OREGON CITY COURIER, MAY 16, 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 CITY COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANY, PUBLISHER M. J. BROWN, A. E. FROST, OWNERS. Subscription Price $1.50. Telephones, Main 5-1 ; Home A 5-1 Official Paper for the Farmers Society of Equity of Clackamas Co M. J. BROWN, EDITOR Affidavit of Circulation I, M. J. Brown, being duly sworn, say that I am editor and part owner of the Oregon City Courier, and that the average weekly circulation of that paper from May 1, 1912, to May 1, 19 13, has exceeded 2,000 copies, and that these papers have been printed and circulated from the Courier office in the usual manner. M. J. BROWN. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 5th day of May, 1913. GILBERT L. HEDGES, Notary Public for Oregon CONTEMPTIBLE The newspaper of today that would carry any influence with the readers and hold those readers as subscribers must not state deliberate untruths. I care not what side of a controver sy a man is on, if he is half a man he has nothing but contempt for a sheet that deliberately lies to give its read ers a wrong version of a matter. That man knows that sheet will throw it in to him when occasion comes. There were over 300 men present at Saturday's mass meeting, and we want to ask any man who attended that meeting, be he friend or foe of the county court, if the following, tak en from the Morning Enterprise, is true? Is there one man present who will say it is true ? Will Mr. Eby him self say it is true? In speaking of the opening of the meeting and of what the Enterprise terms "unexpected developments" that paper says: "One of which was the hoot ing from the platform of O. D. Eby, chairman of the committee appointed by the Live Wires of the Commercial club to act with Messrs. M. J. Brown, R. Schuebel and S. L. Casto in the investigat ion. Mr. Eby endeavored to obtain the floor to state that the Live Wires' committee would submit its own report, being unable to endorse the report of the three men of the ruling faction, but cat-calls, yells and abuse made it unable for him to speak. Shortly after this he left the hall and the remaining faction ran matters as suited themselves. After they had presented their report, which was done by Mr. Schuebel, Mr. Brown withdrawing from the center of the stage temporarily, two reso lutions were introduced and ad opted." 1 If the Enterprise did not have a re porter at this meeting, then it was de liberately duped and stuffed by the party who furnished the above bunk. If a representative was there then he reported deliberate misstatements, Mr. Eby was never on the platform and he was never hooted from it or from any other position. There was not a cat-call, there was not a yell of abuse. He did speak, said all that he had to say. The people listened to him. He did not leave the hall soon after this. Here are the facts, and we ask any man who reads the lines to ask any man present at that meeting if this is not a true statement. When the meeting was called to or der Chairman J. W. Smith stated that before the committee reads its report, O. D. Eby wished to muke a statement and Mr. Eby made that statement. He was listened to and heard by all. There was never a word of abuse, never a hiss, never a cat-call. When Mr. Eby stated that the Livo Wire committee had no report, then some of the audience laughed. In Sunday Morning's Oregonian there were the same and more mis statements and plain untruths. The Enterprise office is the Oregonian's correspondent, and under four-story neaa lines "Hig Kow Breaks up Probe Committee" that paper says: At a meeting held two weeks ago, charges against the County Court were received in writing, and since then it has been sup posed that the joint committee was Investigating these matters. The two members from the Live Wires say thoy had not been giv en access to the complaints, and practically had been forced from all deliberation of the matter. In the course of the meeting', criti cism was directed against the Live Wires on the committee and O. D. Eby rose to protest, but was hooted from the platform. Mr. Eby, Mr. Loder, know these statements are untrue. Mr. Loder, asked by the Courier ed itor if he made this statement, said he DID NOT MAKE IT; that the com mittee had full access to all the com plaints made at that meeting, and the publication of this statement was false. Mr. Eby and Mr. Loder were both present at the meeting two weeks ago when the complaints were signed and given in. Mr. Eby wrote one of them himself, according to dictation. He knew as much about them as any member present; he personally hand ed two of them to M J. Brown. The charge that they had not access to these complaints is deliberately false Ask either Mr; Loder or Mr. Eby if they were ever asked for these com plaints. Ask them if they were ever refused. Then again: The Live Wires committee will make the report on the matter to the Commercial Club. Mr. Eby publically stated at Satur day's meeting that the Live Wire Committee HAD NO REPORT TO MAKE. Mr. Loder did not make any investigation of the charges what ever, and mr. Liouer will tell you so. And this rank misrepresentaion of facts, to carry out the impression that Saturday's mass meeting would not listen to the Live Wires committee is dirty, underhand journalism. When two big newspapers like the Oregonian and Journal have reports of the same meeting that vary so widely in essentials, it is up to the business managers of those papers, and due to the readers of those pa pers, to determine which reports are true, and to find out if the corres pondents are reporting facts or kneed ing them over to suit personal and political ends. Readers in these days pretty near ly find out the straight of matters. You can't fool them with garbled re ports. The day of news butchering has gone by. In editorial columns an editor may state his personal opinions by the acre, for that is his space, but news matters must be given straight, they must state matters as they are The Enterprise's devotion to the gang is almost fanatical. It is a zeal worthy of an honest cause. The "blue sky" law to go into ef fect in June should stop the Enter prise efforts to sell people a newspap er under false pretenses. SOME DAY A few days ago the house of rep- resentatives ot Massachusetts by a vote of 211 to 13, ratified a state amendment to the constitution per mitting the cities and towns to sell necessities to the people. At first reading you will say this is a step toward things coming. So it is, but read it again and look at the utter ridiculousness of a state legis lature having to "permit" the state to sell the citizens of the state life's needed products. The "permit" shows that the state has all these years levied a tribute on its inhabitants for the benefit of the commission men and the middlemen. Now the state of Massachusetts "per mits" itself to compete, permits it self to buy and sell direct when the controllers of necessities boost the prices too high. Well, reforms have come slow in this tired old world for the past 50 years, but they are getting a gait on now. THE RECALL Los Angeles started a municipal free market where farmers could sell petitions are now being tneir sturr airect ana wnere eaters throughout the countv. Many taxpayers of Clackamas county are up in rebellion because of the great funds collected by taxation, and the value received from that taxation. Many think that the affairs of this county are poorly managed; that many of the expenditures are exces sive and extravagant; that the coun ty court runs things as it sees fit and the people know of big contracts and expenditures only after they have been made; that laws are openly ig nored in some actions; that big con tracts are put through without com petition or knowledge of the people; that court favorites are rewarded and others punished, and so on with any number of complaints of favoriteism, discrimination, extravagance and mis management. .Oregon gives the people the recall of public officials when they do not serve honestly or are not capable of the work elected to. The people of this county have car ried their protests to the recall and circulated could buy direct, and the commission men met the farmers at the city lim its and bought all their stuff before it entered the city. And all this illustrates that the There is this much about the situ ation: Ifi there are reasons sufficient to start the recall petitions (and there seems to he a surplus) there are a dealers are organized and work as hundred reasons more for furnishing one man, wnne tne producers ana eat- it, ers run around like a bunch of milling cattle. When farmers organize and sell in the same way the commission men Once bring a matter to the stage this county protest has attained and then let it drop, and the taxpayers might as well go back and take the buy, and when the eaters and wearers hook for a long time to come; for it will be many years before they will get people to start things again. They will say "it is of no use" and will bear it or move out. And once put through a protest, make good on the recall, and as the LOOK OUT prize ngnter saia, wnen askeu wy ne KnocKea out a man mat was almost Hm-fi is a word of warnine- to those gone, "It Will put the fear of my who would change the management of Punch in t.he heart of the next man" unite and say we will buy from those who sell in our interests then there go your commission men and there go inflated prices. Some day we will wise up and act, BALLOON BUSINES tsack east the railroad engineers have been given a five per cent in crease in wages; the firemen ten per cent, and now the conductors, brake- men and baggagemen ask for a hoist or they will strike. Then the railroads in justice, ask for a proportionate boost on rates, Then the workmen in the mills and factories ask for a raise in proportion to raise of foods and necessities. A.nd the mills and factories will have to raise the price of their prod ucts. Grant 'em. Everybody raise and keep raising until we will have to put a quarter pound of gold in a yellow fiver and carry a wad of paper stun a dog couldn't jump over to pay a week s grocery bill. Let 8 all go into the balloon business raise, keep raising, never call, and see how long before this poker game will break up in trouble. One of the matters the county court will no doubt be called upon to ex plain is the letting of a county fran chise to a Portland gas company, which the people know nothing about, A man isn't necessarily a knocker because he has an opin ion. McMinnville Telephone Register. It's mighty hard to pound this into the heads of some Oregon City people. Now it is up to the taxpayers of this county to get in the knockout. They have gone too far to make it safe to quit. Once let up and they are against the ropes hard. You want a change in management. Now is your time. Play the cards as they are dealt to you. You won't be worse off. Your taxes won't be higher, and the chanc es are this county will be run thousands and thousands of dollars less and get more value received. ' The one thing necessary to change swallow that 'ne county court government of this county is for the taxpayers to unite on one man, organize in every precin ct and go to it. And the Courier believes this will be the action. WHAT OF THIS? The following is part of a speech de livered by Vice-President Thomas Marshall. For some reason it was not widely printed Editor. "Along with general prosperity has come a marvelous piling up of colos sal private fortunes. The piling up of colossal fortunes, supplemented by a geenral diffusion of knowledge, has made large bodies of people restive. "The desire of the people is for greater equality of opportunity and enjoyment. More and more, men are coming to the belief that socialism alone will open up and guarantee this equality. "Have backward-looking and in ward-looking men ever stopped to consider what might happen to them here in the great state of New York if those who have not should take it into their heads to make common cause against those who have? They talk about vested rights and in their talks assume they have both un in hcrent and constitutional right to pass their property down from generation to generation until such reckless de scendants shall have dissipated it. Su ppose a governor and a general as sembly of tho state of New York should repeal the statute of descents for real or personal property and the tatute with reference to the making of wills on their deaths, ho wmuch vested interest would any relative havo in the property which fell from their nerveless hands at the hour of issolution? The right to inherit and the right to devise are neither inher ent nor constitutional, but, on the con trary, thoy are simply privileges iven by the state to its citizens." County affairs those who would in voke the recall. Down in Wall Street, New York, is a big business bunch of grafters and politicians who would disrupt the re public of Mexico that they might rob it. How do they do it? They furnish the money and means for the Mexicans to kill each other- keep them fighting among themselves until such a state of anarchy can no longer be tolerated by this country, when Uncle Sam will country. Now look out for these same tac tics to be bred into the recall move ment. The best lawyers will fight you pr harass you. Efforts will be made to get a half dozen candidates to run against the county court to divide the strength and bring about failure. January 1, 1913, there were 647 They will get you to fighting among students at the university at Euirene, yourselves if possible and skin you. and for the coming two years it will ine one saie tning to ao is to nom- cost the taxpayers of Oregon $300 mate honest, capable, men lor county per student if the last legislative ap judge and commissioner, and UNITE propriations are not killed by the uwuumvi. referendum. if signs go for anything, this coun- Are any of the public schools of ty proposes to tip things over on this Oregon getting $300 per student from recall election, ouinuing logecner, me the legislature ! At .Saturday afternoons mass meeting O. D. Eby publicly stated his committee had no report. J. W. Lo der admitted he had made no investi gation of the charges. But Tuesday noon, after a day and a half investi gation, Mr. Eby read a report that fills five columns of a newspaper and that exonerated the county court from a to z. He should be complained of for exceeding the speed limit. The Grange in session at Albany has introduced several resolutions the people will heartily approve. Abolish ing the state senate, asking the gov erment to loan its postal bank funds to the farmers at 4 per cent on real estate security, to abolish school sup ervisors, and that no increase in sal aries of officials shall be received by officials in office at time of passage of bill. WALK INTO IT Are any of Clackamas county'i schools getting within hearing dis tance of what should be their propor tion of this sum of money per stu dent? The Courier is not against educat men who are rebelling at present management will prevail. Fighting among yourselves, the present bunch will beat you and laugh at you. And another See that every name that goes on ion in Orecon. It is not aeainst e-ood the recall petitions is a bona fide vot- roads in Oregon. But it wants both er. These petitions will be dissected propositions to be right for the best ana searcned tor iraud. Don't take a good of the many. chance. If you can't get clean, legal It is against half-million dollar ap petitions, tnen don t get any. propriations for a state university And once more. when our countrv schools are so nit Don't pay any man for circulating ifully deficient and teachers so poor- tj il : i. . .. jjeuuuns. ii mere is iiov enougn pro- ly paid. test in Clackamas county for men in . Spread the hundreds of thousands the different precincts to volunteer 0f dollars that is dumned into Euirene tneir services to secure tnese petit- each vear over the state of Oree-on We Purchasing Power of Pennies Can be learned by your children thru the savings account. The value of money is better acquired by saing than by spending. The savings ac count is the first slop in the education of children in thrift; it affords a ma terial means of applying the princi ples of thrift, and shows the results from day to day. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY ions, then there is not sufficient griev ance for a recall. These suggestions are made in fair ness to both sides. We don't want paid patriots, we don't want names secured at so much ped. We want the taxpayers, if they have sufficient grievance, to get in and donate a day's and we would have results many fold over the product of Eugene. Reason, a little follows: Only 647 students being benefit ted by the hundreds of thousands of dollars you pay to support this uni versity. Three hundred dollars a student, work for the relief work, and not turn and about nine out of ten of these it over for some other outsider or paid students have parents in position to worker for a job, Go right on this matter, dead right, and then go to it as fast as you can. THAT "FRAME UP" send them to Yale, This paper has backed up on the good roads propositions because the good roads proposed would be for the few not the masses. And we oppose the university of Oregon appropriations on the same reasoning too few benefitted for the cost. If Oregon is going to make these huge appropriations each legislature then bunch up the schools and get something like value received. It is certainly a wanton waste to spend these hundreds of thousands of dol lars on 647 students. The Enterprise says the report of the investigating committee was a plain frame-up. The Enterprise published the most of that report (leaving out some im portant matters.) Robert Schuebel when he read the report openly stated that if any man doubted its correctness he would take that man and prove every charge by direct evidence the evidence of county records. The press dispatches give it out Does Editor Brodie care to be that bier business will Dut on a Danic shown? " while biir politicians will delav tariff Is a committee's report founded on action in the senate until the panic the records ot the county a frame-up ? has gotten in its work and a national Does the Enterprise show WHERE- scare has forced senators to c ha nee IN it was a frame up? front. It is entirely possible for 90 Does it show anything or do any- men to put a panic on 90 millions of thing but imitate the parrot? people, but with the present unrest in this country it would be a very dan gerous program, and a booster play for Socialism. When a referendum results In a popular vote against the act submit ted, it is a little late to decrv the means by which that referendum was Jack Johnson, drunk with money secured. If the majority of the voters and success, thought he could do any- don't want a law enacted, it ought not thing he pleased. Uncle Sam put the to be enacted. And instead of becom- K'oves on with him when the negro ing less a government of the people as wen into the white slave business and tune goes on, ours will become more Tuesday Jack got the K. u. ihe pen and more such a government. And it 'ty limit is 35 years imprisonment is altogether best that it should, for and fines. Johnson's lawyers will all the people certainly know a great keep the case appealed until Johnson's deal more about what they need than money is gone, then he will have to a few of them do. Woodburn Inde- stand by the decision and serve time pendent Only a short time ago 46 United I States senators voted to "put Lor rimer over." 29 of these senators have been retired, and yet Lorrimer says he will be a candidate for vindication Some men don't know a funeral when they attend it : - , fr.v' ' 1 f 1 v.yi CLOSE IHE RIVER TO ENSUING MAKE CITY FINEST FISHING STREAM IN AMERICA Makes Eon.3 Baking Easy li MOVE FINDS HEARTY SUPPORT Would Bring Sportsmen From Every State in Union Here Dozens of letters, telephone calls! and personal commendations have come to the Courier office for the ar ticle last week on the closing of the Willamette. Any number of people have called i- . ... . ..... ior ana written lor papers of this is sue to send out as marked copies. On the editorial page of the Ore gonian Monday was a vigorous let ter along this line, written by Thomas Farrell of Portland, a salmon canner, who urges protection for the royal cninook in the Willamette, and Tues day one of the officials of the Tele gram came to the Courier, strongly commended the action of the Courier and who said if the people and pa pers would agitate this matter it Ellj Absolutely Pure The only baking powder mam from Hoyai urapo Cream of Tartar NO ALW LIME PHOSPHATE Milwaukee Happenings Always Inter est Our Readers . After reading of so many people in our town who have been cured by Doan's Kidney Pills, the Question naturally arises: "Is this medicine equally successful in our neighboring towns?" The generous statement of this Milwaukee resident leaves no room for doubt on this point. Mrs. Clara E. Cook, K. D . U. Wo. 2, would be easy and inexpensive to put Box 105, Milwaukee, Ore., says: "For it to a vote of the people at the next years 1 sunereo irom pain in my oacK pprtinn I niucii mure hcvbib u i uvci-tujieu rnu1. :t. u j u mvseii or cauent tne siientest coio. aiist iv wuuiu carry unu wouiu car- mil- ,.r.. t. 1 i . .... i lie Kiuiiey aeurewuiia weie uimabuitu. ry uy an overwhelming majority, is Doan8 Kidney PiUa pr0ved to be just but a question of the opportunity. the remedy I needed. They gave me Most any man has a little sports- cmick relief from all the troubles. A man's blood in him, and while he mav few times since then I have used never throw a line or shoulder a pun Doan's Kidney Pills and they have al- yet he will fight to protect our game ways Siven the best of results.. You and will read a snortine storv or look ma.y continue publishing my former endorsement." For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and at motion pictures of the rod or gun with all the enjoyment of the schol-by. Back in New York state there are some splendid trout streams, where u: i a- , , t i.t u.s Bpeuiieu ueauues grow io me take nQ other nve pouno limit, sportsmen come from all parts of New York and Pen- sylvania to fish these streams. The Cure For Stomach Disoiders game laws are rigid. Only by angling The ereat calamity in Omaha was can fish be taken, only a limited num- quickly overshadowed by the terribly ber can be caucht. and t.h nnen sona- disastrous floods in Ohio. Great suf- on is short, fin mo ro-notni-o oimi . fering and sickness from colds and patrol these streams, and no m exposure resulted. L. Poole, 2217 Cal- ia shown tn tho low viAt. Tk mana writes: "My daughter had a very severe cough and , i . ... ,, , uauKutci uau a I peopie oi mat section Know tne adver- mi, hf iviov'a unnB a Tar rw,. :: j ;i i ,i - " " i.idiii8 anu commercial vaiue or inose pound knocked it out in no time." Re- There is a rumor current on the streets of this city that E. D. Olds, The Oak Grove Disturber" is seeking the nomination of County Judge on the recall ticket. Mr. Olds asks the Courier to state that he is not seeking and would not accept any office within the gift of the people; that he is not a candidate; will not be a candidate for j'udge or commissioner or any other office and and would not qualify if elected. This is plain enough and should kill the rumor. And in this connection the Courier wants to add more. They may say Ed Olds has a sore spot; that he is a "disturber" is work ing to break even and all that Perhaps he is. He isn't the style of a man to turn the other cheek if man hits him; and I can't imagine him heaping any coals of fire on the head of the man who upper-cut him, But at the same time if it had not been for the work of Olds, the dis turber, we would not have had the present uprising against the expendi tures and high taxation; we would not have had any mass meetings or in vestigations. We would yet be taking it as m the past Mr. Olds has done a lot of work to bring about this aroused condition, and there is no getting by it. He is de serving a lot of credit, for no matter what the outcome, it is a tight cinch that Clackamas county will have a more careful and considerate gov eminent from now on. CLARKES For the second time in two years the Enterprise has really taken a stand. This time in defending the county court and the other occasion denouncing W. S. U'Rcn when he an nounced for governor. And these back bone spells are refreshing. Petitions are being circulated to referend the "sterilization bill" oass- The Enterprise says: "Mass Meet- ed by the last legislature. If the mat ing Ends in Pitiful Farce." Like the ter comes to the people, it is my small boy the Enterprise spoke too judgement the law will be killed, for soon, and too falsely. The end is yet it is a mighty drastic law, and the to come. I charges are that it is looselv drawn. Mr. W. H. Wettlaufer purchased a manure spreader last week. Mrs. William Marshall is very ill. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Grossmiller's baby died last Saturday and was bur ied in Clarkes cemetery Monday. Mr. Bottemiller is planting potato Lewis Maxson is building a fence for Mrs. Mary Lee. Henry Kleinsmith was shearing heep last week. Mr. and Mrs. Wolfson were in town last week. Mrs. E. A. Cummins visited Mrs. Williams last Sunday. Miss Ena Stout left last week to teach the summer scnool. The Timber Grove School closed in May 1913. Miss Esther Stout is teaching the Clarke's primary school. fishing preserves. If a fisherman us ed a net, spear or dynamite he would be sent to jail for the limit and the chances are he would be tarred and feathered before he got there. fuse substitutes. Huntley Bros. Co. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper win be plrased to learn thut tliore la at least one dreailcd dlaraae that Mieni And almost ovoru stato nmtaMa ifo taB becn "llle 10 cure 111 aM " "Me and that l And almost every State protects Its catarrh. Ilnll-a Catarrh Cure 18 the only positive it does its birds and cure uow know" to t' medical iratemlty. Catarrh S vuuiuwuiiui iiiM-.int:, icijuirai tt CUIIBlllU- tlonal treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken In. ternally. actlnir directly upon the blood and miipnus surfaces of the syBtcm, thereby destroying th foundation of the disease, and givlnir the patient strength by building up the constitution and assist ing naturo In doing its work The proprietors have so much faith In Its curative nowera that tiipv nffei- One Hundred Dollars for any cnBe that It falls to game fish as game animals. But here in Oregon, here in Clacka mas river, where the falls hold back countless thousands of the gamiest fish that ever swam, and makes the lower river the best fishincr stream in cure- S",A ,or lst ' testimonials. .North America here the laws per mit nets to simply haul out the fish by the ton and sell them wholesale to the canneries. The law might just as well tell the fishermen the river was open to dy namite. With the falls stopping es cape at one end, and nets running en Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. boiu ny an uruecists, 7 so. Take Hall's Family puis lor constipation. Why not get your Lumber tirely across the river, it is simply a r, .1, hutt j- j matter of hoisting them out. from the MILL, direct and Close this stream to all means but Save mone'? Let me figure SAY the hook and line, advertise such ac- oil your lumber bill Hnn arA fVio umvM aava Vn 4- I fish. 1000 loads of WuOD Nearly every railroad booklet you gale Or trade. cvei buw maue a mature 01 scenery and game to catch you, then follow ed with crops and statistics. They know the value of a picture of a string of fine fish or a. felled deer to stir men's blood. A fellow wants to own a place near such sporting lo calities. Even world famous Chautauoua lane maKes a specialty of pictures of fishermen who have caught a 20- pound muscallonge, and advertises that lake as a fisherman's paradise as a place good for a , sportsman's heart as well as the visitors' souls. We would have hundreds of fisher men in Oregon City if we would stop the netters from cleaning out the fish. It would be the biggest advertise ment for this county that was ever devised. Take hold of it for George Lammers Beaver Creek, R oute 3 Oregon Fire Relief Association of McMinnville GEO. W. H. MILLER, AQENT 214, Seventh St Also Health, Accident, Income and Automobile Insurance U'REN & SCHUEBEL Attorneys at Law Will practice in all courts, make collections and settlements of es tates, furnish abstracts of title, and lend you money, or lend your money on first mortgage. Offloe in Enterprise Bldg., Oregon City. Money to Loan. Trading Schoolma'ams Under an arrangement made bv State Supt. Alderman some time ago, eight teachers of Brockton, Mass., are to exchange places with a like number I have various sums of monev oi teacners irom Oregon, tor the term on nana to loan on real property, oi one year, tne purpose being in the ior long or short periods of time. line of an experiment to ascertain possible benefits from an interchange of ideas. Miss Doris Duncan of the Newberg schools and Miss Naomi Williamson will probably decide to go, have been chosen to go from this county. The former has announced her willingness to accept, and Miss Williamson will pdobably decide to eo. It is understood that after the year Rftavnr Ruilrlinn lit) Q AvniraH F-timai tincifiAno in ffn I w gon may be resumed. McMinnville Telephone-Register. WM. HAMMOND. Lawvar. Beaver Bldg., Oregon City. Dr. L. G. ICE DENTIST Oregon Cit Phones Paclfto, 1281. Heme A 19 CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature Best Medicine for Colds When a druetrist recommends a remedy for colds, throat and lung troubles, you can feel sure that he knows what he is talking about C. Lower, druggist of Marion, Ohio, writes of Dr. King's New Discovery: "I know Dr. King's New Discovery is the best throat and lung medicine I sen. it curea my wile oi a severe cold, after all other remedies failed." It will do the same for you if you are suffering with a cold or any bron chial, throat or lung cough. Keep a bottle on hand all the time for every one in the family to use. It is a home doctor. Price 50c and $1.00. Guaran teed by Huntley Bros. List Your Lands Gentlemen: List your Oregon City and Molalla lands for sale with us, we make a specialty of them. Homer G. Day Co. 607 Yeon Bldlg. Port land, Ore. HOMER DAY CO. BROWNELL & STONE ATTORNEYS AT LAW Oregon City, Oregon y,lr4- OVER M YEARS' A. 1 f VST' Trabi Marks rft... .JV Desicns -'rmi'' Copyrights 4c AnTon ndlng a (ketch and dMcrtMlon mar nnlcklr uccrtain cur opinion ttt whwhar an iiiranMnn probably rmtantabla. Commnnltm- out frea. OMeat agenor for ecunn natenta. FVntUka tBrouih Munn A CoTracelTej pecW notice, without chame, lnt? sc.rn.nc Jittttncaiv l ermt, 93 m dilation of any cienutlc jourm four mnntha. II. C-iM K .11 MUNN & Co.set8-T. New Ycr