Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, January 14, 1921, Page Page 6, Image 6

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    Page 6
OREGON CITY. ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 1921. -
MILWAUKIE AND NORTHERN
Quarters for Road
Workers to be Built
OSWEGO, Jan. 12. Glen Zimmer
man purchased the Kennedy place in
South Oswego during the last week.
Trill Zimmerman's father-in-law, a
recent arrival rfom the East, is also
okking for a place.
The regular monthly luncheon
which, the Methodist Ladies Aid so
ciety serves for the grammar school
children took place on, Thursday. The
proceeds were a little over eight dol
lars for the day.
Mrs. Thomas Fox has .been ill for
the past week, but is reported better
at present.
In the next few weeks it is the
talk of the people of Oswego that a
large hotel or boarding house for the
road gang which will be employed on
the Pacific highway between Oregon
City and Oswego will be erected on
property at the foot of Oswego Lake..
. Superintendent Simonton of the
Oregon Iron and Steel Co. while com
ing from the Ladd farm jumped from
a truck and hurt his knee badly and
. was laid up for a few days.
The Owego grammar school has a
new domestic science teacher.
Mr. and Mrs. O. Worthnigton and
son, Claud, have been visiting J. W.
Worthington at Hadlock, Washington
for the past two weeks.
Vernon Davidson, who underwent
an operation at St. Vincent's hospital
on Thursday is getting along nicely.
Mrs. Mary Mosely was a visitor at
the Yates home the latter part of the
week.'
From the remarks--of the Oregon
City motorists, who broke down their
cars while coming from Oregon City
to Portland via the west side while
the east side highway was under
water last week, the annexation senti
ment is growing if it can be guaran
teed that Multnomah will furnish bet
ter roads. Didzun's garage men were
kept very busy as at one time there
ere nine machines lined up in front
ot the gjarage waiting their turn to be
fixed. The high water did them some
good that time.
The Owegoans will hold a meeting
Monday night for the purpose of talk
ing over the annexation to Multnomah
county.
'Mrs. Grant White, of Canby, was in
Oswego on Saturday vistiing relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart who have
been away for nearly a year were
home a efw days.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Pope, of Ore
gon City, were visiting Henry Gans,
father of Mrs. Pope, on Saturday.
Rev. Mr. Blackwell, minister of the
M. E. church, has resigned on account
cf his wife's poor health he has 10
move her to a different climate. A
t.ew niinsiter is expected next Sunday
when it is hoped to see as many at
tend church as can possibly come.
Otto Larson, who has been home
during the holidays, has returned to
Altoona, where he works.
Mrs. J. C. Haines, who has been
spending Xmas and New Year's week
with her son, Charles Haines, of Port
Townsend, Washington, is home
again.
Ike Austin has returned from visit
ing his daughter, Mrs. Dan Prevo, at
Everette, Washington. Mrs. Prevo
resided in Oswego a number of years
before her marriage.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to extend to the many
friends and neighbors our sincere
thanks, for 'the kindness shown us,
at the time of the death of our dear
beloved mother.
MR. J. R. WELLS,
MR. AND MRS. GEO. WILLETT,
MR. AND MRS. R. D. JOHNSON".
Oak Grove Wants
New School Unit
OAK GROVE, Jan. 11. Mrs. C. V.
Filnk and baby returned from the hos
pital Sunday.
The older pupils of M'fs Matthew's
development school visited the cus
tom house Tuesday to familiarize
themselves with the work they are
. studying.
F. A. Smith was a Portland visitor
Thursday.
Dellon Olds is not improving as
well and as rapidly as was hoped
Phones: Sellwood 697, Automatic
21363
East Side Mill & Lumber Company
Manufacturer an d Dealers In
Lumber, Lath, Shingles and Mouldings
Mill Foox of Spokane Avenue PORTLAND, OREGON
J P. FINLEY & SON
Perfect Funeral Service
Telephone Main 9
A-1599
First State Bank or MiivauMe
"YOUR HOME BANK"
Conducts a General Banking Business
4 per cent, interest on Savings. Safe Deposit Boxes for Rent
YOUR PATRONAGE APPRECIATED
since the second operation. He is in
the Good Samaritan hospital.
At the meeting of tax payers held
last Wednesday evening for the pur
pose of issuing warrants to build two
portable rooms the opposing side won
and later a mass meeting of tax pay
ers by regular vote requested th2
school board to take -3"es relative to
purchasing land ana making a new
school unit.
The home economic department of
the social service club met with Mrs.
F. A. Smith Thursday of last week
at which time a paper on interior
decoration by Mrs. L. Marx was most
interesting and instructions in sew
ing by Mrs. M. Butler was very help
ful to the housewife.
The helper's club held their regu
lar meeting Tuesady. at which time
they elected Kathryn Olson, presi
dent; Edith Norberg, vice-president;
Carrol Phillips, secretary and Daisy
Hubbart, treasurer. Refreshments
were served by Miss Jean White, one
of the ladies who direct the club.
J. Felix of Indiana was a guest last
Sunday of his niece, Mrs. J. L. Robin-ett.
WOMAN KILLED
AS ELEVATOR
CONTROL SLIPS
PORTLAND, Or., Jan. 12. Mrs.
Sadie F. Darlington, a widow living
with her two sons at 606 South
avenue, was killed almost instantly
this evening when she lost control of
an elevator in the Swetiand building,
Fifth and Washington streets, and in
some manner fell out of the car and
into the shaft at the third floor land
ing. She was dead when witnesses
reached her side, according to a
physician of the city emergency hos
pital who responded to the call. She
was employed as a janitress in the
building.
Dr. John Gartner, wno was waiting
at the elevator doors on the third
floor, said that Mrs. Darlington step
ped inside as though to start the
elevator, but remembered a bucket
which was standing on the floor near
by. Stepping outside to pick it up.
in some manner her skirts shifted
the control lever and it started up.
She attempted to step inside. Dr.
Gartner said, to get at the lever, but
either could not reach it or turned
it the wrong way.
Walls Writes on
Clearing Stump Land
SHERWOOD, Oregon, Jan. 10.
(To the Editor) Almost every paper
we pick up has an article on the sub
ject of irrigatoin.
This subject is of great importance
to our state.
But is it any more so than the
clearing up of stump land.
There is many small farms in the
Oregon country that are vacant, be
cause there is not cleared land
enough to make them practical horn
es. Many farms that are occupied
would be enlarged. Many men would
be given work if the price of stump
powder was not prohibitive.
R. H. WALLS
Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be C"red
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 is caused by an inflamed condi
tion of the mucous lining of the Eu
stachian Tube. When this tube is in
flamed you have a rumbling sound or
imperfect hearing, and when it is, en
tirely closed, Deafness is the result.
Unless the inltammation can be re
duced and this tube restored to its
normal condition, hearing will be des
troyed forever. Many, cases of deaf
ness are caused by catarrh, which is,
an inflamed condition of the mucous
surfaces. Hall's Cattarrh Medicine
acts through the blood on the muc
ous surfaces of the system.
We will give One Hundred Dollars
for any case of Catarrhal Deafness
that cannot be cured by Hall's Ca-
tarrah Medicine. Circulars free. All
Druggists, 75c.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
John P. Miller, Mgr.
Montgomery and Fifth
Portland
CLACKAMAS
O. A. C, HAS
INCREASE IN
ATTENDANCE
CORVALLIS, Jan. 7. A total of
2784 students had completed their
registration in regular long courses
at the college up to the close of the
third day of registration. This indi
cates an enrollment equal to, if not
greater than, that of last term, when
there were 3077 regular students.
Many who were delayed by weather
conditions and other causes are arriv
ing daily.
Students numbering 317 have reg
istered for their first' time this term,
making a total of 3394 long-course
registrants for this school year.
Fifty-five new students are registered
in the various short courses, as com
pared with 57 for last term. When
these and the 489 summer-school stu
dents are counted the grand total
compiled by the registrar for the year
reaches 3995 students.
Housing conditions are being met
by a committee headed by Professor
H. T. Vance of the school of com
merce.
HARDING DOES
NOT APPROVE OF
INAUGURAL FETE
MARION, O., Jan. 10. In the inter
est of national thrift, President-elect
Harding tonight requested officials
arranging for his inauguration to
abandon all plans for an inaugural
ceremony.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 10. Abandon
nient immediately of all plans for a
celebration in connection with the
inauguration of President-elect Hard
ing was announced tonight by E. B.
McLean, chairman of the Washing
ton inaugural committee, in accord
ance with the desire of Mr. Harding.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 10. Five
members of the house, one from Ohio
and the others from the south, voted
today to cut the $50,000 appropriation
for erection of a grandstand at the
capitol from which congress braves
the bleak March weather during . the
inaugural ceremony.
Against this handful, 285 members
voted for the fund, so that the long
established custom might prevail.
The snow was clinging to the first
pile of lumber, stacked outside when
debate started, coincident with an
other flurry of talk in the senate on
a proposal to eliminate all extensive
and ostentations inaugural show
while so many people in Europe are
starving.
By its action the house made pos
sible the carrying but of the part of
congress in the celebration. It has
nothing to do with any pageant down
town or an inaugural ball, against
which there has been protest on the
ground that "the pension building,
desired for the night festivities, is
needed for the conduct of the gov
ernment's pension business.
NON-PARTISAN
LEAGUE SCORED
BY GOVERNOR
TOPEKA, Kan., Jan. 8. The cam
paign being made in Kansas by A.
C. Townley and non-partisan, leaguers
lrom North Dakota, was assailed by
Governor Allen in a statement tonight
when he approved steps taken by ex-
service men to oppose the campaign.
"Townley has been able to present
to North Dakota a lot of dreams
which seemed real," said the state
ment. "The non-partisan league has
lost control of the state government,
The weakness and costs of his schema
have finally been exposed and Town-
ley is hunting new fields."
CENTRALIA, Wash., Jon. 6. At a
meeting held Tuesday by the women's
legislative council of Lewis county
the council indorsed a bill to be sub
mitted to the state legislature by
Judge Reynolds of the Lewis county
superior court, providing for th
establishment of parental schools
throughout the state.
The Needless Alisery
That Women Bear
V7HEN the
house
hold cares
and the worries
of everyday
hie have drag
ged you down,.
hannv. and Htl'JrraS
there is nothing
in life but
headache, back
ache and worry,
turn to the
right prescrip
tion, one gotten
up by Doctor
fifty years ago. ft
Dr. Pierce, of
Buffalo, N. Y.,
long since
found out what
is naturally
best for wom
en's diseases.
He learned it
all thru treat
ing thousands
of cases. The
result of his
studies was a medicine called Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription.
This medicine is made of vege
table growths that nature surely
in ten ted for backache, headache,
weakening pains, and for many
disorders common to women in
all ages of life. Sold by druggists
in tablet and liquid form. Send
Dr. Pierce 10c for trial package.
III :SXIi IS V "
m vy
1 i
I If
1 2'4SS53Tv7 I i lf.-&&Ss-
OPEN DOORS
IN BUSINESS
THE TRAVELLING SALESWOMAN.
There are many college students
who "canvass" for one thing or anoth
er during the summer, as well as
many older men who turn to this work
when they have finished their regular
life vocation. These are not regular
expert traveling salespeople, but use
this work merely as a filler-in between
or after their real work
To date there are few successful
traveling saleswomen, but their might
wedl be more. It is a business which
demands ability and skill and will pay
a good salary to one capable in it.
Weekly expenses are always paid by
the house, which besides the salary,
often allows commissions; Salesman
ship pays talented persons excellently,
but is uncertain ordinarily.
The woman who is, to enter thi3
field must have good health to be able
to endure the travelling and must also
know how to take care of her health
under rather trying conditions and
much irregularity.
The saleswoman must have a pleas
ant and graceful manner to win tht
attention of prospective buyers. She
must understand people and have
wide experience in approaching all
kinds of people and judging their likes
and dislikes knowing how to address
them and what to avoid. She must
understand thoroughly her line of
goods and appreciate them herself
else she cannot recommend them con
vincingly. She must have great self
control and good nature to adapt her
self to the many trifling disappoint
ments and annoyances which will arise.
She mus be a good talker, able to In
duce patrons to buy.
This business enables one to see
much of the country as she is travel
ing about most of the time. She
meets many interesting people and
has many pleasant experiences, and
may find the work very interesting
The instinct for an abiding place and
home life must be sacrificed during
the period of performing this occupa
tion, but the expert at it learns an
adaptability which can make the best
of any place and any companions! and
feel an athomenese whereever she
stays temporarily.
In some larger places, there may be
saleswomen who go out to their work
near by, but are able to be at home
nearly every night.
THE HOUSEHOLD BUDGET
Did you ever buy a piece of cloth to
make a garment, feeling perfectly
sure that you had enough, and start
cuting the garment out collars, cuffs
pockets, front back, one sleeve and
half of another but only half when
the goods ran out? A trip back to the
store showed you that the rest of the
piece was gone and it couldn't be
matched in town. Well, that is the
way many homes manage their financ
es. 'They do not "cut the garment ac
cording to the cloth."
To make a budget is like spreading
out the goods and laying the pattern
on piece by piece. If you find it lack
ing, you plan where you may save by
making smaller collars or cuffs or
pockets or skimping here and there
where it will be noticed least.
It is not the formidable thing it is
often thought to be to make a house
hold budget and the housewife who is
businesslike and scientific about man-1
aging her home does not have to run
and put it down everytime any mem
ber of the family spends a penny or
rack her brains to remember just how
much she paid for the cabbage and
how much for the vanilla.
One needs to have kept account of
the expenditures one year in order to
know how to estimate what they will
be for the coming year; but it has to
be started sometime and it will prove
very interesting the first year to make
a guess at it and to see how nearly
your guess come to the actual figures
your accounts show up. Many surpris
es and lessons on thrift will await you
as the months roll on and you watch
your system develop.
Your budget and account system
will show you where the leaks in your
finances are, where you have been ex
travagent in some particulars and
spent too little on other features. It
will help you discover where you can
be more economical another year, if
each member of the family is getting
a fair share of the expenditures, if lux
uries are running too high, and where
you can make cuts with least sacri
fice.
It wUl give you immense satisfac
tion to know your financial status. No
business man would consider for a
moment doing away with the book
keeper which informs him at any mo
ment just what his income and outgo
are, and ror what. It Is estimated
that thre-quarters of the incomes of
America are spent by women. It is
really a matter of national, as. well as
private, importance that our women be
trained in business-like management
of finance. Heretofore we have placed
too much consideration on the earning
of money and 'too Jittle on the disposal
of it. There is an old saying, "A
woman can dip out with a spoon fast
er than a man can bring it with a
shovel." This but expresses pictu
resquely the fact that a man cannot
hope to become prosperous in busi
ness unless his wife joins in the thrifty
management of their means. The
household Jbudget will help to do this
without working undue hardship on
any member of the family at any time.
The houeshold budget should be an'
all-family-affair and the result 'of a
"round table" discussion and mutual;
agreement. The whole family should
come to a definite understanding
about what are their ideals and stand-
very ecomnoically, or with nominal
comforts? What shall be their pleas
ures, their educational advancement,
and what shall be a just share alloter
to each?
The next step is the preparation of
a chart for the keeping of accounts.
3 $
S-Ie$$-5$--SS$.$
RECIPES.
js.SJjS.3,s.5j.3sSgj,
Cocoanut Drop Cookies
Cream one-fourth cup fat, add cup
of brown sugar and one-fourth cup of
sour milk. Sift together cup and a
half of flour, one-third teaspoon salt,
teaspoon baking powder, one-fourth
teaspoon soda, and add this to liquid.
Add one-third cup cocoanut, and tea
spoon vanilla. Let the mixture stand
to thicken twenty minutes before bak
ing, then drop by spoonfuls on a
greased tin. Bake in a quick oven un
til light brown. These cookies taste
somewhat like macaroons.
Fairy Cakes.
' Mix three unbeaten eggs with one
pound sugar and add one-quarter tea
spoon of almond or annis oil. Stir (do
not beat) half an hour or until very
light. Add flour enough to make a
stiff mixture. Drop from spoon ' on
buttered cake tins and let stand over
nigh in cool place- In the morning
bake in medium oven. Sugar should
come out and look like frosting
whjch is said to be the work of fairies.
Remove from pans while hot.
Peanut Brittle.
Cook cup sugar, tablespoon vinegar,
and pinch of salt until soft ball stage.
Add cup of freshly roasted peanuts
and stir over fire until yrup is gold
en brown. Add teaspoon vanilla and
pour In thin sheet in buttered pan.
When cool crack into pieces.
pop Corn Balls.
To two or three quarts of popcorn
add syrup made as follows, and press
into balls. Syrup Cup of sugar, table-
spoon vinegar (or flavor with choco-
late and vanilla, or with mapleine, or
use pink fruit coloring). Cook until it
forms hard ball in cold water; add to
corn.
Carmels.
Mix two cups syrup or sugar, one
and a half squares of unsweetened
chocolate, half cup cream or condens
ed milk, two tablespoons vinegar.
Stir constantly and cook until it forms
a firm ball in cold water. Pour in
t uttered pan. When cool cut
squares and wrap in oiled paper.
Sea Foam.
Add one cup of boiling water
In
to
three cups of brown sugar and boil
to the soft ball stage, then pour slow
ly onto tiu stifly beaten white of two
eggs; beat constantly until stirr.
Add nuts and vanilla and drop by
spoonfuls on buttered plates.
Fondant.
Put five cups sugar, cup and a half
water, and quarter teaspoon (cream ot
tartar into a sauce pan and stir until
sugar dissolves. Heat gradually to
boiling, then boil without stirring un
tif soft ball stage. Wash off crystals
which form on side of kettle with a
piece of wet cheese cloth wrapped
around a fork. Pour on greased plat
ter. , When slightly cool beat until
creamy. When it lumps kneed with
hands until smooth. Cover with oiled
paper and let stand twenty-four hours.
Use as a basis for chocolate creams,
nut creams, stuffed dates, Flavor
with vanilla, fruit juice or extract,
reppermint, wintergreen, cocoanut, or
any desired variety.
? HOW TO KEEP HOUSEHOLD i
ACCOUNTS
To prepare a table for
: 6 I
nouseno.a accounts, ru.e up t.C;the League undertakes to look after,
gooa sisea sneexs oi paper .hu m ,
straight across the paper and fourteen
for fifteen lines from the top to the
bottom of the sheet, allowing a two
inch space at the left of the sheet in
which to write the items bought. At
the top of the sheet in the different
columns write the various subdivi
sions of your expenses perhaps as fol
lows: Food, Clothing, Shelter, Operat
ing Expense, Furnishings, Health,
Gifts, Recreation, Advancement, Mis
cellaneousw
Tack these twelve sheets so labeled
and named for each month in some
convenient place in the kitchen, per
haps on the end of the cupboard. Tie
a lead pencil with a string where it
will be always ready to put down the
day's expenditures.
Not very article bought will need to
be mentioned, but lumped into tho
above subdivisions. Most people pay
for their groceries not oftener than
once a week and this can be put down
under food. .When husband brings
home an armful of supplies he can
give you the total to go in its appro
priate column. All bills should be
kept on a bill file and these will serve
as memory joggers. Either the
money must be expended largely by
one member of the family who keeps
the accounts or else all the members
of the household must be very particu
lar to report or put down what each
has spent. The greatest surprise in
this account system will be the com
paratively few entries you will make
when you had thought you were con
tinually opening your pocketbook to
hand out something.
Under the item Shelter would be
put taxes, repairs, insurance, rent on
the property. Operating expenses
would include labor, laundry, light,
heat, toilet articles, stamps, station
ery, water rent. etc. Furnishings
vottld include household furniture,
rugs, bedding, linen, towels, curtain?.
or any equipment or utensils. Health
covers, doctor, dentist, drugs, occulist.
COPYRIGHTED
and hospital. Gifts would be every
thing expended for others than the
family. It might be. hard to distin
guish between Recreation and Ad
vancement as, travel, music, theatre,
or any educational advantages might
be, either, but in general recreation
would cover the pleasure features
while Advancement covers more seri
ous benefits as schooling, special
courses, savings, magazines, books,
and anything which makes the recip
ient better equipped for life. There
will be some items " ,so difficult to
classify that separate columns are left
for them under the heading Miscellan
eous. , -
The articles paid for may be named
in the space at the left of the sheet
and the prices for the same put down
under the proper columns. When the
month has passed tear off the sheet
as you would from the calendar and
file it away for future referencme.
When you have kept accounts for sev
eral years it will be interesting to
compare the same months in different
years, and keep tab on your manage
ment and the rise and fall of prices.
While the proportions alloted to the
various items will differ in different
families, in general a recognized per
cent of the income which should be
demanded by each subdivision is as
follows: Rent 20 per cent; food SO
per cent; light, fuel, repairs, 10 per
cent; clothes 15 percent; insurance,
recreation, savings 25 percent. As
the income increases the food percent
diminishes and the Recreation and
Advancement increase.
To get more information about the
keeping of Household accounts drop a
postal to the Department of Agricul
ture at Washington, D. C., and ask for
Farmers' Bulletin 964 on this subject
or apply to your Agricultural College.
.Sj$.S..tts,3,$3.3.3,.i
LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS S
One of the most influential organ-
j izations of women in America today
the League of Women Voters. It
1 rivals in power and numbers even the
reuBratiu or women s jiuds. it is
organized in thirty-six of the states
and has a National organization with
headquarters in Washington. Mrs,
Maude Wood Park is. National Chair
man and Miss Caroline J. Reilly, Is
Headquarters Secretary.
When the thirty-sixth state ratified
the suffrage amendment, althoue-h
women had long been hoping for the
ballot, yet at the last it was. like
other of the acts of man, "so sud
den" that we wondered just which of
all the beneficial things we had dream
ed of we had better tackle first. From
somewhere fhen appeared "Women
Planks," all thought out, and crystal
lized, and ''sprung" when the oppor
tunity was ripe. Those did express co
herently the mind of women every
where. They were the product of tho
League of Women Voters and show
what a well studied and prudent pro
gram can do. Under the wise gener
alship of Mrs. Wood and her lieuten
ants most of them were adopted into
the platforms of both the great polit
ical parties.
Political leaders, who have been a
little leery of the non-partisanship ot
the League, did not believe they could
so successfully maintain through the
heat of the campaign their natural
poise and pose. This has been the
more remarkable as many of the lead
ers in the league were also leaders
in a political party as individuals; but
thenon-partisanship of the League of
Woman Voters has remained unscath
ed in spite of this; and prospects now
point to a tremendous period of use
fulness and popularity for this or
ganization. Its program is precisely in accord
with the spirit of the times. Women
are now citizens: t.h next tn ia to
j become thoroughly and broadly edu-
cated and trained in citizenship. This
ag weU ag to SUDPOrt suc legislation
as makes especial appeal to and con
cerns women.
As to segregating the women voter
from the man, it no more approves
of separating the sexes in politics than
in the meeting house, nor does it ad
vise women to stay outside the polit
ical parties. On the contrary it wants
them active and influential in the
parties.
It is the idea of the League of Wo
men Voterst to form a clearing house
for all women where legislation pecu
liary desires to be womankind. It will
develop a solidarity of the sex back
of legislation concerning Child Wel
fare, Women in Industry, Health and
Morals. Food Supply and Demand
American Citizenship, Education, and
such other problems as interest great
ly this great forum of American wo
manhood.
3..$.j.e5S.3S3
OPEN DOORS IN BUSINESS
The Theatre Usher
The job of Usher in a Theatre is
one which is rapidly falling to the lot
of women. They can do it as well as
men and, since it pays little and is
very easy to do, it seems more appro
priate for women than for men. ' It
is not a good work for a girl to make
permanent as the pay will remain
small as the requirements are small.
For a girl who must remain at home
during the day, but wishes to pick
up a little money in the evening, this
will serve.
The wages pre only about ?8 or $9
a week, besides gratuities. " Vaude
ville houses py more but the hours
are lorr". The uniforms are furnish
ed - trtre.
The tT?vrr- must arrive at the
theatre an I-our before the perform
ance and are permitted to leave af-
ter the last intermission, only a few
remaining until the close. This tfcey
allot among themselves in turn. When
there are matinees the girls are re
quired to be present. In vaudeville
where there is continuous perform
ance the hours are arranged to ac
cord with the law. It is very easy
to qualify, about the only requirement
being to know the position of seats in
the theatre. .
THE WOMAN CITIZEN. -
$SS$S.JsSs,
These six planks . constitute the
platform desired by women according
to the opinion of The League oi
Women Voters:
1. Independent Citizenship for Mar
ried Women, so that no women can
through marriage lose or attain citi
zenship. 2. More stringent qualifications
for voting than the present laws de
mand. 3. Improvement ia educational
laws and facilities.
a. Equal opportunity for coun
try and city citizens.
b. Adequate equipment.
c. Increased pay for teachers.
d. Americanization study courses
in public schools.
4. Appointment of women on State
Boards controlling
a. Employment of women and
children.
b. Public health and morals.
5. Women on equal basis with
men in political parties.
6. Wages based on occupation with
no discrimination on the grounds of
sex.
$$S3S$.SJ3iJ.s,J.
WOMAN-I-TORIALS
"My love to all those that I love.
My love to all those that love me, -My
love to all those that love those
that I love
And those that lova those that love
j me."
Let the Baby beat the drum and
Willie toot the horn. That's their
idea of peace on earth.
8 $
UN-HAPPY THOUGHT
Just about the time you think you
can make both ends meet, someone
moves the end. Trotty Veck,
ISABEL SURVIVORS
UNABLE TO DESCRIBE
TERRIBLE EXPERIENCES
The most graphic narrative was
given by Fernandez Barreras of Ar
riola, who drew' a striking picture of ,
the desperate struggle for lire by the
passengers and crew thrown into the
sea by the waves after the vessel
crashed.
Barreras said he found himself in
the water being tossed about by terrific-
breakers in pitch darkness.
Many of those who went overboard
were killed, he said, by being hurled
against the rocky shore. In some
cases several persons tried to sieeo
the same projection, a struggle for
life in the icy water ensuing in which
the weaker swimmers slipped away
and were drowned.
The cries of the women and chil
dren could be heard on all sidesj for
some time. Barreras said, but one by
one the struggling victims were si
lenced by the waves. Officials and
citizens of Riveria began doing
iverything possible to relieve the sur
vivors' sufferings.
OUTLOOK FOR
COMING YE AR
VERY BRIGHT
PORTLAND, Jan. 7. That busi
ness conditions will be back to some
thing like normal before June 1 was
the prediction of 1 L Mills, presi
dent of the Oregon Life Insurance
company and of the First National
bank, in an address delivered at the
luncheon at the Imperial hotel Wed
nesday, opening the conference of
salesmen of the insurance company.
Mr. Mills declared that already
there were indications that the bot
tom had been nearly reached.
"Some mills are operating again,"
he said, "after having been shut
down."
As a basis for his belief that tke
present business flurry is near an
end, Mr. Mills declared that stocks
of goods in the hands of retailers and
jobbers throughout the country were
getting very low, in many instances
shelves being almost bare. As a con
sequences, he said, buying must begin
again to take care of the demand.
"We have a hundred million people
In this country who must be fed and
clothed, and we only have to wait
until consumption catches up with
the present supply to set business
restored," he declared.
BURGLAR HAS
HOLES IN BACK
OF HIS HEAD
CHICAGO, Jan. 7. Examination of
McWhorter McGrath, youthful bur
glar, who confessed to stealing $50.
000 worth of valuables from 200
north side residences, shows in Justice
Olson of municipal court today holes
in the back of his head "in which
one's fist could be put."
"If I happened to pass a dark
house," McGrath confessed to police,
"it worried me so when I got home
that I couldn't sleep. Oftimes I would
get out of bed and go back and rob
it."