OREGON CITY COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON. THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1918 REHABILATION OF MEN Freeman, Colton; Arthur Jones, KtnADibAiiuii Clackamas; J. C. Norton Bradford, FROM FRONT DISCUSSED , Canby; Herbert Koebaugh, Canby. Price Harris, Oregon City; Richard" At the Live Wire luncheon in the Isaac Orem, Molalla; Robert Beck rvmmorxinl rlub Darlors Tuesday, man, Milwaukie; Edward August El- most of the hour was taken up with I ligsen, Willamette; Harold Peterson, a discussion on how to take care of Oregon City; John Otto Pfahl, Ore i retumine soldiers of Clackamas gon City; Wilbur Jenning Ross, Wil- county after the war. C. Schuebel, nominee for representative in the state legislature for the coming ses sion, introduced the subject and sug gested that a bill be drafted to the effect that some provision be made with tracts of the California Land Grant lands, to be opened for set tlers soon, for returning soldiers, and that said tracts be put in cultiva tion and buildings be erected by the state, to be paid by soldier settlers on a long-time payment basis. A committee was appointed by the Main Trunk, consisting of Walter A. Dim ick and C. Schuebel, to draft the bill and present it to the Wires at the next meeting. Mr. Cohan, a representative of the Crown-Willamette Paper com pany, from San Francisco, was a guest of the Wires; and addressed them. He said in effect that he was highly pleased with the Live Wire organization and that the spirit shown at the luncheon was in ac cordance with their title, "Live Wir es." Mr. Cohan is in the city for a few weeks as the guest of B. T. Mc Bain, manager of the local Crown Willamette mills. "SUM TATERSj" SAYS HIMES, WHO READS OLD PAPERS PORTLAND, June 10, 1918: (To the Editor) In looking up early day items this morning in Oregon Argus, Oregon City, November 29, 1862, I found the following: "Good Yield. Mr. Peter Rinear son, this year, raised on his farm near town, an acre of potatoes, which yielded about seven hundred bushels. They were of the large blue kind. The vegetables generally on his place yield enormously, both in quantity, and size." The Rinearson place was on the north bank of the Clackamas, just west of Gladstone. Mr. Rinearson was a good farmer, and attended strictly to business. He never tried to raise two crops on the same ground at the same time. He eschar ed weeds. The writer used to visit his place often fifty years ago. GEORGE H. MIMES, Custodian, Oregon Historical Society. CLACKAMAS COUNTY CALLS 189 MORE MEN TO CLASS I (Continued from page 1) Worth, Molalla; Edmond M "Hough, Tualatin; Fred Folger, Oregon City; Charles Aaron Dicken, Oregon City; Chas. Jasper Crawford, Oregon City; Fred Kerbs, Oregon City; Walter Mann, Oregon City; Hugo Hbstrom, Molalla. William Milford HinHe, Oregon City: Charlie Watts Sladcn, Glad stone: Glen Rueben Aman, Glad stone; Reginald Clifford Cooke, Os wego; William James McLarty, West Linn; Paul Huettl, Oregon City; Cleo McMorris, Molalla; Albert Hopp, Oregon City; Charles Cooper, Scotts Mills; Frank Zadniker, Oregon City. 1 Walter Kock, Boring; Guyle Mc Dowell, Oregon City; Paul Theophil Schiewe, Mulino; Rufus William Baker, Oregon City; James Alfred McCubbin, Oregon City; Henry Ar thur Lundeen, Oregon City; Carl E. Kalb, Aurora; Paul Bany, Canby; James Lester Huiras, Canby; Ray mond Lee Thiessen, Milwaukie. Ralph Henry Scott, Oregon City; Fritz Bell, Boring; Simon Roth, Mil waukie; Floyd Olney Kirchem, Ore gon City; Albert Earle Shoemake, Molalla; Walter Olsen, Hubbard; Guy R. Freeman, Barton; Benjamin T. Hepler, Aurora; Erving LeRoy Mil lard, Estacada; Anselm Bede Gray. Elvis Earl Pulley, Molalla; Herbert Nordstrom, Milwaukie; Clyde Ere ret Fromong, Gladstone; Richard Thomas McCarthy, Oregon City; Walter Bertram Aune, Oregon City; Robert James Meyer, Oswego; Earl Collins, Aurora; George H. Wolfe, Monitor; Otto Toedtemeier, Oregon City; Elmer Jack Simkins, Oregon City. Peter Olsen, Marquam; Adolph Gottlieb Deininger, Oregon City; Alfred Thoeny, Oregon City; Roland Conway, Gladstone; Walford A Johnson, Molalla; Wm. Daniel E. Livock, Oregon City; Henry Wm. Culdonzopf, Boring; Earl Robbins Kaylor, Molalla; Gordon Morton Lawrence, Estacada; Oliver Severn Carl Gerber, Estacada. Chester Douglas, Oregon City; Clay C. Miller, Hoff; William Chris Trost, Aurora; Graydon Pace, Ore gon City; Frank Alvin RiefT, New- berg; David Aeby, Clackamas; Bruce Stone, Boring; Charles Lewis Ret tinger Oregon City; Wilfred Edward Brown, Clackamas; Carl Harding, Milwaukie. Willard H. Johnson, Boring; Char lie Otto Krebs, Boring; Arthur Gil more Mather, Clackamas; Charles Victor Koski, Oak Grove; John Wash ington Anderson, Boring; Floyd Frederick Tapfer, Oswego; Henry Hedensten Hansen, Woodburn; John Hubert Tweedie, Woodburn; Harry Earl Davids, Aurora; Theodore Emil Brock, Sherwood. William Henry Zook, Hubbard; Millard Landren Trullinger, Boring; Theodore Frederick Pottratz, Aurora; James Ewen Folsom, Estacada; Ar nold Miles Rickman, Sandy; Rolf Lee Hines, Oregon City; Grant Ulysses Erb, Hubbard; Arthur Smith, Eagle Creek; Libert John Sherman, Molal la; Leslie Bryan Solomon, Gladstone. . Earl Homer Jahn, Oak Grove; RalpH H. Galichio, Milwaukie; Fran ces Cleve White, Oswego; George Washington Thomas Doty, West Linn; Bernard Moynach, Oregon City; Eugene Ben Contreras, Ore gon City; Glenn Monroe Larkins, Mulino; Harry Buxton, West Linn; Hugh Malcom Treele, Oregon City; Paul Robert Rotter, Oregon City. John Falini, Milwaukie; Fred Jose, Jr., Oregon City; Peter Hauglum, Boring; Jerome Brook, Boring; Les ter Ravmond Goodman, Oregon City; Herbert Thiel, Oregon City; Harley lamette; William Samuel Monarity, Oregon City; Hobart Heater, Sher wood; Theodore Sager, Muhno. Gilbert Tellie Robertson, Milwau kie; Merle Ewart Wright, Aurora; Ernest William Blackburn, Oregon City; Charles Arthur Hosey, Oregon City; Hersel Raymond Saunders, Oregon Cityf William Witzel, Bor ing; Paul Herman Jaeger, Sherwood; Otto Boese, Boring; John Edwin Eaden. Logan: Theodore Webster Barnett, Parkplace. Herbert A. Carothers, Oregon City; Harry Chapman Smart, Milwaukie; fcloyd H. Ewalt, Aurora; Floyd J. Davis, Estacada; George Ernest Ol- denstadt, Oregon City; Isaac Rueck, Aurora; William Gustav Schatz, Oregon City; John Ihomas Logsdon, West Linn; Walter Louis Larson, Willamette; Floyd Alvin Trafton, Oregon City; Lyman Winfield Eades Warnock, Oregon. City; Felix Clyde Richey, Boring; Orion Coop, h-sta- cada; Edward Nichols Scheel, Bis sell; Albert Henry-Lins, George; Guy Lantz, Aurora; Lester Burkholder, Aurora; Hans Zenger, Aurora; John Myers Beatie,- Oregon City; Earl Bentley, Oregon City. Herbert Bryan Holcomb, Clacka mas; Edward Earl, Molalla; Arno Ellis Hellbacke, Mulino; Arthur Koh ler, Oregon City; Earl Glen Mason, Hoff; Leonard West Jeter, Oregon City; William Raymond Ware, Ore gon City; John Boss, Oregon City; George Allen McKinley, Oregon City; Clarence Edgar Frasier, Oregon City; William Edgar Feyrer, Molalla. Spencer Allen, Clackamas; Walter Bryan Schuebel, Oregon City; ,Ernest Seeley Andrus, Willamette; Simon Chilvik, Canby; Vito Rocoo Tungi, Oregon .City; Clifford Clinton Koel lermeier, Oregon City; Harry Earl Mitchell, Sandy; Clarence McColly Dale, Estacada; Horace K. Robbina, Molalla. SWEEPING LAWS TO REQUIRE REAL WORK (Continued from Page 1) '2. Persons engaged in the serv ing of food or drink in public places, including hotels and social clubs. 3. Passenger elevator operators and attendants, doormen, footmen and other attendants of clubs, hotels, stores, apartment houses, office build ings and bathhouses. 1. Perrons, including ushers and her attend. n s, engaged and occu pied in and in connection with gam es, sports ar.d amusements, except ing actual performers in legitimate i concerts, operas and theatrical per formances. 5. Persons employed in domestic service. 6. Sales clerks and other clerks employed in s':or3s and o!har m? entile establishments. The scope of the regulations will soon be extended, General Crowder stated, by adding several more non- useful occupations to the list. ' Men who are now engaged as above, or who are idlers will not be permitted to seek relief ebcause of the fact that they have drawn a late order number or because they hav? been placed in classes two, three or four on the grounds of dependency," the regulation states. "The fact he is not usefully em ployed will outweigh both of the above conditions." In addition, General Crowder has provided that any local board will be empowered to force draft regis trants to work whether it has origin al jurisdiction over the man or not. A man loafing around an Oregon City poolhall, though registered in Portland, can be sent to work or to the army by the local board. In determining idleness, regular vacations are not to be considered. Another provision is that wherein "there are compelling domestic cir cumstances that would not permit change of employment without dis proportionate hardship to his depen dents, or where a change would ne cessitate removal of the registrant or his family to another locality, the board may give consideration to the circumstances." Where changes would cause night employment of women, boards are asked to take such circumstances in to consideration in making their de cisions. Showing the necessity for the step General Crowder said: "One of the unanswerable criti cisms of the draft has been that it takes men from the farms and use ful occupations and marches them past crowds of loafers and idlers. The remedy is simple to couple the industrial basis with other grounds for exemption and to require that any man pleading exemption on any ground shall also show that he is contributing effectively to the indus trial welfare of the nation. "We shall give the idlers and men not effectively employed the choice between military service and effec tive employment. Every man, in the draft age, at least, must work or fight. "We must prohibit engagement by able-bodied men in the field of hurt ful or ineffectual employment and thus induct the vast wasted excess into useful fields. We must not think of Germany as merely possess ing an army, but of being an army an army in which every factory and loom m the empire is a recognized part iii a complete machine running night and day, at terrific speed. We must make of ourselves the same sort of effective machine." Oregon City has a number of per sons coming under the provisions of the order, who nre wondering what to do. But they are casting their weather eye about for something es sential as a "safety-first" measure. Progress Is possible on the farm Just as it is in the biggest city in America. Progressive farmera in Clackamas county are the ones who will apprMlate The Courier's club bing offer with the Oregon Farmer. Notice of Administrator's Sale of Real Estate N Notice is hereby given, pursuant to an order of the County Court of the State of Oregon of the County of Clackamas, duly made and entered in he above entitled estate on the 12th day of June 1918, the undersigned administrator will, on Monday tht 15tH day of July; 1918, at the hour of 10:00 a. m., at the East front door of the County Court House in Oregon City, Clackamas County, Oregon, sell at public auction, sub ject to confirmation by said court, to the highest bidder for cash in hand all of the following- described real estate to-wit: Lot 9, 10,' 11, 12, block 4 and all of block 5 and 6 and 100 feet off the South end of block 7 in Mountain View Addition to Oregon City, Clackamas County, Oregon. Said sale being made subject to existing mortgage Of $500.00 with accrued interest in favor of George Elligsen. Dated, Oregon City, Oregon, June 13 1918 EDWARD E. MAY, Administrator. H. E. CROSS, Attorney for Administrator. TWICE PROVEN If you suffer backache, sleepless nights, tired, dull days and distress ing urinary disorders, don't experi ment. Read this twice-told testi mony. It's Oregon City evidence doubly proven. Mrs. Thos. Blanchard, Sr., 1102 John Adams St., says: "I have used Doan's Kidney Pills for kidney and bladder trouble that had annoyed me for years and have received fine re lief. I have taken in all, less than two boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills but they have shown ' their merit so that I can endorse them and advise their use to others." The above statement was given on April 4, 1913, and on April 17, 1916, Mrs, Blanchard said: "I have cer tainly found Doan's Kidney Pills to be all that is claimed for them. Whenever I have occasion to take a kidney medicine I use Doan's for I know they are most reliable." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mrs. Blanchard had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. HANDY LITTLE SEED MARKER Implement Will Be Found of Great Convenience in Garden Straight Lines Essential. The little seed marker shown In the Illustration will be found very useful In garden work. The markers which should be In the form of sled runners are placed 12 inches apart, an extra set of lines can be run through the first. It Is important to have perfect ly straight lines for planting all garden stuff In order to save ground, to say Handy Seed Marker, nothing of the good appearance of the garden, and this can be accomplished In no other way except by the use of a murker. In drawing the first line the ground should be squared up ac curately and a string stretched at one side as a guide for the marker. It Is a good plan to use a line for all other marks as well, setting It exactly 18 Inches from the last mark. TO ERADICATE QUACK GRASS Small Patches Can Be Covered With Tar Paper or Forked Out Follow Disk With Harrow. The following will eradicate quack grass: For small patches cover with tnr pa per or fork It out. For a largo area first mow It, then plow It under nnd disk about once a week till fall. Some times It pays to follow the disk with the harrow. It will soiiu'tlmes he found necessary to plow it again at the end of the season. Corn Is a good crop to put on this land the following year. If there are any stray plants they can be dug out. TROUBLE IN FINDING LABOR Whole Proposition Should Be Studied by Farmer in Winter With View to Economizing. Some crops require much more labor than others and this factor should be considered by growers who have diffi culty in finding labor. The small, qulck-porlshlng crops, such as radishes ami lettuce, require much more labor than others like cabbage, sweet corn and cucumbers. The whole proposition should he studied carefully during the wlni or mouths with u view to econo mizing In the employment of labor and utilizing labor to the very best advau uigu, FARMERS' ORDER RETAINS MASTER (Continued from Page 1) Clackamas county there reside a number of farmer officers of the Grange. Besides Mr. Spence, of Beaver Creek, and Mrs. Howard, of Mulino, the state assembly selected N. C. Glover, of Boring, formerly of Eagle Creek, as Steward; and C. C. Borland, of Oregon City, route 5, was elected Gate-keeper. The next semi-annual session will be held in Washington county, pos sibly at HillsborOj during the second week of next May. The Courier and Th Oregon Farmor both for $1.00. ! - 1 HIS JOB TO BANDAGE WOUNDEDHOUSES American Boss Carpenter Putting French Villages Back on the Map. It was a monotonous stretch of ugly trench, wire entanglements, gaping shell boles, accented by the blackened skeleton flf shell killed forests silhouet ted against a dull, hopeless sky. This had once been beautiful rolling land like our own Ohio and Indiana rich In grain fields, orchards and gar dens. Now It was desolation nothing could live there seemingly nothing did. We had come on some rising ground, and as we climbed we reached the brow of the slope, and of a sudden It seemed that some giant bad suddenly twisted the old world under our feet and we were back borne, for of a sud den the sounds of life came up to us out of a bustling center of Industry. That satisfying chug of an honest ham mer head sinking willing nail Into sound wood, and before us was a pan orama of new building, with piles of 1 clean lumber stacked here and there, and the framing of many new build- j logs told where the wood was going. Then we heard the voice of a man ! who talked real "United States" tell- I lng 27 other carpenters what to do ! out In this foreign land thousands ot j miles from home. ' We Inquired of the boss as to who he was, and with true sense of hu mor be said : "I am a Red Cross nurse. My job Is bandaging wounded houses." i Putting Villages Back on Map, "This was once a French village," he 1 went on to say, "In the center of fine sugar beet country. We are living now on the site of the sugar mill," he said, pointing to a long, low barracks, which plainly had been recently built "We are worklug for the American Red Cross putting villages back on the map. In four more weeks we'll he out of here and on our way to the next ruin, for there are many villages that need us. We go from place to place, always finding that our lumber bus reached there first, so we can get right to work, clpan up and move on again." It Is Just like pioneering, this re building work of our lied Cross only more Important more Important tie cause It is vital to the winning of the war that these people come back to their soil and plant new crops for fu ture years of war or peace. And so the tide of war sweeps hack from whence It came, a Red. Cross army follows close behind In uniforms of overalls, armed with Xankee ham mers and nails to coax back the found lings that have been brushed into squalid helplessness In the south and east , ' j They are comiflg back home now, just a few days behind these carpen tersback to the beet fields, the gar dens and the farms. Soon they will be feeding themselves and thousands of others. WHITE PLAGUE KILLS MORE MEN THAN BULLETS It seems longer, but It was less than four years ago that the nations had not yet started In to wipe each other off the map and that the only times when one beard of the Red Cross were times of flood or disaster and at Christmas time, when the peaceful lit tle Red Cross tuberculosis seals made their annual appearance. Perhaps, In fact, It was the long, ar dent tight In America against the White Plague which, In spite of the war's , enormous new demands, Is responsible , for the especial Interest being taken by the American lied Cross in France's frightful struggle against consumption. This scourge seems to mark the trench tighter for Its own. It kills more men than do bullets and poison gas combined. Until the American Red Cross was permitted . by the French government to start Its drive against tuberculosis It looked as if, ' even with a victory over the Hun, j France might eventually be conquered by this depdllet foe. , Already things are looking brighter. The Red Cross has taken over old hos pitals and built new ones. More than 300 tuberculosis dispensaries are to be opened throughout the country, and Red Cross doctors ana nurses scores of them- -are devoting themselves ex clusively to this tight, doing over there exactly the same kind of work which Is financed In America by the little Christmas seals. It Is one of the wnys In which hy our mm'rlhiitlnns 'o 'hfl Red Cross. America can repay her C.viit to Fruiice. Says It Acted Like a Charm Coughs, colds', sore throat or bronchial troubles which persist .at this time of the year usually are of an obstinate character. That is all the more reason why a truly reliable remedy like Foley's Honey and Tar Compound should be used. Mrs. Mar garet Smale, Bishop, Calif., writes: "Foley's Honey and Tar is a grand remedv: more than is claimed for it. I was suffering from a cold-last week .j moHWne and it acted like a charm." Contains no opiates.- Jones Drug Co. Wonderful Summer Silk Dresses Reasonably Priced Women will take particular delight in wearing such de lightful dresses as these. Everyone made in the prevailing modes for summertime wear. Each trimmed in some distin guishing manner. These are points that make them so desir able for every possible summer requirement of business, housework and recreation. Their outstanding characteristics are their remarkable quality of silks, their unusually becoming style and their low price for this time of the season. Priced $14.50 to $32.50 See our Big Main Street Display w,.,ju iij.miiii.ijinmi.njM, i yu,ingi,u.. .i.iiiiumjim.'i.wmi ii jiii. ii miwffj . . ,;i.mimiiMijMin.iLiiwniiuj-iiiniin aw iiimwipuw-ywwiu' m ' . urn - 7- ' ) ,i f 7." , x t , F k ft lit v - v , , , 'j - , t .,., ? '".:$ -'? f . .4,5 : r w Y I Ii THE SCHUBERT SERENADERS, lamette Valjey Chautauqua Assembly, which convenes July Being vice-president of the Wash ngton Steel and Ordnance company, and the Firth-Sterling Steel company, wasn't sufficient to keep James W. Kinnear, of Pittsburgh, from going overseas as a Y. M. C. A. war work secretary. . x BIG JUBILEE AT ANNUAL SESSION I (Continued from Page 1) 1 cert, New York City Marine Band; ! Character Sketches,- Elsie Mae Gor- I .1 T .... 4.1. J!.n.linn ftf uun; Juncture, unuer liib uiici:liuii vx the Oregon State Grange. Evening Grand Concert, New York City Band. t Saturday, July 13 Afternoon The Eichorns, Community Singers; Lecture, "America and Japan," Min osaku Toshi . Yamamoto. Evening The Eichorns; Lecture by Captain J. M. de Beauford, of the Belgian rmy. Sunday, July 14 Afternoon Sa cred Concert, Schubert Serenaders;. Sermon Lecture, speaker announced later; Sacred Concert, Chautauqua chorus; Concert, Schubert Serenad-: ers. Monday, July 15 Afternoon-Old Soldier Fife and Drum Corps; Lec I ture, "My America," Judge G. C. Burton. Evening Musical program. Col. Pattee's Original Old Soldiers Fiddlers. Tuesday, July 16 Afternoon 1 Concert, Fenwick Newell Co., Lec- i ture, "The Meaning of the Great ' War," Dr. J. C. Bushnell. Evening Concert, Fenwick Newell Co.;-Lec ture, "Remal ing the Kentucky Moun taineers," James A. Burns. Wednesday, July 17 Afternoon Entertainment, Morrison-Smith Co.; Lecture (Humorous), "When a Man Marries," Marshal Lewis Martins. Evening Morrison-Smith Co.; Lec ture, "The Philosophy of Common Sense," D. F. Fox. TJiursday, July 18 Concert, Zed ler's Symphonic . Quartet; Lecture, Charles Crawford Gorst, Bird Man. Evening Concert, Zedler's Quartet; Lecture, "The Juvenile Court in Ac tion," Judge Roland Baggott. " Friday, July 19 Afternoon Tha viu's Exposition Band. Evening Thaviu's Exposition Band. Saturday, July 20 Afternoon Mother Goose Festival; Prelude, LTrebl Clef Club; Lecture, "With Our Armies in Europe," Lincoln D. Wirt. Evening Treble Clef Club; Merchandise of Merit at Popular Prices LIBERT CORNER SEVENTH AND MAIN one of 26 Big Programs to be enjoye 'Cartoon Lecture, New Woodman; Lecture, "Danger Signals oh the Road to Health," Miss" Eugenia Lowe. Sunday, July 21 Prelude, Royal Hawaiian Concert; Lecture-Sermon, MAKE YOUR $ HAVE MORE CENTS The Cash and Carry Method allows us to sell you groceries at a much lower reduction than you will get at other stores in the county where they deliver. And again, our years of experience in this business, and our buying in large quantities enables us to clip off several cents to each article sold and at the same time makes us a profit on the transaction. Again we call your attention to a few reductions below: , Carnation, Borden's, Libby's and Aster Milk, can'.-. ..12c 3 cans for 35c Royal Club, Golden West, Folger's Golden Gate, . . Shillings Best Coffee, all 40c grades, pound 35c Large package Wheat Flakes . 30c Crisco 1 pound 35c, 1J pounds, 49c, 3 pounds 98c, 6 pounds $1.90, 9 pounds $2.85 EXTRA SPECIAL! If Baugltt Before 12 O'clock Saturday 1 pound 35c best coffee 25c 1 pound 30c best coffee 20c W. B. Stokes has Butter Day every Saturday MAKE YOUR $ HAVE MORE CENTS W.B.STOKES Foot of Elevator Te Old Morgan Stand Oregon City d in the new auditorium at the Wil- 9th for a lg-day session. "Grapes of Gold," Rev. H. V. Adams; Concert, Chautauqua chorus. Even ing Royal Hawaiian Concert; Lec ture, "Rambles Through Paradise," Mildred Leo Clemens.