Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, October 18, 1912, Page 5, Image 5

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    OREGON CITY COURIER, FRIDAY OCT. 18, 1912.
To keep the Best Time
YOUR. Watch Must Be
Adjusted to YOU. Fact-
ory Adjustment is insuf
ficient.
We regulate every watch we sell to
the wearer.
You may be sure of its timing if you
buy it here
DON'T BUY YOUR
WATCH FROM A
PRETTY PICTURE
SEE IT EXAMINE IT-BE SURE OF IT BEFORE
YOU BUY IT
When you buy a Watch make it ' a
lifetime investment. Pay enough to
secure a watch that is made to give a
lifetime of reliable rervice.
A cheap watch wont last a life-time.
It cannot keep reliable time. That is
why yoa most not boy a watch by
the case, for most cheap watches
have showy cases. They are made
to sell on appearance.
You Can DEPEND on a WALTHAM, ELGIN,
HOWARD, HAMILTON or SOUTH BEND watch
These movements are the best there are made and with proper care THEY
will last a lifetime. We carry them in all grades and sizes, each the best pos-"
sible value at its price. We can put the watch you choose in any case you ,
desire plain or fancy, gold, gold filled, silver or nickel; open faced or hunting
urmeister & Andresen
Oregon City Jewelers
(Established in 1880)
Suspension Bridge Corner
OREGON CITY.
Hub special coffee is fino. 35
cents per pound at the Hub Groc.
ery, Seventh and Centre Sts.
Mr. and Mrs. G. Wallace of
Mulino were in the city Tuesday
and Wednesday visiting friends.
Editor Edgar McDaniels of
North Bend (Coos Bay) Harbor
was in the city Wednesday and
was a Courier caller.
This is the middle of October,
and Jack frost has been appoint
ed truant officer. You kids look
out that you don't get nipped.
This office has a quantity of
national campaign matter in the
German language that we will be
glad to hand out to any Germans
who will call.
Preaching "trade at homo" and
"made in Oregon"and then dump
ing hundreds of thousands of dol
lars into Portland to do our city's
public work, is certainly a left
handed boom system.
Work is being rushed on the li
brary building. One bright day
is worth two clays after the rains
set in, and the contractor is mak
ing the most of the One weather.
January 27 last A. D. MacDon
ald of Ontario, Canada, wrote
this office for a sample copy of
the Courier, later senj, in a sub
scription, and Tuesday he and
family arrived here, looking for a
future home.
A. J. Marrs of Mount Pleasant,
dug a freak potato this week
that resembled an octopus. From
all over the body there were pro
jections and the tuber weighed 6
and a fourth pounds. Some potat
oe that.
Oregon City officials make
short shift of the street mashers
and women annoyers. Justice
Samson fined J. B. Hasbrook $40
for getting fresh the other day.
This city will soon be known as
a good placo for the "freshes"
to stay away from.
Benjamin. Armstrong, aged
about 60 years, a resident of
Washington St., had a paralytic
stroke of the right side Monday,
and was taken to the city hospit
al. It is thought he cannot recov
er. Tho city council has let the
$2,000 fire alarm system contract
to tho Gamewell Co. of Portland.
A 50 foot tower will be a part of
the system and will be erected on
the bluff near the head of the
Seventh street stairway. The
completed system will be ready
by January 1.
If you haven't registered, do it.
County Clerk Mulvey is holding
the office open evenings that all
you voters may get in. The man
who can register and won't and
the man who can vote and won't
has no business ever opening his
mouth about public matters.
The Columbia Park football
team had the whitewash poured
all over them at Canemah park
Sunday, when Oregon City's
stone wall team shut them out
46 to 0. The Columcla team was
clearly outclassed and never had
a look in.
Twenty-five dollars was what
Justice Sams6n thought about
the proper dose of justice for car
rying a gun, and Anton Bauer
paid it. If Samson would multi
ply this fine by four every time a
gun toter comes berore him, this
paper assures him there won't be
any indignation meetings called.
A check book of the state bank
of Hubbard was found and
brought to this office by a gentle
man whose name and address we
have lost. The book contains a
check 'of $30 given by Ammen
Bros, of Ml. Angel, and the owner
of the book and check may have
the same by proving property at
this office.
DR. CLYDE MOUNT, Dentist,
Masonic Temple.
If you haven't, do it today. Reg
istration books will close Satur
day. -
Come to the Hub Grocery for
"Blue Ribbon Bread." It it wrap
ped in oil paper and is clean.
The Hub Grocery, Seventh and
Centre Sts. has, "Yours Truly"
pork and beans. Try them.
Use Wesson's Snowdrift Salad
Oil. You can get it at tho Hub
Grocery, Seventh and Centre Sts.
"Home contracts Oregon City
workmen" would be as good a
slogan as "trade at home" for
a change. . ;
Here it is past the middle of
October and tho city is yet full of
roses. They bloom almost the
year 'round in Oregon. . ' "
Eat "BLUE RIBBON BREAD."
It's pure, wholesome, delicious,
appetizing. The large loaf wrap
ped in waz paper. 10 cents at your
grocer.
The midlo of October and yet
the thermometer stands around
70 in the day-time, and every day
is bright and sunny. These are
indeed "Oregon's best" days.
Two weeks from next Tuesday
and the uncertainly will be over.
Then we will sqaare away on
another campaign and put in a
free city elevator up the bluffs.
With a hand terribly mangled
by contact with a wood-saw, F.
W. Youmans of Clackamas was
brought to , Dr. Mount's office
where two fingers were amputat
ed. '
Saturday night is the Hallow
e'en dance of Greenpoint Hose
Co., at Busch's hall. A guarantee
of a good time goes with each
ticket and a big crowd is expect
ed. In the commercial club parlors
Friday of this week, at 1 :30 there
will bo a meeting of the directors
of the Chautauqua assembly, at
which time officers for 1913 will
be elected and other business
matters taken up.
The tenth day of next month
the freight franchise of the P. R.
L. & P. Co. will expire. A new or
dinance for another 20 years has
been presented by the power coin,
pany and is before the council for
their consideration.
Some of the ladies are again
complaining that two legged an
imals are using the stair steps
for cuspidors. If you see a man
spit on the stairways or side
walks all you have to do is to re
port the filthy act to the police to
cause his arrest. The city ordin
ance is very severe for this of
fence. Here's a pair of good ones gome
fellow told on Tom Smith, the big
R. F. D. man. When the rainy
weather of the summer forced
him to side track his buzz bug
gy and drive the ponies, they say
when he slowed down for a mail
box he would reach for the stop
lever and his shoe would hunt
the break. And later, when he got
the auto running again, when he
got to a box he would call "whoa."
Such is habit's force.
Another city contract, the fire
alarm system, has been let to
Portland. What's the matter with
Oregon City? Can't we do this
work here? One after another,
and a long siring they make, of
public contracts have been let to
outside contractors, and thous
ands and thousands of dollars,
that should remain right here in
Oregon City, has gone to Port
land. Our. school buildings, our
library, our sewers, our fire al
arm system, our paving all
these let to Portland concerns,
when I hey should have been done
by home merchants. This is a
leak we should fix.
NeW house and four acres in
Philomath to trade for Oregon
City property. D. C. Ecker, Philo
math, Oregon.
Mrs. Grace Woodworth of Hood
River, died at tho homo, of her
sister, Mrs. N. M. Alldredgo Fri
day of last week. She was on a
visit here. ; '
We learn that tho little son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fuge, who
we reported last week as mildly
ill with diphtheria, was taken
n uch worse Tuesday night and i9
seriously ill. : .. . "
TWILIGHT.
A "Stump Jumper" is an Ore
gon farmer, who hits three
stumps in a futile, effort to touch
tho soil once. : . j, ". '.
A three years residence in this
vicinity has revealed one wedding,
one birth and two deaths. At this
same ratio, what length of time
will it require to depopulate our
community?
Tho Meir family,, parents of
Mrs. Henry Schear, removed their
household goods to Canby, . at
which place they will make their
future home.
A communication received from
F. E. Black, a late resident of
this community, locates them at
San Diego, California, where
they are comfortably situated.
The Community Club held its
first regular meeting of the-seas-on
at their hall last Saturday eve
ning and its members wore much
gratified over the large attend
ance. Its opening session was
considered a success from both
a social and business standpoint.
Much enthusiasm was exhibited,
espesciafly on the part of recent
additions to our community.
A strong feeling of "in unity
there is strength" prevailed and
with this idea as our motto for
the. coming year some benefits to
our cornmunity.should follow our
season's work.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Bolls of
Portland dined with the Totem
Pole ranch people Sunday.
L. A. Bullard and Ed Miller
spent last Sunday in the vicinity
of Gresham.
It is to be regretted that their
exists in every neighborhood peot
pie not eligible to membership in
a "Look Pleasant Club."
Farmers Benerally, are lato this
year in sowing their fall grain.
But little seeding as yet has been
done.
Why not revive, the old time
custom of school visitation. I
well remember that when a boy
how my pride was hurt by the
presence of my parents.
G. M. Lazelle recently had the
misfortune to have a fine colt
badly lacerated on a barbed wire
fence. He also lost a valuable
mare some three monthj ago. Mr,
Lazelle's run of luck is a source
of regret to his many friends.
Two acres of potatoes have
yielded .450 bushels on Mr. Wm.
McCords place. Ho has two acres
yet to dig, which will prove equ
ally as profitable.
Clyde B. Harvey of Seattle
snent Saturday and Sunday , with
his parents at Totem Pole ranch.'
Rumor had it that Henry henoer
has disposed of his home place
to a mill man from Oregon City.
Public Sale.
I will sell at public auction at
my farm three miles east of Bea
ver Creek and three miles south
of Logan on Saturday, October 26
2 horses, 1 steer, 6 sheep, 21
shoats, farm tools, poultry,
household and kitchen furniture,
etc. Sale to begin at 10:30
D. G. and A. C. While, owners.
V. W. Samson auctioneer.
News of Woman's Club.
The Woman's Club of Oregon
City held the first meeting of the
calendar year 1912-13 at the
home of the President, Mrs. Mary
Gaudeld, on Thursday afternoon.
There was a good attendance and
an enthusiastic club spirit pre
vailed, denoting a determination
for a greater work for the year.
The calendar committee has
provided a program for the year
that will be highly educational
and appropriate: now that wo
men are so soon 10 De equauy re
sponsible for tho enactment anXX
enforcement of law. And just
here we wish the program might
be given a space in our papers, it
is well worth this recognition.
Mrs. Annie Downy and Mrs. F
N. Norris, with their alternates,
Mrs. lhomas Warner a'nd Mrs
R. Fouls, were elected delegates
with Mrs. I Mary Caufield, Pres
and her" alternate Mrs. E. Rands,
to the State Federation which
meets in Portland in November
for three days.
After tho business meeting the
social hour took the form of a
Kaffeo Klatsch and vacation rem
inescences. Mrs. A. Price con
tributed to tho pleasure of the af
ternoon with, two beautifully ren
dered solos and Mrs. George Ran
motto "Never think you are old
and do not let anything trouble
you," for she sang in a supris
ingly clear voice two of the ba
lads of her girlhood days.
Iu the future the regular n:eel
ir.ws will bo held in the commer
cial club parlors. The president
ami calendar committee were
hostesses and served tasly re
freshments, which they know so
well how to do.
LOGAN
The Republican candidates will
speak at the . grange hall next
Saturday, the 19lh. Let us all be
there to hear them.
Potatoe digging is nearly over
though some are at it yet. The
crop is good but some of the po
tatoes were rotten because of the
blight and in some places nearly
half of the crop was affected.
load of potatoes and he had 2,500
sacks from 27 acres.
This good weather is much
appreciated.
There has been considerable
sickness. Jacob Durig's son has
been very sick but is now im
proving. Mjss Mary Swales has
been out from Portland visiting
relatives here.
We hear that Mr. Campbell
Henry Babbler has sold a car who bought Mrs. Anna Fallert's
farm a year or so ago, has sold it.
Election will soon be here and
the office seekers' suspense will
be over, which will be fortunate
for some and a relief to others.
As to the people, well they may
be fortunate too.
Linos, Buttons, Literature.
The Courier has a supply of
Democratic campaign matter
yours for the asking.
HIGHLAND.
Mr. and Mrs. Elbert. Larkins of
Clarkes, spent" Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. F. Nickalas.
Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Miller spent
Saturday and Sunday, with relat
ives at Viola.
Mrs. Ida Holmes and Miss Isa-
belle Mann visited Saturday and
Sunday with Mrs. .Blackburn at
Gresham.
Mr. and Mrs. G. Wallace are
visiting friends in. Oregon City
and Portland.
Mrs. Frank Scliute returned
homo last Thursday after a few
days visiting with friends in Ore
gon City.
Mr. and Mrs. Stevens visited
with Mr. and Mrs. John Schram
Sunday.
Mr. Ray Welch visited at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. F. Schute
Sunday.
Mr, and Mrs. Curtis Kandle
were Uregon yity visitors last
week.
Mrs. II. Mudgott and daughter,
Bernice, spent Sunday visiting
friends at Colton.
Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Lees were
Oregon City visitors last week.
CLARKES.
Miss Ida and Mary Bottomiller
spent Sunday with Miss Irene and
Krnia Leo.
Sophie Phillpine, from Canby,
is visiting her grandmotnor Mrs.
Elmer.
Henry Kleinsmith was in town
on Monday.
Mr. Wrilliam .Fawner and fami
ly moved out to Clarkes last week.
William Kleinsmith, Jr., is
sawing wood for Mr. J. J. Card.
Kleinsmith Bros, purchased a
new manure spreader.
Mrs. J. J. Gard visited Mrs. Liz.
e Ringo.
Miss Ireno and Irma Lee vis
ited Miss Bernice Schute last
Saturday.
G. Marquiydl is digging his po
tatoes now.
Mrs.. I. C. Hastier, Grand Is
land, Nov., has something she
wishes to say about Foley's Honey
and Tar Compound. "My three
children had a very severe attack
of whooping cough and suffered
greatly. A friend recommended
Foley's Honey and Tar Compound
and it did them more good than
anything I gave thorn. I am glad
to recommend it."
For sale by Huntley Bros. Co.,
Oregon City, Ore.
4
if
5
ox
OYiYdren Ory
FOR FLETCHER'S
C ASTO Rl A
Between the Two
The difference is only a m v
er of taste and a few cents
in price, oojpie preier iuocna,
others Java. People may say
that Tea and Coffee are not
healthy drinks. Nonsense 1
Like everything else they are
abused by excesses. We sell
the pure, wholesome kinds
that you like
GROCERIES
n great variety palate pleasing and
price-tempting. Ask thy purse what
thou shouldst. buy and it will tay Our
Groceries.
einhard Bids:
Oregon Citiy
Seeley's
r
Property before
November 1st
- You must purchase your lots in Gladstone
within the next two weeks if you ivould
benefit hy the generous offer of the Glad
stone Real Estate Association, which so
many Oregon City people have taken ad
vantage of during the past month and half.
WE ARE SORRY TO DO IT, hut we
must revoke our offer on November 1st.
Our Generous Offer:
Our property is the VFRY HEART of
this progressive little town, and we have
been, offering the finest of these lots at
prices ranging from $200 to $400 and at
terms that are arranged wholly for the
convenience of the buyer. $10 cash and
the balance in monthly payments of $5 per
month. That's all the cash it takes and the
buyer can take possession at once.
Two Speckl Clauses for your benefit
And in addition if the purchaser gets sick,
a clause on is contract will permit him to
FORGET his payments for a period of
three months; and we will forget them, too.
Isn't that fair?
And further, should you die before your
place is paid for,. your legal representatives
may continue your contract, if they desire
to do so, or if they prefer it we will pay
back every penny and interest, and annul
the contract. Isn't this more than reason
able? You Can't beat Gladstone Anywhere
And then, on top of these generous terms
which so many have taken advantage of
during the past month, the fact remains
that you cant beat Gladstone anyplace for
the ideal homesite. You knoxv that as well
as we do. Every modern convenience can
be enjoyed in Gladstone, and the water sys
tem of the little city is one of the finest in
the state, no matter where you go. Glad
stone is a city of progressiveness, and when
you invest in Gladstone property you
breathe deeply of that spirit of proaress
which has made this ideal little city what it
is today and with every improvement the
value of your investment mechanically in
creases. The fundamental idea is this :-
No Speculation-Gladstone is here now
No vague dreams of a town way off in the
future. The little city is here, on the ground
now, where you can see for yourself, and it
takes only a look to convince even the most
skeptical that Gladstone property is worth
while.
Our phone is Pacific States 1982. Mr. P. A. Cross has charge of our Gladstone
property; our office is opposite the Gladstone postoffice; Come down and he will
be glad to take you all over these beautiful lots.
Gladstone Real Estate Association
Beaver Building H. E, CROSS, President Oregon Cits, Ore.