Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, February 07, 1913, Page 4, Image 4

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Oregon city courier,, Friday" feb.7 1913,
OREGON CITY COURIER
Published Fridays from the Courier Building, Eighth and Main streets, and en.
tered in the Postoffice at Oregon City, Ore., as second class mail matter.
OREGON CUT COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANY, PUBLISHER
M. J. BROWN, A. E. FROST, OWNERS.
Subscription Price $1.50.
Telephones, Main 5-1; Home A 3-1
Official Paper for the Farmers Society of Equity of Clackamas Co
M. J BR.OWN,
EDITOR
WATCH THIS BILL.
Representative Schuebel of this
city, has a bill before the. house that
should pass but will not. It is to do
away with the lobbies that are pack
ing the state capitol at Salem.
I was told by a man from Salem
the other day that it was a disgrace
to the state the way the timber, in
surance, water power and meat lob
bies swarmed over the building and
button-holed the members.
And it makes us ask "Don t our
representatives know their business?
Have they got to be advised? Shall
the trusts be allowed to have their
own legislature in the capitol build
ing and tell the men the voters elect
ed what to do?
The bad feature of this lobby bus
iness is that it is always one sided.
You seldom see a lobby of the little
fellows, the farmers, the day workers,
etc., at the capitol. They haven't the
organization or the money to spend,
and they wouldn't know what to do if
they had a lobby.
A legislature that is on the square
has no use for the lobbyist. When it
isn t on the square, it has.
Keep your eye on Schuebel's bill
and see which class the legislators
place themselves.
KILL THE PAY BOOSTING.
And still they poke in the salary
increase bills at Salem, and when the
session closes with a hurrah you will
find a number of them have slipped
through. One of the latest is a thous
and dollar boost to the salary of the
county clerk of Portland. He wants
$4,r00.
The way I look at these pay raising
propositions is that the candidate fo
the office should have told the people
he would have asked for a raise when
ho was tearing his clothes for the
nomination and the election.
Not one of them would have been
elected if they had, therefore when
the legislature raises their pay it does
just what the people they represent
did not want done ,hence is not rep re
sentative.
Perhaps Oregon does not pay suf
ficient salaries in some places, but
with taxes where they have been for
the past few years, the taxpayers
think they are sufficient. Let the log.
islature cut out about fifty of our un.
needed commissions and quit making
new jobs for a session or two, then
perhaps the voters would be willing
to look into the matter of salary in
creasing.
Representative Cnrkln of Medford,
introduced a bill in the house that
should pass, requiring candidates for
judges or prosecuting attorneys to be
admitted to the bar. This is just a
plain, common-sense law that would
make a man fit himself for the place.
A man has no business to be a county
judge or prosecuting attorney who
does not know law; he has no busi
ness prosecuting or dealing out just
ice unless he knows what the law de
fines in prosecutions or what justice
is. But the bill should have been a lit
tle broader and embraced justices of
the peace as well for this is one of
the weakest spots in Oregon's justice.
STAYING WITH THEIR GRAFT.
One of the nastiest pieces of work
the Oregon senate ever did was the
defeat last week of the bill of Senator
Smith of Coos County, providing that
in personal injury damage suits the
Judge before whom the suit is tried
shall fix the lawyer's fees.
AND THE SENATE KILLED
THIS BILL.
The senate killed it because almost
half the senators were LAWYERS,
and they didn't want to be driven off
their loot.
These lawyers draw up a contract
with the man who Is hurt and he has
to agree to give them HALF OF THE
VERDICT or they won't try the case.
And this is the senate whose mem
bers are preaching economy, retrench
ment, and as one of them said before
a committee recently "we are playing
the poor man s game this session."
Nine of the 12 lawyers in the sen
ate, men sent there to work for the
greatest good of the people, voted
AGAINST this measure and killed
it and every man who did would
have to climb a ladder to get up on
the same plane with a common graft
er.
Three lawyers voted FOR the meas
ure, and the Courier will put their
names in caps. They were men who
knew they were playing a losing game
but who stood out for the poor devil
who got a hand or loot oil under a
car or got mangled in a mill. They
were:
DIMICK of Oregon City.
IIALLIS of Forest Grove.
JOSEPH of Portland.
TIME TO SPANK.
If you tell your kid if he does a
certain thing again you will punish
him, and then don't make good, very
soon the youngster will get wise that
you are just bluffing and he won't
pay any attention to your edicts.
Mr. Tooze toold the Live Wires
Tuesday that the city council had
simply been up against it in trying
to enforce the laws of Oregon City
and that they had accomplished very
little.
And I wonder if it isn't because for
years the city fathers of this city
have just threatened the children,
never punished, and they now have no
fear of the fathers?
Some time ago the city passed a
rather drastic ordinance against horse
traders, and among the provisions
were those that a rig should not oc
cupy a hitching rack but for a cer
tain time; that "for sale" signs should
not be displayed on any horse or an
imai, and so on with some very
tight if not strictly constitutional
provisions.
On the corner of Eighth and Main
streets a half dozen horse traders
were talking over the new ordinance,
when one of them remarked m my
hearing:
"Oh don t fret. It will never be en.
forced. They will forget it in a week."
Will some one rise and explain
WHY an ordinance compelling own
res of property to cut the grass and
weeds in the parkings in front of
their property CAN'T be enforced?
What was the law ever passed for,
if it can't be?
And will tne next man tell me
WHY the city can't compel a proper.
ty owner to keep his sidewalk in a
THIS ONE WILL PASS.
Only one lonesome representative
inetzei or Marion County) voted
against representative Gill's bill
which makes the possession of a gov.
ernment license sufficient evidence
that he is selling liquor, and increas
ing the fine and adding- a prison sen
tence.
I would like to know on what line
of reasoning the lone champion of
Diind pigs' sustained his protest to
such a bill.
When a man takes out a govern
ment license in dry territory he takes
it out because he is coine to sell
booze and sell it in secret violation of
his state laws.
Mr. Gill knew this when he drew
the bill to flag them ,and every man
in tne nouse knew it.
It is one of the best bills introduc
ed. It will force the government to
take a hand in the "blind pig" pens
and make the business mighty risky.
ine senate will not dare stop this
measure of reform, because there is
absolutely no excuse.
SanFrancisco offers $137,000,000
for Spring Valley water. Wonder
why they don't use "hypo?"
It looks as if that bill providing for
the sterilization of degenerate crimi
nals was going1 to pass. It went thru
the house in a gallop and it will
take a lot of sand in the senate to
oppose it. It's a radical measure.
There is nothing like it in this coun
try. But it applies only to a class of
men who are unfit to associate with
decent people. Schuebel of thjs city
worked hard for its passage.
GIVE US FREE SUGAR.
The beet sugar growers say reduct
ion on sugar duties would hurt them.
and free sugar would ruin them.
Come on with the ruin!
When the owner of land in this bie
country has to ask for protection tor
his Bugar crop against worn out
acres in foreign countries, then these
sugar growers had better quit the
beets and go to raising beans.
We should have absolutely free
sugar; for when we tax it we benefit
nnO fVPOnf fllirrai. . . .f nnrl ah. V. -
safe condition, or do the work itself gugar raiger8 at th M of the
AT SALEM.
and force the property owner to pay
for it?
If the city can't, why did it pass
the law?
If the city CAN'T enforce its laws
against dangerous sanitary condit
ions; against foul garbage dumps in
the back yards and streets, stagnant
cess pools and open ditches, WHAT
are city laws and state health laws
for?
thousands of consumers.
A FOOL BILL.
THE PARASITE.
I hope the legislature will find time
to get a law through that will cut
out a middleman society has no earth
ly use for the scavenger- who stands
between the injured and his indem
nity.
The mill owner stands ready to
make good to the injured man. It is
a part of their system to figure on
dumages they must pay to injured
With a splendid zeal for the eood
of Oregon, Senator Dan Kellaher of
Portland has introduced a bill under
which none except residents of the
state for at least two years shall be
permitted to bid on contracts for
Ihese ordinances, and many other state or countv buildings or imnrovn-
necessary but dead city laws CAN be ments. and no architect exceDt those
enforced. in Oree-on shall be allowed t.n drnw
Every other city of our size enfbrc- plans or superintend any public work.
es them. We can. Any city or in- This is sure some "Oregon for Ore
corporated village in the U. S. can, gonians" propositions, and Mr. Kella-
and the most of them DO. her is to be commended for-his trade
When laws have been winked at, at home ideas, but some hitrh school
their violation ignored for many bov should tell this (senator that Rneh
years, it is mighty hard to get them
to working, but they CAN be oiled
up and made to work. The trouble is,
like the unspanked kid, they think
ma is only bluffing.
Oregon City has 6,500 people.
It has passed the country town age
workmen, and they pay thousands of and stage.
dollars to keep their men insured. Some of the conditions in this citv
iney realize that when a man is would not be tolerated in Canby three
crippiea in ineir employ tnai man days,
must be taken care of. Canemah wouldn't tolerate the
But whatsthe mill owners back up condition of the sidewalks on some of
on is paying damages to the syster our principal residence streets thirty
lawyers tney kick on paying a dam- minutes.
a law would stick just about seven
minutes in the first court it was ever
taken to. As well make a law that
would forbid the Courier to hire any!
printer who had not married in Ore-1
gon and had seven children. This is
simply a fool bill.
John Stark has an interesting letter
on the matter of the value of money
in this issue. The Courior editor does
not pose as a heavy student of finan
ces, but he would like to ask Mr.Stark
why havo any metal at all behind the
government a money if his theory is
correct, that it is the government
stump that Rives gold its purchasing
value? Why not just take a piece of
paper, the samo as our gold certifi
cates and have the government say
it lb money, and it chall UK money?
Why carry the big gold reserve?
age verdict of $1,000 when they know
the injured man will never get a cent
over $500.
Today if a man gets hurt this law
yer parasite will stop the ambulance
if he can and warn the injured man
to stand pat, refuse to settle and come
to him. He will have him sign a con
tract that t,he lawyer shall get one-
half of the damage verdict, and then
he will black mail and keep the case
in the courts.
The injured man loses his job for
ever, his chances are lessened for
getting a job anywhere else, and the
lawyer gets fully half the damages.
Oregon wants a law that will put
a price on a man s injuries the day he
hurt; it wants a law that will
cut out all lawyers' fees and court
ttachments, and give the injured
ALL that the employer has to pay.
Today the lawyer gets damages.
THIS SPEEDY AGE.
If it is necessary to put one man
in jail to make 500 others have some
respect for city government, then the
quicker the better.
Law is no good unless you force its
respect.
I have been in Kansas when any
man could walk up to an open bar in
the cities, call for a drink and get it,
And I have been in the same cities
in Kansas when a man couldn't get
enough to dampen his tongue if he
threw a fit on the street.
These times were before and after
law enforcement.
It's time for this city to enforce
its laws or annul its charter. This is
no longer a four corners or tough
western dump.
Cut out threatening to spank, and
just spank. One spank will be worth
more than a rod of threatening or
coaxing.
Let s enforce our necessary laws,
repeal the others and be some city.
There is an editor down in Rich
mond, Cal., with an awfully blunt
name (Hulaniski) but a mighty sharp
pencil, -and Borne of his quaint ob
servations are mighty good dope
Here's one of a dozen or two pat ones
he fills the live editorial page with
each week:
When we were 20 we used to
spend a day's wages for a dance
ticket, dance all night and work
next day for the price of another
ticket. Now we can't understand
why folks don't hire someone
to do that sort of hard work for
them.
Why when sixty solons, at great
personal sacrifice, insist, regardless
of the int'onvenionce, on managing to
get along with only ninely-fivo sten
ographers and stenogrnpheresses, it is
tin example of consecration that mak
es one think of George Washington
and 1770! Portland Journal.
They suy Dan J. Malarkcy wants to
fill Chamberlain's pluce in the United
States senate in 1911.
At the "movies" the other night
a picture of Batery D. in New York
showed a street car drawn by horses,
and the crowd laughed.
And don't we progress ?
It wasn't so many years ago, and no
doubt many who laughed at the odd
sight remember it, when a street car
drawn by horses wasn't anything to
laugh at, but on the contrary was a
wonder to the day, and when they
first appeared, people would stop on
the street and watch them pass, and
no doubt many who jeered at the
"horse car," as seen in the motion
pictures can remember their first ride
in one, so great an event was it.
And fifty years from now, if one
of our 1913 autos can be found, the
motion picture follows will stage it,
and we will look at the pictures and
laugh at it as we do the horse car or
as we would at one or the old high
wheeled bycycles.
This is an age of change, progress
and "get there."
After weeks of after-election spec
ulation on causes, the papers figured
it out that the reason Olcott's "Blue
Sky" bill clouded over on Election
day was that it provided for state
finds to keep the clouds away. So
now another has been drafted and in.
troduced at Salem, and this one pro.
vides that those who would have
their stocks passed on must pay for
the passing that the fees shall nav
all tne administration expenses. Such
a bill would have been passed by the
voters, but it remains to be seen
what the legislature will do to it.
SIX MEN ON ONE JOB.
Quarreling With Fate
N O
IT is surprising how little fate has to
do with our position in life. The in
dustrious and the economical person
lute few complaints against destiny. He
may have no more brains than tho spend
thrift, but lu knows the value Of saving,
lie sees the importance of laying up a
few treasures on earth.
TI1C BANK
Oldest Bank
OF OREGON CITY
In Clackuma County
Here's the idea a plain old farmer
of this county, who just plugs along
and pays taxes. And it isn't so bad:
"Do away entirely with the state
senate; do away with two-thirds
of the house. Elect ONE representat
ive from each county and pay salary
enough to get a man big enough and
broad enough to represent the
WHOLE county."
What do you think about it?
On first consideration it is not so
bad. This would cut out about GO
representatives, their salaries, ex
penses, stenographers and clerks, and
it would bring the legislature down to
about 30, and down to a size where
every voter could keep his eye on it
and know just who did and who did
not represent.
The success would hang largely on
getting the right man for the places
Oregon has some large counties, coun.
ties with vaied interests, and such
counties would have to have large
men, men who knew every foot of the
counties and who could legislate for
all of it.
Now think this proposition over a
little before you call it a dream. Take
Clackamas county for example and
see If the farmer's idea would not
work out just as well as under the
present plan.
We have Dimick, senator, Malark
ey as half senator; we have Gill,
schuebel, Schnoerr as representative
es and Lofgren as half representat
ive six legislators in all for this one
county, and-every man of them lives
right here in the western edge of the
county, within a square of 25 miles.
Don't you believe that ONE man
one RIGHT man, a big, brainy cap.
able fellow, could represent this coun
ty just as well (and perhaps a shade
better) than SIX men?
It would seem that the time is
really near when the farmers have
got together to combine for their
own advantage, instead of plodding
along and watching everybody and
everything combine against them for
their disadvantage.
If shoe manufacturers need
protection why is it that they sell
immense quantities or shoes
abroad in competition with for
eign countries? Portland Jour
nal. Ask the same question of the cloth
ing makers, the stove foundries, the
farm implement manufacturers, the
automobile factories in fact, ask it
of almost every big manufacturer of
tne country, and see if you get any
answer.
President Malarky has introduced
in the senate a bill providing for two
twenty-day sessions of . the legisla
ture, sixty days apart, and that no
bills shall be introduced' during the
last session. At first glance it looks
good, the only bad feature appearing
is the beautiful opening for lobbying
that it presents the heart to heart,
man to man opportunity.
Thirty-six states have ratified the
income tax amendment, and now con
gress must impose an income tax.
And the wonder is that our country
has so long waited, that it has taaken
all these years to arouse a sentiment
to force state legislatures to ratify
the amendment. Such a law simply
says a man shall pay taxes in propor
tion to his income, and anv man
snouid.
Salem. The progress made during
the third week of the legislative ses
sion seems to indicate that members
of the legislature are trying to live
up to their voluntary pledges to get
down to serious work early in the ses
sion and keep at It and thus avoid
the congestion of business witnessed
during the closing hours of previous
sessions. The early and diligent at
tentlon to business, however, has to
some extent been offset by the large
volume' of business and poor work on
the part of some of the committees,
necessitating referring back to them
many bills.
With the legislative session half
through, the aiembers of both branch
es find themselves farther along In
their work than has marked any pre
vious session. It is said. The amount
of routine work accomplished Is enor
mous, despite frequent snappy debates
over the pabsage of bills.
Both houses have agreed to forbid
the introduction of bills after the
twenty-fifth day of the session, except
upon consent of three-fourths of the
body In which a bill Is offered.
The close of the third week of the
session finds 42 senate bills passed by
the senate and 66 bouse bills passed
by the house, with 13 bills that have
gone through both houses approved
by the governor. So far there have
been no vetoes.
In the house the total number of
bills presented is 433, where two have
been voted down. 13 have been with
drawn and 16 Indefinitely postponed,
in addition to the 56 that have passed.
In the senate 10 bills have been de
feated on roll call, eight have been
withdrawn, 12 indefinitely postponed,
and 42 passed, out of 210 Introduced.
No Bill Carry Emergency Clause
None of the bills carry an emer
gency clause and will not become
laws until 90 days after the adjourn
ment of the legislative assembly.
Probably the most important bill so
far Bigned Is that abolishing the office
of state land agent.
Another act of some import Is one
providing that a wife deserter who Is
convicted shall be compelled to work
on the county roads for the time for
which he has been sentenced, and that
the county shall pay his family 1 a
day for each such day worked.
Appropriations Have Light Week
Appropriation requests made during
the third week of the legislative ses
sion reached a total of $647,415, by
far the lightest week so far. This
brings the total of requests up to 14,
106,263, and not .a general appropria
tion bill even in sight. This makes It
certain that the amount of the re
quests will go well up to the $9,000,
000 mark.
This week will tell the story as. to
what anxious taxpayers may expect In
regard to appropriations. It should
be remembered, In this regard, that
many appropriation measures are du
plicated in senate and house and that
many bills Intended to assist In emp
tying the state coffers will be killed. ,
The sum total, In any event, must be
larger than it was at the last session 1
on account of the money which should
be expended in adequately advertising
the resources of Oregon at the Pana-;
ma-Pacific Exposition and at the San
Diego Exposition and also for a com
prehensive system of building and
maintaining highways.
Contest on State Printer Is Started.
The expected state printer fight has
appeared In the legislature. Only the
skirmish line waa.thrown out, but that
it will be a fight was indicated by the
appearance of three bills, two of them
Identical, but these two diametrically
oposed to the third. One, introduced
by Abbott, is to repeal the flat salary
law of 1911, which Is due to become
effective In 1915 If not repealed.
The other two provide that the gov
ernor, secretary of state and state
treasurer shall control the state print
ing office and that the jrtate printer
shall be appointed by tftt board at a
salary of $1800 a year and not latr
than December 16, 1B1. All of the
sections of the 1911 flat salary law are
repealed in these bills.
Barrett Road Bill Passed in Senate
Passage of the Barrett county bond
ing road bill by the senate probably
wilt mean the calling of a Joint con
ference committee to act on the Bar
rett and Hurd bills. The Hurd bill
passed the house and Is known as the
Orange bill. While both are county
bonding acts they are by no means
Identical.
The Barrett bill provides that the
county court shall be the supervising
power in road matters, but the people
of counties Bhali vote on the question
of road bonds.
The Hurd or Grange bill provides
for election of delegates In road dis
tricts, Shese delegates to attend, a
county road meeting to determine up
on road questions.
House Overrides More Vetoes
The follpwlng vetoed bills were
passed by the house:
Bill requiring depot agents to post
at once Information received as to de
layed trains for the convenience of
the traveling public. Requiring abut
ting property-ownerSjOn county roads
to destroy thistles and other noxious
weeds, and providing a penalty for J
not doing so. Requiring school direc
tors to pay for material and labor
where, through their own careless
ness, contractors leave unpaid bills.
Prohibiting expenditures over and
above the sums appropriated for any
public institution or department of
the state and creating an emergency
board to look after such work. Pro
viding that no expenditure shall be
made before an appropriation Is made.
Question When Vetoed Bills Effective
Just when the veto bills of the gov
ernor that have been passed by the
constitutional two-thirds majority of
both houses go Into effect is a ques
tion that has arisen In the light of the
fact that a number of the governor's
vetoed bills have gone over his head.
It also develops the point as to
whether the vetoed bills, which have
been passed notwithstanding the veto
of the governor, are subject to a ref
erendum ef the people.
The members of the senate Judici
ary committee hare reached a conclu
sion that the vetoed bills do not be
come laws until 90 days after ad
journment of the legislative session
and are subject to a referendum of
the people If such Is desired.
Saloons in Depots Prohibited -Under
amendments which have been
made to the Hosklns bjll In the sen
ate regulating the sale of liquor near
depots, the bill now prohibits the lo
cation of a saloon in any depot, under
the same roof as the depot, or In an
adjacent building. Originally the bill
was Intended to prohibit saloons from
being located within 300 feet of a de
pot. The bill is also amended to ex
clude drug stores from Its provisions,
Bill Proposes Petition Regulations
The name of every person or com.
pany interested In an initiative meas
ure must have his, her or Its name
plainly printed on the cover of any
petition circulated under the Initiative
law and must make known to the
world that he, she or it is so interest
ed, according to a proposed amend.
ment to the initiative law, introduced
by Representative Latourette, of Mult
nomah county. In the house.
This bill also provides that no per
son may solicit for pay more than 250
names on any measure without first
receiving from the governor a license,
something like a notarial commission,
after which he may proceed to solicit
Protects Wages From Loan Shark
Protection against loan sharks Is the
object of a bill introduced by Senator
Farrell. It provides that no assign
ment of wages shall be valid to secure
' a loan of less than $200, unless it Is
: accepted In writing by the employer,
! and no such assignment Is to be held
I valid, when made by a married man,
except by the written consent of his
wife.
Free Textheoks Advocated
oenaior Day introduced a bill pro-
Tiding that free textbooks shall be
furnished In all the public schools of
the state except In high schools. The
bill provides that each school district
shall pay for Its own books.
Any teacher or anyone connected
officially with the public schools Is
prohibited from In any way being fi
nancially connected with the purchase
of such books.
vllle, were Adopted by both houses.
Senator Calkins' bill fixing the sal
ary of the governor's private secretary
at $3000 a year was passed by the
Benate by a vote of 18 to 12.
The senate defeated the house bill
of the revision of laws committee to
repeal an ancient act allowing coun
ties to maintain tuberculosis sana
torlums. Anyone wishing to teach music, ei
ther vocal or instrumental, will have
to be licensed before so doing, ac
cording to the provisions of a bill In
troduced In the house.
Sale of liquor to a minor or allowing
a minor to play any games around a
place where liquor Is sold will result
In forfeiture of the license and a
heavy penalty under the provisions of
a bill Introduced by Senator Calkins.
The house has adopted Representa
tive Blancliard's memorial to congress
asking for the repeal of all patent
rlgh,; and copyright laws, as being one
of the principal bulwarks of monopoly
and the main cause of the high cost
of living.
To give to the governor power to
veto any part or several parts of a .
general appropriation bill where It car
ries appropriations of sums of uoney
for various purposes, Is the constitu
tional amendment to be submitted to
the people at the next general election.
Legislative Brevities
Resolutions of respect on the death.
--3 p:6, of Bran
bchuebel and Gill of this county
are starting something against Mas
ter fish Warden Clanton, and have
introduced a bill askincr for an invest
igation of the state fish hatcheries.
They make startling charges of in
competency and waste of public mon
ey in mis department. .
Sugar is already taking a drop in
price. It is hitting the chutes gradu
ally so it won't jar quite so hard when
the Democratic legislature at Wash
ington gets through with it
The "dissolved " Standard Oil Co.
paid out almost forty million dollars
in cash dividends to its stockholders
Monday. Will some kind court Blease
dissolve the Oregon City Courier
Publishing Company for a little
while ?
Senator Hoskins bill prohibiting
saloons or road houses outside of in
corporated cities passed the senate on
Tuesday. This bill would make the
state dry except where the home rule
law permits licenses.
To Our Friends and Neighbors
You know us. You know we would not-that we could not
afford to- o back on our word. Nor can you afford to ignore
this money-back-INnot-satisf led offer on this splendid laxative
we honestly believe wi have tho should hr. r-. A ni .
poison the system.
Hedschs, biliousness, nervous
ness and other tormenting and seri
ous ills are common when the bowels
i i'i ,ct dally " Batur intnded.
All this my be avoided, if you will
accept our advice.
best bowel remedy ever made the
most pieaaant-to-take, moat per
manently beneficial laxative for relief
from the miseries and dangers an slag
from oonstipation.
We wouldn't say this if we didn't
believe it to be true. We wouldn't
risk our reputation by makiug such
statements did we not feel sura you
would find them true.
Our faith is built both on the
knowledge of what Rexall Orderlies
are made of and on observation of
very many severe cases in which they
have proven their merit. .
TrythematOurRisk
If they do not abundantly prove
their merit with you aim if you
are not entirely satisfied with them
we will refund your money and we
will do that on your mere say-so.
we don't ask you to risk a penny.
Isn't that fairf
Just let the bowels fail in properly
doing their work just let their
action be delayed and incomplete
and the enure system and every
other organ suffers. Waste that
www , just like eandy. They
soothing and easv in action 1
. uun griping, nausea, pi
soothing and easy in action. They
do not causa griDins. nan ,
. fj?!,MC"s1,ve looseness, they
" j ""iiginen intestinal
aeras and muscles. They promptly
rthtv. constipation, and help to per
manently evercome it.
Reall Orderlies promote better
SDtnts i and betUr htejth. In .11 of
to eW-fasXioned, harsh salts Tand
other purpurea, which are not only
aged and delicate persons.
Rexall Orderlies come in rest.
Pocket tin , boxes. 12 tablets. 10
38 tahl.u 5A-. m ..... .V- 19
, , w iBoieis, OUe.
CAUTION: Please bear in mind that Rexall Orderly - ... ,j .
Ijftj, You can buy Rexall Orderlies only ."lb . SSubSSLI M b' " f
V. can buy W Orderlies i. UiislUmuo6.
Great Success of "The Rose Maid.'
Some idea of the success achieved
by Werba and Luescher's latest op
era, "The Rose Maid," which Alan
Dale in the New York American de
clared to be prettier than its sister
opera, "The Spring Maid," may be
obtained from the following which ap
peared the other day in the New York
Evening Journal:
"The Rose Maid," the pretty and
tuneful operetta now at the Globe
theatre, has scored that rarest of
rare things in the summertime, a
cumulative success. And if you have
any doubt as to what that might be,
go to the Globe theatre ,and the
crowds there every night will be an
explanation.
It is a not uncommon thing for an
opera to be successful during the
spring and settle down for a summer
run, but that is not what "The Rose
Maid" has done. It has made its in
itial bow and has been settling up
weekly to ever increasing receipts
that prove it is becoming more and
more popular as the weather becomes
hotter.
There are a number of excellent
reasons for this. Its music, by Bruno
Branichstaedten, is of the catchy, yet
musicianly sort that is manufactured
abroad, while its dramatic story is
engaging and sensible enough to
make you wonder why you are there
hearing it. Moreover those in the
leading parts in the production, are
talented as actors, and there are a
number of sensational voices doing
justice to the music.
"The Rose Maid" is distinctively a
worth while entertainment.
Skin On Fire ?
Just the mild, simple wash, the well
known D.D.D. Prescription for Eczema,
and the itch Is gone.
A trial will prove it.
We have sold other remedies for skin
trouble but none that we could guaran
tee as we can the D.D.D. remedy. If
the first regular size $1.00 bottle does
not do exactly as we say, it will not
cost you a cent
Jones Drug Company Oregon City
Mortgage Loans.
Money to loan on first class, im
proved farms in Clackamas county.
Current interest rates attract
ive repayment privilege.
A. II. Birrell Co. 202 McKay
Bldg., 3rd. and Stark Sts.
Portland, Oregon.
U'REN & SCHUEBEL .
Attorneys at Law
Will practice in all courts, make
collections and settlements of es-
ates, furnish abstracts of title.
and lend you money, or lend your
money on first mortgage. Offloe
in Enterprise Bldg., Oregon City.
A most valuable Pamphlet. .Telia
and illustrates how to clear stump
land at the lowest known cost oor
acre by .devices .Just .oerf acted
Free to all owners of stumn lnnd
who send their names. John. a.
Gorman, .1112 Western Avnm.A
Seattle.
Straight & Salisbury
Agents for the celebrated
LEADER Water Systems
and
STOVER GASOLINE ENGINES.
We also carry
full line of MYERS pumps and
Spray Pumps.
e make a specialty of installing
ater Systems and Plumb- . .
ing in ihfi nnnnlpo
20 Main St. Phone 2g82
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