Pa e Poor
The Capital Journal, Salon, Oregon
Capitafeisfourna
Salem, Oregon
An Independent Newspaper
Published evenings except Sun
day by Capital Journal Printing
Co., 135 South Commercial,
Telephones: Circulation and Bus
iness, 81; Editorial. 82.
O. Putnam, Editor and Publisher
Entered as second class
matter at Salem, Oregon.
mail
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Loganberry
Laughs
By Robert Qulllon
Why didn't Dr. Simons suggest
letting Austria pay it?
At that, it Is much easier to be
good than to make good.
Every time Heinle says "can't, '
it sounds suspiciously like
"won't."
These reprisals remind us that
man born in Ireland is of feud
days.
The annoying thing about sup
erior people is that they frequently
are.
The typewriter is mightier than
the sword. This is especially true
of blondes.
One who boasts of his ancestors
counts himseir tneir greaiem
achievement.
ing out across a wilderness of
tracks branching out into dark
ness, set with red, green andt -blue
lamps.
He waited, lighting a cigajfctul
On his left a heavy electric engine
rolled Into the station, drawing a
Western express train. The lignted
windows of the cars threw a run
ning yeiiow illumination over his
motionless figure for a few mo
ments, then the train passed into
the depths of the station.
And now her train began to
move very slowly out through the
wilderness of yard tracks. Car af
ter car passed him, gaining mo
mentum all the while.
When the last car sped by and
tne tall
Russia has Reds,
blues; but America
brilliant Hughes.
A famous man:
considered great by
people he considers
and fiertnany
has the more
One who
the class
boobs.
Count that day blest whose low
descending sun has seen in all
your mall not one grim dun.
Eventually Dncle Sam may ac
cept a place In the League, but
It won't bo that of official axe-erthder.
Once only the rich
Into American society.
rlchi'H don't matter
box or wrestle.
could get
But now
If one can
Awaiting a Magic Touch
President Harding has asked the best minds of the senate
be sounded out as to the advisibility of the speedy enactment
of an emergency tariff to aid farmers showing how the
orthodox standpatter travels around in a circle to high
tariff as the magic cure-all of all industrial and economic ills.
The old nostrum, however, is no longer efficacious. Prices
of farm products are low because we have a food surplus and
because we have no foreign market for our food, badly as
the world needs it, because Europe has neither money nor
credit wherewith to buy food from us. As long as the United
States possesses most of the money of the world and most of
the grain of the world, a tariff to bar grain imports is not
eroincr to heln the farmer or tret rid of his surplus.
as l. en! it- .-4. tV,a loot t-" "s"" awintned into per
iTiain. ouiuvau, me uuuucai wuici, wuu uiutug snective. nrimr hA rsnih. v.i..
campaign acted as propagandist lor naming declares mat
the republicans face a serious crisis and that unless a remedy
is found, a widespread revolt of the agricultural classes is in
prospect, similar to the revolt of the early 90's, when the
Populist party resulted. He also remarks that within two
weeks after Harding's inauguration, the New York stock
market fell to a new low level, which if it had followed Cox s
inauguration, would have been widely heralded as a result of
democratic inefficiency, "by those to whom the word republi
can is panacea for economic ills."
Sullivan quotes a "wise westerner" as declaring that the
world of 1914 is gone forever. We cannot get it back, and
old man normalcy is a fraud. He simply isn't" which is one
thing the republican president and republican leaders have
never seemed to realize. The old conditions have forever WJtn tne S0gan "Oregon First-
passed away and there exists no magic of politics whereby iai headquarters capital Post No
they can be resurrected. Talk of restoring normalcy is
nonsense.
Whether the politicians Mr. Harding has surrounded
himself with in the cabinet, outside of Hughes and Hoover
who apparently comprehend the situation, are going to be of
much assistance, is problematical. Secretary Wallace of the
Department of Agriculture, has surely a limited vision, when
he would restore farm prices to inflation basis by fiat. He
declares "farm products must come up in price and other
products come down until the normal relation between them
has been restored. This talk of bringing prices back to pre
war normal is morally wrong and economically impossible."
But how is the price of farm products to be raised 70
percent above pre-war prices? A tariff will not do it. We
should of course find an outlet for our great food surplus,
but it can not be found on an inflated basis. Meanwhile the
country anxiously awaits the restoration of prosperity so
glibly promised by the party in power.
tut rV- t XMJL ta l, b
JTHE TALE OF
40MMY FOX
I
Charity doesn't let its left hand
know what Its right hum! Is doing
But it lets the reporters know.
A Missouri man named Ladder
has adopted a little Russian. And
vou know what the fellers will call
him.
There Is one good sign. The
business of the cigar stub collec
tor Is picking up.
A lot of people who clamor for
liberty have yet to learn that the
more rights one has the more
duties he has.
If children were able to defend
themselves, parents would seldom
think It their duly to administer
punishment.
The thing to remember Is not
that the dove brings an olive
branch In her bill, but that she
brings an olive branch and the
bill.
It Ik easy to believe that man Is
descended from thi- r.ionkey, sui
you can t realize bow far he has
descended until you examine a
lounge lizard.
Humor is frequently heartless.
For example, there Is a Georgia
nan who advertises near-beer
With a sign reading: "There Isn't
hend ache In a barrel of it."
Worm: A creature placed on a
hook to catch a fish. Frequently
at en by small children. (2) Also
the male who is part of the scen
ery when a girl becomes a bride.
Oregon a Dumping Ground
Thanks to the cowardice of the Oregon senate Oregon is
now threatened with a real Japanese invasion. California
passed an anti-alien land law at the last general election.
The Washington legislature has followed suit, and Japs,
barred from acquiring property in California and Washing
ton are turning to Oregon.
Senator McNary is probably to blame for leaving Oregon
the open-door for alien invasion. He wired the legislature
the opinion that such action by Oregon would gravely em
barrass the national administration in its treaty making
with Japan. How could it? Caliiornia, fooled for 20 years
by the national government, had already acted, and it was
impossible for Oregon to add further complications.
While Oregon was still debating the alien land law, Texas
passed it. And Washington has now followed with a similar
law. But the pleas of Lodge and McNary and the com
mercialism of the Portland Chamber of Commerce, which
does not hesitate to sacrifice the future for present gain,
prevailed.
There is one way in which the anti-Jap bill can be put on
the statutes and that is by initiative at the next general
election. The American Legion sponsored the bill in the
legislature. Let the American Legion initiate the measure.
It has all the machinery for securing signatures. That is
what the initiative was designed for to secure laws when
the legislature failed to act. Meanwhile we lose two years in
order to "prevent embarrassment of the administration.
cigarette
Behind him lay the dusky, lamp
lit tunnel of the station. Before
him, through ruddy darkness,
countless Jewelled lamps twinkled,
countless receding rails glimmer
ed, leading away into the night
It was In him to travel that way
the way of the glimmering, Jew
elled lamps, the road of the shin
ing rails.
Legion On Alert
For New Recruits
'J, the American Legion has organ
ized to inform members and ex
service men of the membership
campaign now on.
Legion members have been given
three months from January 1, 1921
in which to renew their cards ami
(luring- this time are receiving the
Legion weekly, official organ of the
Legion.
Dr. B. F. Pound, commander of
the local post, announced Frldio
that the following members of the
"recruiting squad," Clifford Brown
Jimmy Young, Joe McAllister,
Johnny Holman and Millar McGil
christ. Allan Kafoury is "ton ser
geant" of the committee.
ARTHUR SCOTT BAILEY
l I i i t w , . i
.. . .1 u.
- w, . l rtnwn tne tree, .no 1,v
Mr. I. ray squirrel s mmuini.- - ,,, 1,1.
Mr Gray Squirrel certainly was could hear him slowly pickm., his
mistaken, when he thought that way nearer and nearer Tommy b
Tommy Fox was dead and cm, nose M sharp, too, and he cou id
down out of the chestnut Tee to smell Mr. Gray Squirrel. He smell
look at him. Tommy wasn't e-n ' ed so good that Tommy eouldnt
in vnu remember that he was help opening one eye the least on.
very hungry? And that he had not Just to see him. That MWM
been able to find anything to eat? Mr. Gray Squirrel noticed that his
Tommy could not climb the UC eyelid quivered. And Tommy sue
where Mr. Gray Squirrel Mt So at once that Mr. Gray Squirrel hid
the only thing left for him to do caught that flicker of his WWW.
was to make Mr. Gray Squirrel and that he was frightened. Ton -come
down where he was my knew then that he must act
That was what Tommy Fox was quickly.
ihinklng about, when he Mt thOM I He jumped up ime """"V
on his haunches and looked up so . quick as he was, Mr. Gray WW
innocently at Mr. Gri? Rqulirst I rel was even quicker. He reacneo.
As Tommy sat there a bright idea the tree Just ahead of Tommy ox.
came to him. So he held his paw and though Tommy leaped men
to his stomach and pretended '.o np the trunk, he was too late. A.r.
be ill. And as soon as he saw that Gray Squirrel scrambled up tne
Mr. Gray Squirrel thought he was tree so fast that his big bush tat
111, Tommy fell over on his side just whisked across Tommys face,
and made believe he was dead J And In another second he was safe
Though his eyes were shut tight, ; in the tree top, chattering and
Tummy's ears were so sharp that scolding, and calling lommj
he could tell when Mr. Gray SquU'- names.
Tr Hl
xommy rox relt very foolish.
Hs realized that if he had Jumped
up without first opening mis eye he
would have given Mr. Gray Squir
rel any warninf; and then he
would have caught the plump old
fellow. But It was too late now
Another time he would know bet
ter. And he sneaked nff .
l ny me w.u . w an
Squirrel's friendi " Uray h o?
It was no use. Mr. Squirrel a
lowed him. Jumnlnir from ..... i,. , eyea bsj
top to another, and made 1 ,y.0Ur face-.T" Ills
The
wards'
watch n. rtothi...ll
nniciA . of. an Ki .
, ana jeer
ing at him, and telling all his
friends about the mean trick Tom
my had tried to play on him
And to Tommy's great disgust,
an old crow high up In a tall tre.j
heard the story, and haw-hawed
loudly, he was so amused. He made
such a racket that all the forest
people heard htm; and Tommy
knew that there was no sense In
trying to catch a squirrel around
there that day. He went down Into
the meadow and began hunting
crickets. And though he didn't
have as good a lunch as he want
ed, probably he ate all that was
good for him.
a great , no sparkle
More Twists to Triangles
Of War Brides In France
Son of Oakville
Man Shoots Self
Albany, Or., Mar. 21. Word Was!
received by C. H. Crampton of Oak
ville to the effect that his son.
I'almer, 22 years old. accidentally
shot himself Wednesday at Monu
ment, Grant county, where he has
been teaching school for the last
two years. p. v. Crampton, a
brother of the young man, left last
evening for eastern Oregon, and
will return with the body, which
wlll.be buried at Oakville
ConimlKKionor at Medfortt.
Medford, Or.. Mar, 21. state
Highway Commissioners Booth
frHn,?na ,!arI'"1 arr'Ved ,n Mod
lord at 9 a. m. todav ami !,., ...
once to contim.o .hi . .
" muior triii
er the Pacifin '. 1
California line. They wlT V
will",!;!00,1" Ashland at no and
will take dinner In u.dr..! ,
aft,.- ... " r.""" '""ism
Portland by train.
leave for
tScHft nis&jB .'RSHSk hE
i 1 t-Xt f rsm.iBr S4 Ml M l II
f& '
IiMHII 1 1 r 'f' """ 4 WJ llW Emti
DRQNCHITIS
At bedtime rub the throat an
mF chest thoroughly with.
VICKS
V aro Rub
Over ' 7 Million Jan UttJ Ytarl
n,ny per cent IT'
T- n .
sician la ohin' " L-!" ko
which he gave Z lm
for years. 8 ,e hli 3
Dr. Erti,j.
substitute for Jr!.1!
" 'heir action yet " Lre I
Ive. They brin. fv. ' ett
buoyancy whleh
by tAiag up the
ig the system of
. Dr. Edwards' oiiv, , 7
known by thel, llt,lt'
and 30c.
and
hnpuritia,
KM
T
mm REASON
assures you that there is
no substitute for
Scott's Emulsion I
An old saying, but nonethe
less true: A bottle of
Scott's Emulsion
taken in time, helps
keep the doctor away.
Scoit & Bowne. Bloomfield, N. JL
ALSO MAKERS OF
ML;
i
((Tablets or granules)
for iNniFSTinN
DOUBLE
r
!
Use Soothing MUsteJ
..When those sharp painst(
throuRh vour ha Kl?Si
seemsasifitwnMirtL"?1 W
Musterole on ySTSffiS
It draws out the UbTSS
awavthenai "aa
MusieroTeisldeTS?
made with on of sana
a mustard nl,.,., Jfr ""N
Many doctorTand
, , ,uu mv
tisraiumbnM"1?.
back nr init. aeii
bruises .chimTainTK
of the chest tit nftn -Wi
CRIP
N.
Dtbtv
The Restless Sex
By Hubert Chambers, Author of "Barbarians," The Dark Star,1
(Copyrighted 19U1 by Robert W. Chambers.)
etc.
When he came out half an hour
later he told the driver to go to
Grand Central Station, and got lo
ot the cnb.
Anne,'' he said gaily, "here's
the two thousand. Count it."
The sheafs of new bills pinned
to their paper bnnds lay in h-.
lap for a long time before she
Parents Accused
Of Using Baby As
Decoy In Stealing
Gtcy 3ptfee
"For th
Detroit, Mar. 27. Mary Ma Lou
ise ltobinson did not obey an order
to appear In Wayne circuit court.
But Mary isn't worried, because
Wireless Amateurs
Hold Con vein lion
she probably knows nothing of the M. v u u
order and wouldn't obey It if she N?" Ufk' Mftr0h 21 ioU can
did. being only seven months old. I s0"(1 n,OHl anything by wireless
She is the youngest child ever these days except parcel post pack
ordered into Wayne circuit court 'ages. Sputtering sparks and buz
on habeas corpus proceedings, and sing dots and dash hnv d.mo.
trated this at the Hotel Pennayl-
last few days o this
that she Is notified in plenty of
timt. to wnt nff : t IIiiiI.iiii Mow '
you may leave us until we ring."
He turned from the corridor and
entered the stateroom, closing the
door behind him. The girl sat on
the sofa, very pale, with a dazed
j expression in her eyes.
He seated himself beside her and
Even then
she drew her hands into his own.
Man Celebrates
103rd Birthday
Breckenrldge, Mo., March II.
Henry Clay's Physician, Dr. Joseph
Singer llalstead, has Just cele
brated his one hundred and third
Birthday. One hundred and three
roses, the gift of every man. wo
man and rhild in Breckenrldge
Were presented to the ng'd doctor.
Dr. llalstead and his wife, who
Is ninety-three, are both still hale
and hesrty, and held open house
for hundreds of their friends from
this section of the state all day
Who came to congratulate the
venerable doctor and to view the
many Henry l lay relics owned by
him
Dr. llalstead lived and practiced
medicine in Kentucky during the
kei(ht of Clai's career, in 1SSU he
Snot oil to HrecKenrldge and pur
chased a 140-fkere farm on the
utskirts of the city, which he still
wns.
"And I can boast of one thing)
that few others can.'" Dr. Hal-1
toed says. "That is, that 1 am the !
fourth ii own this farm. The first
was the King of Spain. The next
was Napoleon Bonaparte and the
third the L'niled States.
Th' Halstcnd wre married In
ISC!. Mrs. Halst.ad was the belle
of iie of the first families in Ken
tucky and the niece of Charles A.
Wyrklllfe, twice Governor of the
State.
K.ght children and fifty-eight
rand - children, great -rrandchil-
t snd great-great -grandrhil-
nw .,'tthday celebration.
touched them
merely lifted one packet and let I "Let me tell you something," he
it drop without even looking at said cheerfully "Everybody makes
It. So Grismer folded the bills mistakes. You've made some; so
and put them Into her reticule, have tj so has everybody I ever
Then he took her slim left hand heard of.
la hoth of his and nel 1 It while i "Everybody gets in wrong it
they rode on In silence through
the electric glare or the metro
polis. At the station he dismissed the
ta.xual., bought a ticket and sleep
ing car accommodations to Hud
son managed to get a state-room
for her all to herself.
"You won't sleep much." he re
marked, smiling "so we'll have to
provide you with amusement,
Anne."
Carrying his suitcase, the girl
walking beside him, he walked
across the great rotunda to the
nettstand. There, and at the con
fectionery counter opposite, ue
purchased food for mind and body
llRbt food suitable for a young
and badly bruised mind, and for
a soul in cmbry, still in the mak
ing.
Then he went over to another
window and bought a ticket for
himself to Plttsfield, and sleeping
accomodations.
"We travel by different linei,
Anne." he said, opening his port
folio and placing his own tickets
In It. where several letters lay ad
dressed to him at his p.-i-emrnt
studio. Then he replaced the port
folio In his breast pocket.
Til go with you to your train,"
he said declining tvt'h a shake of
his head the offices of a red cap
ped porter. "Your train leaves at
l?-!0 and we have only a few min
utes." They walked together through
the gates, the officials permlt'Uig
him to accompany hep.
The train stood on the right a
very long train, and they had a
long distance to walk along the
concrete platform before they
found h r car.
A porter showed them to her
stateroom. Grismer tipped him
generously:
" Be very attentive to this young
tsdy." he said, "and see that she
dea is
fresh
one time or another. The
to get out again and make
start. . . . Will you try?"
She nodded, so close to tears that
she could not speak.
"Promise me you'll make a hard
fight to travel straight?"
"T-yes."
"it won't be easy. Rut try tt win
out, Anne. Back there in those
streets and alleys there's nothing
to hope for except death. You'll
t ai. im
iniu ii ii jou ever go oacK in some
hospltnl, in some saloon brawl, In
some rooming house will sure
ly find you by bullet, by knife, by
disease sooner or later It will find
you unless you start to search for
It yourself."
He patted her hand, patted her
pale cheek.
"IP's a losing game, Anne.
There's nothing in it. I guess you
know that already. So go back to
your people and tell them the last
lies you ever tell. And stick. Stay
put. Mttle girl. You really are all
right, you know, but you got In
wrong. Now, you're out!"
He laughed and stood up. She
lifted her head. All her color had
fled.
"Don't forget me." she whisper
ed. "Not so long as I live. Anne."
"May I 1 write to you?"
He thought a minute, then with
a smile:
"Why not?" He found a card
ana pencil, wrote h-s name nvd ad
dress, snd laid It on the sofa.
It would do any good to think
me when you're likely to get in
wrong." he said, "then try to re
member that I was square with
you And be so to me. Will you'"
'I will."
That was all. She was crying
and her eyes were too blind with
tears to see the expression of his
face as he kissed her.
she did not appear
th . I . . . ...
...a. uut.tuoc sue was sick i vania
in ine House ot Providence hos- ;
pltal, Charles C. Chadwick, county!
agent, told Judge Adolph E. Mar- I
sonner, when he appeared in an- I
swer to habeas corpus propeedlngs '
started by the foster parents of
.Mary Ida Louise, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas ltobinson.
Chadwick said the police had j
mrnea tne baby over to him when
they arrested the parents on a I
charge of stealing a baby cab.
Chadwick swore the police saJd
the baby had been used as a decoy
for the mother to appropriate ba
by cabs from the front of moving I
picture houses. He said she would
drop the baby into the best look
ing cab in front, wheel it home,
ana mere the bugsy would be re
painted and changed In appearance.
The
case will come nn in tht.
Juvenile court on the docket of
negb-rted children. No testimony
"f the parents was taken in th
circuit court.
Hi
wuva, wnere me second district
Amateur Radio Convention ajid
Exhibition has been in session.
It waa the first gathering of its
kind ever held, and the lectures
and demonstrations attracted
inuusands of amateur radio oper
ators. The tricks of the wireless
wizards were all laid on the table,
so to speak, and there were con
certs by wireless, lectures bv wire-
less and messages and convversa-
lions picked out of the air from
far off foreign lands.
vut. , . .
....uo maiupioiisnip code con
tests lor amateurs weie held and
prizes were awarded for the best
: iiuQie-mado amuleur apparatus,
j Among the speakers were J.
Andrew White, editor of Wireless
-tte n. p. Maxim, president Ameri
cn ILidio Rela League; Arthur
jBatcheiler, chief radio inspector
second district, and Charles H
Stewart, Atlantic division manager
mo American Kadio
Li ague.
Council Votes
To Purchase Fire
Truck at Once
Silvrton,
Freight Rate On
Canned Goods Is
Cut, Announcement
I, Ky., Mar. 21. R. L.
foreign freight traffic
Louisville,
Or.. Mar. it. Af it i-n
.t.reyug oi me city council it McKellar
Representative c three da '7'""' f ,he "her Railway
companies submit Id proaff? ? "" f a r'du'-'-
furnish the truck SX "" fi"m 6a t0 5U a hundred
Silverton Auto eompanv prosed ' T" fre'ht es on
to sell a Maxwell for $2X ' rietasJ T SOOds ,rom F'- ports
i'.ros. offered 'an nuinZ,.YZ -.'' N,'w Orleans and Mobile. A
39i0 and M. C. Murphv oeredJS"U"f f about 145 a carload
the LaFiance for 13323. Thi lat-J ' effected, he said.
ter was accepted and the ordir Xori . , , ,
he quipment has aireadv been sent I ALLE(,ED CORNER
ut. The machine will arrive here Arros'cd by Chief of Police Mof-'
m a few days. A one mill tai i-lllj 1 last w, l'k for cutting a
be levied to create a fund for jiy-lC"rn,?r on Chemeketa street, W.
ment of the machine. jA Roberts of this city, was cited
. jto appear before Police Judge Earl
Student. Issue AaaaaC , ' ' " la' S l!urday.
Stay ton. Ore.. March 21 hel 1:hcts failed to put in an ap-
students of the high school are pre-, 'r 'm '' :it the Police court and
New York. Mar. 21
honor of the family!"
Another triangle of the tri-color
No, the aged gentleman is no
the culprit. It was not his love foi
the fair damsel of Krance that
caused Pierre Bellorgetto, soldi
of Demblaia, to divorce her.
Lieutenant Arlington Deppe, son
of the man Madame awaits, is thi
acute angle of the triangle. He b
married and, has three Children
During the late conflict, a hicmbci
of the ordnance department, Lieu
tenant Deppe was stationed neai
Dijon. There he met and loved
Mine. Vennet.
Since he gave her nn engage
ment ring it is probable that h.
didn't stress the fact that he wa
already married. But the husbam
of Madame seems to have been :
man of anger, one who didn't Uki
Jewelry, particularly other men'.
engagement rings on his wife's
finger. A divorce followed.
I'atlier Ilasu-iis bo "Save Honor.
Lieutenant Deppe sailed awav
from Madame Butterfly, and sh
thought one fine day he would re
turn. He didn't, but he had let
his father's address. Mme. Venue
wrote to that gentleman and told
her tale.
"This started a very warm am
cordial correspondence," says Mine
Vennet from her station point a:
the port of New York.
"Lieutenant Denpe's father he-
came quickly concerned about me
Ills letters are brimming over with
expressions of sympathy and af
fection. "He was determined that hi.-
sons nasty romance with m.
should not be a permanent blot
upon my life nor a blur upon his
own family name."
So papa proposes marriage to
the fair lady of France in ordei
that the romance which wrecked
her own marriage, and what has
no doubt, cast a shadow over the
home of Lieutenant Deppe, will
not cast a blot upon her life, and
that the name of Deppe mnv he
connected always and ,,,. M4.
honor and its ways.
The case has been compare!
with the Anglo-Aniri...
,K c: . OI
spurn let here the wholi I
motive of Mrs. Perlev S.dker
magnanimity Is necessarily latkin 1
to save the future of a child
JUy Bptker marri-H tv, 1
whom his brother had loved, who
ww tne mother of his brother Per
ley's child.
How will th
of the Deppes!
MRU
G4RTERJ
Attention--You Men of Mu8cj
Looking for a garter to stay put on those muscled
legs of yours? Something that will act gently
yet firmly?
Then be good to your husky self. Right new
.-hike into your dealer's and get next to then
double grip, double-duty-doing Paris.
Double Grip 50P and up - Single Grip35t
Chicago sH.dl CliN Ct L.Un rHlV I nil
Makers Children's HICKORY Garters
Take a tin-buv Paris todav-remember thrw
Constipation
s insure the ho
to be
paring to Issue an annual
Miicd tne Sannain." The nrlee
will be 11.50 and solicitors are how
nut after i-uhscriptions. It is x-
ported to be ready for distribution
t some lime In May.
Jlhe $10 bail which he had put up
as losseu into the city s strong
box.
Michigan Man
To Head Federal
Pension Bureau
-1 President
Wishinpton. lie
roniiiiiNsiom-r VMM stayton.
MO ton. Ore.. March 21. Slate
Commissioner Corev was in town
t"r a hearing of the water mle -1 .r.ims is said to have ..i.i..t
.juration of the Gardner Bennett appoint Washington Gardner jt
water company. If the Increased, Albion. Mich., a former member
rate desired is allowed by the cm- -he house of representatives and
mission, the rate on citv water writ. a union veteran nt ,,- '
He went away lightly, swinging i be raised. commissioner of pensions, n.
hi. suitcase, and stood on th .ry J commander in chief of .'J Wt
There'd be more
spring poetry if
more words
rhymed 4
with (
Post
ToastieIH
Superior Corn Flakes
T'HPRF K NftTHlwr. enual to Chamb
faaasaaju aVfcsf ai W 1 XAV0
Tablets for constipation. When the
dose is taken their action is so agreeable s
natural tbnf rnn An not realize that it i tte
of a medicine. These tablets possess tonk pr
Hps W olA ki cki.'cV.Jnrr a natural 4(1
v Wl aae, HSU 111 Vv ClAL 1 lOlASHg
iViombftrlain's Table
cured many cases of chronic constipation
prop
f
: 1
LADD & BUSH
BANKERS
ESTABLISHED 1868
General Banking Business
nffino Unnr fr-nm 1 0 a. HI t0 3 P-
8
k-
JOI RNAL WANT ADS PAT ft K in 191J-14.