The Semi-Weekly Democrat Published by DEMOCRAT I'UIM.ISI i I NO CO. VM. H. HORN I ii ROOK, Managing Editor. Entered at the postoffice at Albany, Oregon, as second-class matter. Published every evening except Sun day. Semi-weekly published Tues days and Fridays. HUSINESS MATTER. Address all communications and make all remittances payable to the Dem ocrat I tihlishinK Co. In ordering changes of address, sub scribers should always give old as well as new amlrcss. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Daily Delivered by carrier, per month. ...$ .40 Delivered by carrier, per year 4.00 by mail, at end of year 3.50 By mail in advance, per year 3.00 Semi-Weeklv At end of year $1.50 When paid m advance, one year.... 1.5 CLASSIFIED RATES lc per word for first publication; jC per word thereafter, payable in ad vance. Minimum charge of 25c. Established in 1865. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1913. TRAINS SERVANT GIRLS TO MARRY HER NINE SONS Their Probation Period Is Five Years; Three Already Wed ded; Visit Parents Nightly. St. Louis, Feb. 3. Mrs. Louis J. Tichacck, wife of a wealthy marble manufacturer and former Missouri state representative, trains servant girls in her home to be wives of her sous. She has made three of these matches and they have been so suc cessful that she has plans for keep ing her personally conducted matri monial system in operation until all of the nine sous have taken servants of the family as wives. The father of this interesting family of nine sons and a daughter also has a system. As each son reaches the age of 16 he is given an interest in the father's business and becomes an ac tive partner in it. Tichachek has just taken his eighth son, Harry, into the firm. "Their mother finds their wives and I put them in business and everybody is happy' says Tichachek. M rs. Tichachek has a rule which thus far has never failed her. This is the way she states it: "If a girl is good enough to work in my household for five years she is good enough to marry one of my suns." When a girl lias successfully passed through the five years of probation and has shown that she is proficient as a cook and as a housekeeper, ac cording to the standard set by this mother of ten, Mrs. Tichachek does not hesitate to recommend her to the oldest son still single as a qualified and desirable helpmeet. VVith the executive foresight Mrs. Thicacek preserves the line of suc cession by always having one or more household servants in training when the senior in rank is approaching the end of the allotted five-year period. Friends of the family are comment ing with interest on the fact that three of the sous who have reached legal age Ceorge, 27; Fdward, 24, and Charles, 22 are still bachelors, and that coiucidcntally a young woman regarded by all of Mrs. Tchacek's wo man acquaintances as a paragon of servants has been with the family al most five years. The sons who have followed their mother's advice in selecting servants in the house for wives, and who' have not regretted it, are Louis. ,M: August, M, and Frank, 2-. Louis has two sons, has four daughters and Frank has a mh! and a daughter. The younger members of the Tich acck faultily arc Jerome, 20; Marie, 17; Harry. Id, anil Fugcue, seven. The three married situs have homes adjoining the paternal residence. "Onr daughters in-law are as dear to us as our sons." said Tichaeek. "Every night thev come to our home with their families and we have a party. We make our home so at tractive that our sons never go else where to find amusement. "I have never had cause to regret taking my sons into my business as partners. Hay and night we are a happy f.imitv. Tichaeek lias been in the graining and marbling business in St. Louis M years, lie was a members of the state legislature in W and is a candidate lor the democratic nomination tor city register at the coming spring election. . o PURGE THE COURTS, CRIES A JUDGE, OR PEOPLE WILL Wesley 0. Howard Sounds a Warning and Demands a Straight Road to Justice. Troy, l-Yb. 4 --Kovolmion of the (.mis iinpiinh uiiliss tin' rnnns I"" K'' IIh'HIM'IvcI lit .MIHV, Til hlftll mI anil llius ,u,ll l In- iiu-nli-,1 ini'.i tu'iu'i" uf lho ni.issi'y In a broadside levelled al anliiinati'il Jaws ami the "timidity nf judges," lusii.e We-li-v Howard nl tlit- appellate division nf tin- supreme court nl New Yotk so decl.iied List iii k lit U'lori' tlio alumni of the La Salic Institute. Tin; recall uf judges and judicial decisions prom ise no cure, Justice Howard said, but anarchy instead. "All men are" supposed to be eiual before our laws," he said, "but that seems not to be so. The road to jus tice should hi straight, short and sim ple. There should be no toll-gales on the way, no brigands, no false guide boards. The suitors traveling in au tomobiles should have no precedence over those o'n foot. It is not well tr: scoff at the mutterings of the people; there is much reason for it. "Revolutionary measures arc to be avoided. The movement should begin from within; it is well for the great jurists of the land, the judges of last resort, to take heed o'f the temper of the limes, unbend from their conserv atism and work out the reform them selves. Let us not deceive ourselves. Something will happen. Unless the judges act the people will act; if they do not resort to the recall they will revise the constitution and create new courts." Many decisions to'day, Justice How ard added, record the views, "not of the judges who sign them, hut of judges who lived before the Renais sance." The rule of precedent, he de clared, dominated the rule of right Expert testimony he characterized as "that hideous farce." It was not dis honesty, he said, but constrvatism that weakens the bench "not venality, but timidity." His address follows in part: "lirandt, the o'bscure valet, not guil ty at all of the crime of wghich he was accused, so the attorney-general states, is sentenced to state prison for thirty years practcially for life; Rob in, the millionaire, the alleged wreck er oi banks, houses and homes, goes to jail for 6ne year. Morse, who pyra mided banks and juggled with mil lions, gets out of prison because he is sick, while the convict in the next cell, who stole a coat perhaps, re mains there languishing with sickness till he dies. "The people are becoming impatient with these discrepancies in justice and they are demanding each day in a louder voice that there be reform. Our laws arc becoming inadequate; they do not satisfy the popular conception of equal justice. The people clamor against the law, its delays, its discrim inations, its inconsistencies and they clamor with much reason. "The thousands of statutes, rules, decisions, writs and unwritten laws, uncertain to the judges, confusing to the lawyers and utterly incomprehen sible to the people, coustiutc a condi tion almost chaotic. The huge bulk of the law surpasses all understand ing; it should be reduced to human compass. I am reluctant to say all this for fear of being accused of ig norance if 1 am so accused I shall plead guilty. "The laws will command respect only when they arc worthy of respect. Wooden plows once elicited admira tion; to use them now would excite only ridicule. Many old laws con cerning co-employees, contributory negligence, assumed risks, master and servant, rules of procedure, and rules of evidence arc wooden plows; the use of them now obstructs progress and defeats justice. It is almost su perstition to venerate ancient laws. "The roads to justice should be straight, short and simple. There should be no toll gates on the way; no brigands, no false guide-boards. The suitors traveling in automobiles should have tK) prelcrence over those on foot. All this cannot be accomplished in a day, but the reform should at once begin." The "New Cure for Consump tion." The Frieiliiiaiin treatment for consumption has recently been announced in a most sensational way, through the newspapers of an American newspaper syndi cate. According to The Journal of the American Medical Associa tion this method of treatment does not appear to be based on any new principle. It represents simply another effort to utilize for cura tive and preventive purposes the antigenic substances in the tuber cle bacillus, without at the same time introducing any toxic or harmful substances, "in order to secure this effect, living bacilli, devoid of virulence, so it is as serted, are injected deep into the muscles. These bacilli are said to be derived from the turtle, but the method by which thev are ren dered harmless is withheld. This secrecy is not in accord with the ethical standard of scientific med icine. The report as to the results of the practical use of this carefully-guarded secret shows, first, that in the experiments cm guinea pigs complete protection has not been obtained. Furthermore, there are no indications that it has been possible to euro tuberculous guinea-pigs by this method. The treatment con.seiiently lacks an experimental basis. ,V really and promptly effective cure for tuber culosis should cure tuberculosis in guinea-pigs and other animals. The injections so far made by Friedman in children seem to in dicate that the fluid injected is harmless in children, and that is all. W e have no evidence that the injections w ill prevent tuber- .-ulosis in children, and from the' I nature of the case it will be ex-! ceedinglv difficult to determine I what the effect of such injections! really is. The alleged curative ef- j lects do not seem to be anv more I pronounced and definite than ! those obtained with the various1 forms of tuberculin when properly I used. Iiesnles, the use 01 this fluid is probably not without dan-1 ger. In view of these consider.!-, lions, says The Iminu!, there is! not sutiu ient warrant for anv oth-1 er attitude toward Fricdnunn's ' PAPA AND GRANNY, DOC. SAYS ARE PERIL TO BABY Both Feed the Youngsters Im proper Food; "Give Children Good Lickings," He Advises. Continued from Monday, February 3. Cambridge, Feb. 3. "Dear old grandma" is the2 greatest peril to the proper nourishment of young children, according to Dr. John Lov ett Morse, at-ociate professor of ped iatrics at the Harvard .Medical school. "The greatest obstacle to the prop er leeuing oi cmiuren, says Dr. woman who looked after the diet of her own children has spoiled the lives ot her grandchildren. "Fathers are the ones who snoil their youngsters' appetites for simple foods. They tempt the little ones with too solid tooti, like baked beans and other abbmnalions. "Children should not make the ac quaintance of candy, but it is well enough for them to know what it is when they see it. One reason that children do not sleep at night is be cause mothers keep them up after 6 o clock in the evening to see their fathers come home. Then pa romps with them; they get excited an lie awake. "Every youngster needs a licking once in a while, and when he is to get it, he should have a good one. Children must be made to obey." At 2 years Dr. Morse would give children chops, chicken, steak and roast beef, plain blac mange, tapioca, sago, plain rice and bread pubbiugs. THROAT CLOSED YEARS OPENED BY THREADS Girl Fed Since Infancy Through Side Now Knows How Food Tastes. Fort Wayne, Ind., Feb. 1. For thir teen years Katherin Besse of Mill stadt, HI., has been kept alive by pumping food into her stomach through her side, but now she is be ginning at the age of IS yea A to. cat food, and for the first time in that period to learn how food tastes. When she was two years old she drank some lye which her mother was using in cleaning, and her throat was so badly burned that it adhered and closed the esophagus. She was not able to drink water or swallow food. I ler parents, John and Kathcrine Hesse, took her to a hospital in St. Louis, but nothing could be done for her there, Then other surgeons tried their, skill, without result. The girl is now in St. Joseph's hos pital in this city, having been placed there Sept. 3, 1912. Dr. Maurice Ros enthal, chief of the hospital staff, supervised the treatment of her case. At first silk threads were given to her to chew. These threads gradually worked down through the trachea and in a few weeks it was possible to reach the tissues of her stomach and treat them. As her condition grew better, larg er threads were chewed, until the opening became large enough to force a probe into the trachea. Grandually larger probes were forced down and it was found that trachea remained open. Then she was able to begin to eat. The first thing that was "iven her was candy, and for practically the first time she realized how it tasted. If the throat improves a little more she will be allowed to eat all kinds of solid foods. PERSONAL MENTION. John Leary, retired restaurant man, came up from Portland this forenoon on a few days Albany visit. This is the anniversary of the birth of Horace Greeley, one of America's greatest editors, once a successful can didate for president of the United States. He also became distinguished for giving the splendid advice: "Young man, go west." Some new and attractive seats have been installed in the Oregon Electric depot. They are made of solid wood, standard O. E. shape. Those in the main room are ot soft wood. The ladies' waiting room is specially fav ored with an oak seat weighing eight hundred pounds. George Finloy, of Crawfordsville and Portland, was in the city today. Rev. and Mrs. W. P. Elmore, of Hrownsville, returned h.nne today af ter spending Sunday at Palestine, Benton county, where Rev. Elmore preached yesterday. Mis. Dorseh. nf San Francisco, went to Shedd this atternoon for a visit at the home of Mr. Workinger. after a short visit here at the home of J. G. Gibson. A bill has passed the lower house of the state legislature providing for a physical examination upon appli cation tor a marriage ti.-euse. This is liable to result in making marriage un popular after it parses treatment of tuhorcntosis than one of critical neutrality ami juilicious skepticism. It concerns secret procedure wit hi Hit adequate ex perimental basis ami without any hotter results to its credit than produced by tuhereulra properly used. 1 S i ! i News Beginning With This Head Is From Daily Issue of (?) TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1913. ALBANY KNIGHTS WILL VISIT LEBANON LODGE ON FEB. 12 Invitation Received from the Pythians of Strawberry City to Call on Them. At the regular meeting of Laurel Lodge No. 7, Knights of I ythias of this city, which was held last evcuin;: in their castle hall in the Baltimore block, an invitation was read fro;:: the Lebanon lodge inviting the Albany Knights to visit them on Wednesday evening, February 12th. The invitation was accepted and a large number signified their intention last evening of going to the Straw berry City on that night. The Leba non Knights have announced that they have several candidates ready for that evening and will also prepare a feed for the Albany delegation who will be royally entertained during their fra ternal visit. The Lebanon lodge is said to be in a flourishing condition and growing rap idly, and that they will treat the Al bany delegation in splendid style is as sured, for the hospitality of the mem bers of that order has been demon strated on more than one occasion be fore. Probably twenty-five will at tend from this city. o ARTISANS WILL INITIATE ANOTHER CLASS TONIGHT Local Order Is Increasing in Membership Rapidly and Popularity Increases. The United Artisans of this city will initiate another large class of can didates( this evening at their hall in the Schmitt-IIunt building. The local Artisans' lodge is in a prosperous condition and during the past six weeks the membership has been increasing by leaps and bounds, the result of the campaign for new members now being conducted in this city by L. D. Walter, special organ izer, assisted by Dr. G. C. Eschel man of Portland, supreme medical advisor. The district convention of the Ar tisans lodge which was held in this city on December 17th was one of the most successful held fpr several years and was attended oy delegates from all oarts of Linn and Benton counties. Over twenty new members were ad ded to the rolls of the local lodge at that time and at the meeting tjft'o weeks ago tonight several more were taken into the order. Many of Albany's best young men and women are members of the order. The initiatory work this evening will be followed by a luncheon and the evening spent in social pastimes. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLE MENT. Notice is hereby given tht the un dersigned administrator of the estate of W. A. Anderson, deceased, has filed in the County Court of Linn County, Oregon, his final account as such ad ministrator and that said court has fixed Monday, the 10th day of Febru ary. 1913, at the hour of one o'clock in the afternoon, as the time for the hearing of objections to said final ac count and the settlement thereof. J. C. ANDERSON, HEWITT & SOX, Administrator. Attorneys for Administrator. J10F7 NOTICE OP FINAL SETTLE MENT. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned Executor of the last will and testament of Martha A. Phillips, deceased, has filed his Final Account as said Executor, in the County Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Linn, and that Monday the 10th day of March, A. D. 1913, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, has been fixed by said Court as the time, and the County Court room in the Court House of said County of Linn in the City of Albany, Oregon, as the place for the hearing of any and all objections to said Final Account and the settlement thereof. GEORGE W. PHILLIPS. WM. S. RISLEY. Executor. Attorney for Executor. F7-M7 EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. ......v.. ... iiwiyj K i . l ll n'dl 1IIC 1111- dersigned was by order of the County vi-hii i in Linn county, Oregon, on the 3rd day of January. 1913, duly ap- nomt.'il ..IViltur nf fl.a ....'II r in. 1.131 will illlU testament of Anna Schlosser, deceas ed. .u persons Having claims against the estate of said deceased arc hereby notified tn nr.ic.mf on..,- ..:!. !.- proper vouchers, to the undersigned ... ma nami-uic, m me I-IIV OI AHiaiiy, Orfuilll. within civ 111. 1,1.1,. tjn l. date of this no'tice. Dated this 3rd day of January. 1913. HARRY SCHLOSSER. HEWITT & SOX. Executor. Attorneys for Executor. J10-F7 ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned. administrator of the estate of Jefferson P. Creel, deceased, has filed with the county clerk of Linn county. Oregon, his final account in the matter of said estate, and the county court has appointed Mond.iv, the 24:h day of February. 1913. at the hour of one o'clock in the afternoon of said day. at the county court room in the coulr house in the city of Al- hany. Uroson. as the time and place for hearing objections to said final account, if any there be, and for the final settlement of said estate. Hated this 3th day of Januar. RALPH E. McKECHNI L. M.llKl., Administrator. Atty. for Admr. J24-F21 MAY ROBSON WILL APPEAR HERE ON FEBRUARY 12 Well Known Actress to Play Leading Role in "A Night Out" at Local Opera House. Xo self-respecting grouch will per- I mit himself to be seen at the Albany , Opera House on Wednesday evening, j Feb. 12. If he goes there he will ! subtly r e rocked into good humor by I the chucl ling fat man whose knees I are crowded into contact with the back of his seat. "A Night Out" fits Miss Robson's peculiarly happy disposition and capa bilities as a comedienne to a nicety. It ought to, for she wrote most of it herself. The spectacle of two full- grown boys carting "Granmum" off to a high lite cave to prove to her that the place is respectable, furnishes am ple opportunity for fun-making and assuredly it is made the most of. Miss Robson has a limpid, almost liquid manner of speaking that is a delight in these days of abominable enunciation a voice that in a man might be compared with Forbes Rob ertson's. FINE NEW PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH DEDICATED SOON Exercises Will Be Held Easter Sunday; Building Recently Completed Here. Easter Sunday, March 23, has been set for the dedication of the new Pres byterian church, of this citv. It will he made a big church event here, marking the formal dedication of one of Oregon's finest edifices. The or ganization is fortunate in securing tor the dedication sermon, Kev. Foulkes, former pastor of the First Presbyterian church of Portland, who is making a record in religious work. He is now in charge of the board of reliet, as general secretary, with head quarters at Philadelphia. Standard Oil has just paid another dividend, the small sum of $40,000,000. Frederick A. Cook, the near-north pole explorer, passed through the citv yesterday afternoon for Eugene, wnere ne appeared last evening in Vaudeville. He continues to insist that he reached the north pole as near as possible. He declares that oopsi tion is due to a press campaign in . gurated in Washington, D, C. Howard Freeland, of Salem, who has been working here for some time, returned to Salem yesterday. o ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE. ' Notice is hereby given to all, whom it. may concern that the undersigned, the duly appointed. Qualified and act ing administratrix of the estate of James Sanderson, deceased, has filed in the office of the County Clerk of Linn County, Oregon, her Final Ac count m said estate, and the judge of the County Court has fixed the 3rd day of March, 1913, at 1 o'clock p. m.. tor tne Hearing ot objections to said account, if any, and for the settlement of said estate. Dated this 25th day of January, 1913. LUELLA HOLLIDAY, Administratrix of the Estate of James Sanderson, deceased. WEATHERFORD & WEATHER- FORD, Attorneys for Admrx. J31-F2S SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court ofthe State of Oregon, for the County of Linn. De partment No. 2. Arnettie Mitchell, Plaintiff, vs. H. D. Mitchell, Defendant. To H. D. Mitchell, the above named defendant: You are hereby required to appear and answer to the complaint of the above named plaintiff in the above entitled Court, now on file with the Clerk of Said Court within six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons: and you are here by notified that if you fail to appear and answer said complaint as hereby required, plaintiff will take a decree as prayed for in the said complaint herein ,to-wit: A decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony heretofore and now existing between plaintiff and defendant; that plaintiff have cus tody of the minor children of plain tiff and defendant, and that plaintifl have such other and turther relief as to the Court, seems equitable. This summons is published in the Albany Weekly Democrat once a week for six weeks by order of the Hon. D. B. McKnight, County Judge of Linn County, Oregon, made on January 13, 1913. and the date of the first publication hereof is January 24, 1913. C. C. BRYANT, Attorney for Plaintiff.,. Jan 24-Mar 7 s' NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLE MENT. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned executors ' of the last will and testament of Charlotte Wacner, deceased, have filed in the Coun ty Court ofLinn County. Oregon, their final Account as such executors ami thafsaid court has fixed Mnmlav. the lptft day of February. 113. at tlie nour or one ociock m tne atternoon a- the time for the hearine of obiee- jtinns to said final account and the set tlement thereot. , WM. F. REINER. FRANK F. REINER, HEWITT & SOX. Executors. Attorneys for Executors. JI0-F7 LIQUOR CaSES are NQWONTRIALHERE Den Kennedy Defendant inTwo Cases for Violation of the Local Option Laws.' TWELVE JURORS EXAMINED; ACCEPTED IN SHORT TIME The District Attorney Gale Hill Appears for State and J. J. Whitney for Defendant. When Judge Kelly opened court at 9 o'clock this morning, the work of securing a jury to hear the evidence in one of the two cases of Oregoi. vs. Den Kennedy, both of which were ap pealed from the justice court, was be gun and at 9:25 the following jurors had been examined and accepted: Willia'm Conner, Crawfordsville: P. H. Hargett, Harrisburg; VV. W. Poland, Shedds; D. W. King, Holley; H. L. Kizer, Albany; Lee J. Gaines, La conib; G. Lovelee. Lebanon; VV. R. Ray, Jordan; J. B. Burch, Albany : W. T. Hassler, Scio: Henry Shanks, Jordan, and A. P. Blackburn, Lcba: non. District Attorney Gale S. Hill is representing the state and J. J. Whit ney, the defendant. The two' cases against Kennedy re sulted from the big mass meeting which was held at the First Methodist church in this city on Sunday, Novem ber 17, 1912, when several hundred Albany men met and offered a reward of $10(3 for each and every conviction for violation of the local option law. Among those who attended the mass meeting on that Sunday in No vember was A. Fradenburg and T. R. Mintoff of this city. Fradenburg tes tified in court this morning that he went into Kennedy's place at the cor ner of First and Baker streets on the same Sunday evening that the meet ing was held, and purchased the whis key, which he stated Kennedy pro duced from beneath a bed in the back room, filling two' pint bottles from a quart one. Justice of the Peace Swan and Ex Sheriff Smith also testified this morn ing on behalf of the state. Kennedy was tried and convicted on both cases in Justice Swan's- court and appealed at that time to the circuit court. The two cases will probably require all day to complete. The closing arguments were made to the jury in the first case of Oregon vs. Den Kennedy shortly before noon today and the case went to' the jury at 1:25 o'clock, this afternoon, the charge of the court consuming but twenty minutes. SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of an execution and order or sale to me directed issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Ore gon for Linn County, in the case of J. O. Brown, plaintiff, vs. D. G. Mur ray, F. E. Morgan, A. E. Pfeiffcr, and W. T. Christy and Elmira Christy, his wife, defendants. I will on Monday, the 24th day of February, 1913, at the hour qf one o'clock p. m., at the front door of the Court House in Albany, Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in hand the following described real property, to wit: Blocks Numbered Two (2) and Three (3) in Woodle's Riverside Ad dition to the City of Albany, Linn County, Oregon, as the same appears and is designated upon the recorded plat of said addition to said city, now on file and of record in the office of the County Recorder in and for said County and State. To satisfy tin judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants, W. T. Chritsy and Elmira Christy, for the sum of $2325.82, together with ac cruing interest thereon at 8 per cent per annum from January 20, 1913; and the costs and disbursements of this suit taxed and allowed at $21.50, and the costs and disbursements of this execution and sale. D. H. BODIXE, Sheriff o'f Linn County, Oregon. Dated this January 24, 1913. C. C. BRYANT, Attorney for Plaintiff. First publication Jan. 24, 1913, last Feb. 21, 1913. J24-F21 NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLE-'' MENT. Notice is hereby given thatf'the un dersigned administrator of the estate of W. H. Cleavinger, deceased, has filed his final account as said adminis trator, in the County Court of the State of Oregon for Linn County, and that Monday, the 3rd day of March, A. D. 1913. at the hour o; 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said dav. has heen fixed by said Court as the time and the County Court room in the Court House of said County of Linn in the City of Albany. Oregon, as the place for the hearing of any and all objec tions to said final account and the settlement thereof WILLARD CLEAVINGER. WM. S. RISLEY. Admii5,r:,'or- Attorney for Administrator. Jan 31-Fcb 28 -o Yesterday was ground hog dav. In the morning it looked as if the hog would be eni-cliM..l ;., f. -11 .1 .... about noon it disappeared and the sun i.iiue out gloriously, the hog seeing his s h.i.loiv ;,,,,... ,i:.-;:..i.. i ... dition rules he will R0 back in his ...v .inn remain tor six or seven ccks. tnese old weather rules, though, do not always applv to Ore gon, which is sometimes a weather law unto itself.