Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, November 08, 1912, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    6
ttlaltbam
Elgin
Reward
Hamilton
Tngersoil
movements
Solid Geld
Gold Tilled
Solid Silver
Solid nickel
punting and
Open face
Cases
OUR WATCH-SELLING METHODS
WHEN YOU BUY A WATCH OF US YOU KNOW EXACTLY
WHAT YOU ARE GETTING. WE ONLY ENJOY GOING WITH
YOU INTO THE DETAILS OF ITS MAKING AND MATERIAL
POINTING OUT ITS STRONG OR WEAK POINTS, AS THE
CASE MAY BE; OF SHOWING YOU WHY CERTAIN PARTS
SHOULD BE TESTED THOROUGHLY AND PERFECTLY AD
APTED TO MEET ALL CONDITIONS FOR WEAR AND TIME.
KEEPING QUALITIES IN OTHER WORDS, YOU GET THE
BENEFIT OF OUR EXPERT KNOWLEDGE AND OUR PER
SISTENT HONEST METHODS. ' - ,
WE KNOW WHEN YOU BUY A WATCH OF US THAT YOU
WILL BE PERFECTLY. SATISFIED WHETHER IT IS THE $1
INGERSOLL OR THE $150 HOWARD, AND THAT YOU WILL
SEND YOUR FRIENDS TO US FOR ONE LIKE IT.
OUR PRICES
ARE CONSIDERABLE LOWER THAN YOU CAN BUY ELSE
WHERE, EITHER FOR CASH OR ON INSTALLMENTS
Gent's Watches from
Ladies' Watches "
$I 00 to $150.00
$5.00 to $75.00
We make a Sp ciolty of Watch Repairing All Our Work Guaranteed.
Burmester & Andresen
OREGON CITY JEWELERS
Suspension Bridge Corner
OREGON CITY.
lis all off now forget it till we
vote again.
Francis B. Kgan, an attorney of
Portland, was in Oregon Gity.Mon
day al tending to legal matters.
Rev. J. R. Landsborough re
turned from a business trip to
California Tuesday.
High street and John Adams
street . need improving. They
would be handsome resident
streets.
M'K. In IV,-. I. 11,-..., .irlirv ooiro if
never thunders in Oregon? Satur.
day night last we had several
peals and lightening flashes.
Don't say bread, say "BLUE
RIBBON BREAD." The loaf that
makes the best toast. 10 cents
this great big loaf. At all good
grocers.
J. F. Mow and A. G. Danielson
have opened a fish, meat and poul
try market at Gladstone and will
will carry everything in these
lines in season.
'Tis November, but the roses
yel grow in profusion in Oregon
and the lawn mower is on the job.
Hack east there have been snow
falls and sleighing.
Monday, the twenty year freight
franchise of the P. R. L. & P. Co
through our streets, will expire,
and nothing has yet been done by
the council to renew it.
W. C. Greaves of Kansas City
addition, has announced himself
as a candidate for oily council
man from ward 3. This part of
the city has never had a candidate
for the council.
Thero was very little betting in
this city on the presidential re
sult. It was generally conceded
Wilson would win and only the
longest kind of odds would induce
a man to look pleasant at Wilson
money.
Active work on the foundation
wall of the Episcopal church is
going on. Tins work has been
V. slow and expensive, but this big
wall when completed will make
the handsomest church site in
Oregon City. High on the bank of
the Willamette it will have a most
beautiful view.
One of the Courier's force who
had a beautiful faith in Roose
velt's ability to come back, made
the rash declaration Tuesday that
he would not sleep again until
Roosevelt was elected. No doubt
the physiciafis of this county will
have a keen interest in this case,
to determine just how long a man
can live and work without sleep.
Prelty punk job to lie in bed
Tuesday night and have election
returns handed to you, 'eh? At
eleven o'clock the power company
worked its signals to all U9ers of
electric lights in every city it
served. One flash of the lamp
was Taft's victory, two Wilson's,
- three Roosevelt's and four in
doubt.
A long needed and thorough job
has been done on the Singer hill
road, thai of dressing with about
eight inches of crushed rock.
This is the most important street
in Oregon City and a thorough
fare of heavy traffic. It had been
worn to the bed rock and was full
of holes. When this crushed stone
lias been worn down it will make
a line street.
On Ninth street, between Jef
fersoa and Adams, is a locality
that looks as if it were the city
garbage dump. The abandoned
stone crusher and the lot litter
ed with every conceivable odd
and end that has been dumped
there, makes one want to pass on
the opposite side of the street.
This rubbish has been there for
about a year and a half, and we
wonder how much lunger it has
a lease for. !
George Hively of Barton was in
the .city Tuesday.
Now let us forget there ever
was an election and work to make
I his an even more prosperous
city than it now is.
Trees, fine apple' and pe'ach
10 cents each if called for; other
varieties at wholesale price,
for list.
A. J. Walker, Milwaukee,
Mrs. Helen Montour has been
seriously ill this week at her
home corner of Third and Wash
ington streets, with a physician
and nurse in attendance, but is
now improving1. A hard cold near
ly terminated in pneumonia.
An observer who kept tab on
the voting under the city council
rooms, i ward two, said that it
averaged about fourteen minutes
to a man, and that one man was
in the booth an even forty min
utes before he was confident he
had done his duty to his country
and convictions.
Mail Carrier John L. Etchison
didn't care a darn whether Wil
son, Taft or the Bull Moose wed
ged in yesterday, and Mrs. Et
chison wasn't a bit interested in
the woman suffrage outcome.
They had more important mat.
ters to consider. He i's a dandy
boy and about the happiest couple
in Oregon City are now alt 212
Washington St.
It is a pleasing tfhange to one
who sees his first election in Ore
gon, the absence of log-rolling,
vote-buying and buttonholing on
the streets, or anywhere else. You
will hear plenty of politicians
condemn the corrupt practice
law as too tight and exacting, but
it is only the politicians. A law
to be of any force has got to be
tight, and certainly the Oregon
law is one splendid reform over
the eastern states way of doing
things on election day.
From the many pats on th
back the Courier was in right in
its comments' on having all our
public works done - by Portland
contractors; One' of the big rea
sons for Portland's great growth
and success is that when money
game to that city it has stayed
there. Every time we let a public
contract to Portland contractors
we take our tax money and send it
to Portland and it never comes
back. These outside contracts
are a drean on our city. Home
contractors should do these jobs,
the money should be paid out
here where it would do some good.
Only a short time until spring,
and .then we will see the most
prosperous season and the big
pest boom this historic old city
has ever seen. The government
canal will be started in good ear
nest then and will employ hun
dreds of men : the Willamette
Paper Co. will have its west, side
idilionof 150 houses under wav
the Moody Land Company will
start their west side improvement
plans; the Southern Pacific will
nave their main line work well
under way and then there will be
the usual steady growth of the ci
ty, the street improvements, etc.
There will surely be lively times
in the old town next year.
Tuesday noon a fellow came
down the Fourth street stairway
with a beautiful jag on, and he
was telling his companion how he
was going down "to put a plug in
that woman's nonsense, b gosh."
There was some consolation in
the prospect that he wasn't in
shape to know how he voted and
as lable to vote "no" on stock
running at large as against wo
man's suffrage. He bellowed and
blowed about the woman's place,
and made a conspicuous fool of
himself. After he had blowed
what money he had, told all who
would listen to him his opinion
on woman's voting, then probably
he went home and licked his
wife.
A. P. Schneider of Beaver Creek
was hero election day.
cinnati, is visiting her daughter
Mrs. iimile Knapp on Tenth St
Slate Treasurer Thomas F
Ryan was.in the city Tuesday.
Mr. Linusiey ol Carus was in
Oregon City the early part of the
wees.
Francis Brunei', seventy years
of age, well known in Clackamas
county, died at his home near
Mulino Tuesday.
frank Mueller or Clarkes. one
of the well known farmers of that
place, was in this city Monday.
Mrs. A. Nelson of this place,' is
in Portland, caled there by the
serious illness of her sister1, Mrs.
Blair, who is suffering from ty
phoid fever.
Mrs. William Evans and Miss
Sarah Jones of Portland, and Miss
Hannah Llewelyn of Beaver Creek
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
nai Linusiey.
Mrs. Thomas accompanied by
her son. was a visitor hero during
tne early part of the week. She
returned Wednesday to her home
at ueaver ureeK.
Milo Blair of Hubbard, well
known here, who has been ill with
typhoid in Portland for several
weeks, has so far rocovered that
lie has been taken to his home.
Mrs. Don Meldruni was operat
ed on c. St. Vincent's hospital in
Portland Tuesday, and we learn
tshe is getting' along nicely. She
has heen ill lor several months.
Lower Main street is certainly
in a scrambled condition, liul
this is one of the penalties of
growth and progression. Paving
comes high in confusion, but we
must have it.
Dr. Hugh Mount left Wednes
day for New York, where he will
attend the congress of surgery,
and will also stop in Rochester,
N. Y. and Cleveland, Ohio. He wilt
he absent about a month.
Mrs. William Mnllory. known
in Oregon City as "Aunty" MaU
lory, died in Portland luesday.
ihe luneral was held in the Pres-
uyterian church in this city
thursday alternoon.
BOYS AND GIRLS, A WATCH
for you. You can earn it by help
ing us one Saturday aiternoon.
Send postal today to National
Houket;per8 Federation, Suite
78, (78) 1313 carmen Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
Mrs. Caroline Wichard of Cin
cinnati, Ohio, has arrived in this
city, and is the guest of her
(laughter, Mrs. Emilo Knapp of
tenth and Main streets. She will
remain with Mrs. Knapp until
early in the spring.
The winter rains have been
coming prelty steady for some
days past, but we will get a line
Indian summer to, make good lor
them. But they are warm, and
an Oregonian, the true old Ore-
gonian, rather welcomes them.
Milo Blair was taken to his
home at Hubbard Saturday. He
has been ill with typhoid in Port
land for several weeks, but his
improvement has been steady for
the past two weeks, and the doc
tors have pronounced him clear
out of all danger.
FOR SALE CHEAP A four H. P.
gasoline draw saw. Will not re
fuse any reasonable offer. Owner
leaving country. Call at Clear
Creek Park or see E. J. Goodson,
Oregon City, Oregon. R. D. No. 2.
Wanted f irst ciass milk cow. m.
Yoacr, 102 Moiana Ave., uregon
City.
Well, the people of Oregon
showed they knew what to do with
a ballot if it was loaded down with
forty perplexing, misleading pro
positions, and the Oregon sysUwn
is stronger and more popular
than it ever was. They sorted out
the vicious bills and killed them
and held onto every inch of
ground the Oregon system gives
them.
We have elected a president,
now let us elect a public elevator.
The library walls are going up
fast
will
and, the contractors . say it
be ready for occupancy by
iry 1. Then with the park
and landscape put in handsome
shape (and let tne Woman's Club
alone for that) and John Adams
street improved (which -we un
derstand will be done in the
spring) this will be the real
handsome part of the city.
In the coming election of mayor
and city councilmen, voters want
to forget good fellowship and all
other friendship ties and elect the
man for his fitness for the work.
What our city council needs is
practical men for the various de
partmens, and not carpet walkers.
We need men who know street
building, sewer work, road con
struction practical fellows" with
practical educations, and men
who can size up a public job and
know when it is being done right.
Electjon is over, now let us get
together for Oregon City and
make a whale of it. A public free
elevator will do more to build up
a city on the heights than another-
big factory. While the big
bluffs are all right for tourists to
rave over, they are the dread of
workmen, mothers with baby car
riages and elderly people. The
Courier looks at this mailer just
as it does improved streets and
other improvements, where in
creased values more than offset
the expense. The day is coming
when a progressive people wiil
certainly overcome this stairway
obstacle, and it seems to the Cou
rier that it is better to do it now,
than after the west side and Glad
stone have grown at the city's ex
pense. Let s pull together and
land it. .
Dell Trulinger ,of Union Mills
was hero Monday.
N. R. Graham was here during
Monday and Tuesday, ;
Fred Shafer was in Oregon City
lection day.
Mrs. January has gone to Cor
vallis to visit her mother, Mrs.
Mulvaney.
Charles Stewart and wife were
here early in the week.
Mr. Tablor of Union hall, was
in this city on business Monday.
Mrs. Grace of Clarkes, visited
with Oregon Cityl'riends Monday,
Bert Campion ol Pendleton was
among the Oregon City visitors
Monday.
J. V. Harless one ol Moialla s
prominent citizens, was here the
early part lo the week.
Mrs. Cyr and daughter of Con
don, are visiting Mrs. (J. B. Janu
ary of Oregon City.
Mrs. Gertrude Lewthwaile. ac
companied by her daughter, Alice,
lett Tuesday evening lor Texas,
lo spend the winter. I hey will
be at El Paso.
A Timber Deal.
Wanted, to sell tract of timber
lo be sawed on premises. Have
pond and conveniences. Timber
three fourths miles lrom Canby
railroad survey and 3 miles from
Moialla. Write to G. W. Herman,
Moialla.
THE FIGHT AGAINST
THE MAPLE SCALE.
How Colorado Springs Combated These
TV.. Pests.
A department of forestry was creat
ed by the city of Colorado Springs Jan.
1, 1011, Unit some united action might
be taken ngulnst the cottony maple
scale which was Injuring so many of
the soft maple, locust and linden trees
of the city, Bays City Forester P. P.
McKqwo In the American City. At
that time thousands of the trees were
white with the cottouy, waxy secretion
formed by thin Insect, which seems to
thrive In our high, dry country and In
creases very rapidly. The present In
festation has been gaining a foothold
for the past ten years, and natural
enemies have done very little If any
thing; toward holding it In check.
A so called spraying district, con
taining 200 city blocks, was mapped
out, and arrangements were made for
spraying all Infested trees In this dis
trict three times, the city to pay for
the work outside the property lines
and the property owners to pay for
that Inside their lots. The principal
object of the first application was to
clean the trees of the old cotton so that
the living scale might be more easily
reached, while the second and third ap
plications were for the purpose of Irri
tating the soft bodies of the scales,
thus causing death.
Just a word as to the nature of tills
Insect will show how hard it Is to kill
It is a sucking mouth part insect and
continually has Its beak beneath' the
bark sucking sap. For this rensou a
poison like lead arsenate would have
very little effect upon It. Instead, It
must be killed by bodily irritants such
as kerosene emulslou. The kerosene
in this solution Irritates the body, and
the soap upon drying forms a U 1 lit
over the Insects' biealhlng pores which
radiate to all parts of their bodies.
Thus It will lie seen that killing this
Bcalu Is a slow process and ileuinuds
two or three applications.
The most Important parts of the op
eratlon are Hie thorough mixing of Hie
emulsion ho that the oil will not sep
arate from the water and applying I
with force. This city has a four horse
power gasoline engine, a good three
cylinder pump and a 2(H) gallon tank
mounted on a milistuntlal truck and
with this oiittit cau maintain a pres
sure of WKi pounds. By pouring the
kerosene Into the empty tank, starting
the engine and pump and then adding
the dissolved soap and boiling wa
ter the solution becomes thoroughly
agitated and emulsified and will not
separate.
Duping the spring of 1011 approxi
mately O.OOO trees were sprayed three
times each, and the success of the
work Is unquestioned. Now and then
one finds a scale which survived the
spraying and formed new cotton in
which to lay her eggs, but this was to
be expected, and In four or five years
this district may have to be sprayed
again thoroughly. Last spring we
treated a similar area In the same
way. No spraying will be (lone dur
ing the summer, t'.e best results In
spraying for the cottony maple scale
being obtained during the dormant pe
riod of tree growth from early fall to
late spring. iradually we will get
over the entire city, and then we hope
an occasional spraying will keep our
trees absolutely free from this Inju
rious and extremely unsightly insect
POLK'S'
OREGON and WASHINGTON
Business Directory
A Directory of each City, Town and
Village, giving descriptive sketch of
each place, location, population, tele
graph, shipping and banking point;
also Claixinod Directory, compiled by
DMilness and profession.
R. L. POLK CO., SEATTLE
MOVED
I have moved my stock of General Hardware in the W. G.
Green Building, corner Seventh and Center Streets, and I take
this means of thanking my former customers for their lib
eral patronage and invite them to call and inspect my raw
quarters which are larger and in which I may better display
my ever increasing stock, anil I solicit new customers to call
and look over one of the best stocks of Hardware in the county
I will continue to cater to the wans f the people who palrou
ize my store to the best of my ability.
C. W. FRIEDERICH
GENERAL HARDWARE
Corner 7ft i Ce-ter Sti OREGON CITY, OREGON
Clackamas Southern Kail way
Company (Issues Letter
To the People of Clackamas County : : . ." !
The Clackamas Southern Railway Company will be ready to begin laying the track
from Oregon City to-Beaver Creek, as soon as the rails arrive that have been ordered.
We desire to lay them down immediately, and ballast the track so that we can begin to
briug in logs and cord flood and make the roail pay from the very start. We have more
than 53,000.00 of stock subscribed that is unused, hut this we are unable to use except
for grading and bridges, under our contracts with our subscribers. .
It will require about $10,000.00 to lay the steel and ballast the road from Oregon
City to Beaver Creek, and in order to do that we must: sell this additional small amount
of stock. i ' 1 ' '
One business man in Oregon City has taken f 1000.00 of the above amount, and two
others Ifcive taken $300.00 each, and we believe this sum should be raised in a few days
time, as it is sold at $50.00 per share, with a par value of $100.00. This road is now a
success and we feel that Oregon City will help place this first six miles in active opera
tion. Your investment would be safe, and at the same time greatly aid Clackamas
County and Oregon City. ; t
You will not be called on to pay one dollar of the amount until the track is laid two
miles and rails are here for the full six miles. '
We are confident you will do your best and help this splendid enterprise, and at the
same time make a safe investment, by taking a portion of the amount to be raised.
The Company has about Twenty Thousand Dollars ($20,000.00) of stock sub
scrilx'd in addition to the Fifty-Three Thousand- ($53,000.00) Dollars above mentioned
for grades and bridges which have not as yet been accepted by the company, but which
will be accepted when terms are agreed upon. -. ,
If you desire the immediate completion of this road to Beaver Creek which will
insure the remainder of the line in a few months time, we ask you to come forward and
and accomplish two things at one time: First, help.Oregon City and Clackamas County;
second, make a good-, safe, sane investmentthat will net you good returns.
If you are interested and desire to help the Board of Directors and the other stock
holders of this county, we ask you to sign the following stock subscription contract and
jnail it to tlie secretary, and wlien this first six miles of road has been completed you
will say to yourself, I am proud of assisting one of the greatest enterprises ever inaug
urated in Clackamas County and at the same time made a safe, sane and honorable
investment.
Oregon City, Oregon, Xorembcr 1912
t consideration of the delivery to me of.. .shares of the Capita
stock of the Clackamas Southern Railway Company, at $50.00 per share (fully
paid and nonassessable) by W. A. Huntley, Trustee, I hereby agree to pay therefor
the sum of $. .-. . to said W. A. Huntley, Trustee, and treasurer of said
Company, ichen the track is laid from Oregon City southerly a distance of two
miles in and along the presentgrade of said Clackamas Southern Railway, and the
rails arc in Oregon City for the remainber of Hie distance form Oregon City to Bea
rer Creek, a distance of six miles.
Da led this...... .1912
.Subsiriber
Connections are now being made with the Portland Railway Light & Power Com
pany, so that cordwood, lumber, piling and other timber can be sent direct to the Port
land market and the money derived therefrom will be scattered over that part of the
county tributary to the road and a great benefit not only to the people along the line
but those engaged in other lines of business. .
Remember you don't have to pay a dollar of this subscription until you Ree the
rails laid down for a distance of two miles and the remainder of tin; rails on the ground
for the full six miles of track.
Do not allow paid knockers of antagonistic interests to warp your judgment or in
terfere with the completion of this enterprise owned and controlled by our own home
people.
Address all communications to Clackamas Houthern Railway Company, Oregon
City, Oregon. .'".
Respectf ally submitted,
CLACKAMAS SOUTHERN. RAILWAY COMPANY.
By CSrnnt B. pimick. Secretary
Mad Start Anyhow.
Ghosts and weird apparitions which
were said to appear la an empty house
were not an hiducemont to possible
tenants, so the agent bad it elaborate
ly done up and dncorated aud- by the
way of tempting halt bad some ex
pensive gas fittings put In the bouse.
The next week he heard that some
bold man bad been after the bouse.
His heart leaped with hope anj expec
tation, and be rusbed off In frantic ex
citement to the housekeeper of the
haunted grange.
"This is splendid!" he gasped. "Some
one bas taken the 'bouse, hasn't he 7"
"1 don't know, Blr, I'm Sure. Per
haps be'll come back for the bouse,
but he's taken all the gns Qttings."
Bt. Paul Dispatch.
"Our Personal Guarantee
to all Skin Sufferers"
How ths Rad Pursusrs Inorssssd.
One day while the late Senator
Hearst, father of William Randolph
Hearst, tbe publisher, was a young
man and yet had his fortune to make
be and a few companions were on a
prospecting tour. Along In tbe after
noon they sighted a band or Indians,
and as In those days all Indians were
hostile Mr. Hearst aud his friends nat
urally wanted to get away from there.
All the prospectors except the future
senator were mounted rtn horses. Mr.
Hi-arst was on a retired army mule
and soon found himself In tin rear.
The Indlnns were on his tnill. and
things began to look serloiix when he
called out to bis rupldly disappearing
companions: "Hold on. I;vs: there's
only h few of them. We uwdu't l"
afraid "
Just then the mule scented the ap
proaching Indians and with n wild
snort started out with a gait that soon
left the horsemen far behind. Vhn
Hearst was ahout a quarter of n milt
in advance he turned In bis saddle and
yelled at the top of bis voice:
"Hurry np. boysi'yoq'll get scalped.
There's more than a hundred of them."
-Kansas City Star, , ,
We have been In business In this town
for some time, and we are looking to
build tip trade by always sdvlslng our
patrons right.
So when we tell you that wo have
found the eczema remedy and that we
stand back of It with the manufacturer's
Iron clad guarantee, backed by ourselves
you can depend upon It that we Klva our
advice not In order to sell a few bottles
of medicine to skin sufferers, but be
cause we know how It will help our
business If we help our patrons.
We keep in stock and sell, all the well
known skin remedies. Hut we will say
tills: If you are suffering from any
kind of skin trouble, eczema, psoriasis,
rash or tetter, we want you to try a full
size bottle of V. U. b. Prescription.
And, If It does not do (he work, this
bottle will cost you nothing. Vou alone
to Judge. '
Again and Spain we have seen how
few drops of tills simple wash applied
to the skin, takes wuy the itch, in
stantly. And. the cures all seem to be
permanent,
D. U. D. Prescription made by the
D. D. D. Laboratories of Chicago. Is
composed of thymol, glycerine, oil of
wlntergreen and other healing, soothing,
cooling ingredients. And if you are
Just crazy with itch, you will feel
noothed and cooled, the itch absolutely
washed awny the moment you applied
this D, D. D.
We have made fast friends of more
than on family by recommending this
remedy to a skin sufferer here and
there and we want you to try it now
on our positive no-pay guarantee,
JONES DRUG COMPANY. Oregon City.
Phone 1121
Res. 1833
Office In Favorite Clear Store
Opposite Masonic Building:
Williams Bros. Transfer Co.
Safes, Pianos and Furniture Moving a Specialty
Freight and Parcels Delivered
PriceB reasonable aud
Satisfaction Guaranteed
D. C LATOURETTE, Presldn
F. r. MEYER, Cahi
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of OREGON CITY, OREGON
(Successor to Commercial BanIO
Transacts a General Banking Bu Iness Open from 9 a. m. to 3