OREGON CITY COURIHR.THURSDAV. JULY 3 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 Pric $1.50. Telephones, Male 5-1; Home A 5- Official Paper for the Farmers Society of Equity of Clackamas Co M. J. BR.OWN, 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 6th day of May, 1913. GILBERT L. HEDGES, Notary Public for Oregon j REMEDIES at of That "abortive" recall "attempt" has grown into a full-sized protest. They say the "fellows" thought bet ter of trying to hold up the recall el ection with an injunction. It was a wise second thought. If we had settled all the prelimin aries of the elevator matter before the proposition went to the people, how much trouble, delay and expense might have been saved. The action of the ladies' organizat ion of Oak Grove on the County Court recall is significant notice that the In his address at the barbecue Aurora Friday last, W. S. U'Ren this city tok up the matter of state and county governments, and out' lined the proposed remedies that would be submitted through the init iative next year. Mr. U'Ren opened his address by asking if there was a man or woman present who was satisfied with the results oi our present government ana if so to raise their hands. Not a hand went up, He made the statement that only fortv cents worth of results were ob tained from each dollar expended of taxation money and the sixty cents was lost and wasted. This he declared was not so much the fault of the pub lic officials as the fault of the sys tern a cumbersome, indirect, ineffic ient method of transacting public bus- iness. The remedies he proposed, and which will be submitted to the peo pie in 1914 by the People's Power League, were, in brief outline, the abolishment of the state senate, a smaller legislature, proportional rep reservation, the taking from the leg lslature the power to introduce appro priations, and the short ballot. He pointed out the great power of a combination of counties wanting ap propriations, and drove the point home by showing how at the last leg- is DiKnu-iaiii. nubile bliab IIIQ . i ii i .1 women of this county are taking not- ""Mure there were euough counties Sen and am roinr to tak nart in th anQ. memoers wanin g appropriations coming election. to be in the majority, and how by trading each locality got its bale of fodder and the taxpayers furnished When one out of four voters in this tne Dales' big county signs a county court re-j He would have only the governor call, and when you consider that the introduce appropriation bills and for the circulation of the petitions has bid. the legislature to increase the all been volunteer work, well, it cer- amounts he recommended. This would tainly shows a vigorous protest and centralize tne responsmnty, ana every looks like the danger sign was out. voter would know definitely who was responsime ior taxation, and over the governor would be the referendum and the recall. This would stop the trading of support in the legislature- over appropriation bills, stop the dod. ging of individual responsibility and iorce tne memDers to stand alone on their own work, He would provide a t-hort ballot, This year we would elect state offic iels the second year legislative offic ials and the third year county offic. mis having annual elections and every year officials elected for at least four years subject to the recall; r.nar. fnilnr.v p orv . Qhomfr oeoaoati. Tti. i- u,:. n 4- k- iv. . . r.y """' uuoiiiic jn biua iuuui.iv wn uui uc I nisr.rirr. Bf.Timpv. wnnlar ethnnl onr. a square deal between rich and poor ervisor and such officials' be appoint- u;n w! ih.ii umii is bciik ""iea Dy tne governor and subject to re minor violations oi tne law line me mnvnl hv h m fnr niQ,.f jt poor man, who is unable to buy off This would again force direct respons the jail sentence by paying a fine. ibility and every official would have ymuu ucuuiiu, to TTIRkfi O-nnfl tn hn hia nfTinn I OIL i . . And different sentences for the I j, " county wouia do conducted by .... ... - .In rfirnmicumn rf man ntt-nA V... 1 same violations will always - breed i 11 ,'. " , mnfomnt tnr- Inotipo nnj fla Ueu Juyie U Uiev WOU1U. Select 8 DUS1- distinctions. The man who cannot pay Pesl? manKer. Mr. U'Ren explained ..... r . I in natal I haw f hm nmnid ... 1- .. i. a line goes to jail to serve several . "vu,u V1" weeks and months in confinement, T.?e man,a&er would be chosen for his while the other man pavs his fine fltne.s? b.ecause f hs P.st records and does not even have the punish ment or inconvenience. And all you can make out of such discrimination is class distinction and that's dang erous. "What will the women do?" is the questions politicians and others are are asking now that women have the vote. Some say they won't do any thing that they will stay at home, rock the cradle and wash the dishes. Others say they will vote as their husbands vote. The Courier's guess that about half of them will vote and that they will vote their honest con. victions; that party and the husband strings will be ignored very largely. Wonder where that county court lawyer is who a few weeks ago said the recall petitions wouldn't get enough signatures "to call the Judge to dinner. Over 3,200 names of voters of this countv are siened to thi recall petit ions of Judge Beatie and Blair. These names are every one sworn to and in the hands of the recall executive com mittee. And yet George C. Brownell says he despises the men behind the recall, and the Enterprise says the Courier would be allright but for the company it keeps. How do you far mers like that? There are few spots on this old dump of a world left to conquer. The two poles leave little to hope for as an outlet for a crowding population and then what? Well, in the day 3 of your great, great grandchildren our air ships will -be doing a regular trunk line business carrying our un easy Americans up to the different stars, and scattering a crowding pop ulation around the sky. "It can t be done?" Back up to the time you 50- year-olds were boys and review ev ents. There have so many improbable and impossible things been done that the can t man is a lonesome cuss in this age. "But the atmosphere runs out," he will tell you. So does food on a north pole trip, so tney take it with them. In the year about 2015 I would like to come out of it for a few hours and read the first page of the Courier. "Aerial excursion to Mars, Great Opportunities for Prospectors and Investors." What Wait and see. Alaska, that frozen end of land that we paid Russia about seven and a half million dollars for, has gold in about every square fooe of it, and some of these days when the rail roads develop it, it will pour a greater golden stream into this country. The western states continue the output of the golden stuff, Africa is opening up rich deposits, and in almost every cor ner of the world men are finding the precious metal. And it makes a man wonder what our money will be like or be worth if we keep on finding the yellow stuff. The value of gold is its scarcity. Suppose a literal mountain of it should be found and it became as common as copper? You would have to take a hand bag full of it to buy a pound of crackers. And do you know that our money today is far cheap er than it was 25 years ago? In those days a man worth ten thousand dollars was rich and fixed for life. while today it is considered but a drop in the bucket as a start to riches. And 25 years ago money came harder and bought more, loday a man earns double. It's an interesting subject to think on. When gold, the basis of our money, becomes so common that we will have to send a roll as big as wall paper with a grocery order, then I suppose some of our wise financiers will try to turn the country over to a radium basis. John Stark will not agree with me that supply makes cheap or dear money, but events of the past 25 years look as if suppIv naa a lot to oo witn it. THE FUTURE OF AMERICA. There Is no reason why we should not have on these shores the noblest civilization the world has ever known. There is no reason why we should not lead the world in political Idealism and reform, as we did of old. There Is no reason why we should not take as advanced a place In art and literature, in philosophy and re ligion and In all the higher realms of the Intellectual and spiritual as we have lu the political, commercial and Industrial There Is no reason why we should not become more than ever before a beacon set upon a hill to the peoples of all lands and races. In a measure we have been and are all this, but not In the degree that It Is our opportunity and duty to be. Everything Is in our favor our re sources, our Institutions, our history and our youth. Our danger is of losing sight of our high Ideals and manifest destiny in the pursuit of temporary, partial and per sonal things, of submerging spiritual in material things, of thinking more of luxury than of leadership. eec apart rrom the old world as we are, we could become the evangel of peace, of universal education, of hu manitarian enterprises, of a social or ganization that would do Justice to the workers, eliminate waste and bring producer and consumer together; of ag ricultural and Industrial efficiency, of practical philanthropy and helpfulness one to another, of freedom from cor ruption, of popular government at its cleanest and best These are not Impossible Ideals. They are both practical and necessary, With these things more nearly real ized we could become a nation such as was contemplated by our founders, Is it not time, in Lincoln's phrase, that we had a "new birth of freedom and that America should in the highest and best sense take her rightful place as the leader of the world? erty and republicanism the world around, and In this age we should not atone our prophets. SATURM mm Lrgdklyn WHY NOT? Big Business tried the same old often-successful bluff that if the tar iff was reduced wages of workingmen would be reduced accordingly. Spprfltnrv rtf PmnmorMi DAtinA worked a new bluff. Ho gave it out sPots- 14 is a proposition to save and his ability to manage in the same way a telegraph operator would reach promotion to the hieh offices of the company, a mill worker climb up to superintendent, or a district school teacher rise to the head of education al departments by ability to manage and perform, the work. If the man made good in a little citv he could work up to the county and to the large offices and cities. This is but a brief outline of the proposed reforms for Oregon s weak 60 that if any manufacturer reduced ccnts r th0 dolIar now wasted and wages because of tariff reduction. K've the Btate. counties and cities 100 government officials would go thrucent8 wortn of efficiency and results. his business and see whether the cut was justified or not. iwumy years airo li a povernmnnt. Thorn m n ii;,. , .. t official made such a threat he would what thinking men realize, that the have been called an anarchist on the tariff question is a local issue and that ground that a manufacturer's busi- politicians cannot settle it to the sat- ness was his own and no one hail n IsfuMinn f thio .t. .. , , , , i v. woo vuuiivtv any jllurc right to pry into it. han the Methodists can make that miners are chancinc Sent mnnt. a church the national reliirnn. Rw In. changing. Thoughts are changing. ''ty wants a higher duty around his It is but a little way ahead when stamping ground and lower rates every manufacturer of necessities evorywhere else, and the product un will have the irnvnrnmont toil mm der such conditions is bound to he a what selling prices to put on the out- crazy-qullt, with localities and inter put; when every coal mine will be al- ?,st3 favrea I where these interests had lowed a certain per cent of profit- , pui' ond maiie tMe most noise, when every telephone, telegraph, and 0 , y we wi" handle this matter ittiiruuu win ue overlooked hv thA v"'uBn oviiid buid ui court or com VESTED RIGHTS. . Have buck ward looking und Inward looking men ever stopped to fouslder wlint inij;lit happen to tlieiu hole in the great state of New Yolk If Hume who buve not should take It Into lliclr ' heads to make common cause ugalust those who hnve? They talk about vested rights and In their talk assume they have both un Inherent and a constitutional right to puss their property down from generation to generation until some reckless descendant shall have dissipated It. Suppose a governor und n general assem bly In the state of New York should repeal the statute of de scents for real and personal prop erty and the statute with refer ence to the making of wills on their death. How much vested In terest would any relative have In the property which fell from their nerveless hands at the hour of dissolution? The right to Inherit and the right to devise are neither Inherent nor consti tutional; but, upon the contrary, they ure simply privileges glv eu by the state to Its citizens. Vice President Thomas II. Marshall. government and rates fixed. And it may not be a very distant luitnor stop when the government win own common necessities, trans portation and wire corporations. And wouldn't this country be thou sands of tinio better off if they were so owned? Wouldn't a thousand bo benefitted by lower prices where but one is benefitted by corporation prices? mission, composed of big, honest able men, and tariff duties will hn lcvioH scientiffically, will be placed where they will produce revenue with the least possible burden, and place the duties necessary for revenue on those who can best afford to pay them. Wonder if the Enterprise yet thinks the recall an "abortive attempt." IF INDEPENDENCE Nationol independence was declared ono hun dred thirty seven years ago. But personal independ ence in most cases has to be secured by each man for himself. One of the most important requiere ments for any man's independence is u comfortable sum of money laid by. The business of the bank is to provide a place where any man can keep his money in safety, both while it is being saved and after a goodly sum has been accumulated. A bank account, therefore, has como to b ethe surest path to fortune and independence. We urge everyone who has no deposit in the bank to begin keeping an ac count at on co. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Clacka mas. T. L. Sagar, Plaintiff, vs. Everard Sugar and Susr.n Sugar Stal ey. Defendants: To Everard Sager and Susan Saga btaley the above named defendants, in the name of the State of Oregon you are nereoy required to appear and answer the complaint filed again st you in the above entitled action on or before the 4th day cf July. 1913 which is six weeks after the date of the first publication of this summons, If you fail to so appear and answer. the plaintiff for want thereof, will ap ply to the Court for the relief de manded in said complaint, to-wit: For a judgement and decree annull ing a certain deed executed by the North American Trust Co. and re cordod at page 258 in book 72 of re cords for deeds for Clackamas Coun ty, whereby the said Company pre tended to convey the West Half (V) of the Southwest Quarter (W) of Section Twelve (12) Township Four (4) South of Range Two (2) East of the Willamette Meridian m the Coun ty of Clackamas and State of Oregon containing 80 acres, more or less, to Stephen Isacrar in truss for himself and for you and his brothers and sis ters. Plaintiff will further apply to the Court for a judgement and decree de claring that said deed is a cloud up on i'lamtilt s title to said nronertv and removing the same nd that you, me saia defendants, nave not, nor have either of you, any right or title in or to the said land? or anvo art mereoi Dy reason of the aforesaid deed. This summons is published Pur suant to an order made in the above entitled cause by the Honorable J. U. Lampboll, Judcre of the Circuit Court of the SUte of Oregon for Clackamas County on the 12th day of May 1913. ine date of tne first publication of this summons is May 23, 1913, and the date of the last publication is July 4, 1913. U'Ren & Schuebel Attorneys for Plaintiff A RAINY DAY. As I write this it Is raining. The water Just outside my window is plunking down from a leak in the eaves. Rainy days have their uses, but for myself I prefer to invest In sunshine, On a rainy day I can almost believe In infant damnation, whereas when the sun is shining it Is utterly repug nant However, I did not start out to talk of the weather nor again of theology. xnose tilings are only thrown in as background. So we will literally turn our backs on both, throw a fresh log on the hearth, pull up the most comfortable chair, light our pipes and talk things over. You want to get on in the world. Well, that Is just what I want you to do. You can't get on any too fast or too far to suit me so long as you play the game square. Are you playing It square? Think It over. You need not tell me, but you had better not try to deceive yourself, We will assume that you are. I do not believe a man like you could long be content to play it any other way, Now, since you play fair, why don't you get ahead faster? Maybe you don t work bard enough. You can't get anywhere unless you "stir your stumps," as the saying goes The only way to arrive Is to move. Assuming, however, thnt you work hard, what Is the trouble? Possibly you do not use enough Intelligence. Outwardly all men look pretty much alike. They have the same kind of hands and legs, faces and bodies. They are not widely different In phys leal characteristics. What Is It, theu, that differentiates them, that makes one a world celeb rlty and the other a clodhopper? Why It Is a mere matter of brains. The winner Is bound to find out the truth about things, while the other takes hearsay or prejudice or some other half baked or inadequate process. You have got to get right down to business and think things out. But- If you play fair and work and think, and If you do all these bard enough nobody can stop you. THE APOSTLE OF LIBERTY. It Is not popular to praise Thomas Paine, perhaps the most misunder stood man of modern times. Yet I am convluced that It Is Just; and, being so convinced, I will do It Thomas Pnine was the apostle of liberty In three lands In his native England, his adopted America and in France, that he loved. Tie endangered his own freedom and finally lost It that he might give free dom to all mankind. Au intensely religious man, he yet believed In religious liberty and taught tt to an intolerant age that mlsunder h)8d his motives and his Ideals. He believed not ouly in the Ameri can mid French republics, but In a re public of the world. Ue set the colo nies on Are for Independence and heartened their soldiers lu the dark days of the Revolution. He helped frame the bill of rights In France. He taught the rlghU of man In England. Uls "Age of Reason," which resulted In heaping calumny on his name, was written as much against French athe ism as it was against what he regard ed as superstition In America and England. This man expressed his faith In God In some of the most beautiful apostro phes lu literature and showed a keen appreciation and sympathy with the spirit of the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth, of whose character and moral Ideals bo spoke In praise. . I erhaps ho lacked education, for he was ever a commoner, the son of a staymaker and with only a grammar school training. Yet few men have ever written la moro eloquent or trenchant English. I It bus been said that those who 1 come to save mankind are either worshiped as gods or chased as devils. It was poor Palne's misfortune to suf fer the last named fate. Yet the law f compensation operates, and through It he will some day be placed as high as he was before made low, for that Is necessary to balance the scales of Justice. Personally I believe him to hare been the actual author of the Declara tion of Independence, and there la abundant proof to support this view. At AQJ rata, Ut.WM UManhataf ui. RevSapiuelW.Purvis.D.D. THE BRANDED SLAVE. Text, "I bear branded on my body the marks of the Lord Jeaus."-(R. V.) Ual. vl, 17. They've been treating Paul shame fully. He's one of the most modest self sacrificing sort of men. but tney've been nagging him. stinging lilin with petty criticisms, disputing his nut hurl tv and makim: liu'lit of his work Finally he turns, not with reproach but as a father might to an ungrate fill child, and with drawn face anil pained voice dismisses all their In gratitude and pettiness and liisimia tlons with the words. "From hence forth let no man trouble me. for 1 bear branded on my body the marks of .the Lord Jesus." Twenty centuries hnve been speculating his meaning. Was It the right of circumcision? Did be refer to the marks which were branded on slaves by their owners? Was It the scars upon his own body, the scourging at PhilippI, the stoning at Lystra, the wild beasts at Ephesus. the hunger, the shipwreck, the wear! ness which had put their Imprint on his bowed frame or lines on his face? Or were the marks spiritual, not only scars and welts and ridges left by Insh, rock and lion's claw, but the brandings on the body of tremendous mental and spiritual struggles marks the magistrates, centurions, llctOrs procurators, kings and emperors were not powerful enough to stamp there. but which as a slave of Jesus Christ he bore as the brand of ownership? Honorable Scars, A scar, a cicatrix, may be honorable or dishonorable. Paul's were those of honor. They were diplomas from the school of Christ, credentials with the authority of heaven. He was not ashamed of them. Attorney General Brewster bad the most blackened, deeply scarred face ever seen iu public life, but he got It saving his little sis ter's life from a fire. Scars of honor. Our profession puts Its mark on The scholar becomes nearsighted or blind, like Albert Barnes; the student's face shows study lines; the laborer's hands arc cnllouued; the machinist has broken nails and oil stained skin; the merchant's face is worried. I remem ber a New England town where I saw so many one armed and one legged men. "Powder works," explained the bus driver. But they were not ashamed. At the last G. A. R. conven tion I listened to the old Boldlors tell of their marks saber cut at Chancellors- vllle, bullet wound at Antietam, leg lost at Gettysburg, but none were ashamed. I recently heard Anthony Comstock. New York vice crusader and United States postal Inspector, tell of his work. Ho laughed over his In juries, broken ribs, bullet wound. scar across his right cheek from the knife of an assassin. Infernal machine sent by express, small box by mall; Ingersoll spit In his face and broke his cane over his Dead, but be was not ashamed. Who Owns You? I've seen the cattlemen out on the great prairies take their blazing hot' branding iron aud stamp their mark of ownership on horses nnd cattle. For ever afterward, east or west, city or country, no matter where I meet them they still bear on their body the mark of their owner. As a lad of sixteen on board a man-of-war In Philadelphia harbor the writer had a great Amerl can coat of arms tattooed over the mus cle of his right arm. Until his dying day, on land or sen, under any flag, he must bear, willingly or unwillingly, the seal of the great republic. Christ asked two signs of discipleshlp self surrender and self sacrifice. Matthew surrenders his tax booth, Simon his fishing boat. Paul Is a brilliant Roman; of the Jews he's a Pharisee; be has. a tremendous hatred of Christ. . Then comes a change: At midday on the road to Damascus be becomes the slave of Jesus Christ. What was It sunstroke, epilepsy, hallucination? He, the peerless intellectual giant, says It was the Lord Jesus. From that day he calls himself the "servus" the slave of Jesus Christ. "I am no longer my own! I am branded with the mark!" Whose servant are you?" I asked a purse proud fellow one night "My own!' "ion look It! No man can hnve two owners be cannot serve God and Mammon. The Mark on the Forehead. All true human life and love are a Bur- render and sacrifice. And the mark Is speedily stamped on us. A maid loves a man. She gives up her home, ber fa ther's honorable name, her liberty of maidenhood. From that June day she no longer lives her own life. The ad Justment to another's will, the cares of household management, the babe put iu her arms, the responsibility, place lines of care on ber face. These are the brands of love, borne gladly for love's sake. She's not ashamed of the marks. The Roman slave had bis own er's mark branded ou his forehead. It was an outrage, cruel, damnable. I can conceive the horror, the piteous sense of indignity, the effort to conceal the shameful murk put there by unfeel ing hand. Today we each put on our own mark. If all bis life a man bad beeu trying to engrave "the mark of the beast" on his forehead, what reason has be to expect that when he pass es out of this life the foul marks shall disappear in a moment and that he will bear on his "brow the "marks of the Lord Jesus Christ" Iu its stead? No. We shall be recognized when we get home by the "marks of the Lord Jesus." "Taskmaster to A flivt Them." ,5K(jUnLYJN ERNACLgy B I git 6TUDY6N MOSfS, THE GOODLY CHILD. Exodus 1:22 2:10. July 6. Whoso recciveth one sueh little rhild In ilt name, reeeicetk Ue." Matthew 18.J. OSEPH was the Grand Vizier of Egypt for eighty years-dying at the age of one hundred and ten vears. Surely the Israelites Buffered no oiioressiou during that time. Shortly thereafter, however, another Pharaoh came Into power who "knew not Joseph"-who ignored bis services to Egypt aud the tentative covenant with the Israelites. This Pharaoh Is supposed to have been Ranieses IL, n hard-bearted. selfish despot This Pharaoh perceived that the Is raelites were multiplying much more rapidly than were the Egyptians. Therefore be considered them a men- ... .. . ... ... i 1 I...... i.li.n.u na ace. At nisi mey uuu ui-eu n...cu protection, be cause Goshen lay eastward, and au Invading army would encounter the Israel Ites first Egypt's only antagonist In those days was Assyria. When the Israelites would outnumber the Egyptians, an Invadine army might bribe them, and thus the rule or the Pharaohs be overthrown. To meet this contingency, various ex pedients were tried. First, an euiei compelled the Israelites to perform ar duous labors, which It was uopeo would undermine their strength. On the contrary, they seemed to nourish Increasingly with every burden. The next repressive measure was the edict that every male child of the Israelites should be strangled at birth. But this command was disregarded, the mld- wlves claiming that they arrived too late. The final resort was the royal edict that the Israelites must drown every new-born male iiirant. ranure to do this was made a punishable crime. It was under these conditions that Moses was born. The account indi cates that both his parents were pious, and hence we are not surprised that the babe "was n goodly chlld"-beau- tiful. Comparatively few parents real ize that where children are otherwise than "goodly" grncefu! In feature and character-a responsibility for the de fects rests upon them. We do not mean that any human pair could bring forth absolutely perfect children. Who can bring a cleun thing out of an unclean?"-Job 14:4. What we mean Is thnt as careful breeding affects the form, features and character of the lower animals, and Improves both fruit aud flowers, so also It Is potent In respect to human ity. Parents have In their own con trol the most wonderful power where by to Influence the character and form of their children before birth, and not to be ignored after birth the power of the mind. Were this law of nature clearly recognized by intelligent, con scientious people, what a change would speedily be effected! ' Co-operating With God's Providence!. Doubtless Moses' parents thought how to advance the plan which proved an eilpppQaflll In onrlnn- hlo Ufa Thiw f knew that the Egyptian princess re sorted to a certain secluded spot on the Nile for her bath, presumed to hnve been part of a religious cere mony. A little basket was woven of bulrushes, and made watertight with Pitch. The babe was Placed thp.reln IMes llmo Osking Easy IfSl Absolutely Pure The only baking powder made front Royal Crape Cream of Tartar NO ALUM.NO LIME PHOSPHATE mm and at a proper time was left near tne spot visited by the princess. Moses' little sister Miriam stood near, ready to suggest the bringing of a nurse. It Is quite possible thut the princess per ceived the ruse, and merely co-operated, believing that the child might as well have tho mother's care. Aided and Protected. How much there is of wonderful ro mance In this story! Think of the leadings of Divine providence In this case! One day the child Moses Is a danger in his par ents' home. At any moment his presence might be discovered, and he would be killed. Possibly his par ents would also be put to death for disobeying the royal edict The next day, through Divine prov- The Princess finds 1o-idence, the child Is bnck In the luinie home, and his mother paid by the prlucess for caring for him. It Is assumed that the child was weaned at the age of four years. Then ho was claimed by tho princess as her owu. lie was given the name Moses, of which Professor Sayce says: "The Greek form of the Hebrew Mosheh lloyaca-is derived by Josephus from the Coptic lancient Egyptian) ilo (wa ter) mid Hies (saved out of it). In oth er words, the princess made a pun of the name, as though she had said: 'This is my son, because I brought him forth-out of the water.' " Truly, we never know when Divine Wisdom is working human woof into the Divine web, or plan. God's people are ever to remember that He is "working ull things ucco'rdlng to the counsel of Ills own will." While using humau Instrumentalities, God never theless respects the human will, and merely co-operates with It And who ever "most zealously co-operates with God receives proportionately the larger share of the Divine blessing. This sim ple lesson, received into good and hon est hearts, gives us greater fallb In God. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTO Rl A SUMMERING AT Tillamook Coujity Beaches Natures Playground," as these beaches have been called, are now open for summer visitors. New hotels, with allm o'dern conveniences, cosy cottages, camping grounds and Double Daily Train Service Leaving Portland daily 8 45 A M " "daily except Sunday , 1.20 P. M. BEACHES REACHED LN FIVE HOURS v afternoZH11 leB Sa'urd?P,!nts in time fo .dinner, spend fS n ; tarme each the eveninK and Sunday with lima businet.rn Prtland Su"day niht ithut f Round TriJ Fares from Portland Season Tickets on sale daily Week End (for return MnnA, CfirrpRnniidintv liu fnwnn r ,",' '.' s . niri nuin oiner points Call for brand new folder "Tillumook Counly Beaches." Week End (for return Monday)'.'.!". linn CorresnonHintr Inw .. f, :. .' ,J-UU sunset Sm 0G0EN&SHASTAI ROUTES Folders and full information from any S. P. Agent or at Citq Ticket Office 00 Sixth St., Cor. Oak JOHN M. SCOTT General Passenger Agent Portland, Oregon If seven doctors had tol dyou, as they had told C. E. Blanchard, of Lo Grange, Calif., that you had but a short time to live on account of kid ney trouble, what would you do! He says: "I took Foley Kidney Pills and they completely cured me and I can not speak too highly of them." Cost less than the doctors, but accomplish more. Huntley Bros. Co. C. D. LATOURETTE, President F. J .MEYER, Cashier. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK of OREGON CITY. OREGON (Successor Commercial Bank) Transacts a General Banking Business Open from 0 a m. to 9 Office phones: Main 50, A50; Res. phones, M. 2524 1751 Home B251, D251- Saf WILLIAMS BROS. TRANSFER & STORAGE Office 612 Main Street e, Piano, and Furniture Moving a Specialty Sand, Gravel, Cement, Lime, Plaster, Common