THE FARMERS EQUITY NEWS K!"3i S. L. Casto, President, Oregon City, Rout 3 T. C. Buchanan, Secretary, Oregon City, E. E. Brenner, Organizer, Oregon City, Route 3 Vol. 1 ABOUT THE WAREHOUSE Secretary Lyman Explains the De tails of the Undertaking. Portland, Feb. 5, 1913. To the officers and members of the Local Unions of the Farmers' Society of Equity: For information and encourage ment, we wish to state at this time, that we have returns to date, from five local union secretaries on the stock subscriptions for the Farmers' Society of Equity Warehouse Co. The total number of shares taken by mem bers of these unions is 91, of which 54 have been paid in full. One local Bent in $162.00 in cash yesterday. There are several locals, which were to hold meetings the forepart of this month, and we expect to hear some good reports from them in the next few days, as their officers re ported that they would push the mat ter with all diligence, and as individ uals, were heartily in favor of our plan. The committee on co-operation has certainly met with much encourage ment in its work in the way of letters and good will from officers and mem bers of the association in various sec tions in our territory. If the members of the locals contin ue to take hold of this proposition as freely as they have started out, we shall soon have very nearly the re quired amount of subscribed stock, which is necessary to complete our corporation, and turn the company over to the subscribers and to the board of directors elected by them. A very few individuals, who have failed to examine into this proposit ion very carefully, and who have jumped at erroneous conclusions, have intimated that they would not do any thing at present on this stock, but that they would wait and see how things would come out. To such we would say, that if every one waited for somebody else to take hold of any such organization as this, there would never be anything done, and such an attitude is absolutely inexcuseable on the part of any sane member of the Farmers' Society of Equity. If he cannot afford $1.00 a month necessary to take out at least one share of this stock, he may be excusable, but if he persists in hanging back simply be cause he is afraid to trust his broth er farmers and the members of his Society, it is either the result.of folly or ignorance. The warehouse company is a nec essary adjunct to complete the mark eting system for the Farmers Society will have in the formation of a com pany of this character, and the great disadvantage all will be- put to with-1 out such a central organization. In dividual locals may do something for themselves. County unions may assist the locals of their respective counties in carrying out some of the plans of the Eauitv svstem. and the btate aec retary might help these county and local unions to co-operate with eacn other, but without a central company with strong financial backing, ana competent manager who will insist on the proper grading of fruits and vegetables, and who can successfully cope with other business men in the produce line, we believe that our (soc iety and our organization here in the Northwest would be doomed to final failure. Let no one think, that the writer or the incorporator is looking for any prominence or recompense on their oart for the promotion of this conv pany. The "laborer is truly worthy of h is hire" and it would be lolly to ex pect a few men to put in days and weeks of hard work on this propos ition without some pay for the same. but when this company is organized and turned over to tne coara oi di rectors elected by the stock holders, then the present board of incorpor ators have done with their work, and it is up to those who subscribed for stock, and those whom they have el ected as directors, to take over the entire management of the propos ition together with all monies which have accumulated to their credit aur ing the organization period, with the exception of a very small amount nec essary to pay the expenses of incor porating and disposing of the stock. Trusting that the members of the Farmers' Society of Equity will con tinue to show their enthusiastic in terest in this proposition, and that the matter of completing the organization may be carried out without unneces sary delay and expense, we remain, Very truly yours, Committee of Incorporation of the Union Sales Company. A. R. LYMAN, Sec. About our Portland Warehouse. As the writer understands the sit uation the stockholders will own and operate this warehouse; make their own by-laws and regulations under the laws of the State of Oregon and as members of the Farmers' Society of Equity, but in no other way a part of the society. When a sufficient amt of stock is subscribed a meeting of the stockholders will be called and of ficers elected and stock issued, and be assessable, or non-assessable; trans ferable or not, and .can issue their stock in any way they choose. In fact those questions will be left entirely to the stock holders. Those who buy the stock will say how it is to be man aged. P. W. Meredith. The Rifle Route. A German named Anton Meyer, ag ed about 60 years, living on the Mil waukee road in Harmony Precinct, killed himself Monday by putting a rifle muzzle against his forehead and pulling the trigger. Sheriff Mass and Coroner Wilson took charge of the body. The man was undoubtedly crazy. JTHE OFFICIAL OR.GAN OF THE FARMERS SOCIETY OF EQUITY EQUITY. A plain motion before the house is worth carload of long drawn out suggestions. Co-operation 1b new thing with farmers and that puts them in the primer class. When we buy and sell a few little things and make and save money we will try bigger things. Each member should go to the meetings and take part; add your in luence. You are one and should count one in the local: in the neighborhood in the State, nation and in the whole thing:. The farmers of Clackamas county or of the State of Oregon need have no fears about the success of any plan of co-operation as the National Un ion is going to put in a system now. Congress called for a report from the Sec. of Agriculture in regard to co-operation and the report has been sent to congress and contains 391 pages. The time is not far off when Uncle Sam will join the Equity. Uncle Sara has joined forces with the banks and made some of the largest fortunes for a few bankers that the world ever knew. Uncle Sam has gone into partner ship with the liquor dealers; stored their product; loaned them money on it and made it pay from the very first. It is time for our uncle to help his farmers out of the ruts of competit ion and devise an honest and econom ical system of co-operation for all his workers. The Agricultural College of Kan sas is now the head of all co-operative organizations of the farmers of that state. The Oregon College gets every year nearly $200,000 of our hard earned money and they should spend some of it in securing sale for what they have helped us to produce or they would be a business failure. f And now comes a bill In our legis lature to tax us over three hundred thousand more for this college. We have learned how to veto these things. Bulletin No. 10 from National headquarters has been on the market since the 21st of Dec. but very little listed from the Northwest We must list our stuff. It costs us comparative ly nothing and we can not sell it if it is not listed. There should be a quantity of mer chantable produce.Jiye stock etc., for us to work on. We will learn more by experience than discussion to begin with. The government is going to loan money to the farmers because there is a powerful demand ana the bankers are discussing it The farmers are dis cussing it .The politicians are discus sin; it. We farmers want that money to build creameries, packing houses, fac tories and canneries on the farms and can give good real estate secur ity.And we want this money direct from Uncle Sam at 2 per cent without any middle man with a big commiss ion. We welcome to our County Union two more up to date locals. One is the Colton, W. W. Gorbett Sec, J. E. Sandall, Pres; another at Damascus with J. C. Rogers Pres. and H. T. Burr Sec These new locals must read UP to date and the Courier; attend the meetings of the County Union; push into the collar and will soon be on to the ropes and sailing a smooth sea. See? The irrand jury has indicted nearly all the commission men on Front St, . ; i M on two counts, one on resinum m trade and the other for conspiracy. It matters not to the farmer wheth er these men are found guilty or not The "system" of distribution which robs both the producer and the con sumer will remain at' the old stand. The only difference will be that a few hungry lawyers will file briefs a mile lonar. then demurrer, and move for a writ of habeas corpus and a subpoe na duces tecum and a nunc pro tunc and then they will find eomma in the wrong place and the judge will take the lawyers under advisement and divide up the fines and estates and we will hear no more about it We cannot leaislate wealth into ex istence; all the good legislation does is to state whose pockets it must go into. The" farmers produce billions of wealth and every year Congress and the legislatures let it travel the same old road into the other lenow s pocK et And this kind of confiscation has been going on for years. What is the use of working people working them selves poor without changing the con ditions that give it all to other peop le T Join the Equity and help us help ourselves out of the old rut. Mfc.Kt.Dnil. BTAT1 OF OHM. CITT Of lttJKO, I luui couwrr. run J. Cnnr ukM on thtl ht M mm prtar lb. Ira of w. I. nun Co., aomi blMlllta M U CUT Ol TotedO. COMIT ud SUM afsrasin, utd UiaI ml6 firm will par Mm mm at ONE huhuked IMI1.LAW1 joc Men via rrtry M of CittKM thmt rnnool t wna DflMwol Hau.1 CiTiua Cera. FRANK J. UHENET. Sworn to trior me mbwrilM m mr Drtnoai' Una ltd Oar ol Dotemkrr, A. D. I !. Notiit Public. mill Ckurrfc Can tain ktoruflr an art dlnvtlr upon tb. blood u laaeota mrlMM ol too ajroum Bono lor imimniiiii, ir. brill DmrUi, Tie. Tatt Hall Family FUa for esutlpatua. Money to Loan. Oregon CiCy Abstract Co., 017 Main itreet. SOME DAY. What the Farmers May Accomplish When They all Pull Together. Years and years ago some fellow alive from his ears up, conceived that co-operation in business would be a goou stunt. He got the idea to working in a small way and then in no time every business of any size in the country began to get in. And we call them "combinations" and "trusts." And then the fellows who worked for the combinations and trusts be gan to see where they would have to get off. at if the combinations and trusts should use the hang-together power, so they acted on the same lines and combined. And we call them labor unions. And capital and labor have been having a monkey and porrot time of it ever since. Some time the parrot gets the best of the deal and the next round the monkey wins out They are much in the position of Great Britian and Germany. Each one has to keep coming back, each has to watch and keep prepared for the oth er, for the minute one relaxes, it is a gone nation. But the question is where would either capital or labor be without the union behind it, so long as the other is combined? And the answer to the question is, "Look at the farmer." Everything has comulned except the farmer. He plays it alone and everybody plays him. He raises a dollar's worth of stuff and gets 48 cents for it. He works longer hours than any class of people in this coun try and gets the least for it. The rich farmers (the most of them) are those who inherited it. If there were no unions, no combin ations, no co-operation, and all was open competition, demand and supply would regulate wages and the cost of everything, and everybody would be on an even footing would have an even break. But when about nine out of ten are organized for each others' , benefit, when about nine out of ten combine to hold up their prices and hold down the tenth man's prices, then that lone some tenth man is going to get it where Johnny had the bronchitis'. It has taken years for the farmer to realize that he must get in and play the co-operative game or be put out of the game, but he realizes it now. Every tick of the clock shows him how the middlemen and the produce men, the combinations and every one of the' unions have skinned him alive these many years. And then he remembers that he and his neighbors have what the world MUST have, what the people cannot get along 24 hours without and then I hope he calls for the kicking ma chine. The farmers are realizing that they have the material for the tightest trust on earth right in their hands and that all these years they have been allowing the big fellows to take it away from them and get rich out of it. And there is a change coming it is here. The farmers don't propose to run any forcible skin games, but they do NOT propose that anyone else Bhall with their products. The farmers at last realize that all they have to do is .to organize as the other fellows do and they can have at least half of what the other fel lows are making in speculation off the stuff they raise, and yet lower the price to the eaters and wearers. And they are going to do it. Oregon farmers are waking up and they are going to do things. The Eq uity society gives them the power to come in for what they are justly en titled to, and they are going to make use of that power. What the farmers of Oregon want to do is to go slow, careful, and then everlastingly stick. That is all they need to do. They don't have to raise millions to control their output; they have it in hand. They have simply to play the cards they have. The Equity unions are growing.The farmers have faith in the movement, and every man is preaching for it. It can't accomplish all that it is cap able to bring forth in one season, and the most of the farmers realize this, but every day it can grow stronger, every day it can benefit a little more, and some of these days it will be in a position of power to laugh at Wall Street Farming would be a mighty good life if it paid in proportion to other vnc&tinns. But the farmer never never . 1 ..1 l. ..,A,t,a AM that i.An ' JtllUWS WI1CII lie nuino u v-iuy whether it will pay for harvesting or not. He is at the mercy of the fel lows who get together. They can give it out that there is a big potato crop in the east, that there is over produc tion, refuse to take the farmers' sup ply at any price until they have them scared to death, then buy up the stuff as they want it and double their mon ey- . . With buying and selling agencies; with organizations that will show the demand and supply if a state, each state, and yes, the whole country aft er a little well the farmer can then be his own middleman. The idea is to go slow and go care ful, avoid internal dissensions, give and take, grow stronger each week, and one of these days the farmer will not need anybody's sympathy. BROWN'. CASTOR I A For Infant! and Children. The Kind YonHaie Always Bought Bears the Signature of CLACKAMAS UNION PROTESTS Does not Understand how This Clearing House Would Help. A resolution to the effect that: Whereas We as members of Clackamas Local Union (No. 6831) Farmers Society of Equity, are in terested in all efforts for the better ment of marketing our crops; and Whereas It has come to our not ice that a company by name of Union Sales Co., or Clearing-house and Warehouse Co., (We don't know which) Inc. of Portland, Ore., has been organized for the purpose of handling F. S. E. goods, on, we un derstand, a practical commission bas is, and whereas The i. a. fci. is an or ganization for the purpose of elimin ating commission men and middlemen and marketing their own crops, thru channels provided by the laws of the F. S. E., namely the County . Union and State Union, which can be incor porated for any and all purposes in this line, and Whereas The F. S. E., having in their by-laws provided us a market system, we consider the Union Sales Co., of no practical benefit to the F. S. E., though posing as its friend, now therefore be it Resolved that we, Clackamas Co unty Local Union, F. S. E., condemn the Union Sales Co., as having no part whatever in the F. S. E., in spite of fine promises, that we indorse the idea of a selling division, but consider it should be Society of Equity, and not Union Sales Co., and be it further Resolved that this resolution be incorporated in the minutes of the meeting, and that a copy be sent the Secretary of each local union, and one to the Secretary of the County Union of Clackamas Co., and one to the National Secretary of the F. S. E. and one to the Secretary of the Union Sales Co.. or Clearinghouse and Warehouse Co. FRANK HABERLACH. THE LOCAL UNIONS. With Officers and Postoffice Addres- ses in Clackamas County. Alberta Local Pres. Jess May field; Sec. Ferris Mayfield, Spring- water Rt. 1. Beaver Creek Local Pres. Fred Kamerath; Sec. W. W. Harris, Oregon City Rt. 3. Canby Local Pres. Geo. Koehler; Sec. R. C. Brodie, Canby Rt. 2. Carus Local Pres. A. J. Kelnhof- er; Sec. S. L. Casto, Oregon City Rt.3 Clackamas Local Pres. J. A. Sieb- en, Sec. Frank Haberlach, Clackamas. Clarks Local Pres. Albert Gasser; Sec. John S. Gard, Oregon City Rt 4, Colton Local Pres. J. E. Sandall; Sec. W. S. Gorbett, Colton. Damascus Local Pres. J. E. Roy er, Sec. H. T. Burr, Clackamas Rt. 1. Logan Local Pres, W. E. Cromer; Sec. P. M. Kirchem, Oregon City Rt 2. Macksburg Local Pres. C. D. Keesling; Sec. J. W. Smith, Aurora, Rt. 1. Maple Lane Local Pres. H. M. Robbins; Sec. G. F. Mighells, Oregon City Rt 3. Mt. Pleasant Local Pres. P. W. Meredith, Sec. F. G. Buchanon, Ore gon City. New Era Local Pres. Aug. Stae heley; Sec. C. B. Reverman, Oregon City, Rt. 1. Shubel Local Pres. Chas. A. Menke; Sec. Elmer Swope, Oregon City Rt. 4. Stone Local Pres ,T. E. Brown; Sec. M. J. Byers, Clackamas, Rt. 1. Sunnyside Local Pres. R. P. Grady; Sec. E. Ochlschlaeger, Clack amas, Rt. 1. Mt. Pleasant Meeting. Mt Pleasant Local met Friday ev ening at 8 P. M.. Three more added to our rolj with more on the mourn ers bench. A collection for our janitor amount ed to $2.15. A committee discussed tne question of sales agent for Oregon City and it was the unanimous opinion to ao our buying through a county agent. We elected 5 delegates to the next County Union meeting; listed quite a lot of Droduce and merchandise. Five subscribed stock for our Union Sales Co., with more to follow. Supplies ordered and communications read, and adjourned to meet Feb. 21. SNAP SHOTS. Does L. L. Pickens think the dove 0f peace will lay any eggs in his hen house? Why doesn't Washington County form her County Union? We are an xiously waiting. W ought to form our State Union before, or at the saw time, as our Union Sales Co., and one will help the other and guard each other's in terests. We are very much in need of a man under pay of the County Union to do a great many things that ought to be done, and it is too expensive to ask any man to do without pay. He could get his salary from the business. We are standing still until this is done on some plan. The standing committees of the Co. Union met in the County court room as guests of Sheriff Mass. He had been trying to serve injunctions on poison oak and had a Tillamook cheese on his shoulders with a cir cular smile in the center arouDd the nose, containing a French briar and welcomed us, but did not have any humps on his back and did not claim to own the court house. We made our escape in the afternoon wondering who wrote that stuff about not liking a fat man. No. 5 NOT FOR FARMERS. Court House Refused for Meeting of County Equity Society. Ye farmer editor appeared before Judge Campbell and requested the use of the court house for our next county meeting of the Equity. Well, we got turned down hard and plenty, The Judge informed us that the court house was not built for farmers or farmers' meetings. When we revived sufficient to look around we came to the conclusion that the court house was built for a sup eranuated lawyers' home; also used as a sort of pension bureau for broken down politicians. On the lower floor is a small corral with a cage annexed used to herd hayseeds about tax paying time. You know we still owe some on our court house. We don't know how much and can't? find out, but if we were paid up we probably would not be allowed inside at all. Court decisions are sometimes revers ed and we will meet in our court house that we built for ourselves and it is too bad that Judge Campbell can not be there to welcome us but of course by that time he will necessar- illy be OUT. And when all cases are appealed to that eternal judge behind the pearly gates we will not be told that the mansion built with our hands was not for honest farmers and their meet ings, and do you suppose our hearts will bleed with sorrow for one who goes another road? P. W. MEREDITH. PLAY THE EQUUITY GAME. Hop Growers of the Valley Should Get in With this Movement. Notices have been mailed during the last week by the hop men-of this section asking for a meeting of all growers to see about purchasing their hop supplies in car loads and thus cut Out much of the cost to .the grow ers. ' This is a good beginning and we would like to see a strong organ ization of hop men of this valley formed later as a result of this move ment. The hop growers this year lost thousands of dollars by the manipu lation of the buyer and if they had been organized like the apple men, or wool men, there would not have been such a stagnant market worked out to fleece the hop growers. The hop growers of Oregon should sell direct to the breweries and not deal through jobbers and brokers, where the Dutchman's one per cent is often secured from the hop grow ers. Independence Monitor. But why have yet another organiz ation when one co-operative effort would serve all ? Why have the Gran ge, Farmers' Alliance, Equity Society hop growers' union and so on? That is the trouble with the farm ers and it is the trouble the interests like to see, for the more associations they have the less strength they will have. The hop growers of the valley had better get in with the Equity Society. It has a better plan of organization and co-operation than the growers can ever frame up, and it is ready and working. Social at Shubel. A basket social will be held at the Shubel school house Thursday night, Feb. 20. A musical and literary pro gram will be given. Every one will be insured a good time. New Era Meeting. New Era Local will hold a special meeting at Brown's school house at 8 P. M. Saturday evening, the 15th. All members and non-members will be welcome. NOTICE. The regular annual meeting of the stockholders of the Clear Creek Creamery Company will be held on the third Monday of March, March 17, at 10 o'clock A. M., at the creamery, Stone, Ore. At this meeting five directors, a secretary and treasurer will be elect ed for the ensuing year, and any other business transacted which may prop erly come before it W. P. KIRCHEM, President, A. O. HOLLINGSWORTII,, Secretary. IT'S A MISTAKE Made by Many Oregon City Residents. Many people in a misguided effort to get rid of kidney backache, rely on plasters, liniments and other make shifts. The right treatment is kidney treatment and a remarkably reco mmended kidney medicine is Doan's Kidney Pills. Oregon City is no ex ception. The proof is at your very door. The following is an experience typical of the work of Doan's Kidney Pills in Oregon City: James Wilkinson, 201 Fourteenth St., Oregon City, Ore., says: "I had a backache and pains in my loins and could not sleep well. There was stiff ness in my limbs and other symptons of kidney trouble were present. Be ing advised to try Doan's Kidney Pills I did and was gratified by their promptness in relieving me. Although I am in my seventieh year, I am hale and hearty and I give Doan's Kidney Pills the credit" For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. " -1:;--!'-M.ipjyyr HI ALCOHOL 3 PER npniT. AVegelablerVeDamflnnrnrli!. slrailatineilKnMtfanififpdnh fogUK Stomachs andBoweis of Promotes DiestionjCheerfuI ness and RestXontalns neither UpiuntMorphine norMiucral. NOT NARCOTIC Aajx'toidiksamimm. PimifJria Sttd- Am Suit WmSmf CtonM Sugor Anerfect Remedy for CuikHm Hon , Sour Stomach.Dlarrhoea WormsrConvulsionsJcverisli ness andLoss OTSleep. Facsimile Signature of oSufc, mm NEW YORK, Exact Copy o! Wrapper. EAGLE CREEK. Misses Echo Githens and Meda Murphy and Mrs. R. is. Gibson spent Tuesday evening with Mrs. Hunting ton and Miss Alice Driscoll. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Douglas went to Molalla last week. A small crowd met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Howlett last Thursday evening, and spent the time with a spelling match and in singing. H. S. Gibson was a Portland visi tor Monday. A. G. Dix was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Howlett Sunday. He preach ed to a small audience at the school house morning and evening. J. f. Woodle was over this way Sunday. Ed Douglass butchered some hogs and took them to a Portland market the first of the week. H. G. Huntington made a business trip to Portland last week. . Mrs. Roy Douglass took dinner with Mrs. R. B. Gibson Sunday. Mrs. Fred Hoffmeister visited the school Friday afternoon. THE MARKET REPORTS Oregon City Prices for theVarloua products or tne Farm. The hop market is practically at a stand still. In Oregon and in Californ- na there are some holdings of 1912 hops, but the buyers are not willing to pay the prices that were quoted in January, and those holding hops are not willing to sell their hops any lower than the prices demanded by them, and will hold for better pnees than those quoted by the dealers. Offers of 14 and 15 cents have been made for the coming crops in a few sections, but so far as there is no one taking up the contracts. The grow ers who have held onto their hopes will not sell until spring, when there i3 some prospect of the prices advanc ing. Eggs are down to 30 cents retail, and no doubt as Easter draws near the price will gradually drop to a much lower price than the present one. The price of butter remains about the same and the demand is good. Although we have experienced some cold weather the gardeners near the city are able to bring their daily supply of fresh vegetables to the loc al markets. They include: onions, winter radishes, . parsnips , turnips, cabbage, cauliflower, and various other varieties.. HIDES (buvincrl: Green hides 80 to 7o; salters 7c:dry hidosl2c lo 14c; shop pelts 30o to85o ea'h. juiUS Oregon rancn, zoo. FEED (selling) . Shorts $27 ; dran$25; process barley $38 per ton. FLOUR $4.80 to $5.70. HAY (buying. Clover at $9 and $10; oat hay, best, $11 and $12; mixod $10 and $12; alfalfa, $15 to $16.50; Idaho timothy $20; whole corn $40. OATS $27 at $28; wheat ?i.uu bushl. oil meal selling about $55; SUay Brook Dairy feed $1.30 per hundred pounds. Live 8took Meats Beef (live wt.) Steers 6 and 6: cows 5 and 5 1-2: bulls4 1-2. MUTTON Sheep three to live cents. Chickens 12o. Pork 9 1-2 cents. VEALi Calves 12c to 13c; dres sed, according to grade. t POULTRY (buying). Hensllc springs 12c; rosters 8c, ducks 14, gene 12c: turkeys 16o. MUiiAln 330 10 300 Fruits Apples 70c to $1.00. DRIED FRUITS (buying) Or. egon prunes on basis 6c to 8c. . .uuuer (Buying) Ordinary country butter 30o lo 35c; fancy dairy 80o per roll. W. S. Skelton, a merchant at Stan $100.00 for the relief a single box of Foley Kidney Pills gave him. "I had a severe attack of kidney trouble with sharp pains through my back and could haddly straighten up. A single box of Foley Kidney Pills entirely re lieved me." Huntley Bros. For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years YHI OINTAUR aOMMNV, NW YORK OITT. GLAD TIDINGS. Schuyler Usher made a trip to Mt. Angel Saturday returning with a load of shingles, to be used in roofing his granary, which is in process of erection. Henry Hattler, assisted by Dave Franklin and Jay Bentley, is busily engaged upon the new hop house, which will be completed in a short time. Ed Seaman, assisted by his son Robert, has been doing some grub bing lately. " J. Marquam, our enterprising mer chant, ordered a number of boxes of smelt, which, arriving in good shape, found ready sale, and were much en joyed by the consumers. Roy Garrett and wife, of Eastern Oregon, are now at Tom Garrett's on a visit and having disposed of their interests in Eastern Oregon, may con clude to locate somewhere in this county. O. L. Hammond has commenced breaking up clover sod and from the condition of the ground and the great benefit of clover sod as a fertilizer he will surely have a banner crop, of grain this coming season. Mrs. Clara Schnack paid a visit to her parents, Who live near Mt. Angel, Saturday, returning home Sunday, ac companied by her Bister, who will visit with her the comnig week. Born, to the wife of Frank Erick son a boy, Thursday Feb. 6. Alfred Olson is doing much im provement on his place this winter. Blacksmith Olson has moved from Marquam to a new home lately com pleted on a portion of the Fred Mey er's place. The Forty Year Test. An article must have exceptional merit to survive for a period of forty years. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy was first offered to the public in 1872. From a small beginning it has grown in favor and popularity until it has attained a world wide reputat ion. You will find nothing better for a cough or cold. Try it and you will understand why it is a favorite after a epriod of more than forty years. It not only gives reliefit cures. For sale by Huntley Bros. BROWNELL & STONE ATTORNEYS AT LAW Oregon City, Oregon Dr. L. G. ICE DENTIST Beaver Building Oregon City Phones Paolflo, 1221. Home A 19 Oregon Fire Relief Association of MoMlnnvllle GEO. W. H. MILLER, AGENT 214, Seventh St. Also Health, Aooldent, Income and Automobile Insurance PAUL C. FISCHER Lawyer Deutscher Advokat Room 8 Beaver Building Main 8L Oregon City Dillman & Howl and Real Estate And Insurance Weinhard BIdg. Main Street. Oregon City A IF