acksonville, Or., Now Drinks Mountain Water From Mains W OMEN'S. GLUBS Lditcd by Mrs. Sarah A. Lvans i . r aM. WMBiMHaHI.BBMillHaaaBMHiaMMa -n. f n . in organization of ) 63,000 womiu.. as 'Tlie Housewives' bengue" N sdIU of all that has benit aald ami I predicted, AtKut t-)wv, womwi, xlub trrtktmt up th homo, euch year JL show an InoreBKirig number of ., women orgfinlnlng for tho purpoN of Improving- household-condition una lor .....aa.- a...l.. fen.... a..wtllftlilU 111 thplr inv iuuj u k iivmw M.vivinn ... - Clubs. Xh subject Is beginning, In fact, to tak on national Importance, - fmors perhaps . through tho high cost of 'living than for any other reason. But tor whatever reanon, there Is a prcat movement stirring which has Its ceiitur In the homo. in Kaw VnrV rliv th housekeepers 'have an knawn as Wbioh Is ft new and twmerful factor In .' ft crusade agalnrt high living. These Vamcn have already demonstrated the rValue of their organisation, for It was they who instituted th famous boycott gainst butter last winter, and within a few -lays caused tho officials of the Elgin company which controls trie isew rjfork market to write to their, rftpresen--tatlve at that place, ordering an lm me dial reduction In butter, adding that, f ha. nnntlnuni refusal of women to buy V.-aa- ...... .1.4 -nnnw" lalnr riltn thP - uuiLer wuuiu ruuiici ...... .... business." If this condition obtains rwith a staple articl of food like butter, .What food may not be reduced by a boy j cott. If the women organize and are firm I tn thetr demands? '. This organization has sent out a creed 4 which might be studied to the benefit I of avery home In Oregon as well as In , New York. Briefly It Is: "Control the quantity of food. ' "Prevent abort weights and measures. i "Keep the butcher from stealing and ' I the grocer from his sins. "Protect vour children's lives from ; danger of Infection from the candles 1 they cat , "Keep the fat dealers' dirty fingers -' Hrt--e-the pickle barrel, f "Stop paying 48 cents a pound for : flvs cent food because It Is In a fancy ; package. i j"Stop juggling of prepared foods end to a little cooking to her own good 'and j her family's. i "Prevent disease from dries. "Break herself of the costly canned g-ooda habit Rend the labels and thus get the benefit of the pure food lo,w. i "Remember that the good old garden I vegetables are still grown and that I they can be found In the markets." , f jjvudviiuiu .uiiuilliua iiaa una a. null' " aAvltl Imnatna In (ha fnilflf.fl j.li,Vtat '1 the nnt two venrn thrmitrh thA mitlrtna? ! efforts of Mrs. Olef Gulldlln of Fort 'Wayne, ind., who has been chairman of . i that department Through her efforts : and the efforts of Mrs. William Fear filthy laun- of Portland, who Is chairman of that committee of the state federation, much j Interest Is being aroused In the nublec ; In Oregon, which will be heard from later. K fc K S every club that Is affiliated di rectly, or Indirectly with the Gen eral Federation will be expected to I follow the general prtciples laid lown In t th resolutions passed at the recent con t ventlori at Ban Francisco, the following eunie- -ef--them- na - been" made, that t they may be studied by clubs, and as far ' as possible some recognition of those ' that have a local Interest be given at ; tentlpn..ln tha club work of tha year. ; The resolutions arc: t Resolved: ? "That the general federation co-oper-! at with the movement to erect a coins. aai peace statue at the Manama canai. "That. It Indorse the good roads move- t meet, th subsidy for post roads and thr Jocean-to-oeeSjn highway' to be known as ancoin itignway. i "That It protest against further cur J tatlment of the national forest reserve ; 'That It Indorse the congressional bill T for the creation of a bureau of national parka, under the department of the in t terlor. "That It express to President Taf t its aoDroclation for his aDDolntment of t Miss Julia Lathrop as head of the chll- drens' bureau. j "That It seek federal aid In the pro curement of vocational training and dl- ; rectlon for boys and girls leaving the publio schools. t'urge its clubs to be active In promoting household economics. J "That Jt Indorse the national employ ' era' liability bill now pending In con- gress. -P "That It urge women at ports of entry In th txfllted States to study immigra tion conamons, ana urg-e-Trrro tho p- ; pomtment of women employes In the lm t migration service. ; "ThaTTt IhlIorse"lTie''""movemenl'" the appointment of women police of .-: fleers in all cities of the United States. ' .'That It declare Its disapproval of the i present contract labor gyem In prls- Onst: that It Urea Iht VlniTthfnt nntlnnp . employment of convicts; that It advo 1 cate tHat the product of convict labor , be consumed by the state, and that thi profit of convict labor, above the cost of the convict's support, bo devoted to . the dependent family of the convict. "That it recognize the English Bible as a literary classic, and urpn Its intro ' ductlon to the literary program of clubs. "That It IndoFeethe- movement for higher ideals for-the American 'Stage. "That it recomniend to the clubs the necessity for plans for the better medl ' cation of schools. i" i"Th.,it advocate th passage of laws . reauirlrig a certificate of. health before : the issuance of a marrlape certificate. 7 '.'That it go on record a- favoring uni form marriage and divorce laws. (p- vadiV, the home of the easy divorce. M' newspapers toy discontinue the publica tion of comic supplements, or to change (he character of the supplement' now publlnhed, "Thst it advocate! the pHSssge of law (o li.sure tho legal oqusllty of men and vomer, in respect of property rights, "and In ropect to the domestic relation." it R R IRS JULIA LATHROP. chief of tho child bureau department at AVashington. 1. C, told women who were gathore'd at the Fairmont hololi San Fruiiclsco, July 4, celebrating Indi pendence Ia , what she considers their greatest duty. "W.inen muNt learn to stick to their tasdt." she said. "They are too apt to work enthusiastically for a reform or measure, see It enacted and then hurry on to fresh flelils, thinking they have accomplished all in their power, and all thry were callrd upon to 1r I have seen many a splendid philanthropy come to complete and dlro failure JUst because women had ceased to continue their Interest, "This message sometimes applies to the club president. After tho excitement of election is over, after the flowers have faded and the congratulation die away, und when the members who have so heartily elected her have fled to mountains and seashore, the president must, remain working earnestly to pre pare committees and develop plans of j work for tha ensuing year." I It K ' LANS are maturing In Michigan for the work incident to'the suffrage campaign which will be vigorously I waged for tho next six months, or until the November election. The entire state Is being organized-, by counties, with headquarters at Detroit, from which speakers, organizers and literature will be sent out. The Arkansas Federation of Women's clubs, In convention at I-lttle Rock a few days ago unanimously adopted a resolution to ask the next state legis lature to extend the school suffrage to women. Missouri women, supported by every woman's organization In the state, have entered upon a campaign for the ballot. Initiative petitions calling for the sub mission to tha electors of a constitu tional amendment to give women the right to vote for all city, county, state and federal office In Missouri were placed In clrtulatlon lost week, and re ports to the headquarters of the suf frage association show that they are being signed at a rapid rate. Georgia is among the southern states which are developing a strong sentiment In favor of votes for women. Miss Alice Ormond, a beautiful and talented young writer of Atlanta, who has made a notable success in New York, Is one of the leaders of the movement In the south. Wisconsin has a splendidly equipped Men's League for Woman Suffrage, the personnel of which will have great In fluence on the priisent campaign. Kan sas has several Men's leagues In various parts of the state, with others In pro cess of formation. The Men's Iaoague for Woman Suffrage In Ohio are com posed of ftiBIeadlngr men of the state, many of whom are taking active part In the campaign. - Michigan was one of the first states In which a Men's league was formed. New Hampshire ha one of the largest In the trnlted States, and the one recently organized at Dartmouth college Is cooperating with the state campaign committee In an effort to se cure submission of the amendment to , V. . lAnn Tl.. -Aa - i ! t : HiC CltVllfl B, Alio 11ICI1 yiL UICKUU i a.n. , u-i.t - ,i il. i oens ai iunu a tun veil uuu uuruig me nummer for the purpose of furthering the cause -of -woman- suffrage- ln that- at&ta -and carrying the amendment in November. X C ' j ' "'t 'a) i , 4 1 j $ '1 f - - 4 i . - -' 4 -is - ' t "rV 1 1 ' , ""v - ,v r. MMIMfciil,-lflll MlllllliaMMMMMMI tl WI'HM -ilMaMMtMaMallltllllllllllinM II Ill III IM10 MlimMillll ira Storage reservoir and impounding dam for new Jacksonville system. (Bperlsl to Ths Jdottib!.) Medford, Or , ' Aug. 3. Jacksonville, the. quaintest and oldest ctty of south ern Oregon, has now for the first time In It 60 year of history, a water sys tem. An Impounding dam that will hold captive 85,000,000 gallons of water; a storage reservoir of 200,000 gallons ca pacity, and a mile of water main con stitute the water system that was ob- (1st, Second only to Portland', talned at a cost of $85,000. The water, which i. fed from Jackson creek, is, ac cording to analysis by Portland chem- mm fids MIL BE HOAXED French- GovfimmenLAgrees Jo Distillation of Absinthe That Contains No Thyion. r T Is sometlmea said that women have no inventive -genius, but this is dls- proven almost every. that are being made In the Patent of fice. Just at present much attention Is being attracted by the Invention of Mrs. Isabella Glllen, the wife of a plumber oT Woodfliere, L. it, which will mini mize, if not entirely remove all danger from escaping gas In burning buildings. The Idea was conceived, It la said, when the deputy fire chief of New York, flurries - Krngpr, wrna killed from es caping gas in the elevator pit of a By George Dufresne. (Br the luternstlonal Newt Berrlee.) Paris, Aug. i. Having succeeded within an almost Incredibly short time In wiping out the thousand of opium Marseilles, Toulon and Paris, the government Is now turning Its at tention toward-JTieasures.whlch will di minish the rapidly Increasing consump tion of absinthe, which forms one of the greatest dangers of the French na tion. During last year alone the con sumption made an enormous and quite gallons, and a commission appointed to study Its effects entirely confirmed the Indictment of the National League Against Alcoholism that "absinthe Is the source of macfne.3S and crime; it causes epilepsy and consumption; It makes the husband a brute, the wife a martyr and the child a degenerate." Substitute X Permitted, All the same, there are difficulties In burning building, and the "cut off" i the way of the suppression of the trade man was powerless to do anything. j In absinthe. The manufacturer,. are a Mrs. Glllen's device consists of fii 'lit- powerful corporation, and the state re tle thermostat filled with mercury and j celvos from the gale of this drink $10,- so nrranged that when the temperature 000,000 a year and the communes a Ut of a room exceeds 160 degrees the mer- tie less than $5,000,000. In the words cury rises and closes an electrlo circuit. I 0f M.-Callleux, "a wave from the The tnr'mt the circuit is closed a aprlng , depths" is to be feared if all the ab- ta lever throww " Intha ArtnXrnm r KSo UnnJlrtV. ( o1 V iaL omTfa honudseCan b WJr ' be dePrlveJ ' elr favorite liquor. For Mrs. C'llen had never had any train- ' . . . T , V . uve,","'m'J Inn- op eineHenep nlonc m.rh.T.lnl. a., I u Hie mra ui it cuinpieu lilieruiciiuil technl.Ml lines, which proves that some women, at least, have Inventive genius. of the sale of absinthe. It discovered that the principal has been poison In K il at SPECIAL committee appointed by the French government to Investi gate the workings of woman suf- need be, so lo frape In the various countries and states , pernicious ingr cf the United States where it has been adopted, has silbmiti ?ri a favorable re port and in no uncertain terms recom mended its adoption in France. In con cluding, the report makes these statements: "Whatever the point of view, It Is reitain that at tho foundation of tho debate there is only ono ouebtlon, that ciuality of sx. (if erffTallty of .iex. , Those who stand alone loda'v are not the suffragists. It ! absintlio Is a ; vegetable substance, ! thyion, so that the suggestion Is that dlBtlfle"rB',shfri-haeve the right to pro duce a liquid and label It absinthe, If long as It be free of this edlent. Further, ao plant containing thyion shall henceforth be Used in French distilleries, and of these plants absinthe or wormwood Is tha chief. From now on, then, It looks as If, we should have an absinthe which Is not absinthe. Whether It will be any less pernicious Is at least doubtful. The absinthe manufacturers profess them selves efitlrely satisfied with this com promise, a fact In itself suspicious. tho first state to seennd the, motion n is pra;,ce that lars In the rear. The adopt this resolution.) That It request the national rhll dren's bureau to print and distribute information touching the subject of birth and death records. "That It petition congrrf,s to Increase the appropriations for thn enforcement of the white slave law, and that a pro test be voiced against the light sen tences often Imposed upon persons con victed In the federal courts of a vio lation of the law. w "That It recommend the appointment Of a subcommittee to study political science as a tfrf-paratlrm forcltlzcnshlp. "That It uree. upon the publishers' of great majority of the civilized world today has decidedly passed us. Tho laugh l.i not on our side. We stand alone with Spain and Turkey." t Pi HAT war Is to be declared on "tax iodKers" by the Federation of Club Women of the 1'nited States In the Interest of the public schools Is Indl- PRISON SENTENCE FOR DELINQUENT HUSBAND (Special to The journal Oregon City, Or., Aug. 3. David La Cure, who was arrested some time ago at Portland, on the charge of non-support, was yesterday sentenced to serve one year in the county Jail. Upon tho promise of allowing bis wife to draw hi eated in a pamphlet which was clrcu- w ages, county Judge Ifeatle paroled nim. lated at San Francisco convention. '- 'if The women are not partlnl In their ac cusation tBat taxes aio being dodged. 4. SweB Affair Toothache Gum , STOPS TOOTilAGIIE Instantly I Us im perfect ulUf action for II pari. AB dnia store t bjr mail, 15c C. . DMT A Co , DrtsotT.-Mi&M. gled for years to make such a trip pos sible and by short meals, poor clothes and shabby rooms have managed to save enough money to get that which would be invaluable In thetr work. In some places the teachers have been asked to Vn'ilaa 11 Ktntaimpnt fif thlf Inavtnnai mrA j expenditure to prove to soma o these recalcitrant . tax-dodger that teacher The question Is asked of every club woman: "f'o 1 pay rny own taxes and wse mv Influence to prevent tax dodg Ihi;''" . , . . The federation's committee on schrml revenue ha cooperated with the Na tional Education Association In nn ln- .i . . ..u. a . I v. ' vpsugauon, me rd.uu. ui wi r t raeklng money set forth illj the pamphlet bejng e(r- culated. It say, In part: i " "The general publio must be made ijjjaanBijyjaBajai to realize thatspeclal .tralnmg requires time and monoyt and, when a teacher' makes the larger-. Investment, a largetj return In tlte way of Salary is Oflfy reasofiable. i This, canister un" the public consclcure U sufficiently aroused otre)' tufn an honest' schedule and to. fay Its tax'es. ' ' ; "The men who demand most from the j schools are ofu-n the ones who are , friosrdeTlnguenrti'Bfifjt thrtr ttntps.- i ''X' man was ' heard to say recently ; that he thought teffChers were, laying u money s.11 the time. He met them 1 everywhere In JSuropa and they eeemed, to have plenty of money. Ko need of j raising their nalarle.: Now we k;now that the'se sam teachers bare etrug- WOMAN PIONEER OF 1852 DIES AT ALBANY Albany, Or., Aug. 3 Mrs. Jame Dan nals, a pioneer of 1852, passed away yesterday evening at her home here, aged 78 years. Mrs. Dannals, whose maiden name waa Louisiana Clover, was born In Indiana and came to Oregon, settling on a donation land claim near narrisburg. She soon married Jame Dannals and lived on Albany Prairie about ten miles from Albany. Thirty year ago they moved to Albany. Mr. Dannals died about a year ago. Mr. Dannals left six children, Charles, Frank and O. P. Dannals, Mr. Dalsey- Allan, Mrs. William Pollak and Mrs. Worth Huston, all resident of Albany. Tha funeral will be held Sunday and Inter meht will be In the city cemetery. ROOMSf n GIVE ARE l ;v PROMPT .Mifk G Bei m Woik' mm The kind that kpeaks-for iUelf when you speak or laugh, Dental Work that shows J5 kill .fundi and Durability Painless Extractions Very Moderate Prices DHB.E.WRIGIT AND ASSOCIATES 3422 Washington Street, Comer Seventh Phones Main 2119, A-2U9 OFFICE HOURS 8 a. m. to 6 p. m.; Sunday 10 to 1 Seventeen Years' Practice in Portland j. a MACK & CO. Fifth and Stark J. G. MACK & CO. GET A LITTLE Telephone Herald? Jifou Know-What It JsL. Don'tYou? No?WeU, SEE FULL EXPLANA TION SEC. 2, PAGE 3 " J , ' Furniture The Productions of America's Foremost Makers Are Displayed in Our Line For the homes of the discriminating, at a mod- v erate cost, the "Quaint" type of furniture best meet the demand. Simplicity of design, trustworth iness in construction and . excellence of finish are distinguishing features of our display of this -popular fur niture. - At 12 is an Arm Rocker similar to the illustration shown at right. In fumed oak, with spring seav-coyerea in opanisn leathefa , . . j As low as $9.00 are other Arm Rockers in fumed oak, with- spring seati, upholstered in Spanish leather. x . At S18.50 i, a Library Table in fumed oak with heavy 4-tncn'''1eWW-W4rTnch' MpTM " quarter-sawed stock. Massive Davenport in fumed oak, upholstered in Spanish leather, with loose cushions, at ?BO. Those Who Have Floors to Cover Should Investigate These Offer ings in Room-Size Rugs Sample Rugs Several of them to be removed from our rug'racks to make room for incoming new patterns. f 27.50 for 9-ft. by 12-ft. Body Brussels Rugs in pat terns suitable for bedroom, living room and dining room. Ten patterns to choose from. 930 for 10 ft. 6 in. by 12 ft. Body Brussels Rug. ?40 for 11 ft. 3 ip. by IS ftj Body Brussels Rug. Carpet Rugs Made up in our workrooms from roll ends of carpets. Priced considerably lower than loom rugs of like size and quality. $ 7.75 for Rugs made from Wilton carpet border, size 3 ft. 9 in. by 7 ft. $14 for Rug of Body Brussels, in predominating 'shade of tan. Size 6 ft. by 9 ft. 915 for Body. Brussels Rug in a small pattern. Size 6 ft. by 10 ft. 6 in. f35 for Axminster Rug, size 10 ft. 6 in. by 12 ft, In desirable conventional pattern, tan background. f 45 for large Bigelow Axminster Rug, 10 ft 6 in. by 18 ft. Small pattern with tan background. A fine floor covering for large living room. Of Interest to Those Beautifying Their Homes is it to know that keeping in touch with all that is cor rect and new in fabrics for the creation of distinctive schemes in interior home dec oration is our constant aim. You have the advantage here of a complete and up-to-date stock of decorative fabrics and wall papers, and the ex perience of skilled decorators and workmen. Among the re cent arrivals in decorative fabrics are: Printed Linens in quaint patterns, in floral, striped and lattice designs. Subdued color effects. For sleepinK- ropm hangings, furniture coverings, bed aets, etc. Also in the heavier patterns and color effects, suitable for living room and dining room. Color retaining and washable. Wall Papers to Match-r-Enabling the decorative treat ment f the various rooms 6f the home to be faithfully car ried out. We'll gladjy assemble fabrics nd wall papers, floor coverings, etc., and submit original color drawings showing the finished effect , Fifth and Stark J7GTMacK78rCC Fifth and Stark v ' L .... " L ' ' - T