’ » ‘ SjE / in n ’ T H E Jf 1 By Peter Radford. Lecturer National Farmer«' Union. to their equipment which enables them to handle long distance work with dispatch K och has been said and more writ» ten about the woman In the factory and behind the oounter. but how about the woman who works in the field. I want, to any a few words In her be­ half. I resret a necessity that com ­ M ERCHANTS. W ORKING MEN, pels woman to work for a livelihood, add I favor not only shortening bar EM PLOYERS EN THUSIASTIC hoars, but freeing her from manaal U N C E SALOON W A S B AN - * labor entirely. I crove for society I8H ED. IMPROVEMENT that high standard o f excellence where IS GENERAL. - > the home is woman’s throne and her life la devoted to molding the char­ acter and elevating the thought o f the rising generation. But so long as want, greed and m isfortune prevail In this world, women, through chaise or necessity, will work, and perhaps they will work at one task or another as many hours per day as they please. W e may pity tbs wank and admire the strong in their struggle, but the term woman Is entitled to her shore o f sympathy and reward. DRT TOWN UKED BT ALL Picnic Parties a Specialty Black 100 k soior « ioio « m r y ^ Have just received the Latest New York Patterns For LADIES SUITS Come in see them Mueller; the Tailor Phene Block 14 Cell on All Must Tell. Newberg Manufactur. ing & Construction do The labor problem, es relates to men, Js e most vexatious one, and when we apply It to women it becomes more seriously com plicated. W e will always have to work unless some po­ litical genius can pat a law on the statute book that will enable ua to live without labor. 80 long aa every person must meet tofi face $9 face, the beet we eaa do la to equitably dis­ tribute the burdens and reward labor, and if there is t o be a revision o f wages and a shortening o f boars, I want the farm woman to get her share. She has more r eason to com­ plain than any other class o f tollers. She has, as a rule, few er oomfarta, few er pleasures, lees recreation and leas opportunity for enjoym ent than her sister la the c it y .' She has not so many conveniences and few er lux­ uries and lees to he thankful for than women who live in the town, but she tolls on, a model o f consistency, pa­ tience and womanly devotion. Cer­ tainly she should be the first to be rewarded. For W indow s, D oors ft C en tral M S W rrk, 4M N. M ela Street rapidly being paid in. Mill Men Net Drunk New. Under the licenaod saloon, one mill regularly sent home from six to 18 men on the m idnight sh ift because they were too intoxicated to work. W ith Qregon C ity dry, that m ill has refused adm ittance to hut three men in the seven months that the law has been in offset in the d tp . N et a cheek in the last pay roll d f the Oregon City paper mills was cashed in a Portland or a Milwaukto saloon. Out o f 688 chocks iapued fo r the last pay roll o f the W illam ette Pulp A Paper com pany, nearly 80# Y m m U n C o u n ty Yamhill County Abetr f No other like it I No other as food T L . M aW l l a a a ( a b I r E M M lflk lll \ Am ma mm mee Ins NÜW MOT wVWlNg M O T M UM pUJi Weekly Oregonian and Graphic both ooe year $2.35. The great dallies with flaming head­ lines deplore the IR o f women who toil In the cities, the elty pulpit thunders with sympathy tor her, and the legislators orate in hdr behalf, but not a line to written, a word sold or a speech delivered In the interest o f the million women who labor on the farm. W here one -woman works In the cities in this state, there are a hundred mothers tolling tn the field, aad no haentlon to made o f i t la the woman In the d ty entitled to any more consideration than the woman * 2 ° “ UDd November 3,1914 NOW L . AD AM S, o f OREGON C IT Y . ¡oadir CM» mot bus inos a A m m ock Imp novo d. C ollection s a n oosíor. I ftooo fow ar bod bilis. A bolition o f th t saloon h a t turnada vaut mum datíp to th t ch an m lt a ftra d t. Chocha th a t aatd té High Cost o f Living Reduced f f fk V U Simple enough: C ron the river, farmers, M m * on the new bridge into Marion county, and bring your grist o f wheat for flour and feed. We will give you for every bushel o f wheat delivered to the mill, viz-: 35 bounds good flour....*......................... $1.015 8 pounds m a n ................................................ 104 3 m m Am sh orts...............................................048 1 ■W r I y \ f . • .i;v f ■ $1.167 Or all flour, 40 pounds ............................... 1.16 P- S. —We pay half ferry charge to those having to croes ferries thought . !■ L « u - uhwwpu — t - i - ■.■*■ — — a p — — M C ham poeg H ou r M ills CHAM POEG, OREGON «<0 -had fu lfilled the neighbor’s predic- tions and had ‘broken ou t in an tm- expected -p o t.' W ith n ice accuracy sod an alm ost in conceivable display of he had sawed every round U a apart p en through the rpiddle rpiddle. ly magnify their troubles and enlarge their accomplishments. This cbarac- tertotic permeates organised society aa well aa enters Into the individual 5£ TO ladder together. It would help fruit picking and be convenient r variou« other purpooes. Be uld gel e good secondhand thirty ot ladder for $ 6 , and 1 agreed to ly half o f i t T he ladder proved be e useful article, end we kept on top o f the picket fence that panted our gardens, where either E He bad divided that ladder lengthwi« s u ’S j s j t s j s j m s £ « top _to to bottom she may have a mors attentive an- toP bottom . !” ' — Y Y outh’s o u th » Com ion. ‘ dlenoe when she cries aloud, but the pan panion. Flattaring. real labor problem. In so far as It re- Flattering. latea to women and children, to on “Oh exclaim ed N anna, rush- h, , s ir !” exclaimed rush­ the farm—where mother and child, in g in to the draw ing room breath- ing into drawing wielding the hoe and gathering the leMw ^ carrying her her lo u rte e n - lesaly and carrying rourteen- harvuet. toil day to. and day out with m onth^ ld charge with whom ^ m onths-old charge, with whom she out hope o f reward. ^ ^ vigitl*g ’ th e 1QO « 0 h, had been visiting the zoo. “ Oh, The City Life Puny. ma’am , Archibald spoke this m orn- thia morn­ t The farm women work from sun ing fo r the first tim e I” until sun. They do their housework “ R e ea a lly !” exclaimed the young and lull a half-million babes to sleep fath er, jum ping up in excitem ent, father, ent. after the chlckena go to rooet. and * “D what did he say, nurse?” before the lark sing« The city wo- . S’ ,' . . “ W h y, Blr> sir, I I ' » was showing him him a a man frequently dt£m• under kard « showing large cage of monkeys when he ships that the farm woman would >*rge eoasider a blessing. The d ty people clapped his hands and called out are great talkers sad ofttlm es great real plain, p lain , T a p s , pap a!’ ” papa!’ m . .f C « -. TODAY VOTE OREGON DRY K iv and cantankerous. 1 certainly fonnd him eccentric, but I am easy to get «lon g with, and we tired aide by tid e nearly seven yea re without any •erioua trouble. W e each had a few fruit trees and a small rege- table garden. UNOKR NKW MANACKMCNT ~ on. t h e > r® J * fi S a fe s t » bb The Real Labor Problem le on the still The others were cashed at soda Wood o fill kinds. Wood sawing a specialty Prompt service. Leave orders at yard or fountains or by private individuals, at Zumwah’ s Pesd Stars, Pint and Main «0 whom the payee was indebted. One check was cashed at a Port­ ' P H O N E B L U E 191 land dry goods store. E. P. HAMILTON, Prop. Paper m ill managers were at their w its' end to keep sober enough men on the midnight shifts o f the plants to operate the m achinery through the night and, at the sam e tim e, not vio­ late the 10-hour labor law. Many T h a • N a t i o n a l • W e a k ly tim es shift schedules had to tbe broken, the earlier night shift men lapping oyer into the m idnight sh ift i n C l u b s This entailed the paym ent o f over­ tim e to men doing the work o f those drunk. Most o f the men who have been discharged while the plant was running full capacity, have been die- mimed fo r intoxication. s They hold their jobs now. The average deposits in the banks havs increased. Though the saloon­ keepers carried'heavy accounts, their balances have remained practically the same. Some o f them have gone into other lines o f business, tw o o f them have moved away from the d ty . Checks that were form erly cashed W i n Y « a G * b C . 1 W . in saloons—and one saloon is said to have cashed regularly $8000 every pay night now find their way through the channels o f trade into the bank deposits. L. Adam s, one o f the lending dry- goods merchants o f Oregon City, said ; “ Since Oregon C ity dry went into effpct, business has improved. Col­ lections are easier. I have few er bad bills on m y books than I had a year ago. It aloe hat had a tendency to make people buy all o f their goods at home. , “ W here I cashed 16 checks on pay- nights a * the m ills, I now cash 60. The abelition o f the saloons haa turned that vast amount o f money from the Portland liquor houses Into the *meat m arkets, grocery stores, drygoods stores sad other channels o f trade right here at homq. Oregon City is now saving the m on o} that it form erly spent fo r boose.* B. T. McBain, m ill manager o f the W illam ette Pulp ft Paper company, m id: “ M y last pay roll is evidence that the men do not now spead their money in saloons, either ia Portland or in Milwaukie. O f the 686 check* last issued, nearly 600 o f them hear witness that fam ily expenses are be­ ing paid. Mea who ' form erly sent their cheeks back endorsed by sd^on- keepers new put them through Hie HOME oa the stores o f Oregon City. N ot one o f m y chicks haa come back endorsed andin the Up. by a saloonkeeper." The follow ing police statistics come from the d ty records o t Oregon v ! G R A P H IC “ I oner trad a neighbor,” M id the w i r e d m erchant, “ the oddest speci­ m en o f humanity I ever met. i had beeu warned that thia man— Blank jj will call him — vaa unreasonable REO TR U C K Office phone —-sse- {r -* 7 V ïi ^ZJSStSU T b «, boast o f tbslr accomplishments, bat I have seen widows tn the country make a crop, drink branch water and oat corn-bread and molaseee and raise more children sad better ckil dren than many o f theae city orphan asylums. The d tlss need, to get buck to the soil with their Ideals. They are hysterical, puny and feeble in their conception o f life, Its require monte and Its opportunities. -— - --------- The Main Chanoo. Chance. E ng- A Scottish laird invited an Eng­ n d to go salmon fishing lish frie friend „ with ¡th h him im . . T h , EngH, hn un ked The Englishm an hM hooked a -to salm »». on, > but fell • >»> “ in hia excitem ent Mt into ^ thq stream in^° stream . . The The keeper, keeper, aee- ing he was no swimmer, went to his aid aid, , when the laird cajled o u t: * "W h a t are ye about, Donald ? Get haud o’ the rod and and look to the the feesh feeah. . H H e e will will wait, wait, but but the the «__ v „• ___ » feesh winna.” Lumber wm na. , r « f f BhM u d A t Three Hundred andJThirteen, First Street, Newberg, Oregon n s Ont o f Sorts, HERBINE M W * » «■ The Philadelphia Society tor the Prom otion o f Agriculture to the oldest association of Ks kind in America This was organised by Qserge Wash­ ington and Renlamlm jfranklto ta 17JU Helping a Tartan A angular custom prevails among the Tartar* or Kurds. I f a man guts into difficulties— namely, loess his eattle or other movable property— he pour* a little brown sugar into a piece of colored cloth, ties it up ana carries one such par- C$1 to each of his friends and ac­ quaintances. In return he is pre­ sented, according to circumstances, with a cow or sheep or a earn o f money. He ia thus at ones set on a torpid liver. The first does ■rings improvement, a dew <)•*>■* Use puta the Uver ia fine vigor- condition. Herblne also ox- S Its restorative Influence to the stomach and bowels. helps digestión and food assimi­ lation. purifies tbs bowels and brings back the habit of regu­ lar dafiy bowel more menta. When tbs stomach, liver and bowels are active, bilious im­ purities ao longer obstruct functional prooesaea, tbs result o f which to renewed energy, mental activity and chacera! « PHONES: 7, J. Kelley Plumbing Co It Bareroft’s Drug Store N ext Door to Poetofflce Residence, Red 147; Shop, Black 196 S A N IT A R Y PLUM BING, S T E A M F IT T IN G G ALVAN IZED PIPE. E T C Office and Shop at 402 First Street, Newberg. Oregon J. L. V A N B L A R IC O M Staple and Fancy Groceries • Fresh Fruits and Vegetables i meaft particu lar, ip t service dueex’ t i y ou . W e w ant you r trade ^4 •'W