r Oregon crry courier, Oregon city, Oregon Thursday, may 4, 1916. Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure catar rhal deafness, and that is by a con stitutional remedy. Catarrhal Deaf ness by an inflamed condition of the mucuous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely clos ed deafness is the result. Unless the inflammation can be reduced and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Many cases of deafness are caused by catarrh, which is an inflamed con dition of the mucuous surfaces. ' Hall's Catarrh Cure acts thru the blood on the mucuous surfaces of the system. . We will give One Hundred Dol lars for any case of Catarrhal Deaf ness that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Circulars free. All druggist, 75c. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. -r 3? fsfyif jr fil Mb by 'I he PjturoA3 OREGON CITY 1 GARAGE 1 Agency for m Reo and Dodge B Bros. Car jj Main and 4th Sts. H Sewing Machines j and Supplies g Motors for running 1 Machines g HOGG BROS. 1 Quality Work at OREGoTciTY g n DBYDO,l WSs'andi Delivers 1 Type Z Farm En-aw , f nn gine-lla H.P. $35HWE SELL F0K 3 H.P. $60; 6 H.P.I LESS $110: F.O.B. Fac-I ' tory MORGAN'S GADKE PLUMB-1 CUT "ATE GRO- ING SHOP I CERY The Modern Drug Store JONES DRUG CO. Tflilnrinir. Clennintr and Pressing 1 REPAIRING 502 Main Street g 1 H SMITH & TELFORD Artistic Work g ROCK BOTTOM I PRICES HOME TRADE I SHOE SHOP Gladstone, Oregon p A. Lindgren, Prop, p QUALITY MERCHANDISE!! 8 En Men, Women and Children I fj W. B. EDDY m m By properly ad justing your back hone the chiroprac tor corrects cause of sickness then se cretions will flow; health is restored. Dr. G. F. Anderson gf N I 1 1 8 HtAlTH'S KEYOOARO OTTO SCHUMANN Granite and Mar ble Works Portland, Oregon Phone E-743 39 East Third at Pine St. m f I H g 1 I Si MILLER-PARKER CO. Gmw lUmhrellas and Locks Electric Utensils Repaired PAINLESS Special for 30 days Regular $20 Ahimiu'in Plate $10 Modern Painless Dentist 253 j Washington Portland, Ore. Oxy-Acetyhme Welding New, tough, live Metal replaces de fective parts Oregon City Foundry 4th and Water Sts. 3 Si Will You Eat Here We pledge you the UTMOST In service quality Falls City Restaur ant, Bakery and Confectionery Lenses alone $1; in Frame $1 to $5 Sphero (curved) G. E. Glass Mtg. $5 Kryptok $8 to $15 Wm. GARDNER Jeweler Vulcanizing and Repairing Smith & Porter Oakland, Hudson and Maxwell Cars HI k-0 ill 1 it Bf ST IN jj 'i PEACE Jii plk.J Mm 7th & John Adams g Phona 392 g On mo3t any afternoon you will see a long row of farmer's wagons and teams, and perhaps a few rural-owned automobiles, at the hitching rack beside the court house. Merely one of the many practical signs of the prosperity that Oregon City enjoys. $50 Reward This association offers a reward of fifty dollars for the cap ture and conviction of any one person stealing poultry from a member of this Associa tion. If more than one person is concerned in the stealing, an additional reward of ten dollars shall be paid for each conviction after the first. Anti-POULTRY THIEF Assn. of Clackamas County The Picture Tells The Story vertincra, Box 17, Oregon City, Ore.. SUNDRIES and SUPPLIES Repairing & Over hauling OREGON CITY GARAGE Drain Tile, Plaster I'ime and Cement LARSEN & CO. 10th & Main St Phone 70 H. W. STREIBIG'S gg 528 Main Street MEATS Phone 131 Your Health Needs HAZELWOOD DAIRY Milk & Cream Because They are Pure. Phone 145 HABERDASHERS IIead Foot Outfiitters to Men MILLER & OBST Main and 7th POOL AND BILLIARDS Everything for Smokers . AcrT , AMn RAASCH & LAMB WOOD SOLD AND SAWED Phone Main 231-R GRANT-NASH 7th & J. Q. Adams Sanitary Service SKILLED BARBERS Clean Baths ED. JOHNSON Prop. Phones Main 1101 M-172 Dr. a. Mcdonald Veterinary Surg'on Oflice Red Front Barn Phones Main 116 Oregon City till 1 DILLMAN & HOW LAND p Fire and Life In If siirance y Real Kstiite Agts. B Money to Loan j on City and Fnrm H Properties mm H Accordion, Hem fj stitching, side and y sunburst pleating, p scalloping buttons pf covered m 209 Pittock Blk. ft COileN 1 a K. Slcnhan, l'ort i land. Bwdy. 1099 f New location sea- Psonable Flowers for all occasions Shop 612 Main St. Phone 211 James Wilkinson Florist Gladstone, Ore. Complete line of Salmon, Trout and Bass Tackle the kind that "gets em" C. W. Friedrich Hardware Oregon City Multnomah Furni ture Hospital 351 Third, Portland Phone 4551 Upholstering, Re pairing, Polishing Mattresses made over & to order UPHOLSTERING Babler & Gerber Truck Co. Auto Service Be tween Oregon City and Portland In Oregon City Phone 365-J; In Portland Phone Bwdy. 512 ESTACADA PEOPLE MEET Addresses by O. W. Eastham and J. D. Butler are Interesting Abo.ut three hundred persons at the Estacada meeting last Monday even ing listened to addresses by J. Dean Butler and O. W. Eastham. Many of those present were little folks attract ed by the musical program furnished by the Johnson brothers orchestra. Mr. Eastham, in the principal ad dress of the evening, devoted much of his time to political topics and in part said: "Our governor has given out the statement that the Oregon peniten tiary is overflowing. We send back word to build additions and make more room while we keep at the busi ness of making more criminals. We encumber our statue-books with a multitude of laws so complex and numerous that even a lawyer cannot avoid breaking them, and for some slight offense we brand and blight the life and hope of the flower of our young manhood. Our penitentiary is filled with men who are, for the most part, very much the same as the pop ulation outside of it. Only a small portion of the inmates were criminals at heart or enemies of society when they made their first trip there. Most of these men, when they looked from behind their prison bars for the first time, were little more than boys. In time our courts and prosecutors will come to understand that the sen tence of a year in the penitentiary is in reality a sentence for life, and if we are going to stop the penitentiary overflow we must do it when our lit tle folks stand at life's morning and falter between the byways that lead to a criminal career and the high ways that lead to success and useful citizenship. "The immortal Dante, in his vivid imagination, wrote over the portals of the inferno the words of doom, 'Abandon hope, ye who enter here.' This sentence of terrible despair has been written in fact .over the gates of Sing Sing, the state penitentiary of New York; and it may as well be written over the entrance to every penitentiary of the land, for practical ly all that pass within are the human forms of lost souls they return no more to useful walks of life. "When we go forth to labor in the vineyard of life we must grasp its great problems and make our labor count; we must cultivate the pliant minds of our boys and train them into channels of usefulness. Reformation is a word of little practical meaning in this field. It is early attention to the weeds as they first appear in the garden that gets the great result." CANDIDATE HEADS LIST Miss Rose Uptegrove Leads Near Rival by Six Thousand Votes The results of the button sale to swell the fund with which the Live Wire committee is buying votes for Miss Rose Uptegrove, Clackamas county candidate for queen of the Rose Festival, were apparent yester day after the count of votes had been made, and Miss Uptegrove stood at the head of the column of candidates, with a good 6,000 votes over the next highest. j Manager Kelly sent the votes that resulted from the button sale last Saturday in to Rose . Festival head quarters early in the week, but in the first count they were omitted by mis take and the local candidate's stand ing was not recorded as it should have been. The committee in charge of the campaign is greatly pleased with its progress and is extending every effort to keep Miss Uptegrove's name as near the top of the list as possible. Yesterday the count gave her 125,420 votes, whereas the next highest can didate had only 119,410. The votes that were purchased wth the proceeds of the button sale carried Miss Upte grove's name from seventh place on the list to the first place. A special concession that the com mittee here will probably take advan tage of was granted by the Rose Fes tival managsment this week. This concession makes it possible to give 5,000 extra votes for every dollar spent for votes. The dollar itself will buy one thousand votes, and with the five thousand given free the induce mont to purchase votes should be great on the part of those who are interested in seeing the Clackamas county candidate elected. This con cession is the last, according to the statement of the Festival manage ment, and will hold good only until May 13. Miss Uptegrove now has the honor of heading tho list of candidates for the second time, and with the display of tho proper spirit by those who would lend tho managing committee the support that is due it, her name should remain among tho first few. WOODWARD FOR ASSESSOR Expert on Values Seeks Republican Nomination His thorough familiarity with land and property values is given as one of the qualifications for office of R. E. Woodward, who seeks the republican nomination to tho office of County Assessor. Mr. Woodward has spent many years of his life in the real es tate business, and this active connec tion with land and property has given him an experience in judging values which is enjoyed by very few. With this experience as an asset Mr. Woodward pledges himself to serve the voters fairly and impar tially and to render true valuation on all property that he is called upon to assess. He pledges himself to work untiringly in the interest of the pub lic, throwing out favoritism and giv ing fair and impartial treatment to all. Personal profit is not in Mr. Woodward's plan, but to be fair and just and to uphold the reputation he has made during the many years he has lived in this county, without add ing to tho burden of taxation, will be his watchwords if honored with the nomination. (Paid Adv.) Jelly Roll Recipe Only Two EUs Required By Mrs. Janet McKenzie Hill, Editor of the Boston Cooking School Magazine This Jelly Roll Is fast becoming very popular on account of the way it keeps fresh. With proper handling it should keep fresh a whole week, providing it Isn't eaten up in the meantime, for it is every bit as good as it look9. 33 KC Jelly Boll On enf sifted flour f scant half tef Spoonful salt 8 level teaspooitf uls K C Making Powder grated rind of 1 lemon 8 egg beaten light 1 cuf sugar lA cup hot mills glass of jelly pow dered sugar. Beat the sugar into the eggs; add the lemon rind, then the flour, sifted three times with the salt and baking powder; and, lastly, the milk. Bake in a but tered dripping pan; turn out on a damp cloth, trim off the crisp edges; spread with jelly and turn over and over into a roll while still warm. Dredge the top with powdered sugar. Hot millt used in the jelly roll en ables it to be rolled without danger of cracking. Have the milk scalding hot, also be careful to have the eggs and sugar beaten together until very light and creamy. Bake in a moderate oven. ' K C Jelly Roll is illustrated on page thirty-two of the new and handsomely illustrated 64-page K C Cook's Book, which may be secured free by sending the certificate packed in every 25-cent can of K C Baking Powder to the Jaqubs Mfg. Co., Chicago, 111. The Spreading Adder Viil Fool You If You Oon't Know Him. He's a sly creature, his snake. When he's discovered aud trapped he'll make such a hullabaloo about it. with his hissing and coutortious, that If j-ou're uot wise to the fact that he's only bluffing you're sure to be fright ened. If you're acquainted with him, however, aud refuse to ruu, he'll give one final twist and roll over on bis back, just as though he had made up his mind to die and save you the trou ble of killing him. But don't be fool ed. He's only playing possum. He's the spreading adder. His tricks have resulted in all sorts of wild stories about him. Many peo ple believe he's poisonous, because be spreads bis bead out flat and hisses when he's disturbed. As a matter of fact, he couldn't hurt you If you pick ed him up by the bead. He's only bluffing when be hisses. Then there's another story about the spreading adder to the effect that he will bite himself and fall over dead This belief comes from his habit of playing possum when he sees he's cor nered and can't escape. The spreading adder is about thirty inches long, a reddish brown and blotched arid spotted. He lives in dry woods and on sandy hillsides and eats toads and Insects. He's also called the blowing viper or the hognosed ad der. Philadelphia North American. HAS TO SPLIT HIS TIPS. Not All the Money the Waiter Gete Goes Into Hie Pocket. Don't think the waiters are getting rich. They might If they could keep all their tips, but- Comes a waiter of twenty years' service who says the man who does the serving Is lucky If he gets 25 per cent of his tip money. "We wouldn't couiplulu much If we were allowed to keep our tips." be said, "but the waiter Is by necessity the best tlper In the world. He has to split bis tips at least five ways. The liend waiter gets his, the oh pi a in ha.x UIh hand out, and the 'scrub' waiter and cook are next lu Hue. "If the waiter keeps all t lie money the captain will soon get wise to him. and he will get no mine 'live ones' steered up to his table. If the cook Is neglected the waiter might get his or ders cold from the kitchen. If be doesn't cross the pulm of the bead waiter with diver once in uwhlle he will be looking fur another job. "The popular Idea that nil waiters are rich Is 'ull wrong.' The average waiter gets about $( or $8 a week, and some of them get less. The muu that leaves a quurter In the tray la reully giving the waiter ubout 0 cents." Chi cago Tribune. Lettere and Poetage Stampa. "Strange Ideas some people have about postage," said the clerk who oHMis the mall. "Yes. See this letter here with three oue-cent stamps on It and stamped 1 cent due? That's a case lu point. The writer of that letter thought that perhaps It weighed a lit tie over an ounce, u little more than would go for 2 cents, and so lie put on a little more postage 1 cent more which he thought would cover It. when the fact Is that It required an uddi tlonul two cent stamp. Of course yon know that letter postage Is not frac tloiml. but that It goes iu multiples of two. If a letter weighs evor so little over an ounce it requires uu additional two cent stamp. But not everybody seems to know this, and so we some times get letters like this one with a little more postage for a little more weight" New York Sun. Jenkins' Ear. There was a war known us "the war of Jenkins' ear." It came about lu the following way: In the year 1731 an English merchant vessel was hoarded by a Spanish giiardshlp. iind the cap tain, oue liohert Jenkins, wus most cruelly used, oue "f his ears lieing torn off In the scrimmage. Ubtalnlny no re dress by appealing tn h!s guvorunicnt he appeared before parliament In 1?:!S when the convention of the I'unln whs so exeltrdly discussed that war foi lowed. Jenkins" story was verified In, the admiralty records so recently as ISOO.-Kxchaiige Miss Evadne Harrison has return ed from a visit of several days at Hillshoro and Metzger. Judge D. Rcasoner of Washing ton county, transacted business here last week. WARTIME NURSES The Great Battle of Mercy Won by Florence Nightingale. WORK OF THE GREAT PIONEER. She Changed the Military Hospital From a Shambles Into a Life Sav ing Station and Became the Mother - of Modern Nursing Methods. Florence Nightingale,' whose death occurred in 1911 ut the advanced age, of ninety, was a revolutionist lu the most splendid sense of that term. She it was who revolutionized nursing to that extent that she may be considered as the mother of thut profession. Previous to her entrance luto the field the sick were the victims of callous ignorunce and grasping in difference, but Florence Nightingale iu- troduced the trained, skilled aud gentle hospital nurse, district nurse aud mill tary nurse of today. Certainly to few women and to few men has it beeu given to serve their fellows so splendidly and so effective ly. Florence Nightingale found chaos In military hospitals; she created or der and all that order implies. After the battle of Alma, in the Crimean war, the military hospital at Scutari was like a dirty shambles. Wounded men died in hundreds iu the midst of squalor and vermin. Crowds of poisonous flies buzzed, ceaselessly above the sick; medical supplies were inadequate; proper food could not be had; there were no arrangements for washing or sanitation. The plight of the wounded soldiers, herded together in this hotbed of pesti lence, was worse than If they had been left upon the battlefield. "Are there 110 devoted women among you," wrote Russell, the famous war correspondent of the London Times, "able and will ing to go forth and administer to the sick and suffering soldiers In the east in the hospitals at Scutari? Are none of the daughters of England at this hour of need ready for such a work of mercy?" This appeal was answered almost in stantly. Sidney Herbert was then at the head of the war office, and when the authorities began to be inundated by letters from women of all classes anxious to respond to the cnll Mr. Her bert's thoughts at once turned to the lady who was in his opinion the one woman capable of organizing and tak ing out to the Crimen a staff of nurses The woman was Florence Nightingale. Miss Nightingale was thirty-four at the time, and from her childhood Bhe had devoted herself to the study of hospital nursing and hospitul manage ment. In 1849 she hud enrolled herself as a volunteer nurse at the first train ing school for sick nurses established in modern times the Deaconess insti tution at Kalserworth, on the Rhine. When the war broke out there was no woman In all England better fitted than Florence. Nightingale to give to England's soldiers comfort and relief. Mr. Herbert wrote to" Miss Nightin gale and asked her if she would go out and supervise the whole -thing. His letter crossed one from her, for on the same day Florence Nightingale had written to the war office offering her services In the hospital ut Scutari. The offer showed splendid courage. Within a week of making her resolve. Miss Nightingale had her first contin gent of nurses in marching order. She had selected thirty-eight nurses to ac company her, and they arrived at Scutari on the day before the battle of Inkerman. And without a moment's loss of time that lady in chief and her staff set to work to cleanse the Augean stable which they found waiting for them at the great barrack hospital. In a short time the place was entire ly renovated. Everything was scrubbed, old clothes were bu-.ed, e kitchen and laundry were establish- nd the place became a comfortable, well organized hospital. Florence Nightingale super intended everything. She worked as hard at the routine and organizing aa nt the nursing Itself. At all hours of the day and night she would walk silently, lamp lu hand, through the wards, giving a word of comfort here or instruction there. She saved the lives, literally of hundreds. Wounded men, so horribly mangled that doctors gave them no hope, and other nurses could not bring them selves to touch them, were saved from death by the tireless care of this one wonderful woman. The men worshiped the very shadow of this "lady with the lamp." The supreme womanliness of the work of Miss Nightingale made her the Idol of the English people. Three mon archs paid their tribute to her. Re membered by royalty she was not for gotten by the people. On her return, shattered ill health, from Scutari. $250,000 was presented to her by a grateful nation. She used it nil for the founding of the Nightingale Train lng Home For Nurses at St. Thomas' hospital, England, which is practically the parent of modern training homes throughout the world, just as Florence Nightingale was the mother of all pres ent day nurses. - Cleveland Plain Dealer. Spiritual Victory. If after victory on the field of battle we fall to win spiritual victory and to place ideals where they truly should be the heroism of our soldiers will have done no more than postpone our own catastrophe for a few years. M. Taul Sabotier. Duty makes us do thlugs well, but love makes us do them beautifully. Phillips Brooks. Pupils Visit Mills The pupils of the fourth and fifth grades of the Clackamas school were in Oregon City on Friday afternoon, in charge of their teacher, Miss Anna Backmann, and made a tour through the paper mills here. The trip was supplemented by discussion in the class room and proved very valuable to the children from the view point of instruction. They showed a keen in terest in the machinery and products of the mills. t7na A V I'm Wall III Lrl We have just received our second spring shipment of the famous 1 LA 10) WALL PAPER and of f er a variety of well selected patterns for 4fc Per Single Roll IFVaiTB.lk Ouascli BUSCH BLOCK OREGON CITY, ORE. E mnM',-,1 POPULAR COUPLE MARRIED Miss Grace Martin and Clayton Cole man United in Marriage A very pretty wedding was that at which Miss Grace Martin became the bride of Clayton Coleman on Sunday evening at the St. John's Episcopal :hurch at Milwaukie. The ceremony was solemnized at 9 j'clock, Rev. John D. Rice, of Sell wood, officiating. Mrs. Tyra Warren layed Lohengrin's wedding march as he bridal party entered. The bride, vho.. was given in marriage by her father, Albert Martin, was charming n a creation of white voile and satin, carried a bridal bouquet of white rose 'suds, and wore diamond earrings, a ;ift of the bridegroom. Miss Doris lartin, sister of the bride, was maid )f honor and was gowned in white 'oile and carried a bouquet of pink osebuds. Howard Cooper, of Mil waukie, acted as best man. Following the ceremony the guests vent to the Martin home, where a 'uncheon was served. The table dec irations consisted of carnations. The :ouple left on a late train for Eastern Dregon, where the groom bwns a arge wheat ranch. Those in attendance at the wedding were: Mrs. Mary Warren, the Miss es Lora and Sally Warren, of Port 'and; Rev. and Mrs. Rice, of Sellwood, Howard Cooper, of Milwaukie; Mrs. Josephine Shewman, Mr. and Mrs. Tyra Warren, of Risley; ;;Mr. land Mrs. Albert Martin and Miss Doris Martin, of Island. C.-N. McARTHUR SUES Asks Damages for Alleged Libel in Complaint Just Filed Damages of $50,000 are asked and an attack on the constitutionality of a portion of the prohibition law sanc tioning the sale of alcohol as drafted by the legislature, are contained ,in a suit filed in the Multnomah county circuit court on Tuesday by C. N. Mc Arthur, representative in Congress, against R. P. Hutton, superintendent of the Anti-Saloon league of Oregon. Mr. Hutton is held responsible for the publication of a defamatory circu lar assailing the congressman for his stand on the liquor question and ex tolling the attitude of his opponent in the coming primaries, E. V. Little field. District Attorney Evans, mean while, has submitted the alleged libel to the grand jury, for it may consti tute a violation of the corrupt prac tices act. The constitutionality of the prohi bition law is brought into question by Mr. McArthur when he charges Mr. Littlefield, as chairman of the com mittee on alcoholic liquors in the house of representatives at the legis lature in 1915, with actively support ing and oeiner larcelv responsible for the dry law enacted "in defiance of the constitutional amendment passed in 1914." The "defiance" exists, accord ing to he complaint, in allowing a certain traffic in pure grain alcohol by druggists, which the amendment as adopted by the people does not authorize. Paper in iH'H Hi T -"illMlnl.ihaiirilJTWirnTTili'TI-i-'''1 I Attend Masonic Meeting ' On Monday evening twenty mem bers of Multnomah lodge, No. 1, A. F. and A. M., of Oregon City, attended a meeting of Willamette Lodge No. 2, at the Masonic temple in .Port land. The local delegation motored to the metropolis. A delegation from the Yamhill lodge made the attend ance of the trio which originally formed the first grand lodge of Ore gon. The program offered for the pleasure of the visiting lodgemen con sisted of an exhibition of color pic tures of the Columbia River highway, speeches and a fine banquet. Among those who attended the meeting from Oregon City were the local chapter's officers, Charles C, Spencer, worship ful master; H. A. Swafford, senior warden, and M. W. Hedden, .junior warden. .. Affirmative Team Wins Lula Miller and Andrew Naterline, the affirmative team in the debate held at the Oregon City high school ori Monday, were awarded the decision by three judges for their work in solv ing the question oratorically: Resolv ed, That Athletics in High School and College Requires More Time and En ergy than the Result Warrants." The winning team was coached in its arguments by O. D. Eby and the negative contenders, Clay Miller and Florence Stromgren, were assisted by the Rev. Mr. Landsborough. The judges were Miss Harding, Miss Win chell and Mr. Olsen, who declared that Clay Miller and Lula Miller were the best debaters of the quartet. R. L. Holman and T. P. Randall, Leading Undertakers, Fifth and Main St.; Telephones: Pacific 415-J; Home B-18. Republican Candidate for DISTRICT ATTORNEY E. W. Bartlett i To Assist in Reducing Taxation of the County To Conduct the Office without Fear or Favor And to Diligently Prosecute Offenders oi the Laws of Oregon