OREGON CIXY COURIER, THURSDAY FED. 26, 1014. 5M OREGON CITY COURIER Published Thursdays from the Courier Building, Eighth and Main streets, and entered in the Postoffice at Oregon City, Ore., as 2d class mail matter OREGON CITY COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANY, PUBLISHER M. J. BROWN, A. E. FROST, OWNERS. Subscription Price $1.50. Telephones, Main S-l; Home A 5- Official Paper for the Farmers Society of Equity of Clackamas Co M. J BR.OWN, EDITOR "GETTING EVEN" The Courier editor has $10,000 loose money. (This is just a ghastly newspaper joke to illustrate with.) He can convert it into five dollar bills, make a bundle like a roll of wall paper and shake it in the face of the assessor and tax collcctois. There will be no taxation on it. He can take it to the bank and get an interest-drawing certificate of de posit for it, and yet he won't have to pay taxes on it. He can loan it out on a note or mortgage at 8 per cent (and get $50 a $1,000 bonus on it besides, as many Oregon money lenders do) and yet will not have any assessment on nis investment or taxes to pay. But If he puts that $10,000 into a fac tory on a vacant lot he has in Ore gon City and give employment to men whose families are hungry the as sessior and tax collector will jump onto him with glee. For 'tis the law. If he put this money into a flock of cows and help to push along the sadly neglected dairy industry ol Clackamas county, or if he put the money to work on a logged-off tract and help to develop the state then would he have to get into line and pay the price of progression. W. S. U'Ren's $1500 exemption bill will be voted on in November, and the probablities are it will be come a law. "It's class legislation," big busi ness newspapers yell "it's taking J taxation off the little man and forc ing it onto the rich, and it is not morally or legally right." Just as morally and letrallv right as it is to exempt cash, notes, mort- It's a moral obligation for every state to provide work for those who need it, and it is but a ques tion of time when it will be a lega obligation. Governor West, they say, will in itiate a bill' to abolish the office of state engineer and the water board. All that will be necessary is the sig. natures. The people will do the rest. If it is for better government to force candidates for judgeship to run independent, why isnt it for better government that state officers, from governor down, should run indepen dent of party? Following the lead of Oregon City, Lebanon has passed a city ordinance that hereafter any person found with intoxicating liquor in his pockets will be prosecuted and it will be unlawful to deliver intoxicating liquors except in sealed packages. ine nome lax exemption meas ure that will exempt from taxation the improvements and live stock, im plements, etc., on a home place to the assessed value of $1,500, is rapidly approaching the end ol the campaign for signatures. Ex-Governor Geer is the sixteenth candidate to get in the race for gov ernor; he coming out for state wide prohibition, woman suffrage, econo my in taxation, road building under bonding actj, amendment of tax col lection law and reclamation of arid lands with government aid. i 'RAW FOR THE LAW Last week this page commented on how a former millionaire congress man irom iew xorK smuggled a $100,000 necklace, was caught at it, pleaded guilty, and was let off with a fine, which was absolutely no pun ishment nat even an inconvenience, Here s another: Remigio Galcido, a young Spaniard of Portland NOT ADVERTISED Here is a matter of much public interest the daily papers don't ap pear to be giving to their dear read ers in any considerable news stories, or through . very lengthy editorial comments. One year ago the city of San Fran cisco went into the public ownership game on a small scale. 1 hereby began the operation of a 7-mile street railroad on Gary street, stole a pint bottle of milk from the door step of A. L. Mills LnH in th fit tu.iv mnntv,.. president of the first national bank, municipal control it netted the city because he had not eaten in several $206,000 over a quarter of a million days ana was starving, lie went to dollars profit on seven miles of street INCREASED VALUATIONS OF PROPERTY DOUBTED jail for 25 days. Now both these sentences were en tirely within the law, and according to the code were justice. Littaur, the congressman, had al ways worked for high protection. He had a big glove factory at Glovers- ville, N. i . When high tariffs made road. In December 1913 the city also took over another line whose fran chise expired, and in the first 21 days of its operation by the city its av erage receipts were 81,000 a day. During this year eight additional street railroads will be bunt and op him rich, then he turned smuggler erated by the city at an expenditure lie uiuii i want iu nay uuuus un tnciQj So 000 UOO. stuff he didn't make. He was a thief and traitor to his country. The bpamsh boy in Portland was starving and he kept nature's first his lile, law, and he went to jail for savins lioth sentences satisfied the law, but both were aggrevated cases of injustice. One was a traitor to his country and he was not punished. The other was saving himself from starvation and he went to jail for it. Littaur should not have got caught! duce?" This is the first city in the United States to compete with the traction companies on a big scale, and the results of its first year's experiment makes news that big business doesn't like to have circulated. t On the 7-mile line over 9,000,000 passengers were carried during the year and not one was killed or injured. JNow the reasoner will ask if a 7-mile municipal owned railroad will net the city over a quarter million dollars, what would all the lines pro- with the goods on. Galcido should have death. Then this would not written. starved to have been LOOKS PECULIAR One of the right kind of initiative bills being circulated provides that I no mark or sign shall appear on the ballot to indicate the party of anv iu- dicial candidate: that every candidate gages, househod furniture, diamonds, for judge shall not enter the primar- etc, It was stated in the . newspapers jast week that one-fourth of Oregon is owned by men and corporations that are foreicrners to the state. A Michigan timber company owns ies, but shall be an open independ ent candidate at the polls. It's a move to take the courts out of politics and party. It's a good move. Alaska is going to have a govern ment railroad. Ihe Courier s idea is that the purpose is a splendid under taking, but that the system under which the government will get its coal out is very weak. For illustra tion an editorial paragraph in the Portland Journal says Under the leasing bill a cer tain generous portion of the coal lands will remain in the poses sion of and be operated by the government for use of govern ment railways, for the navy and as an emergency chack against possible monopoly if it should develop under the leasing system. Now the point we take is WHY if And the answer is they would prob ably pay the taxes of San Francisco. Public ownership of utilities and necessities are coming as fast as pub lic sentiment and private votes will bring them. And why shouldn t they : Under such ownership the profits are divided with the many. Under corporation control the prof its make a few millionaires. FOR REPRESENTATIVE To the Voters of Clackamas County: I have decided to Decome a candi date at the Primaries for the Repub lican nomination for Representative. I have been a resident of Oregon for 27 years. For the last 20 years 1 have lived on a farm at Heaver Creek. If nominated and elected I will advocate economy in all appropria tions. Our state tax is much too Estimates of T. W. Sulivan Regard ing Road Bonds are Questioned . Editor Courier: I have read the discussion about the county road bonds, in last week's Courier with a great deal of inter est. This is the right way to handle this matter. Give every one a fair chance to express his opinion on the subject through the columns of the county papers, and I can assure you that we appreciate the fairness of the Courier in publishing these arti cles. It makes the Courier always a welcome visitor. Now it is hard for me to find the words to sufficiently express my op position to this county bonding, for J L..;i J! mi 5 l ., roau ounuing. inere is naraiy any thing about it that is favorable to the farmer. The farmers don't want it, and if the farmers don't want it, why should, the city people try to force it on to them ? A direct tax that would be equal to what they would pay out each year, as interest and sinking fund, on those bonds, would be just as easv to pay as the interest and sinking! iund on the bonds, and we would get the benefit of about $560,000 more money for road building than we would by bonding. If we should have to pay 6 per cent interest on those bonds, which 1 think we would, the interest alone would cost us about $560,000 before we got the bonds paid off. Mr. Sullivan's table, which he pre pared, was based on 6 per cent inter est and this would amount to about $465,000, and if we had to pay C per cent it would add about $93,000 to the table of his preparation. Mr. Sul livan's system of bonding is very un satisfactory to the farmers. It does not indicate prosperity for . the far mers but just the reverse. Raising the assessed valuation of the county two or three millions of dollars each year does not better the condition of the farmers any. Instead of his wealth increasing so as to enable him to pay his taxes easily it works just tne reverse with him. it is a good deal like life insurance you have to die to get the benefit of it, and the only way . the farmer could sret anv benefit out of Mr. Sullvian's plan of working, . would be to sell out and and leave the county. I am surprised at any legislature that would pass a law and leave it in such a questionable condition as they did that last road law. Every hicrh nnd T will firrht. t.n rprlnpp it. t.n the leasing system is eoine to be the lowest limit ennRtstpnt. with t.hp i v f . . i . .i I ' , wien, mail luau law. jvery such a benefit to the country m the proper management of the various member of both houses should have way of cheaper coal, WHY doesn't departments of the state govern- too much respect for his own reputa- uie government aiso employ tne sys- I ment. tem? If it is good for the country There are too manv boards and JJr. Withvcombe of the O. A. C. wny is it not eauallv eood for the commissinnprs nd I sh enHoavnr vast tracts of timber in this county announces that he is a Republican navy and the government railroads? to reduce the number to such as are mat it win not sell, or operate. candidate tor Governor. He is a very And it it is good for the govern- absolutely necessary. Eastern speculators and cornora- arood man. but he will never ha imv. ment to ODerate its own minea and An n msmU nf fn Hons nave invested hundreds of ernor of Oregon. Ilia Dartv had ahnut use its own railroads, whv isn't it zati nns T flm familiar with thoir rml l.A......n,l P .i..n : l i .... I oa nm ...... . . .1 n i : , . ii . . I . . . , . . .. . Hiuuwiiug uj. uuuiiis in minis in wre- ou.wuu ma oruv in urecon wnen ne b uauy uenenciai io tne country nr. mies nnri ripmnnris and I Ehn tin o gon that they have never seen and was nominated for Governor some ,arKe, and why doesn't the govern- in my power to aid in securing such mem, uo us own Dusiness alter ex pending millions' of dollars to build tion to allow such a job to nass out of their hands. The construction of the law by the county court and the county attorney is in better shape man tne legislature lert it in. Give us direct tax and a good uoaomaster, but no bonds. . George Hicinbotham, may never see, Their agents hae seen them and reported good investment; that fu ture Oregon development will raise the price of lands far more than le gal interest rates, and as taxes are low on dead land, the investment is sale. years since, yet he was defeated. The Republican party has not so larce a majority at present. Jefferson Re- its own railroad to its own mines in its own country? Does the government owe coal op erators more tnan it does the people? How manv coroorations could af ford to run their affairs as we run tha 4tfT.iit.ci t a im nt-nn T T J it.- fn.nl Tn 7 T f 0Kn; the present system of government with jarmers wno clear land; the work- its councils and various flnhsMinrv Yinn iifhn , u Al. ...... I ... . . , hiL .v, J ie cap- governing bodies in the form of fropist, single taxer and personal italist who starts a factory these l,,.,)0 th,, i i;ni i, l frinH nf w a tt'p 4u; men have to put up the big end of friction and consequently little effic- H'ed at his home in Philadelphia on M.itM'1 Oregon; -while they ienCy. Our system of government is Sunday night, of pneumonia. He was JOSEPH FELS , Joseph Fels, millionaire philan- uib uoing it tney are making more one. rnnsnn nf hirh tnv ratQw . ,,,! lw.1.11 t . "" 61 years old Mr. Fels had spent hundreds of thousands or dollars and years of la- valuable the idle fund holdings of men ,, n'.,i who do not even live in the state. It may be "class legislation" to ex- t v i,-n .i . . . bor to bring about the system of sin- empt from taxation $1,500 worth of J"J t il ? therfe tha9 U taxation in this anotter coun- workers' and developers' industry, fd nn nit.ative movement to prohib- tries-a system which he had lomr but it is WiJHm, t S 't the legislature from repealing any ,)notoH , ' . lu"ZJ...J "'cu,v act nassed hv tho nitintiv. Tho 17. . w we even iur exHnu i. nris inn rnvt dm nnw . . .. . . - . . founroj ,.,;fu u Couriei autulvu mbii lb. legislation as they desire. There are undoubtedly too many bills introduced at each session of the legislature. It is almost impos- ier believes this movement Is a llrflt-f nf nn...t TV. 1 !.,.. i . "Rut it u,ill .,11 t ii "" y- enemy. legislature is .v ..... .... vo w tunic Ulll-K not fro no- tn lufrnni.h ion thp a!s ?,UJno ' busi."esi8and biS of Oregon. If it should there would be business newspapers will tell you. no more legislature. The people have you will take it off from build- the right to rule Oregon and the letr- lngS, live Stock, and imnrnvpinnnta isluture isn't pnincr tn rlianntn tlint .i .,.,1. :i i i. ' , , , . , t -- -r- ...v oim iui ii, uai-it on lanci through high- rignc. ci levies uuu luxation. Sure 'nough. If Portland wants to set the whole But it will take S20 off th nvnriin-p-1 country against it and have everv. uiacKamas countv fnrmor nm) (!, every larmor Knockinir. it shnu il home builder for his improvements ImS8 tno ordinance now pending that and put from 82 tn Sfi l.,.lf nr, i,,,i all hogs and calves must be taken tm or.,i u .11 l.- j. . ; i'm-t),iii,i i. . i.j i.. nicy win uo irom flu to $18 : " u mapuctea ue- ohead because of their industry. roro they are killed. They must also Mr. it will raise the ev es on the spec- T , ' J , w Zu", Mlnfr ulutivo land holdings, on the timber Kluuf ,tered' To have this done it tracts, the railroads, the franchise, Tit' "cc.eMltnto their being taken to make ud for the Py(.mnH,Z ' l? tho Union stock yards alive. Once poor man, and was the onlv olution ! trt lllof nnJ n..:i-nUl A ii vv jmou uu ctjunuum taxation. In speaking of his death U'Ken says: . "The world has lost, in the death of Joseph Fels, one of its best men. He was always look ing for a square deal for the common man. I know of no other millionaire giving as he did for justice, or primarily to benefit the man working for wages. I don't know anyone else among the class of wealthy men who was spending money so freely to get benefit for the man at the bottom of society." A VOICE IS CALLING? company would I voice, in fact a great many Tl t ..... i?. but yt: ,rwhM ! thu' at whatever price'it decid- C! C??, hnl,i in.ro iu ..., , , ,, lu l,uy- mis is a sp endid bltr bus-l """-"'. uy-m-uiite iemocrat to ,.,?!" Si Vh Tcutors ,lh. many i''MH mmbination. UUS get out in the First Congressional acres will have to put up the hulk of Kr rH i 2.. i .(district mi rtr.nt w r ii.,,i i. to ST ' n2'"? !""'! ?W1r -ill have hoa7of a pTote'st or argument Zain- Messenger bTf'th." creased I levv nfr,,. L J1Z- f tno,P'nk in W. S. U'Ren's plat- " iu nas De,:n,sucn ?n opportunity . . " v"" ciiijinuna, iorm innt nrovii es ntntn nvcim present Dates to Remember April 10 Last dav UDon which sible for members to give so vast a nominating petitions may be filed number proper consideration. I will w'tn secretary of state, favor any measure to limit the num- April 15--Last day upon which ber of bills introduced. What we need nominating petitions may be filed is not more laws, but fewer and bet- with county clerk, ter laws. May 1 Closing of the registra I have always stood for Oregon's tion books by county clerk until af progressive laws, as exacted by the ter the primary election. people through the Initiative and 'May 15 Primary ; nominating el Referendum, and I shall always be on ection for Democratic, Progressive the watch for anv attemDt to cur- and Renuhlinnn nnrt.ips tail the people's power along this July 2 Last day upon which ini-Ilne- tiative petitions may be filed with the W. Grisenthwalte Secretary of state. BOOST FOR U'REN; LOOK OUT FOR BOOTH Parnell Averill Gives Courier Reader a Few Points to Think On Fiiitnr Pnnrier! I notice your enquiry to your read ers as to their opinions about Mr. U'Ren's idea about building good roads and thus not only doing a great work towards building up and devel oping this great "Oregon country" but giving work to a great many idle men. For one thing I think very highly of this idea and particularly of the source from which he propos es to derive his funds for doing this great and much needed improvement. If (here is anyone who ought to bear public burdens it is that class ot peo ple who are abundantly able to do so. It is true that the great Uregon- ian fairly froths at the mouth about U'Ren's plan of tax exemption $1500 of personal property from the com paratively poor man s home, out .t is easy to understand the cause of thU violence, to-wit: it would make more taxes to be raised by the idle rich Think of the pitiful predicament of poor old John D. He is asked anil required for that matter, to pay an income tax of nearly $10,000,000 and in anguish of heart nearly akin to mortal agony, he flies from Cleveland to evade service there in hopes that some wily attorney in New Yrok city will find some means for him to evade it, and to be sure they will mighty nigh accomplish that pur pose. By the way, Mr. Editor, did you see that the Czar of Russian, in a re cent journey through his realm was saddened at heart to see so many ev idences of abject and squalid pover ty among his ' subjects? Has anything ever been known of old John D., in his travels through his realm in this country (he owns near ly $1,000,000,000) of this kind (?) Christian (?) gentleman (?) ever expressing any sorrow about the great and appalling poverty he sees daily in our great cities? Not much! He is actively scheming to deprive tnem or what little they have left. His coal mines in Colorado are known to be worse and more brutalizing than anything in Russia. Such money monsters have had their dav and a Nemesis is on their track and will. surely overtake them. The land of Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln is not to be given over to satisfy the insatiable greed of a set of cold-blooded wrenches more cruel and merciless than any pirate that ever sailed the seas under th black flag. The Oregonian is now daily boom ing the candidacy of Mr. Booth of Eugene for the office of U. S. Sena tor from Oregon. Of course! Birds of a feather flock together. This man Booth, it is a matter of record, en quired some 40,000 acres of valuable timber land from that aggergation of Big Business sharks, the Southern Pacific R. R., at a nominal price far below its actual worth, notwithstand ing the government especially stipu lated in its contract with this law less combination, that this land should be sold to actual settlers in tracts not more than 160 acres at the uniform price of $2.50 an acre. Later, when the government insti tuted a suit against the S. P. for vi olation of contract Booth and his as sociates set up the plea that they were "innocent purchasers." This was and is one of, the most transparent falsehoods ever uttered and John U. Court, but a short time ago U. S. Attorney of Portland, told the writer that he wrote to the new Attorney General, Wickersham, that he would not stand for that kind of a deal and the proposition did not look good to him a little bit. Later he resigned to avoid giving his sanction to the scheme. Innocent purchaser! Rats! If there is any innocence in any of that bunch it would take a more powerful microscope to discover it than any that has ever yet been in vented. Reduced to its last analysis this candidacy of Booth with his backer, the Oregonian, is to secure another large tract of valuable timber land on the Suislaw or in that region, where there are hundreds of quarter sections with timber on them, conser vatively worth $200,000, also timber land in the same Oregon & California land grant in and around Scotts Mills in this county. You may"' be sure that these blood-suckers have long had their greedy eyes on these choice morsels and they propose to grab them in the not distant future, if they can persuade the yaps and boobs to vote them into office. When William the Conqueror land ed on the English shore from Nor mandy away back in the 14th century in his eagerness to jump ashore, be ing the first man to make the at tempt he slipped and fell prostrate on the ground, his followers appaled by this start. It was a superstitious age, but they were satisfied and re vived by the Conqueror's wit, who, rising from the ground with both hands full of English dirt, exclaimed in thunder tones: "Lo! here I hare this much English soil! Let us go on and grab the remainder." So it is with Booth and Pittock of the Orego nian. Having both hands full of Ore gon soil, they now propose to jro and grab the remainder. Will the people of Oregon stand for this land-grabbing scheme? No I Not if it is done under the seeming and fair guise of pretended patriot ism, and high and lofty devotion to the best interests of the state. We have been fooled too much. Parnell Averill. The King of All Laxatives For constipation., use Dr... King's New Life Pills. Paul Mathulka, of Buffalo, N. Y., says they are the "king of all laxatives. They are blessing to all my family and I al ways keep a box at home." Get a box and get well again. Price 28c. Al druggists or by mail. H. E. Bucklen & Co. Philadelphia St. Louis. Children Crr FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Voters of City and County Warned They Must Register All voters of the city and county must re-register now for the ensuing two-year per iod. All registrations made be fore January 5 are now abso lutely void, because of the re cent decision of the supreme court, declaring the 1913 elec tion law invalid. Persons who have not registered cannot rote at the primaries May IB. Reg ister early and avoid the crowds of the last few days. V, present to send a Dmocrat TT.ii ''."i r 1' I I'tt'1 n".ln's lll,,cfit, this hrd surfaced toads payable by a I f !om. tnia district to Congress. Con "c" exemption bill. graduated tax on fortunes of more ,s.la?n it will help the worker because he improves and has something to be exempted, while the speculator who urns minis out or cultivation will have nothing to exempt and will have his levy raised to offset those who will have exemptions. There you have it. Doesn't it take taxes off tho men who deserve it and put them on the property that should be made to come through for tho support of Oregon? Clackamas county had better piny this game and play it hard. POWER A bunk account will enable you any hidden ambition. After ii vi heu lory out money to satisfy you have your money noes out nud works for you. It enablcs'you to help friends w hen in need, thus clinching awl increasing their loyalty, which has a n money value. It gives you respect of your fellows and standing in your community. Gives yon power-you can work in distant places without going there, have men work ing for you, and have beautiful property and industries that will be the marvel o, other men. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY ne lliiu Ii ;n .1... mnrt ."""""6 """t " amyriaillir tnat SO than $50,000 left by deceased per-1 'lttle nterest s shown. A few namei sons. Mr. Geer proposes a state 9v-!!lave uuen mentioned for the place. torn of hard surfaced roads, but he but,s 01118 of tlle men are unknown proposes tn hnnd fnr th.im .J i,snd some of verv ordinary nliliitv taxpayers will pay the bonds and as lYn.lla 110,10 l'pear to enter into the much more in interest. U'Ren's plan lFlt Wltn anv enthusiasm. There are would give the state good roads, P!unt.v of able Democrats in the First would give work to thousands who district and tho services of an able must have work, and money that dead 1111111 are ru'lirod at Washington at men can't take with them, will pay tnls tlme ar,d we should like to see for these roads and provide the work 8 man ft into the race at once. The for the needy. Any man who is alive fneral opinion is that almost any nbovo the ears need not deliberate competent Democrat can be elected. long as to whoso road policy is a 100 I Balem Messenger, to 1 shot. I i "The Democrats of thi. Mnvmia. lonal district are given a rare oppor tunity this year to elect a Demo cratic Congressman. A similar op portunity was thrown away two years ago. The Wilson adminis tration has met with the approval of the people of Orecon and thev will give the administration a vote of con fidence by clectilie a Demnirnt.ir Congressman where the party lives up to its obligations and good, clean and progressive men." loiedo &entinel. We honestly believe we have the hest 1 1 Trr . r ""WVA TWiivi lUi lIlUIliCMIUIl ana ayspepsia. we .urge you to try it at our r sic. Tf it ,Wn' -Mam you as we feel sure it will we'll cive hnrlc vnnr mnnW n'i, - j ,r . ... i . . c - j niiuuui, a WWIU. x uu us your iamny druggist. Ion know we wouldn't dare reccmmonA nrwthi know about, nor dare to break a promise. Therefore, when we recommend any remedy it is because we believe it to be better than anv other to reliW th ;imt f j 11 , Dfcause prove our faith m it and our sincerity toward you by promising to give back your money if it doesn t relieve you and m every way satisfy you, you have no possible Ixcuse for doubt oTStion. are, we honestly believe, the best remedy made for Indigestion, Dyspepsia and all other Stomach Ills We Know They're Good Delays Are Dangerous You Risk No Money Of course the Republican machine wants Colonel Booth for governor. Hut the motives for his candidacy find a deeper source than tho local aspirations (or desperations) of the machine. The fact is big business gritting its teeth and bitintr its im. per lip beneath an acquiescent smile, yci-ns once more to regain influence m affairs of national leiislntinn Tho innuence 01 uootn as a senator in that direction could not ba withnnt value. With Lane promising to intro duce a bill for trivine back to tho state it's lost harbor rights, land grabbers in Fortlnnd would especi ally like to have the influence of liooth in the senate rhamhnr RnV Herald. Get your letterheads and envelopes printed with the name of your farm on them. The Courier will make them cheap for ou. . Rfiidl Dyspasia Tableti. in addition to other ingredients, contain Tepsin and Bismuth, two great digestive aids used by the entire medical profession. They soothe the inflamed stomach, check the heartburn and distress, stimulate a healthy secretion of the gastric juice, aid in rapid and comfortable digestion of the food and help to quickly convert it into rich red blood, and thereby into flesh, bone and muscle. They relieve stomach distress promptly, and, used regularly for a short time, tend to re store the stomach to a comfortable, easy-acting, healthy state. They aid greatly to promote regular bowel action. Don't neglect indigestion, for it fre- fluently leads to all sorts of ills and com plications. The pain and discomfort is not the most unfortunate part. The fact that when the stomach is not acting right, the material needed to repair the wastes that are constantly taking place in the body is not being given to the blood either in the proper condition or fast enough is far more serious. Nothing will cause more trouble than an unhealthy stomach. The blues, debility, lack of strength and energy, constipation, bil iousness, headaches and scores of other serious ailments result from the failure of the stomach to properly do its work. Our willingness to have you use Rerall Dyspepsia Tablets entirely at our risk proves our faith in them. We always sell them this way, and it is because we know that they have greatly ben efited scores of sufferers to whom we have sold them. There's no red tape about our guarantee. It means just what it says. We'll ask you no questions. You needn't sign anything. Your word is enough for us. We know that when they help you you will con sider it monev well mi : n. had cost you ten times as much. If they don t help you, the money you paid for them is yours, and we want you to have it Sold only at the more than 7.000 Rexall Storea-the World's Greatest Druj Stores, in convenient boxes-three sizes: 25c, 60c, $,.00 HUNTLEY BROS. Oregon City, CO. Oregon