ItlfllKRT GINTHEIV.
Socialist nominee for county
school superintendent.
who is failing and there are
some who are is the man who
has retired to the interior with
nothing to go on and with a lack
of ambition to work and struggl
against odds.
The homestead land in the, in
terior has been gobbled up by the
land hungry colonist and the
ambitious homeseeker at such
rate that it is now necessary to
go well into the interior to secure
desirable holdings. Gradually the
land within a few miles of rail
road surveys has been taken up
for homesteading. Year by year
the. frontier has been pushed
hack until now it is only in a few
places that it is possible to get
laud within five or ten miles of
a (own. In the vicinity of Burns
Imperial and Bend, the rush of
homeseekers has pushed the bor
der of the available land far out,
EAGLE CREEK.
Mrs. Annie Cooper was seen
down this way one day last week
Mrs. R. B. Gibson called on
Mrs. Jones last Thursday after
noon, . .
The Kitzmiller crowd of hunt
ers returned borne the latter part
of last week with two deer.
Mrs. Viola Douglass went out
to see her daughter Mrs. Jim De
Shazer, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Woodle, Miss
Nettie and Joey Woodle were
guests of relatives over this way
Saturday and Sunday.
Mrs. Jones called on Mrs.
Hewlett Saturday afternoon.
Mrs. Kitzmiller look dinner
with her daughtor, Mrs. Guy Wo
odle, bunday.
the narent-teachers' meeting
held at the Laglo Creek school-
house Saturday was well attended.
Prof. Gary was present and made
an excellent talk on the County
High School Law. Some of . the
supervisors gave interesting
talks on different subjects of
interest for the benefit of the
teachers. All partook of a fine
dinner.
Mrs. Roy Douglas' father and
b. other were her uests recently.
11. S. Gibson made a trip to
Portland the first of the week.
George Walter and Will Doug
lass returned from their hunting
trip Sunday, bringing one deer
home with lliein.
Chester Dean was an Estaeada
IV HERE DOCTORS
DISAGREE
TAXATION THINKERS WHO SEE
IN DIFFERENT WAYS.
Mr.
Hiclnbotham's Criticisms
O. D. Robbins Views.
of
Editor Courier:
I want to give you an overhaul
ing first for fixing my article in
last week's Courier the way you
did. Did you do that on pur
pose, or was it just an unmten,
lional ommission? You make my
article on single tax read: "All we
want in Oregon is speculators,
and won't touch anybody else,"
when it should have read: "All we
want in Oregon is a law lhat will
effect -speculators and won't
touch anybody else." I don't
want you to try to inako mo out as
crazy. 11 people should read
such stuff as that and think that
I wrote it lhat way, they would
surely think I was olf my base.
Now for friend Robbins: He
says assess my land at $20 and
the COO acres of unimproved land
of the Strobridgo estate at $20,
or assess us both at $100 per ac
re." Now just because Mr. Rob
bins has a piece of land that
would be valued at $100 an acre,
is no reason that all of the Strow
bridge should be valued at the
same. I cannot see as well as
when I was young, but I can plain
ly see the injustice and unreason
ablcncss of such an argument as
this, and friend Robbins will ilnd
out if a revaluation is made of the
land in the county, that it will be
made according to the actual val
ue of the land, and that the man
who has got land worth $1000 an
acre will have to stand an assess
ment of that much, and the man
who holds a piece ot land on
which a' blue jay would starve to
death', would perhaps have to pay
taxes on an assessment of $1.25
an acre, and your uniform in
crease in valuation, which you
talk so much about, will have no
thing to do with it. You know
this just as well as I do, and the
men think what you are doing be
fore you vote.
' Yours for the best interests of
tho state,
George Hicinbotham.
visitor Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Douglass,? hnal elfect on society will be that
hd Douglass, Echo Githens and mo poor tailoring man, who has
Mrs. R. B. Gibson made a farewell
call on Mrs. Viola Douglass,
her daughter Miss Bina, and her
son Gai l, Sunday evening.
Mrs. Viola Douglass, Miss Bina
and Master Can Douglass left
Monday morning for Portland
where they intend to reside this
winter, while Carl goes to busi
ness college.
ELWOOD.
CENTRAL OREGON.
far out in the vast inlerior of
Oregon, where until u few ' short
years ago I lie only signs of lift1
in a desolate country covering'
hundreds of miles were clusters
of sagebrush,' scattered juniper,
trees and tin occasional jack rab
bit., a vast colony of pioneers is
hard at work building up a won.
derliil new empire.
This "desert" of the past is to
ne (he great gram country of the
i mure ami uie poor, mini working
lonesome, immigrant lioniesleiider
of the past and present is to be
Hie successful farmer of the fut
ure. . '
The homi'slead in Hie inlerior
olTcrs advantages and good ones,
but it is" n ly for die person who
is willing' and ready to undergo
some hardships and endure long
hours of bard work. To Hie person
who is soaking an easy life the
home-dead is the one place to shy
clear of. The homesteader who Is
making' good in the interior and
I here are hundreds who are -is
Hie man who is in the field to
gel . a start by the sweal of his
brow, lie is I he man who has
slarled in wilh some money to
carry him over or some means of
support independent of the land
upon which he settles and he is
Hie man who is willing lo gel. up
wilh the birds in Hie morning',
work bard all day anil go lo bed
lired at nighl. The homesteader '
.Charley Freeman and Ernest
Valleu left Elwood Sunday for
Sandy, to look for employment.
Mrs. Elliott called on Mrs. Carl
Stroingreen last Sunday.
I he old fashioned spelling bee
started at the Elwood school
house last Friday night was at
tended by only a small number.
It is hoped there will be a larger
crowd next Friday nighl. Every
body study your lesson and come.
Montio Cox visited Mrs. Leigh
in Highland last Monday. Mrs.
Leigh is improving very rapidly,
and expects to walk again soon.
Charley Freeman sold his bug
gy horse to Waller Cox.
lUlolph Freeman is on Iho sick
ist.
Georgo Rutherford is sawing
wood for Mr. lierghund.
Jessie Phillips expects to leave
soon for Oregon City, where she
will spend a few days with hi
sister, then go to Portland whei
she expects lo work for some
lime.
A parly was held at the home of
Delhert Bonney last Saturday
nighl. All had a very good time
The evening was spent in playing
games and dancing. Those pres
eiit were: Misses Nouna Vallen
Ml hi Bil fner, Marlha and Louise
Srhwerin, Anna and Tillie Baur
er, Nellie and Myrl Bouncy, lluby
Countryman, Lena Put, and Mag
gin Wilson and Lucy Livingstone
Messrs Krnest Otis and Micajah
Milieu, John I rygg, Mat. Jngnun
Carl Meilike, Charley and Adolph
rreemnu, Archie lionnev, Robert
Pulz, Stanford Cox, Fred Baurer
Frank Wilson and Albert Meilike
John Velborl, Foster, Calif,
stales; "I have suffered many
years with kidney and bladder
troubles, and all ho' I have paid
Hundreds of dollars to doctors
and have taken all kinds of kid
ney medicines, I could not ge
any relief until I tried Foley Kid
ney Pills and they effected a com
pleli cure. I have never been
bothered with my old trouble
since.
For sale by Huntley Bros. Co
Oregon City, Ore.
Tiro You Blue and Worried?
Ncrvoui P Some ol the lime reully III P Cutch oold easily and frequently suffer
Irom biliousness or headache ? The reason in (hut your tystem doe not rid itself
of the poisons in the bloodj just nt impossible a It is for the rato of stove to rid
itself of clinkers. The waste does to us exactly what the clinkers do to the stove;
mske the fires hum low until enough clinkers have accumulated and then prevent
its burning at all. Your liver is sluiiiish you ire dull and heavy sleep does not
rest, nor is food appetizing. In this condition jllncss develops. Doctor Tierce's
Colden Medical Discovery eradicates the poisons from the body a glyceric alter
ative extract made from hloodroot, golden seal and mandrake root, stone and
queen's root, without the use of alcohol. No matter how strong the constitution
the stomach is apt to he " out of kilter " at times ; in conse
quence tho blood is disordered, for Jhe stomach is the labo
ratory for the constant manufacture of blood.
Mrs. Bknj. Ruuc. of Port Dover, Ont, T?o fW, writes: "I hv
Iwvn a mult lutrnivr for yar from thrcwt trouble, catarrh. ImKm-atkm,
Iitimlc trouM,, blmtinir. runMipation and iwrviHianna at timM 1 would
l in hM, tlun able to Iw ui airain. Waa under many ilitlumit doctors'
cam ntiil would But IwttMr fur a littkiwhlla, thm 1 would ko down with
chrome inflammation all thrown m. Kur mnrtwn y.ra 1 had this
lM-isim In my blood. Afu.r trying noaily evorythinu; I urot worao. I rvad
In The l'ti)h'a Common Roniut M.!i.itl A,lv(.,r r ltr pinn'a f2..l.i..n
Jlfdionl 1 i(covery and Dr. Sam'' Catarrh Hcmedy. 1 have taken th
ioKlun M11II01I lnseovrry ' and Plraaant l'ellrta,' and havo uaed rlva
littles of lr. Snire's Ottjirrh Kemedy. I am now ahle to do my work,
and walk with pW'aituru. 1 fool Ilka a new woman. 1 enjoy everything
around me and thuuk t nxt for letting me live king enoujin to find soma
thuiic Lhat iitudu me well airaln."
Mas. Buu Lr. Pieroe'i tlca.au. Pellets regulate liver and bowel.
got to havo a piece of land to
make a living off of ,will have to
bear the burden of the tax for tho
rich, lhat don't need any land, and
it will divide society into two
classes, one class will bo tho tax
payers, or niggers, and tho other
will bo the gentlemen of leisure
You and I will be among the nig
gers. "Get in and pay your tax.
es, you dirty old fern rooters. I
had to do the same before I made
my pile." (Gentlemen of leisure
talk.)
1 will readily admit that our
present tax laws are not what
they should be, but what is the
us of trying to amend a bad law
with a. worse one? It is just as
easy to pass a law that will put
these land speculators business
on tho bum as it is lo pass a law
that will put us on the bum.Just
such a bill as this will be sufll
cient to show us whether the poo
nlo as a whole will inform them
selves sufficiently on a subject of
this kind or not, to east an liuel
ligent vote. To he sure there are
well informed men who differ on
this subject, but as a rule self.
interest will govern the voter. You
say you aro not afraid of single
tax because your land is all under
cultivation and you are not afraid
of it hurting you. Mr. Fels wants
single tax because it is greatly to
his interests: Mr. Cridgo wants
single tax because Mr. Fels is
paying him big for wanting it, and
it is my honest opinion that if Mr.
U'llen, Mr. Eggleston, Mr. Wag
11011 and tho whole bunch of Fels
employees were situated as I am,
ami as thousands of olhers aro in
the stale, that they would oppose
the singlo tax just as hard as I do.
There is one class it -favors and
another class it hurts. Tho poo
plo who are least able to pay Iho
(axes are the ones that would
have the taxes to pay. This sin
gle lax bill is against Hie best in
terests of Iho state and we don't
want it. Laboring men and poor
A VOICE FROM THE GRAVE.
Twilight Writer Likens Lazelle's
Letter to Cemetery Noise.
Editor Courie?:
After hibernating for fifteen
months, the Oregon City Fruit
jd Produce Union has become
aroused. The letter of Mj. J. Laz
ello, Secretary, Oregon City Pro
duco Union, Incorporated, in last
weeks Courier, has a spookish ap
pearance, as a voice from the
cemetary, some several hundred
stock holders having become
thoroughly convinced of its de
mise. 1
Various requests, of a normal
nature, for information to which
they are entitled, indicated the
necessity for more strenuous ef
forts, which later, only develops
slight animation of the supposed
coi'pse, but utterly fails to bring
forth the desired intelligence.
If, as stated by Mr. Lazelle,
the Union has actual assets, the
more reason why the slock hold
ers should be advised, not only of
what these -assets consist, but of
the expenditures of their money
to-date.
If by inference the directors
feel maligned, it is the direct re
sult of an inactive Secretary, who
should have promptly arranged to
provide the information aske
ior.
I will admit that have nothing
to sell during the Union's days of
activity, I did not patronize them,
consequently not compelled to
ship produce to Portland on my
personal account, as did some of
the directors'.
The correspondent's explana
tion as to why the Union's exist
ence is not publicly maintained,
is illogical, and its continued pol
icy of hibernation should not re
ciuiro the services of a graduate
of the Oregon Agriculture College
to prove deceptive.
The continued silence on the
part of the officials of this board
will more forcibly indicate to its
stock holders the inefficiency of
its past management.
So far as I am personally con
corned, this closes the incident,
as I seek no controversy over the
matter.
The last paragraph of Secre
tary Lazelle's open letter, being
foreign to I he question, I ignore
as it is but the mutlerings of one
anxious to extol his superior
knowlege over a contemporary,
self adulation being decidedly ob
noxious lo most people.
A. II. HARVEY.
Stockholder.
Pr pal Portland Agents Ladies' Home Journal Patterns, All Styles & Sizes 10c, 15c
Express Prepaid on Purchases of $5 or Over Within 100 Miles of Portland
Samples on Request.
i ' : r
'II TVT s a v If l.4"k, n fT. s d x rarl
I SILKS ARE VER.Y PRETTY
CLACKAMAS.
Tho Clackamas Feed and Auto
Co. havo completed their new
building. The new concern will be
under the management of W. r
Haberlach.
The Mothers' Club met Friday
afternoon at the school house
Tho next meeting will be Friday
afternoon Oct. 25. An interesting
program is anticipated for that
time.
A good sized crowd attended
Iho Republican rally at the Odd
Fellows Hall Friday night.
Mrs. W. R. Green visited al
Portland Monday.
Tho three upper grades ol the
school have organized a Literary
and Debating Society. Foster
Jenks was elected president and
Rose Johnson Sec. and treas.
Fortunes In Faces.
Thero's often much truth in the
saving her lace is ner ionuue,
but it's never said where pimples,
skin eruptions, blotches, or other
blotches disfigure it. impure
blood is back of them all, and
shows the need of Dr. King's New
Lifo Pills. They promote health
and beauty. Try them. 25 cents at
Huntley Bros. Co., Oregon City.
Ore.
O. D. EBY,
Attorney at Law,
General practice Deeds, mort
gages and abstracts carcnilly
made. Money to loan on good
security. Charges reasonable.
Office in Stevens Huilding.
Paint Kitchen Floors
Don't Scrub Them
Avoid the backache and sore knees caused by
scrubbing bare floors. Patmea floors are easy to keep
bright and clean, are attractive and very inexpensive.
KMEQUWIY
FLOOR PAINT
gives a hard, durable, sanitary finish for floors, steps or
any inside surface to be walked on, easy to keep clean
and hard to wear out You can apply
it yourself. It dries in a short time.
Offered in appropriate and attractive
shades-
JONES DRUG COMPANY, Oregon City.
With a larger and mo'e varied collection, more exclusive weaves and novelties and
more popular prices than in other years, we are euabled to satisfy every require
ment of the fashion seeker. Come, compare qualities and prices and judge for
yourself.
Yard-Wide Swiss Messaline Silks
Shown in the wanted plain shades, cream and black,
Best $1.25 variety priced at
Here is a lot of dependable quality silks guaranteed to give you perfect satisfaction.
Yard-Wide Real Swiss Messalines of soft, clinging weave and beautiful rich finish.
They are shown in all wanted plain shades, as well as cream and black, Of)
bought to sell regularly at $1.25 yard, this sale only at UvJC
89c
French Challies at 50c Yard
A great shipment of new all-wool French
Challies just received. The assortment
includes an endless variety of neat
stripes, dots, rings, small figures and
floral designes in most any wanted color.
Very dainty fabrics that wash perfectly.
Better than usual values at these prices.
French Marquisette at 65c Yard
The popular new French Voile Marqui
sette shown here in plain weave, and
with self-colored silk over-stripes. It is
a sheer fabric that makes up gracefully
and is especially adapted for party dress
es and evening wear. Comes in colors.
The plain fabrics are 65c a yard, with
stripes 75c.
New Heavy-weight Coatings, $1.50 to $3.00 a Yard
At these prices you have unlimited choice of the most fashionable new Heavy
weight Coatings, such as Two-Toned Diagonals, Striped Zibelines, Illuminated
Chinchillas, Novelty Scotch Effects, Mackinaw Checks, Plaid Back, Double-Weight
Fabrics, etc., that are all pure wool. Not a desired shade or coloring is missing
from this showing, and all are special values from $1.50 to $3.00 a yard.
New Wide-Wale Diagonal Serge in all colors, the yard $1.00 and $J.25
50-inch Two-Toned Whipcords in all colors, priced at, yard $1.50
Women's Richilieu Union Suits, All Styles.
$1.00
A form-fitting garment with no side seams and narrow waisted
All styles at, suit
TIE PAST UD
THE PRESENT DAY
A SERMON ON CONDITIONS AND
THEIR REMEDIES.
The Way an Oregonian City Pion
eer Looks at Things.
Editor Courier:
The Atlantic White Lead
Works in tho city of Brooklyn,
N. Y., in 1843 or 1844, at that time
was a co-partnership company.
It was a big concern. About that
time they talked about organizing
a joint stock company, the first
in the city of Brooklyn. It was
debated for about two years to
decido which it should bo, one
sharo of stock one vote or the in
dividual one share one vote. It
was decided that the one individ
ual could hold more than one
share and vote each share. That
was when the dollar was put
against tho man; and tho dollar
won. lugnt mere the idea was
sprung to control Tabor by con
troling the money. It just seems
that right there was where our
trouble commenced in tho United
States. Money to control labor.
Now the idea is to have cheap la
bor so as to develop our resour
ces and in order to obtain that
wo, will encourage immigration in
order to havo ample supply of
labor. Even a surplus would be
desirable to have labor competing
against itself, which . was the
cause that brought on the labor
unions. LnbdV unions in a demo
ratic republican government was
bad, very bad, and never should
have been. See here the cause
and conditions that brought on
the labor unions is worse than the
labor unions. After a while the
name "joint stock company" was
too common. Then it was chang
ed to corporation. Now it is Trust
lombines and Realities, and
goodness knows what else.
Now we have had about seventy
years of the. workigns of the cor
porations. It is said to be the
era of the greatest prosperity of
nation that the world ever knew.
Jreat understandings too numer
ous to mention here.
Now the question is, what have
wii to show for this great era of
prosperity, and seventy years of
corporation rule? Will we have
more very rich people than any
other nation in the world and mil
lions of idle men. The ideal To
obtain surplus labor worked well
for we sure have them and we
sure have white slaves, millions
and that mill is still grinding un
der corporation rule and commer
cialism. Say, just you remember
that those millions have all been
obtained inside or the past fifty
years, with the exception of two.
Now Republicanism has been
in the saddle for a long time and
has not bettered conditions for
the good of tho common people,
only made it worse. Democracy
has not made good, and will be
given another chance. Now about
the above "isms." They aro about
like what the old Frenchman said
about his daughter: "My daugh
ter Gustena was a h 1 of a sit."
We have had for many hund
reds of years a large class of
good hearted honest people that
have been more or less misled. 11
seems that they are in the last
ditch. By building up a great
monopoly, by using their influ
ence of high license and internal
revenues and neglecting the
wants of humanity and always
looking to an unknown world in
the hereafter, making promises
that can never be fulfilled. They
have used their influence in oth
er things that are bad, very bad.
It seems that the only tangible
thing they have is Prohibition.
The great majority of people be
lieve in temperance.
Will have to say a few words for
the women. "God bless borne and
mother when we want our cook
ing done." If some women filled
every office in the United Stales
they could do no where near as
bad as the "Lords of Creation."
Now Mrs. Women, you cannot
possibly do worse than tho men
and tho chances are forty to one
you will do seven times belter.
Let us give the women a chance
to vote. It will not hurt.
Now according to the fellers
lhat are going around the coun
try talking anti-single tax, get
ting $400.00 per month and ex
penses. Now the small farmers
and the small home owners of
the cities and towns will be hit
the hardest by this system. Ac
cording to reason they, are the
ones that will put up the fund to
pay these fellows so as to have
their little homes. It has been
said that the rich will be benefit.,
ed by single tax but if the truth
is known, it is the big fellow that
is putting up the fund. When this
government was organized, if
we had had wise statesmen who
would have looked into the fu
ture and made different land laws
instead of as now running over
the new country cutting and
slashing waste, waste, waste, just
like a band of cattle in a grain
field. Waste, waste, waste, im
poverished the land by taking all
out and putting nothing back.
If single tax will take us back
to the first principles let us vote
it.
In New York it was said that
anyone could get $1,000,000 who
could invent or devise a plan to
stop the crush on the bridge and
street cars. That is easy if you
could d , it. How would you do it?
You just go to the city hall and
run a straight line out from it
two hundred miles, then strike a
circle of 200 miles radius, and
when a train of cars or a ship or
a steamboat or any conveyance
comes up to lhat line, stop them
and before they can pass over
double the price of freight. Why?
So as to starve you fellows out.
Too many people here in one
bunch. Well we think that would
do it.
Well we have that settled and
the very host thing to do is to go
down to the custom house and all
the custom houses in the United
States and wipe them off the map.
We don't mean the buildings. II
is the tariff, custom, the nuty on
imports. That is what catches
the people both ways imports
and exports. It js safe lo say
that half or three-quarters of
tho profits are unearned increa
ment and that is a debt that can't
be paid. II is invested and makes
more profits and keeps on doing
so. Of course tho people making
these profits are the industrial
people of the counly. How long
will it take to absorb tho wealth
of this country?
Let us turn this around and
put a duty on exports and the
state do the trading..
Now I will ask you if you know
what makes tho people bunch so
in great centers. Labor-saving
machinery is one reason, money
is another, but there are many
oilier reasons. Capital and big
business bank oil population, for
population is the basis of wealth,
and that is the -reason that com
mercialism clamors for popula
tion. Everything is bargaining.
The more people the more wants
to dicker with. The very height
of competition gambling, from
Iho highest to the lowest.
The industrial people of the
United States are in a hole. They
voted themselves there mostly
by misrepresentation.- Now to
get out of lhat you will have to
learn to vole for yourselves and
a good way to got out is lo vote
for the socialists.
O. R. II. Miller.
cure perman.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
Oregon City citizens cannot
doubt it. Doan's Kidney Pills were
used they cured.
The story was told to Oregon
City residents.
Time has strengthened the evidence.
Has proven the
ent.
The -testimony is from this
locality.
The proof convincing.
Mrs. A. M. Hallabaugh, 328 A.
Grant St., Portland, Ore., says:
"For two or three years I suffer
ed from kidney complaint and in-
llammation ot the bladder. I had
considerable backache, but the
worse sympton of my trouble was
with the kidney secretions. Doan's
Kidney Pills relieved me soon
after I began their use and in
claims made for them." (State
ment given January 10, 11)00.)
Re-endorsement.
Mrs. Hollabaugh was inter
viewed on March 20, 1910 and
she added to the above: "My
health has been excellent during
the past several years, due to oc
casional use of Doan's Kidnov
Pills. I cannot say enough in
praise of this remedy."
For sale by all dealers. Price
50 cents. Foster-Millburn Co.,
Buffalo, New York, sole agents
for the United States.
Remember the name Doan's
and take no other.
LEON DES LARZSE violin teacher
410 High St., phone 3171. Or
chestra for pupils.