OREGON CITY COURIER,.. THURS DAY, MARCH 19, 1914 Public Opinion from The People Sabjects of General Interet SUNDAY, MONTEBANK; , CONVERTING FOR THE COIN Parnell Averill Gives his Opinion of this . Evangelist Editor Courier: I take pleasure in returning thanks for the kindly reference giv en, me in your Equity column by its editor. My suggestion as a candi date was largely in a Pickwickian sense as the idea was to get someone in the running as a Democratic can didate, or. anyone who was an avow ed and open advocate for the com mon good and not a mere puppet for the corporations. By the way, Mr. Editor, it is an nounced in the Portland papers that "Billy" Sundav is coming tn Port land to clean up the town and by the same token to grab what loose cash he can. The writer is familiar with MATTERS POLITICAL MATTERS OF HEALTH Dr. Turner Discusses Drugs and Gu bernatorial Candidates A few days ago an agitated female gave me a calling down over the phone because I opposed the nomina tion of Chas. J. Smith M. D. for (inv. ernor. In his family and circle of per sonal friends I have no doubt that Dr. Smith is a most estimable gentleman aim i. nave saia nothing and do not in tend to say anything that reflects on him personally. I oppose and shall con tinue to oppose to the last his nomina tion. First, because he is a political medical doctor, and as such is not fit ted to be governor of the whole peo ple. Medical "ethics" and his inclina tion to favor his favorite school of medicine would never allow him to on- pose or turn down illegal or class med- rebelled and these men are now pay ing the penalty of the latest craze of the medical profession: "Preventive Medicine" or the rotting of the hu man and animal filth under the pre tense of protecting them against disease, and I herein prophecy that the time is not far distant when the worst epidemics of disease the world has ever seen will sweep this and every other civilized country as the result of the wholesale vaccinating and serumizing the people. When it does come and the people awaken to the fact that they have been made the goats of medical ignorance and super-1 stinon, me meuicai rraternity had bet ter taKe to tne tan timber, MARY BAKER EDDY AND CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Rev. Milliken Takes up Both in Ans wer to Paul Seeley of Portland Editor Courier: I have a sincere regard for many members of the Christian Science Faith whom I know. I do not doubt mat Mr. seeley is a kindly, cultured, conscientious gentleman. I am also pecked Eddy Mary Baker Glover Patterson kddy a much married woman. Is it not truth then, rather than "truthless inuendo" that she was a "Much married divorcee? Christian Science claims tn h' u religion of revelation with Mrs. Eddy bh us propnetess. As such her life is open to investigation. Out of an impure fountain can flow no nnanl. lied stream. Facsimiles can be brot to prove that from 1868 to 1870 she his methods, havino. tekn f, K B?"B,""?' in 11 governor, a newspaper 'in Illinois "during of ZLV? ena 10 u: .:..i t r : . ,7 . . . 6"'' 'a mure uniair ana dratic ma levivaia. incidentally also his v two k; u.ui. : ".rivl sug- hiatorv ,n.i,- .,- ": ,01 "e"'K P P. L. Snyder, of Paxton, 111., a rep. u beco,n,dIy: I "PPOse him because he utable citizen, informed the write fas publicly announced and is writing that Sunday was a large shareholde otters to ladies registered as Demo- in the Saratoga Hotel at the stock "ats, that he intends to continue the yard, Chicago, which hotel keeps an absurd, grand-stand, fool policies of open bar day and night. His immense our Canadian governor. If you people collections, now known to be close Sould ee ome of the papers I get to $400,000 in the last six years, are f ro'" the Jast, and read thfs comments the result of a cunningly devised made 0 West s actions, you would not nchomo nC fir.t ii.fin w .4.v, only feel ashamed of vour state, hut. dox ministers in a town or city, who wouw recall West in short order to hold get-together meetings for six Prvent him giving Oregon worse weeks prior to his arrival, and then rePutation than she now has. Eastern build an immense tabernacle to hold People read the papers and now think from 5 to 10,000 people. tnat tnls 8tate is the headquarters of One of his stipulations is that. h a lawless gang of outlaws that must shall have a trained choir of 300 Pe ruled v soldiers and that civil law voices nnH nn crr.hoti- an i.f. I is dead here. These two facta alnnn foi. should relegate Dr. Smith to nrivata to draw a crowd, and then the rapid- lif? nd keep him there, as it is quite lire talk of slang, abuse and ridicule ,cvluel" ?rlat "e is not or proper gu- wmt ne neaps upon everybody indis-l u uiaviu o. am, crimately and his antics and coarse 1 am a Democrat, but not enough of jokes as well as the frightful suffer- one 10 vole Ior any men who follows ,ings of the lost in the inferal regions 'n Wests footsteps, and dozens and soon have the yaps "bughouse." hundreds have told me the same thing. When the physiological moment . West na offended the best elements arrives and the crowd is reduced to ln "? Democratic party and he per- a slate of frenzy bordering on lun- onaily couio not oe elected dog catch- acy Billy takes up his personal col- e and no man wno follows his me- lection, which never fails to be an tnods can e- immense one. His laest "killing" at We need a big man to pull Oregon Pi lnkiiHnU T3 -. J.J nr ,...4- C .L. L1 . .1 a & . n-iffluui8u, i u., umuuiiieu vo poo,- uui, u tne noie ano one oi the ways to 000, less than two months' work, get him is to keep Dr. Smith in med Even the rotten millionaires gave ical practice. Ladies, don't be soft- imnusomeiy, some as nign as $z,uuu soapea vote against Dr. Smith. As a each. This was in gratitude for doctor he is probably all right as a Billy's sermon on the text "Let governor he would not be. Medical everyone be content with that condi- doctors have no place in politics and nun in mo wiiitii uou nas seen in muKe it your Dusiness to see that all to cau mem. medical politicians are kept in pri Pittsburgh is tho center of the vate life. iron and steel business, which em- Something About Flv SwathW HL T, 8my i me"' .r6" , The companion craze to eugenics is hours a day, seven days m the week fv swattinir Now I nm JEj J at very humble wages. This talk of f fes fw thev arl Xlw I 'irihey contnbuto free'y te The political doctors tell you that Tthe anlZZ Lhue aTah u' v stable f'y ca"ies the germ of spinal One of the, secrets of the religious meningitis and other flies carrv cerms mountebank is hip. well known rn. ,c i L..- 7 , ,1' '""J' es mark that you can't do anything w th U1 Xvom foolish ITtZ av I people by telling them tf t 6od Is k ' Lov!" lhev ,won.i llst?n t.yu- You theory mkht bo friXen i V must iret ncnt alter tnom tinm hb mi . . . , . i. to breakfast;, and, tell them hell Z-LtLT A dispatch from Lintonville. Cali fornia states that the whole town is down with smallpox. No doubt filth and vaccination are the causes. Whole sale vaccination is frequently followed by wholesale smallpox and some of these Oregon towns like Monmouth, Dalles, Arlington will no doubt come in tor their share for they have re cently been thoroughly vaccinated and "protected" Dy Dr. Calvin B. White our $5,000 a year "specialist" or smallpox. This in a "Free" Country The Oregonian of the 15th states that Dr. M. ti. Marcellus, health offic er of Portland, descended on 1200 un employed men at the Gypsy Smith Tabernacle, backed by a squad of po lice who guarded the frant doors, and vaccinated 450 men. The News states that 800 men escaped by side doors that police failed to guard. This is as sault and battery according to decis ions of various supreme courts, but then it must be, remembered that these political doctors are above the law and putting diseased filth into the arms of a few hundred poor, unem ployed working men doesn't count. I wonder if he would take police and surround the homes of some of our leading bankers and business men and do the same thing? We pause for a re-' willing to admit that there are man v ascribed her "Science" to Dr. QnmW excellent things about Christian -immediately after his death she ocience. Moreover thm nnntrnvurnr , Claims that, tho snma tannh n nn.-. did not originate with me, but wjth I through revelation of God. Not sat- mr. oeeiey, who leaped into the lime-1 'sued with her own matrimonial light to combat my statement that Christian Science Metaphysic was unscientific. Now he is hurt because I replied to his challenge, and prov ed my point. Our only discussion here tofore was Christian Science Meta physic. Now note that Mr. Seeley makes absolutely no attempt to ans wer my argument in my last letter. His silence is an admission that the argument is unanswerable and nriBiian science Metaphysic is a farce. He sidesteps from the point at issue, to Mrs. Eddy's personal char acter, anu tne rapid growth of this creed and the good it does, things entirely foreign to the point we had under consideration before. Hence I might leave the field aat.isfiVrl that t had proyen my point. But as I en joy little friendlv discussion T shall allow myself to be drawn into consid eration of Mr. Seeley's new argu ments for Christian Science. First, is Christian Science grow ing rapidly? Is ramrl Growth a Hl'o-n of infallability? Mormonism has grown more rapidly than Christian Science, and Mohammedan! either, but that does not make anv one of them true. And is it really growing so rapidly? Two years ago I visited many places in the East where it had run its course and is now dead. It is significant that the ventures she tried to come between several nusbands s and their wives. When the Wentworths, with whom she lodged, asked her to leave their home because she had endeavored to alienate them she scarred the fur niture, slashed the matting and bed ding, and placed live coals upon some newspapers in the room. Mr. Peabody, who has been attorney in some cases involving Mrs. Eddy's career, and into whose hands a mass of evidence has fallen, affirms: "Deliberately and solemnly, with a full understanding of the meaning of my language,I affirm and charge that Mary Baker G. Eddy, the foun der of Christian Science and the pre tended successor to Jesus, has again, and again, and again sought to ex ec.se malicious animal magnetism, u.ut sue, nerseii, nas repeatedly thus sought to cause sickness, sought to cause aeaxn, sought to cause disas ter, and this, as everything else I have said, I will Drove bv lep-al ev idence whenever Mrs. Eddy may be yicaaeu uu require it. mree per sons whom she sought to kill by mental treatment . were Daniel H. Spofford, Richard Kennedy, and Liara Choate. Mrs. Eddy was willing to invoke the courts to make the aforementioned Spofford pay her some money she thought he owed her STAND BY JUDGE ANDERSON IT IS ONLY FAIRNESS 1 BEATER LCVEB f TifriSr INOtPCNOINT TILTING Or APRON CONTBOl I SEAT V ' I f APRON LEVER lndpwintif B4ttr Conrrgl Fdinqfrom4to20k . L p.r jcr. - J LOWEST-DOWN MACHINE . ' BwauMpnjn Pauts Under RWAk le WEBAOC HEI6HT 3 FEET 8 INCHES. INDEPENDENT RAKE TeethMadfotOil-TOTperwi Spring Swl Hiqh Carbon Bdter Teeth set staqqered. formlnq spirdl.glv Inq wide delivery. Simple Apron Tightener Both Sides ' 1 V- W J DOUBLE ANGLE STEEL REACH 1 fc7 I W I CAST-STEEL SIDE BRACKET 1 JL I Jr G'Vinq LTtrectDrdft anH HrrMr.(-.-.- I I Sr I Formina ahanment Cae I I undor all conditiona j DOUBLE ANGLE STEEL REACH Oivmq rj.rect Draft and ellminatmq all strain from Spreader Box A Reach is as indispensable on a Manure Spreader as It is on aWaqon. luva ieeu ana Dreea on only .three jumps behind them. In u tarn i3 rh- 7'i,Bn' other' words the averae-e nerson i .f.?. ?ur "ae and keep other' words the average person ifZ, ynrSuP van iiiKiimu uiem or worn on meir flB - alum ,i,;n j C Z feelings. Some say that professional Swato A-f " h"i?t men and men of parts go in with ""J AfI d,': Sunday and help fn the meetings. Z fnto vr fth,S! ftf yU ?-d Professional men and men in hua. ??' i???" through the agency of f Il lness are ant to en in wirh nnv ' Yla ? X0" n0 narm tor disease movement Zt hafa boomehln l"0!,1" a, hey body, and na- it, thinking it will help them get on Zf "" awoa "" Vlsltln8: in life. b 0t'u 4. i. --.a .. j Judge Barnes, of Chicaeo was an J- v" ' WW10" ana neany an f ?lr.nf nS LWis ?" oth" diseases are the result of exter- had a lot of yaps bunched up that iroids aZht X th. T- Me a" he was robbinir. and Barnes .rot tt L i dlf c?.uht ln'the Jlmn8 rn rake-off. ooweis. Uisease mak T.i it i l. , . . ... I Kciuia uuu u lllHMHHPn nrnpna nny everyone mat snases nanas witn ji". ...m .r. Sunday is converted, even children r",,!8 Illrle,ss lf "ot five or s x vears o d. A M.h.m nf in," mo mus aim leave me Kankakee, 111., told the writer that 3 months after Sunday left only about 50 of his 2,700 converts were in line. Keduced to its last analysis Sunday's scheme is a game to skin 'the yaps and ministers fall for it be cause it brings accessions to their cnurches ior a time at least, and on the strength of this boom they get promot,ea to larger churches at larg er salaries. One of the most extravagant and absurd of Sunday's wild talks is his denouncement of Unitarians. Here is a choice extruct from his ravings: "I'll tell you who is in hull I Old Em erson is m hell!" Ralph Waldo, mark you, whom the whole educated world delights to honor. "Old Holmes is in hell!" Oliver Wendell, the genial autocrat of the Breakfast Table, and the most lovable of ull the American poets, except Lonirfellow. who was also an Unitariun. as was Whittier, and Lowell, Franklin, the best all around American this country ever produced, was also sent to hell and Joiterson and Dr. Charles Elliott, filth only increases t.hn rlnnno owui, me mm ana mere will be no flies to swat. Still, this is the way of medical doctors who treat symtons only, and never remove the cause oi disease. Truth and Ricrht will A lady asked me recently if I wasn't anuiu to say sucn awful things about some of these medical doctors that seem almost lnerarli n. T on ,l w Decause 1 always tell the truth." When Mr. Brown kindlv nnpnprl the tuiumiis or tne "Courier" to me as a personal representative nf nil Orllnn1a oi arugiess healing I told him I would always confine my remarks to facts and truth only and I have kept my word and I wish to snv Mint T l,Q,ro found that the Courier has the right ninu oi Blina. ine aai V Cltv nrnaa ia . j i . v ----. - uwiiuu uuuy ana soul Dy the medical trust and many country editors are afraid they will offend some .doctor who spends $1.00 a month fur n nar-A should they publish anything exposing lueuiim malpractice. i nave received ca s and mnnv Inf. and everyone who is not strictly or- , n'om PeoP!e in Clackamas county iL. J .... ,f J 1 Whnofl toc Vini.A K,w... ...... 1 A- j thodox." By the same reasoning Bloody Mary is in Heaven and old John Cal- vm, who burnt his friend Serbetus over a slow fire, and old Jeff Davis and Dowie and all the bloody-minded bigots of the past. One instance will show the greediness of this revival ist, and this came under the writer's own knowledge. A poor fireman was lying helpless in bed in the cold winter time of the Middle West and a big family were dependent on him. When Sunday was approached to help this poor, unfor tunate family he contemptuously peeled off a single: dollar bill from a roll big enough to choke 'a cow. This will be about all for Billy ounuay, uut wnat s tne usei This fall an excitement will be waked up in Portland and Billy will walk out of that city with $15,000 or $20,000 to the good nnd another winter will come on with the same hard conditions existing for the poor ana tne unemployed. Parnell Averill Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOR I A Special "Health Warning" for March March is a trying month for the very young and for elderly people, Croup, bronchial cold3, lagrippe, and pneumonia are to be feared and avoided. Foley's Honey and Tar Compound it a great family medicine that will quickly stop a cough, check the progress of a cold, and relieve in flamed and congested air passages. It is safe, pure and always reliable. Sold by all druggists. whose eves have been nnpnnrl morl ical oppression, congratulating me and the Courier on my articles, and telling me to keep up the good work. The man who tells the truth has noth ing to fear. I come from a family of doctors, medical doctors, nnd I am the first one to renounce medicine for some thing better. If I did not knnw flmt natural methods of assisting Nature to heal disease was belter than pills and serums I would still be handing out pills and serums. My fight is not against any doctor individually, but against the system, for I number many medical doctors anion? mv clnsn friends men who send their wives ana daughters to me for treatment, rather than poison them with serums ana cripple them with operations, unu woo ueneve me ana in me and fol low my methods as nearly as they know how and dare. There is many a good, conscientious medical doctor who does not believe in medical tyran ny and who is doing good as he sees the light. Some day perhaps they will be Naturopaths, for it will soon er or later be the one big universal school to which all doctors will flock. You can't beat it or get away from it. It has nothing but merit to recom mend it and all thinking people musti ui-vcpi. it. in me meantime 1 shall con tinue to educate the people to tho best of my ability and when I am gone others will tnke my place. Now Paying the Penalty Press dispatches today announce that out of the standi France, numbering 717,000 men, 250, 000 were down sick with sr-nH.it fa vor, measles, spinal meningities and other diseases. As these soldi vaccinated and squirted full of all kinds of serums, nature has finally I ARE YOU LOOKING For a Low Down Easy Loading Light , Pulling Manure Spreader One that will Last a long time and please you better every time you use it? Look no further. WE HAVE IT AND YOtj NEED IT THE BLOOM MANURE SPREADER GETS THE MOST OUT OF THE MANURE By breaking it up fine and spreading it evenly Easy, sure control and jiu nurse Kiuer ine oniy spreader with a reach Farmers who have bought them say they are the best farm machine investment a farmer can make. See the BLOOM at the nearest Mitchell Agency or write us for Illustrated Catalog Northwest's Greatest Impement and Vehicle House PORTLAND, ORE. SPOKANE, WN. BOISE, IDAHO Mr. Hicinbotham Thinks he Should be Given Same Chance as Others Editor Courier: In justice to Judge Anderson, I want to say a few words to the many patrons of tho Courier, in regard to the . nomination of Judge Anderson for one more full term, at least, in his present office. It is customary to give all county officers that have served one. trm, sati&fadtorilyj la second term. . Judge Anderson left a more renu merative position than the one he now holds, iust heranso hio nor,,r friends insisted on his taking hold of the county affairs and helping to run it in a straie-htforwarH nnH hi, iness-like way, as he had been doing with the business he left. nH tho success he has had, and the satisfac tion he has given, since he took hold of the county affairs, you are all fa miliar with. I do not want to say one word against either Mr. Cross or Mr. Mulvey. I think thev are hnth Mn. able and worthy of the office, but I dont think we have anv hist 'nnci to turn Judge Anderson down, on a piece of a term, for any other man, iiu luanci iiuw gooa ne may De. We certainly can't exnect to vet ..jr laii m ais piace tnat will bo more faithful and true than he has been. I helped to keen- Mr Mnl in the Clerk's office for two terms and he gave satisfaction. Now let us do as well by Judge Anderson There is no justice in turning him down with a piece of one term. George Hicinbotham. ENTERPRISE ROAD FIGURES I UNFAIR TO DIST. 20 LABOR WON'T STAND THIS GAFF FOR LONG Writer Explains the Road Situation 1 and Expenditures In the weekly Enterprise, of Feb. 27, appeared the expenditure of road district No. 20 since the year 1907, stating that "District 20 spent $17,792.66 since 1907, on its high ways, there being 20 miles of road in District 20." But the writer does not state tho, that .from 1907 till 1911 there were not only twenty miles of road, but forty miles in district 20. Up until that time (1911) districts 56 and 20 were, both under Number 20. And I wish to state that the mon ey was spent eauallv in district 56 as well as 20 up till the time when the district was divided. The party states that "In 1913 district 20 built one mile of plank .roads spend ing over $2,300 during that period on all its road work." There was one and one-half mile of plank road built in 1913, and one and one-half mile of new road was opened through timber, most of which was heavy grading and two new bridges were put in and one re paired beside other expenses. The writer also seems to favor district 18, but he does not know that people from districts 19, 20, 21, 45 and 56 donated work and helped do the grading, and that is why the ex penditure figures of district 18 show up so well. John Putz. Employment Matter Must Be Faced or History will Repeat Mnrph 1K 1Q1I Editor Courier: ' I . suppose the 0. W. R. . N C.n expect a birthdav in the and they want 150 men to make them a nice fat present. The ojther day they sent their man to the Gipsy Smith Tabernacle to hire 150 men at $1.50 per day1, charee them SH.i?R per week for board. anH si.nn no month hospital dues. They did offer the men a free place to sleep. Looks nice doesn't it? To men that, nniv just a few months ago were paid from $2.25 to $3.00 per day by the oaine tumuanv ior aoine- t.hA onmo work. But here is the criminal part Ui 1 V. The men refused to rnnsiHpr tho offer. Labor balked and Capitalism tan t unaerstano it. They have been so used to havinc Lahnr rfn not ti their music, and the only thine: thev ,, wine uautt, wiui is me cut in wages. They sav thev doh't. work I say they. do. but at a livino- wage, dui let me asK wny is tne cu m wages .' nave the Railroads cut tne ireisnt rates so as tn let farmers make a little larger com mission on your produce, or have tney cut the passenger milairA i you might take a trip to the Panama canai or some other place? No in- steao tney are raising their rates. Now if that fat-salaried not , the O. W. R. & N. had offered these men from $2.00 to $3.00 per day mesa men would nave tumbled a over themselves to get to the works, un tne other hand I have read number of letters in the Courier stating that if a man couldn't even earn enough in seven months to sun. port himself five months he ought io starve or sometning to that ef fect. Now I want to tell those writ. ers to take a trip around and visit some oi the construction camps, have been in a few mvself . and win say mat nine out ot ten are working on commission with the em ployment agencies. As a rule they work three shifts, one coming, one wuriung, anu one going. They give a man work enouo-h to scarcely make expenses and then turn him off and by the time he finds another job he is broke, and not onlv tnat, dui ne is Doosted about so much that he is disfranchised and loses his right to vote. Qh! It is a great sys tern. It is a serious situation and will have to be looked squarely in the face and not alone by one city or state, but by the nation, as it is a national affair. If not attended to it is my prediction that Labor will do as it did in Sweden and England some few years ago. There are chanc es of having a Mexican situation to settle right here at home. C. A. F. ply. (Questions relating--to health mat.. ters will be answered if sent to mo care Hotel Edwards, Portland, Ore.) i & ,H St ,1 . ,t St St St St St st TRADE for St New Mexico nrnnnvtv ------ x I Clackamas County land. 160 S acres in New Mexico, 65 acres under plow; 100 acres level, and can be put under plow. balance 60 nrrps ia houvilv . timbered with cedur and Pin- . on. bmall house and stock ! barn. This place adjoins for- J est reserve and is an ideal stock farm. Two miles from Barton, 21 miles from Albur- ! querque, a town of 25,000 S population; 15 miles from R. S It. station, 75000 elevation, and one of the healthiest countries m the world. R. H. . survey is near place and pros- pects are that a road will soon be built. Price $5,000. Dillman & Rowland, 8th & S Main St. ,4 s st st st st St St St St y st st st st st S Notice of Stockholders' Meeting Notice is hereby given that the an nual meeting of the stockholders of the bandy Land C o. will meet at on o'clock P. M., Monday, April 6th, 1914, at the office of said company at Sandy Oregon, to elect its officers and trans act such other business as may come before it. Ed F. Bruns, Sec. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTO R I A cult has refused to report the mem- or to punish her enemies, and she brshin statistics to U. S. Commis- had a first class case for criminal li stener Carroll for ' several years in bel against Peabody, who again and fact ever since it passed its merid- again challenged her to take the mat- mn. More men are helped bv. and l,er "H- DUC nls statements were nev- umte with, Methodist. Presbvterian er. called. In 1881 she started a Baptist or Lutheran churches prac- Metaphysical College" which guar- tically every year than Christian anee?, to make a ful1 fledged "sci- Science has reached in all its history ent,st out of a numbskull in three I called Mrs. EMv . Mnh mr. weeks for thr?e hundred plunks. In i j- .- seven vearo shn aclmittort that hor school sent out 4,000 full fledged "Scientists" ($1,200,000 worth) Could a divine stream flow from such polluted source? Probably a car load of crreat toe nails of the apostle Peter were in rmiatK ried divori-oo " w. nt . t..,Tu sevm years sne admitted tnat her 1p in,o,HTV t" ""IE." ,:-ru": school sent out 4,000 full Baker married a man namfiH Oln. ver. He soon died, and his dust lay Polluted for over fifty vears in the Pnt.tor's a &01 T?? field at Wilmington, N. C. unmarked luiEuticiu win n sn wnn nan n i , . . .. . . been his wife as amassing a nrW cuTlimuon a.ur.wS ,t.ne .UarS Aes i.. t t tt! ; " .--- anu manv oi tne D essert re ira nor, luiiune. r .s only son, and hers, formpH - wnnH.rfn mTni V produced by Mrs. Eddy. The hvnno tists of Nancy and "Paris have her beaten to a frazzle. The late lament was crnelly deserted hv the unntr iormea as, wonaenu. mirac es as any al mother to the cheerless mercy of strangers. She tries to excuse this conduct in later life, but her plea is Where Thomas and Wilson Differ Bullrun, March 13, 1914. The problem of the unemployed is an issue that must be met, and the sooner the better. Now Woodrow Wilson has hit on the right scheme. ne ays tnat as soon as warm weather arrives there will be plenty oi worK ior everybody. Under his scheme all that .the working people will have to do is to hibernate and hole up through the winter line a near; come out in the spring and feed on skunk cabbage tin grass gets good; then go to work to producing profit for the plutes. I don't think his scheme will work. I beliieve that the whole people must collectively own the means of production and distribution, reduce the hours of labor to conform to the production of the machine: give ev eryone an opportunity to work, and if they will not work, don't feed them. ' M. V. Thomas. OGLESBY'S PLATFORM ' FOR COMMISSIONER To the Taxpayers of Clackamas County, Oregon: In presenting my name for the of fice of County Commissioner, on the Republican ticket for the Primary Election, I submit for your consid eration my pianorm; Am -opposed to issuing bonds for the Pacific Highway or any other highway; Every road district should get 78 per cent of all taxes levied on the property of each road district for road purposes; 25 per cent for brid ges and repairs for bridges; Am opposed to the present system of taking half the road fund and creating a fund to be used by the Court. as a general fund, thus rob bing many districts of their share of road funds to give to others where the big man with a strong pull can get in his work. Am in favor of eood roads to the market places, so the farmers can get their produce to market; I shall oppose over a 16 mill levy for all general purposes. The pres ent taxation is little better than con fiscation. We must call a halt or we will all be out of homes in the near future; Strict economy in all county ex penditures; Will not be the tool of any clique or ring and will not lay down to any influences brought by anyone. A commissioner for all. If you think I can make good give me your support., If not vote for the other man. Geo. E. Oglesby. WE CAN NOW SUPPLY THIS HAIR PREPARATION Our biff Harmonv Lahnratorioo in Boston have caueht up with t.hoir orders now and so we won't have to disappoint any who are using Har mony Hair Beautifier and want, mnra of it, or any who have been advised by your friends to use it. We can now fill all demands, even if it be comes even more of a rage than it is now. Harmonv Hair Beantifior is in at what it is named a hair beautifier. It is not a hair dve or hair nil hut u dainty, rose-perfumed liquidd ress mg to give the hair its natural gloss and brightness, wavy softness, rich beauty. Easv to annlv simnlv sprinkle a little on your hair each time before brushing it. Contains no oil, and will not change color of hair, nor darken gray hair. To keep vour hair and sealn Hnn druff-free and clean, use Harmony Hair Shampoo. This nure limiirl shampoo gives an instantaneous rich lather that easily pentrates to every part of hair and scaln. insuring a quick and thorough cleansing. Wash ed off just as quickly, the entire op eration takes only a few moments. Contains nothing that can harm the hair; leaves no harshness or sticki ness just a sweet-smelling cleanli ness. ' Both preparations come in odd- shaped, very ornamental bottles, wit,h sprinkler tops. Harmony Hair Beautifier, $1.00. Harmonv Shamnoo 50c. Both guaranteed to satisfy you Sold only at the moor than 7.000 Rev- all Stores, and in this town only by us nunuey tiros, uo. MOUNTAIN VIEW as pointless as Mr.'s,lv' Af eu "jan uowie overshadowed ner r ... . " ' nc Pfin n pro v no tho fn 11 wtsvwt oi ner Metanhva c MfV RaW . . o uu.- brother says that he enlisted at ?, k1 noihe "nation, thfl war. anH n t . accompanies i t. . ,' j xiZl 11 13 wnat does tne business. The re the outbreak of captured at Bull Run,' and that wnue ne was in. a Confederate pris- sults prove the force of suggestion and could not hZ TTM but not the accompanying plana .oU,;."eLhl'P.h,.mselfn,?h? tion, else there would be a score of u vuive irom mm. mat n,PO . ioco fMj;f 4U maqe Mary baker Glover Patterson healinrWch nrovlne i a divorcee. Her th rdlv was Asa fi. r'.i."?8""?' e.. ProvlnK 1 on pro theories itself cor va.u, p wu- iV "7r V. rect oy us results. resident of Lynn and vicinity and u u uY l 8 ys W well known as an 1.7 . mh?K who made a fortune out of gational evangelist, told the writer ncr .pets; as her successors that Mrs. Eddy's Vrannical ta PerPetua.tev th.f business. Her philo. mcntof her husband led la . hr hSn- Phy stlcks lts head lnto the sand dubbed by her acouaintances th. and says because it does not see the She devil." Mr. Peabodv. a Rnstnn destrover he is onlv a fnntasir n-t attorney who had occasion to inves- mortal mind. Her religion is based salLTuctllo'srofTra h" t is an- happy in one matrimonial other story to which I shall be Dleas- hence we are surely justified in call- ed to discuss with Mr. Seeley later ing the relict of the deceased Glover, on I the divorced Patterson, and the hen- w. T. "Milliken. Foley Cathartic Tablets are entire- lyeffective, thoroughly cleansing and always pleasant in action. Thev con tain blue flag, are a remedy for con stipation and sluggish liver, and a tonic for the bowels, which are im proved by their use. Try them. They do not fail to give relief and satis faction. Sold by all druggists. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Welch are grand parents to a fine daughter born last Monday to Mr. and Mrs. Ray Welch, Dr. Hugh Mount being the attending physician. Mrs. Welsh thinks it a fine piesent on her birth day, as well as to be a grandmother. Mrs. Maggie Harrington is quite ill with an attack of lagrippe. Mrs. Dr. Hickman and Miss Lacy of Gervaise spent several days with Mrs. C. A. Hickman. Wiley Mav will move this week into his former home on Duane St. and Mr. and Mrs. James Andrews will move into the house he vacates. Mr. Chanler was calffed tki hia farm in Washington last Friday on important business. George Offield visited his father-in-law, R. M. C. Brown on Molalla Ave. Mr. Offield is a cattle dealer of Merrill. Ore. and had inst heon tr, n-j.i-.-j -,. - jroruana witn cattle. Quite a number of people are mak ing garden and planting potatoes. The Ladies Aid will meet at the church next Tuesday for all day work arid will serve dinner, to, which the husbands are ivnited. 1' Hep fThe High Calling of Motherhood demands the utmost precaution in maintain' ing health at high efficiency. It is doubly important and nothing in the world is so needful as Scott's Emulsion, good cheer and sunshine. Scott's Emulsion makes the blood rich and pure. It contains the vital flesh building and bone-building properties and insures abundant nourish ment. It strengthens the nerves and creates energy and vitality during this period. Expectant and nursing mother always need Scott's Emulsion. YOUR DRUGGIST HAS IT 1S-S1