Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, August 28, 1913, Image 4

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    OREGON CITY COURIER, TH URSD A IT, SEP. 28, 1913
OREGON CITY COURIER
Published Fridays from the Courier Building, Eighth and Main streets, and en
tered in the PostoG.ee at Oregon City, Ore., as second class mail matter.
OREGON CITr COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANY, PUBLISHER
M. J. BROWN, A. IJ. 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
HE SHOULD RESIGN
STOP IT
William Mattoon, county commis
sioner, will be asked to resign his of
fice on or before September 3.
He should not wait for the request.
He should have tendered his resignat
ion the minute the verdict of the vot
ers was given, for the reasons and
. charges that recalled Judge Beatie
and Commissioner Blair apply just as
much to Mr. Mattoon, and but for the
fact that a re-election exempted him
, from ther ecall at the time the pe
titions were circulated, he would have
been included.
Mr. Mattoon signed the private
bridge contracts end the timber cruis
" ing contracts and was equally respons
ible or guilty with Beatie and Blair
,. for the many official acts for which
the neonle recalled them, and he
should never cling to a technicality
to hold his job.
All over the county come demands
for his resignation or recall, and the
people say that unless he does resign
on the ballots at the general referen
dum election in November will appear
a recall for him.
It will need no campaigning to re
call Mr. Mattoon. The verdict of Aug
ust 16 applied to him as well as the
recalled members of the court, and
should he refuse to accept that ver
dict, and a recall should be brought
about, he would be buried by an ava
lanche of votes from the indignant
people of this county.
He has no moral right to remain a
commissioner since ther ecall elee
' tion. How ho can look the voters of
Clackamas county m the face as a
county commissioner, since the recall
election, I do not know.
He should sten down.
If he will not, he should ba pulled
down.
NOW STICK
A sketch of history tells us that the
Union troops, after winning a hard
fought battle, scattered, pillaged and
dissipated, and the Confederates saw
the advantage, returned ana turned
, defeat into victory.
The power that recalled on Satur
day, August 16, is the power that can
rule Clackamas county if.
That fight will have been in vain
if the voters who made it do not hold
the breastworks. .
There is ltitle use in breaking up a
ring unless we keep it broken up.
That the defeated will try to come
back, and will try every smooth one
known to the political game to slip one
over on the voters who gave them the
K. 0. is as certain as taxes in Oregon.
The thing for the men and women
voters of this county to do is to ever
lastingly hold to what they have
won and get more.
The move to make is toward stand
ing just as solidly when the next line
up comes as you did August 1G, and if
you WlLlj you can absolutely govern
this county and govern it right. You
can free it from every graft, every
drone and get a dollar s worth for
vour dollar of taxation.
The Courier will absolutely stand by
the people along these lines as they
stood with the Courier on the recall.
Form precinct organizations. Get
together, you taxpayers, and be in a
position to reverse the old order of
things. Don't wait for the old "county
ring" to weld and toll you what they
want, but organize and tell the ring
what YOU want.
You huve the power, vou have dem
onstrated it. NOW KEEP IT.
Nexty ear we are going to have
taxes in Oregon that will make you
wince.
Already they are preparing you for
the smart, by telling you that the
state tax will be a big one.
And the next year the state tax
will be still bigger, and the next year
bigger again, unless something is
done to stop the looting at Salem, un
less something: is done to change the
system under which six million dol
lar appropriations are plugged thru
onto a state which is only in shape to
bear halt this load.
We have a system under which any
man who can get an appropriation
typewritten can introduce it, and we
have a legislature of which a majority
of its members all want a bale for
their districts, and by swapping sup
port they all go through for you tax
payers to buck up.
We have a state jammed full of of
fice holders and commissions, and
under them an army of assistants,
deputies and clerks. We elect men to
office and they hire clerks, deputies
and assistants to do their work.
And it will ever be thus until we
absolutely change the system under
which we are pillaged until we fix it
so these men who we elect to missrep
resent us are deprived of the power
to heap great debts upon us, until we
change our system so that every last
man at Salem will have to openly
stand up and be responsible for his
work and his votes.
The house dodges and gets the sen
ate to help hide its responsibility, and
the senate comes back and helps the
house cover up.
Individual members justify their an
propriation votes bv the excuse
was the only way I could get anything
lor my district.
Abolish the senate. It is absolutely
unneeded in Oregon. Take away the
right of members to appropriate, and
give that right to one man, the gov
ernor. and hold the recall over him
These two changes will do more to
give this state a representative gov-
ernment, and reduce it s expenses
than any reforms ever tried.
The voters of Oregon want to line
up on these matters. Next year you
are going to have your chance to
change things, and next year you
want to change them or the hook
for you.
Wilson and Bryan have handled the I WHAT KIND OF A REPUBLICAN?
Mexican situation in a splendid man
ner and the American people are com
mending them.
The Telegram and the Oregonian
are clamoring for free speech, yet
think it the proper act to arrest any
man who attempts to speak.
It begins to look, in the Bandon in-
Scandinavian Service
There will hp. spr-vico in thp Kcun..
(In answers to Questions asked bv Idinavian lnnriin.p at. thp M0fVin.ii
the Oregonian of W. S. U'Ren. Re- Church next ThnrsHnv. Am. 9Sth at
1. 1 . : 1 . I- ' n T n - . . ' .
fuuuetm uanuiuuie, ior governor, asp r. ivi. tev. John Ovall will preach.
w wiiai, aiiiu vi a nepuuiican ne is, uooa songs and music will be render
Mr. U'Ren replied as follows:) ed. All are most cordially invited to
i ou bsk . wnai Kina or a rceDubii- attend.
can is Mr. U'Ren? I am the kind of
a uepuDiican who believes in tht Funeral Notice
peoples power, including the mitiat- Died Mrs: An.,a. mi... w.i.,,--
vestigation, as if Leach might be at- ."T T re,ca" ,n lnelr i0' Au?ust Z7tn 1913- at 4:30 p- A-
rested for kidnaping that 600 men who ""S?1? I governments; M., aged 68 years, 3 months and 15
deported him. a .,,,., uc.cvo urn. me system can aays. Funeral services from the resi-
? 7 ; i'-'-""j .. me uciitc, mumim Avenue, mursuay ai-
iiciituu u- eieuLiiiir reureKenijir vpQ rprninn at ..ihi -.-. b-.,...,ri ...
. ... !.1L. SVKTKI A-.! J J.t.1. !l. P . .T I . W V WU. 'M1
rure water is me yjtxcj mini; neeu- oui mis win not be done bv thp v t
ed to make this place the right kind standpatters of the party. I am the
ot a town to live in. wont tne ousi- Kind ot a Kepublican who alwavs Swedish I.ailipa will lvW.
ness interests see it; thinks of the people first and of the The Swedish Ladies
I nnol-tr !.. T1! 4- 1 J .1. T 1 1 . . . . . . . . J
F i. . iwjpuDiican win meet at the home or Fred Urick-
C4. i ,a 'uoi uc kuuu uarLv Doiicv in urecron. i son. .Jackson St. ..- tips. Snuonth k
warm up and the Portland Republican Kecauene Yote J1"8 steadily grown next Thursday, August 28th at 2 P.
c . Slnfft 19(1? when flip noi4i, nffiitinll.j M TU I. Tl. ....11 t.i 1
DaDers are verv anxious to mane out , , , r , jr xi.c uumi vvan num roxuanu
the Democrats and get a line on them. aeciarea ior the initiative and refer- and others will be present. All are in
And some of them don t smoke.
endum. For Secretary of State the vited.
nepumicans gained 16,400 votes be
tween 1902 and 1912, besides the Pro-
ENTERPRISE
According to a bulletin recently is
sued by tho Department of Agricul
ture the yearly income of the average
American farmer is $040. Reasoning
from these figures, the bulletin con
cludes that farming, even under the
most favorable conditions of recent
years, is not a highly remunerative
occupation.
It has been almost a year since this
city was advertised all over the stato
as a typhoid locality, and about all woj
Enterprise is a great thing, and has
often filled its special place in the
world. Enterprise, governed by ambit
ion made Roosevelt all that he has
been ; enterprise made him police com
missioner of New York, enterprise
made him governor of New York, en
terprise made him a naval secretary,
enterprise made him president, and
enterprise made him keep on trying
to be president until people sickened
or nis enterprise. And it was enter
prise also, that madeh lm blame all
his faults -upon others, and sacrifice
Loeb and Cortelyou whenever such
acts could Bmooth away any bumps
that interfered with his enterprise.
And it was also enterprise that
moved e. e. brodie to print six col
umns of Roosevelt campaign matter in
his Taft publication during the last
campaign so that he could get three
inches of Roosevelt advertising. This
was enterprise of the real e. e. brodie
enterprise stamp, and it was more en
terprise of the enterprise kind when
e. e. brodie told his big business
friends that "his night editor" had
done it. It was enterprise, enterprise
ih printing any old fabrication that
occurred or was carried to e. e. brodie
in the recent recall campaign that
helped to defeat the former members
of the county court; and it was enter
prise enterprise, after the defeat, for
e. o. brodie to listen to his master
voice and discharge "his night cdiitor1
because one of the leaders in the
Portland rinir tlmt tries to run Ore
gon City as an annex told him to do
so. And it is this same kind of enter
prise that make s tho enterprise
prhit patent medicine advertisements
lor four cents aiv inch, lust to get
the money, while it charges Oicgon
City merchants 20 cents an inch, if
they will pay for it, for position ngh
beside the patents.
hntci' rise is a great thine, but the
enterprise is a poor, pitiful, palsied,
prevaricating imitation of tho real
thing.
An. tu e.,4..-..
...i . . ,i . .., it .11 . ' - I -11 111 1 1 1 C LHII1I11I b
Wiiat s tne mater witn mis oia gressive party vote of 17.400. most of The pitv n,,nn hD o.;n o m
town? There have been three street which came from the Ronnhlionn . nni i;.. i .....
hl,l ,ithm the nat mpnth W !,w " Jl.: ' V 6 "V," UI ""'".' Btieet,
"" ""i" 7 -, 5 u iV ii iiti year. and Mayor Jones says they will en-
only need a railroad holdup in the "What candidates has Mr. -U'Ren deavor to break up that paved thor
neart of the city to catch up with supported for imnortant offices? Tn miM . D.ai..j
jj,., I t r I -i- "'J IBVCWUiaii 1U1 1 ji uauu
vinaim. me uest oi mv reccoiection. i nave aneprtpra Tho ctot.v, f no.,n
supported all the Republican candi- ment is a o-rpnt. tpmntntinn tn anWg
A. B. Armstronc. countv school su- dates since 1898. exceDt Mr. Taft tn "1 et. 'pr mil. " mnii if ID hopniYiinn- a
. i t i,"'i., -j t : A mir? j i, . . " ' . 6 "
perinienuent oi roruanu, nas ueen in- u n. oeiung in ana tne lew very dangerous locality,
dieted by the Multnomah grand jury "Assembly" men who won nominat-
for accepting a bribe and is also ions in 1910. Allowing for these ex- If You've a Kick. Present It
charged with malfeasance in ottice. ceptions 1 oeueve practically all of the September 2 the state railroad corn-
Mr. Armstrong is well known in tnis rtepumicans nominated in Oregon mission will have a hearino- nn mat.
city, and his many friends hope for since 1900 have more or less publicly ters of service and determination of
nis acquiuii on uiai. .''ra.tu uieir laim in tne peoples raies. mayor Jones has appointed r .
power system ot representative Gov- J. Tooze chairman jx a committee to
t. :... u ,..v.. tu .i;,i. Kamer lwormation regarding unsatis
-l. If OU WI1U IIIC UlllUIUAbCO V.. ..-t .. . . . ....
will he for next vear lint what will uu alf """ten in me reason uaciory conditions in tms city, and
U,eybdo Thl . voters of Oregon r" n;LaVL.m sitT .to Mr. his committtee is busy getting to-
restless. Conditions and results don't ,3" i T1.. , D0Uln, ?u. r aala mt' ooze re(uestea
suit them There has certainlv got to r , J. r," kjibBi.iii now oau ma- any person wno nas any com
sun wein. in.ie nas certainly go. ui .u tn oproa- . .,. nin- .- r.io . tr. t,- - ..
be some changes in our present sys- uiL"Z71.j f""." . c , U"'?C3,'
e t i -i "cimiK icuuui me ueuuiea rower oei vice mat same oe maae to mm im
MltoT l912.-hLch he mediately in order that they may be
fer the needed, remedies isn't big YZ 1 "'h" w"'p , r''" wau" ""
enough for the iob. ' f : i: , r.v.i....6
f " a meer-ini. m r.np ipnoiio
"ie publicly denied having author-
If continually advocating safe ized the use of his name in connec-
drinking water is knocking, then put ment for it. The fact is that George
.i . f (-; ,:.u .u- - i .
tuu .uii.i uuwii oa a j-iiu-n.ci 1.1 .iuii wiin .ne measure ur tne urgu.'
tne long term, lypnoio is tne Knock- m. urton, jj. Lee raget, M. U. Reed
er. It has its hammer out twelve and eight or ten other men, besides
montns in tne year, it is noiding back myseii, were present and heard Mr.
this city's growth worse than a panic. Selling express his approval of the
When private supplies of water are measure and authorize us to submit
found in nearly every business place it to the people witn an argument.
and office in the city, it is time to because he said he would be too busy
i 1. : v. , : i- . ....ii
i-nu-iY. . i in me tuuiLmiKU to give it iurtner at
tention. I have no doubt that Mr. Sel
ling counted the cost and figured he
wouia acquire more votes from the
standpatters by this course than he
would lose by thus repudiating his
principles and libelling his friends.
Whatever one thinks of Mr. Selling's
ALCOHOL 3 PER CFNT
AVegelablePrenaralionforAs
similaiinSilicFootfanimpdiia-
tin J the Siomachs artiBcwctsof
It would be a brave higher
court in a certain sense that, on a
trivial technicality, would reverse
the just verdict and judgement in
the Diggs case. Portland Jour-
It was a brave higher court that let lotyalty? prin-cjp'?s ru friends, it can
. . . .1 Qt. IPflQt- hp -OlH thuf Inn trnr V a An
-v t.Huv umu .unu iic -uun. 1110 uc-
a word of
Bourne.
not because he was my personal friend
but because I believed he could be re
elected, and I thought he was the most
the degenerates, convicted in Portland be said .hue
vice crusade, go free, but I don't re- feat i k?? man and a
member reading any leading editorial plaint. supported Mr.
protests in the Journal.
Now comes the statement that there effective senator Oregon ever had.
is a little package of butter stored "In 1908 I sunborted Mr. Taft he
away in Chicago amounting to 65,- cause he was recommended bv two of
uuu,uuu pounas. inirty-two tnousana my inends. Everyone knows what Mr.
tons of butter in cold storage in one Roosevelt said of him. Judge McGinn
city, is an easily understood answer told me that Taft's decisions and opin
io the question: "Is there a butter ions rendered when he was a Federal
trust.'" Cold storage is a great thing Judge indicated that he was a broad
c . u : c i u. .i ...
-ui- me oavinir ot tuou stuns, out at minaea man wnose svmnatnies were
the same time it is a great thing for always with the oppressed and heavy-
mo siuups who want to corner me lauen.
markets. Capital Journal.
BUSINESS AND POLITICS.
The sooner nil t he great inter
ests close their ueiulijuai'ters In
W'tishiiigron, cease the pnii'tliu
of imiiu, ..ining . representatives
at the orbital, the sooner will it
be l-ossll .0 to get business down
to ti lias', 'hut will enable every
man In trade to .conduct his af
fairs with a minimum of anxi
ety, yet with a riinxliuuui of
profit. If they will only figure
out how much money they are
spending iu financing campaigns,
how much they are putting Into
organization mid how much the
Washington bureaus cost, and if
they will only then sit down like
sensible men and compute the
amount of worry and how they
. are shortening their lives by this
continuous turmoil, they will
agree with me that they will be
far better off if they will take
their business out of politics.
Vice President Warslmll.
COUNTY PAPERS
STATE OF OHIO. ClTT OF ItiI.TOO, 1
Frank J. Chencv nvikcs o.th tlmt hn Is nonlra
pnruiiT ot tha llrm of F. J. t'HE.vtv & Co.. lining
-USliiedfl 111 tll CUV Of TnlMn I'nnnlv an.l Htoto
"During his term as President Mr. wrt'r.TVf!,R'?'' !S. ll',8u"' 2
I Taft proved that he was a Torv thru ?? .' S;1'""11 dmt cnm,t be cureu oy tne uso oi
j n ,u u.. :: ' . vvu.- tMTvana m-iiB.
i iiu viuuugn, uy euiiyictiun as wen as
association, ne did not believe had
There are in this country about!
courage to say so. He was against
20.000 eilifnra nf ln.Hl newsnnB. nH fTT '"'""T" 'm against me
-,n.wi . i:i-- ' - -iwftwc aim icxeieiiuuiu anu recall,
OU-.U11.U lUCtLUIJUlltilll II.WBUdp.l, fi.of lrof nrtA ll U. I T .tj
big and little
Ihese editors are the real directors
of public opinion especially THE
COUNTRY EDITORS.
What the public school teachers are
to the children the editors who do
their duty faithfully, thoughtfully.
are to tile grown men and women.
b or they give to their readers not
have no part nor lot in holitics with
such a man, no matter how he got
me party nomination.
W. S. U'Ren.
SWOm 10 bpfoi-e me find HUliMrrUii'd In mv niwainoa
ti.ia ULti uj Ul i-'l.'LCIlI-.lT, rt. II, , IOMIj.
i , A. W. G LEASON,
i SE..L I Notary Public.
IlaM'S Cltrirrh Curo 19 takon 1ntf.rn.il1v nnil ft
'llroctly t.ie blood and mucous Burracea ol the
systciu. bci.u ior W'tntinoiilitlH, troe.
V. J. CTIENIIY & CO., Toledo, a
nin i uv .in nrir-"iHiM, (Lit.
TuKu llull'K Fiim.Iy Pills for conttlpatloa,
A DEAD WRONG HOLDUP
Oregon City Readers Are Learning
The Way.
It's the little kidney ills
The lame, weak or aching back .
The unnoticed urinary disorders
may lead to dropsy . and
The Portland Journal says there i
always fun and trouble up to historic
Oregon City.
The "county ring" is still figuring
on "just how it happened. It just hap
penod, that's all. The people rebelled
. have done is to post "Roil Your Wat- on the manngement and pulled down
er signs, ana ooost it along. tne ring.
mi-
mi
m) mm.
- y
m.---m mr,m i i mn m tb. urn
-i'' .. .
Hotels gladly accept the "A V. A" T
re alway and nverywhata gjoJ.
your nfxt trip. They save tivie n:id w
.. .1
V ncccpi t!um
,VFL"".r;' CMKQUES which
!.-iuc ml.yinj. Carry ihcm uu
The Bank of Oregon City
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
Thp lncf. lprrlulpf i.vp n..o n inn.
only their own thoughts and opinions abolishing assistant district attorneys
but the thoughts and the opinions ot Unri o-ivinr. i io .,.,. That
others the current knowledge and the right to elect their own district Bright's disease,
thought of the day. Mew York Jour- attorney. When the kidneys are weak,
mil. if Ml Q npPIpl lo, nnt tl.n tnnLl Vf pi n fnm ,,,itU ?.' T.l. !.,..
. - -thu u .,v.t.uvu lTT, P11U tllC lUCl I . . . tlllll nibll MXJUll a A-1U11
mat it was reterended was a big sur- Pills.
prise to the state. HOW the names A remedy especially for weak kid
wen. D..U1.U onu wn tue law was neys,
i;w "Zi"ni. p. J. Doan's have been used in kidney
uwu. vt.ii 1 1. . . 1. t jp r n
countv countv c-nvi.. r.mnr.. Thn npp. "ouu,es lor " years'
pie would elect their prosecuting at-
elected would
THE ETERNAL WHY
This paper has asked one ouestion
which bus never been answered, and
that is: Why, after the voters of Ore-
nnn l-ir.-l ., f ., n.n,...l nlnll Jl.n.
v11 iitiu v a iuiiciui election uiaau- . a .
proved of the amounts asked for aAd tTL 8,? m5"
I. .... . i:. i j 11 i 1. I
tile atrents of thn iinivn.-sitv thon nrJ "nve lu ' e UP ana. snouiaer tne lull
. . T . r . ; . J . r rf.sr.nnsi hi itv fn tha
the legislature? Had endum and lve the new county at
ischedtthereouid Ufe if they understond
Endorsed by 30,000 people endors
ed at home.
Proof in an Oregon City citizen's
nnml n,ll nf thi. m,irnt ior me results OI nis atutemt-nt.
which totaled onn-third thi amount. ?ftlc.e- There would be no. assistants A. G. Woodward, 412 Main St., Ore
afterwards appropriated by the state " H prosecutions onto, gon City, says: "My kidneys were
legislature, they did not insist before u- ' Tulu ,,BVO 10 HU4nu " by disordered and - caused my
the legislature on the original bud- rru i.'i a . , , . .... 1 ack to become lame and painfj.' Uu-
get? Why was the amount multiplied L.;":'Vsfh- taking Doan's Kidney Pills, 1
' UHIVV TT II) All. -1 IV. 1 . 1 - I , ,., , ,
sieauny improvea ana was soon iree
from the complaint"
For sale by all dealers.- Price 50
The law should never have been held cents. Poster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo
up. It gives better government to the New York, sole agents for the United
counties ana iar more iorce to nros- sttpa.
ecute law violation.
Both houses passed the bill, the gov
ernor signed it, and the governor made
the appointments of county attorneys
to hold until the people should elect
their successors.
Voters want to look into this mat-
teh thoroughly, The referendum
should be voted down and every
county have a resident prosecuting
attorney, a man who will stand for
by three through the
to bear upon
they held to the
have been no attempt to again refer
the matter to a vote of the people.
TOO MUCH TO HOPE
It is perhaps too much to hope
that the Oregonian will ever be
able t otreat the administration of
Governor West with the same
large-minded fairness with which
it discusses the conduct of nat
ional affairs by President Wil
son. Woodburn Independent.
Remember the name Sloan's and
take no other.
A household remedy in America for
25 years Dr. Thomas' Eclectic Oil.
For cuts, sprains, burns, scalds,
bruises. 25c and 50c. At all drug
stores.
There are two men in nwimn fhia his own work and a man who can
Portland daily never has and never ue iouna wnen needed.
will give credit lor doing what they
can for tho' best good of the common
people Governor West and W. S.
U'Ren.
If the governor should rush into a
burning building and save human life,
the Oregonian would say it was a
frame up for advertising and that he
hud on a suit of abestos.
Miould Mr. URen iumn into the
river and save a drowning man. the
Oregonian would say itw as because
the man had a signed referendum pe
tition in nis pocKet.
I'.acli ot these men m his own -wav
is working for the best good of the
many, and the many know it. but the
uregoman will not give them any
leuit.
But the Oregonian does not renre
sent tho people, and the neonle know
it.
TV
ii
6J
VActive at seventy
r m icviniy
V attribute their good
ysmi neaun to SCOTT'S
'A:" :! EMULSION because Its
he'',. J concentrated nourlsh-
LA . j permanent
V. DOClV-BOWPil. nnrl h.,,.
It Is devoid of drugs or stimulants.
cn-on no.rng, Woomfiriri N. J, U-M
An Explanation
Mr. Hall, manager of the Pacific
Telephone Co. of this city says the
puunsned reports that this company
has refused to have the fire alarm
system installed in its central office
are hardly fair to the company; that
the company is ready and has always
been ready to assist the city in this
work, and the only point of difference
s that he does not think the girl op
erators should have the responsibility
of locating the fire. He says the girls
come and go, and the responsibility on
a new girl is too great, and that while
the city might relieve the operator and
company from all responsibility, yet
an error of an operator in giving the
location of the fire might be the
reason for great business or Drivate
loss. He says the company will will
ingly install the system in any place
where others will take the
ility of locating the fire.
MINISTER PRAISES
TIVE
THIS LAXA.
Rev. H. Stubenvoll of Allison, la.,
in praising Dr. King's New Life Pills
for constipation, writes: "Dr. King's
New Life Pills are such perfect pills
no home should be without them."
No better regulator for the liver and
bowels. Every pill guaranteed. Try
them. Price 25c. at Huntley Bros. '
A CARRIAGE THAT IS RE
PAIRED AND RE-PAINTED
by us you couldn't tell from the
new articTe, for we will make it
just as good as it ever was. If
your horses need shoeing you
will find us good judges of a
horse's hoof and what kind of
a shoe it needs, and our work
will b'j properly and scientific
ally done. If you want anything
done in our line we guarantee
satisfaction.
jOwen G. Thomas
Oregon City, Ore.
l-VVff.T-)U .ijuiij
Proraoles DitSeslionJCkcrfuI
ness and Rest.Contsins neiltar
Upi.mi.Morphitie nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
AtrtpeofoMBrSlML'W'mjini
Bmpkia Seed'
jlhcSama
fimrmm
Ililarbomikmi WormStrd
Cltmtkti Sugar .
hhtejttaUtmr.
ADerfecf Remedy forConslipa-
tion , Sour Slomach.Dlrrrtoca
YVoniis.Convulsions.rev.ri..
ness arulLoss CSleep.
FacS'uile Signature of
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
Ay-
AT
IF
Km
Guaranteed'
Exs -c Copy of Wrapper.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
nv.nnjTl fJ U M VA M H Ik A H HH
er llle rw-j MHtH.W tj B id O 19 Kffi
m& wafirT n sjFHriBJO.
THK O-NTAUR lOHMHT, NKW TORN OtTY.
Costly Treatment.
"I wa3 troubled with constipation
and indigestion and spent hundreds
of dollars for medicine and treat
ment," writes C. H. Hines, of Whit
low, Ark. "I went to a St. Louis hos
pital, also to a hospital in New Or
leans, but no cure was affected. On
returning home I began taking Cham
berlain's tablets, and worked neht
along. I used .them for some time
and am now all right." sold by Hunt
ley Bros. Co.
How the Trouble Starts.
Constipation is the cause of many
ailments and disorders that make life
miserable. Take Chamlerlain's Tab
lets, keep your bowels regular and
you will avoid these diseases. For
sale by Huntley Bros. Co.
For dyspopsia, c.r
use Burdock Blood Bitters. Recom
mended for strengthening digestion,
purifying the blood. At all drug
i
. jj
: Do You Know I
lnis Bear
He 6tands for
it The Standard OU for
r -s 1 Motor Cars
r y
i jS? I Watch for hirii. He is on every
Jl ZEROLENE can. He marks
Tl ff the oil that freed the car from
r P carbon.
' l ' ) ' ZEROLENE i3 p,0fa
v V I easy to handle; also frrr
f lnarbraelsr.el3 WW
I A Sold by dealers
I everywhere and at s.v'C
V M all agencies of the ' f,
l PORTLAND SAN FRANCISCO
i "
Spend August at "Nature's Playground"
Tillamook County Beaches
New hotels with every modern accomodation, cozy cot
tages and camping grounds at nominal cost. The trip down
there
Through the Virein Forests Tillamook County
Is one that should not be missed
Two Trains Daily-Chair Buffet Car Service
on the afternoon train.
Low Season and Week End Fares
from various points on the Southern Pacific.
Splendid fishing along the Nehalem and Salmonberry
rivers, as well as on the briny deep.
Call for our new folder "Tillamook
County Beaches," it contains full in
formation, or consult with any S. P.
Agent.
JOHN M. SCOTT
General Passenger Agent
Portland, Oregon
UK
SUNSt&
I lOGOENasHASTAI I
I ROUTES J I