Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, August 07, 1913, Page 3, Image 3

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OREGON CITY COURIER, THURSDAY, AUG. 7, 1913
OREGON EQUI
NEWS
UNITED WE LIVE
DIVIDED WE STARVE
PROFITABLE PRICES
FOR FARM PRODUCTS
Vol. 1
Official Representative of the Farmers Society of Equity
No 23
nr
OREGON EQUITY NEWS
Published every Friday in conjunc
tion with the "Courier" in the interest
of the "Farmers' Society of Equity."
ADVERTISING
rates given upon application.
PUBLICITY COMMITTEE
M. J. Lazelle, Oregon City ; R. C.
Brodie, Canby; E. Ochlschloeger,
Clackamas, R. No. 1.
SUBSCRIPTION
Special Low discount to Any Man
who Farms.
ADDRESS
all communications to M. .J. Lazelle,
Manager, Oregon City, Oregon. Call
on Saturdays to see Editor.
STATE OFFICERS
President Wm. Schulmerich of
Washington Co.
Vice-President Wm Grisenthwaite
of Clackamas Co.
Sec. Treas. F. G. Buchanan of
Clackamas Co.
Directors: A. R. Lyman of Mult
nomah Co; F. M. Hall of Columbia
Co; P. H. McMahon of Yamhill Co;
J. W. Smith of Clackamas Co; E. E.
Hellyer of Washington Co. The Pres
ident and Vice. President are direct
ors also.
CLACKAMAS COUNTY OFFICERS
, Pres. S. L. Casto of Carus Local.
Vice. Pres. J. H. Bowerman of Da
mascus Local.
Sec. Treas. F. G. Buchanan of Mt
Pleasant Local.
Directors: W. J. Bowerman of
Sunnyside Local; J. C. Royer of Da
mascus Local; Wm. Grisenthwaite of
Beaver Creek Local.
LOCAL OFFICERS OF CLACKA
MAS CO.
' Alberta Pres. Jesse Mayfield. Sec.
Ferris Mayfield, Springwater R. 1.
Beaver Creek: Pres. Fred Kamar
ath; Sec. W. W. Harris, Oregon City
R. 3.
Canby: Pres. Geo. Koehler; Sec.
R. C. Brodie, Canby R. 3.
Carus: Pres. A. J. Kelnhofer; Sec.
S. L. Casto, Oregon City R. 3.
Clackamas: Pres. J. A. Sieben;
Sec. Frank Haberlach, Clackamas
Oregon.
Clarkes: Pres. Albert Gasser; gpc.
John L. Gard, Oregon City R. 4.
Colton: Pres. J. E. Sandall; Sec.
W. S. Gorbett, Colton, Oregon.
Damascus: Pres. J. C. Eoyer; Sec.
H. T. Burr, Clackamas R. 1.
Eagle Creek: Pres. W. G. Glover,
Sec. C. C. Longwell, Barton R. 1.
Highland Local Pres. M. E. Kan
dle; Sec. S. S. Palmer.
Laurel Ridge Local Union Pres. G.
C. Heiple; Sec. N. E. Linn, Estacada,
Rt. 1.
Logan: Pres. W. E. Cromer; Sec.
P. M. Kirchem, Oregon City R. 2.
Macksbur.g: Pres. C. D. Keesling,
Sec. J. W. Smith, Aurora, R. 1.
Maple Lane: Pres. H. M. Robbins,
Sec. G. F. Mighells, Oregon City R. 3.
Mt. Pleasant: Pres. P. W. Mere
dith; Sec. F. G. Buchanan, Oregon
City, Oregon.
New Era: Pres. Aug. Staeheley;
Sec. C. B. Riverman, Oregon City, R.
1.
Needy: Pres. J. D. Ritter; Sec. E.
Werner, Aurora, R. 2.
Shubel: Pres. Chas. A. Menke;
Sec. Elmer Swope, Oregon City R. 4.
Stone: Pres. T. E. Brown; Sec.
M: J. Byers, Clackamas R. 1.
Sunnyside: Pres. R. P. Grady;
Sec. E. E. Oeslschlager, Clackamas R.
1.
West Butteville: Pres. James Par-
ett; Sec. J. R. Woolworth, Newberg,
R. 2.
Wilsonville: Pres. M. ' C. Young;
Sec. R. B. Seely, Sherwood, R. 6.
Oregon City Readers Are Learning
The Way.
It's the little kidney ills
The lame, weak or aching back
The unnoticed urinary disorders
That may lead to dropsy and
Bright's disease.
When the kidneys are weak,
Help them with Doan's Kidney
Pills,
A remedy especially for weak kid
neys. Doan's have been used in kidney
troubles for 50 years.
Endorsed by 30,000 people endors
ed at home.
Proof in an Oregon City citizen's
statement.
A. G. Woodward, 412 Main St., Ore
gon City, says: "My kidneys were
badly disordered and caused my
tack to become lame and painfu1 Up
on taking Doan's Kidney Pills, I
steadily improved and was soon free
from the complaint."
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name Sloan's and
take no other.
Costly Treatment.
"I was troubled with constipation
and indigestion and spent hundreds
of dollars for medicine and treat
ment," writes C. H. Hines, of Whit
low, Ark. "I went to a St. Louis hos
pital, also to a hospital in New Or
leans, but no cure was affected. On
returning home I began taking Cham
berlain's Tablets, and worked right
along. I used them for some time
and am now all right." sold by Hunt
ley Bros. Co.
EDITORIALS
The farmers all ver the world are
organizing.
The Equity is not doing one-tenth
part of the business that we will do
when our county unions all have first
class agents who will work in con
nection with our central clearing house
m Portland.
Can you 'imagine the immense am
ount of fruit, vegetables, eggs, milk,
butter and meat that could be pro
duced in this grand Wil'amette Val
ley if the farmers were allowed a
good profit?
The most important things to hu
manity, materially, is food, clothes.
fuel and shelter. This is the wealth
of the human family and here in the
Willamette Valley the people who
produce these things are poor and the
rich are people who produce nothing
that helps the human tamuy to live
and enjoy life. Something wrong!
The Equity of Clackamas county
must begin in time to organize the
small fruit growers for next year's
crop. We know where the berries
will be, now find the profitable mar
ket. Up in the Yakima country and
around Kennewick the farmers sold
1200 crates and received for canning
$1.44 per crate net f. o. b. For me
diums $1.69 and for fancy lot $3.60
per crate and WE.sold for 75c to $1.
A well-dressed man of Portland was
complaining to a prominent lawyer in
the Yeon building the other day of
the 1. W. W s not working. The law
yer replied that this building is chock
full of men. who never worked, won't
work and never will work." There are
hundreds of easier ways to make
money. Graft it?
It begins to look as though 1913
would hold the record for strikes,
lockouts, investigations, graft, and
low prices for farmers' produce. With
food getting cheaper in the farmers'
hands and .dearer in the consumers'
handls nobody could blame the far
mer and consumer for going on a
strike if it would do any good. We
must do something before conditions
get worse. Organize.
Clackamas County has about 25
unions with about 500 members. Our
county business agent has sold to our
members nearly one thousand dollars
worth of binder twine alone, and sav
ed our members nearly one hundred
dollars on this one item. We have in
this state an incorporated Equity
Warehouse Co., that will in a week or
two be ready for business in the city
of Portland, backed by about 1500
members in the state.
Thef armer used to get 5 cents per
quart for his milk and he delivered it
to the consumer. But one day an agent
agreed to pay him four and a half
cents and take the milk at the farm,
so the farmer agreed. But other
agents did the same thing and then
the agents organized and now they
pay the farmer 3 cents per quart and
charge the consumer 9 cents for
water and all.
Just such a market system as this
has caused the city consumer to be
lieve that the farmer is the cause of
the high cost of living.
Our O. A. C. advocates building si
los and filling them with insilage as
the cheapest feed for milch cows.
But under this insane mtthod of sell
ing milk the farmer could never pay
for his silo with 3 cent milk. Organ
ize and change the system.
The Farmers Society of Equity of
the State of Oregon has decided to
have a legislature committee, resi
dent Grisenthwaite will toon appoint
them and we would suggest that they
frame a bill for our legislature to al
low our Agricultural College to de
vote about fifty per cent of their ap
propriations to scientific marketing of
what they teach us how to praouce.
That's Equity.
Another thing they could do would
be to encourage our U. S. senators and
representotives from Oregon to elim
inate the restrictions for manufactur
ing denatured alcohol. We farmers
could eet a profit from our potatoes
and compete with the Standard Oil
Co. in furnishing auto s witn a better
power and later on we might be able
to buy an auto for ourselves. Stick
tight to the organization.
The cotton crop of the U. S. is
worth every year about one billion
dollars. Sometimes a bumper crop
brings the farmer less money than a
short crop. The railroads make more
money out of a big crop. The specu
lator makes more money out of a big
crop and so does the manufacturer,
but the farmer gets his profits from
a short crop because the crop is ex
pensive to pick and bale and market.
It is estimated that the farmers
could save 75 million dollars every
year on the marketing of their cotton
crop alone if they were organized and
cooperate.
Are we farmers not a lot of suck
ers for not telling Congress how to
loan money direct to us like they do to
bankers and whiskey makers. We
could have saved the expense of one
hundred men going to Europ e and
traveling all over those countries ask
ing those people how our people can
do something for ourselves,
The Polk County Itemizer says:
The fact that onions from Texas, po
tatoes from California and eggs and
poultry from points outside of Oregon
are being received in Portland and
in carload lots while the farmers in
the immediate vicinity as well as those
tributary to the railroads leading to
this market cannot find a market for
their produce at any price has led the
Portland Realty Board to actively
take up the question of establishing
public markets where gardners and
farmers may dispose of their products
direct to the consumer with great ben
efit to both. It is stated that the fact
that the farmers cannot sell their own
crops in Portland without a license,
and the further fact that the commis
sion men will not buy from him ex
cept at their own prices, is causing
many farmers to allow fruits and
vegetables to go to waste rather than
dispose of them at a loss.
This is partly what is wrong but
who would have ever thought that
any good would have come out of a
Portland Realty Board. NEXT!
All the smart lawyers in Oreeon
can't justify this action in the mind of
the man who reasons ana tmnks.
Because other counties up the val
ley let private contracts is absolutely
no justification tor judge rJeatie.
If Linn County got trimmed that is
no reason why Clacks mas county
should be trimmed, too.
Because Giteau murdered a presi
dent you have no right to shoot Wil
son. Such awful small prices for the
farmers' produce proves we should
organize.
Such awful high prices for what
we have to buy proves that the other
fellow is pretty well organized.
Now is time farmers are wanting
to be organized. The Equity should
take advantage of this opportunity.
The Farmers' Society of Equity has
three states organized. Oklahoma,
Idaho and Oregon, with organizers in
nearly all other "states.
There are some prospects now from
the looks of the Farmers' Society of
Equity, that we, the Haves of the
country, will get our eyes open to a
certain extent at least.
We farmers of Clackamas County
and other property owners were tax
ed last year over a half million dol
lars. Now, brother farmer, how many
of those dollars come back to you?
What have you to show forit?
The taxpayers of Clackamas County
ought to send a crowd of polticians to
the Fifi islands or somewhere to find
out how we can get some benefit out
of $600,000 taxes.
The Clear Creek Creamery Co. of
Clackamas county is an example of
what farmers can do when they or
ganize and cooperate. The product of
this institution is nearing the one
hundred thousand dollar mark.
The State Grange has a legislative
committee, and come to think about it
wouldn't it be a good scheme to coop
erate with these grangers and put a
few good laws on our books and take
a few bad ones off? Don't you think
it will pay to stay with the organizat
ion and help organize the rest of our
csountry ?
Congress has done a lot of investi
gating and it will soon be time to tell
us just how many $ each one gets
out of all those dirty deals. Then I
suppose they will appoint about one
hundred men on a commission to come
to Clackamas County to find out how
to get signers to a recall petition.
Besides the animal part of humanity
they tell us there is an intellectual or
spiritual part. Civilization, progress
and all improvement to the race de
pends on how this spiritual part is
developed. Education ih nature, liter
ature, music and improvements in co
operative production and distribution
requires happiness, leisure and frefr;
dom for each and every member of
all society.
Meredith
EXTEND MEMBERSHIP FIRST
National Headquarters Advises Going
Slow on Warehouse Venture
Indianapolis, Ind., July 28, 1913
Mr. P. W. Meredith,
Oregon City, Ore.
Dear Sir:
This acknowleges yours of the 21st.
Contents noted, and always glad to
hear from you.
Mr. Meredith, if you can supply us
with the Constitution anj By-Laws in
force at the present lime for the
Equity Warehouse Company at Port
land, please send a copy by early
mail.
Mr. Meredith, I cannot understand
why there should be any lack of un
derstanding about the duty of the
Oregon State Union to complete the
organization in your statet We have
noticed that the work was practically
at a standstill, and must say that this
is to be regretted very much. We will
do as you requesed, and write to the
Secretary and the President and Nat
ional organizer Cutting, who is still
in Oregon, to get busy on organizing.
I have grave fears for your cooperat
ive efforts through the Equity Ex
change if the organization is not ex
tended and the membership increased.
Enclosed is a draft giving sugges
tions for a State Union Constitution
and By-Laws.
Yours sincerely,
J. A. Everett,
Pres. Farmers Society of Equity
News of Carus Local
Carus Local No. 6882 met in reg
ular session at 8 P. M., with Presi
dent Kelnhoffer in the chair. All of
ficers and 11 members present. A
number of subjects of interest to the
farmers were discussed.
Mr. Michael Kroll and C. Anderson
were admitted to membership and 3
other names were voted favorable and
will be entered next meeting.
Considerable indignation was
aroused regarding the article printed
in the Morning Enterprise, which
said that Beaver Creek Local's reso
lution regarding Mr. Schuebel was a
slap at the Recall. We wish to state
that the Equity Society has taken no
stand whatever, officially, as regards
the recall movement
Mr.' Schuebel was recommended as
Township organized in the F. S. E.
Sales sheet as follows:
Geo. Bliss, Rt. 3., has a cow and
a stock hog for sale; H Brown of Rt.
3., has a cow and a two-year old hei
fer; C. Piepka, Rt. 1, Canby, has 3
head of horses for sale; S. L. Casto
has a brood sow, with pig, and one
horse for sale.
"Tales of Honey and Tar" from West
and East
Wm. Lee, Paskenta, Calif, says, "It
gives universal satisfaction and I use
only Foley's Honey and Tar Com
pound for my children." E. C. Rhodes,
Middleton, Ga.f writes, "I had a rack
ing lagrippe cough and finally got re
lief taking Foley's Honey and Tar
Compound." Use no other in your
family and refuse substitutes.'
For sale by Huntley Bros. Co.
DON'T BE A QUITTER
Stand by the Equity and the Equity's
Warehouse Proposition
Oregon City, Ore.
July 28, 1913
Editor Courier:
It is easy enough to be enthusiastic
when everything is running smoothly.
It is easy enough to get the blues
when things go wrong. It is far too
easy to start a kick whenever some
one does something that don't exac
tly suit us. But what the Farmers
Society of Equity needs is men who
are broad enough to look over any
minor objections and to give their sup
port to the warehouse company. After
the business is well established every
one will be glad to contribute sup
port. Of course that support will be
welcome but what is needed is sup
port at the present time. The kind of
support that will make the undertak
ing a success. The kind of support that
really accomplishes something by be
ing available when it is most needed.
The proposition is already supported
by a large number who are
determined to give the undertaking a
thorough trial. Since we have a set of
honest and capable men in charge of
the state union and warehouse com
pany, our prospects of success could
hardly be much better. At the same
time we must realize that the venture
is a new one and must be supported.
This support must be of the kind that
never fails whether the outlook is
bright or dim.
We have no place for quitters in the
Farmers Society of Equity. Every man
who started out with enthusiasm for
the warehouse and company and who
retreated and began to support some
one horse affair when he saw some
imaginary obstacles in the way is a
quitter. Fortunately a great many of
them have seen the error of their ways
and are again ottering their aid to the
proposition. We are not to make this
thing a success and will probably find
that it succeeds exactly in proportion
to the support that we give it. If we
look around at the men who are suc
ceeding in life we notice that the ones
making the greatest success are the
ones that are most constant. The men
who follow one undertaking just long
enough to encounter an obstacle are
not usually making much progress.
The successful men are not successful
because there are no obstacles, or be
cause they shut their eyes to these
obstacles but rather because they
meet them and analyze them and fin
ally surmounting and going ahead.
So if all the members of the Far
mers Society of Equity will back the
warehouse company with a determin
ation to see it through to success. If
each one will keep up his enthusiasm
even if he cannot see that everything
is perfect. If each one will be prepar
ed to look over mistakes for they are
characteristic of human beings. And
above all things will apply rigid test
to any scandalous rumors that may
appear. Be absolutely sure that they
are true before they are spread. If
found to be true face that matter
squarely without turning to some
other proposition and without putting
on a plaster that merely hides the de
fect. The thing to do is to repair de
fective part. This will always be pos
sible so long as we retain complete
control of the undertaking. We can at
any time demand that a weak man be
replaced or poor plan of action chan
ged. All that will be necessary will be
to put the actual facts before the
membership in their right light. How
ever, we should at all possible times
keep our troubles from being thrash
ed out by the public gossips who are
forever propagating trouble.
Then let every farmer join the so
ciety and every member support its
undertakings.
W. W. Harris
FAMILIAR 8AYINQS.
"Variety's the spice of life"
and "Not much the worse for
wear" were coined by Cowper.
Edward Young tells us "Death
loves a shining murk" and "A
fool at forty Is a fool indeed."
"Of two evils I have chosen
the less" and "The end must
Justify the means" are from
Matthew Prior.
GEMS OF THOUGHT.
Health Is the second blessing
that we mortals are capable of
a blessing that money cannot
buy. Isaac Walton.
Only the actions of the just
Smell sweet and blossom In the
dust.
James Shirley.
As the ancients
Say wisely, Have a care o' th
main chance
And look before you leap,
For as you sow ye are like to
. reap.
Samuel Butler.
Since knowledge is but sorrow's
spy.
It Is not safe to know.
Sir William Davenant
From Ignorance our comfort
flows. Prior.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
C ASTO R I A
Lumber!
Are you
going to
BUILD ?
Get it direct from the mill and
save money. All kinds ofjjough
and dressed seasoned lumber.Write
or phone us before you buy.
Sager & Clark
Old Superior Stand.. Oregon City
Route 4, Phone Beaver Creek
Mutual.
PERFECTSPHERES
With All His Scientific Skill Man
Cannot Produce Them.
THE CURVING OF A BASEBALL
It li Possible Only Because the Ball Is
an Imperfect Globe and In Compari
son With Its Size Much Rougher
Than the Surface of the Earth.
The real reason why a baseball cart
be thrown so that It will describe won
derful curves during Its progress
through the air Is that every such ball
has a surface made up of mountains,
valleys, craters, canyons, gorges, plains
nnd other Irregularities of the surface
that, when the difference In size is
taken luto consideration, makes the
surf nee of the eurtli seem like plate
glass.
If It were posslblo to make a perfect
sphere If it were possible to make a
baseball with an absolutely smooth sur
fuce and nn exact sphere no pitcher
In the world could make It curve. The
very best pitchers baseball has ever
known or probably ever will kqow
could not ninke the ball deviates hair's
breadth In its flight.
And so while It Is partly In the art
or knack the professional pitcher has
In holding and releasing the baseball
as he throws It. it Is also due to the
fact that a baseball has a wonderfully
rough surface against which the air
catches and turus It that gives It the
curve.
It you pass your hand over a plate
glass It moves smoothly with nothing
to retard it. If you pass your band
over an unpinned board you can feel
the roughness splinters we call them.
Vou cannot move your hand as easily
over the board. This is the same prin
ciple with the baseball. There Is a
roughness in Its surface that catches
In the air nnd forces one side about or
retards thnt side. This has but one
result to make the baseball leave Its
straight course, and In doing this it de
scribes a curve.
This does not detract in the least
from the cleverness of the pitcher who
can so accurately Judge his muscular
control as to make a baseball curve up
or down, right or left. But the fact
remains that It Is the roughness of the
baseball tbnt makes all his pitching
cleverness possible.
Take a brand Dew league ball in
your hand. It looks to be a perfect
sphere thnt Is, absolutely even and
uniformly round and as "smooth as
glass." And'lt may be as smooth as
glass, for glass also has a rough sur
face. Put a baseball under the most pow
erful microscope, enlarge It microscopi
cally 10.000 rtlnmpters, and what do
you see? The very thing mentioned in
the lirst paragraph of this article. The
surface is rough. It looks like the
landscape in the Alps or Yellowstone
park or any other rough section of the
earth. It lias peaks, ranges, ridges,
vulleys, plains and holes, gulches and
all sorts of uneven places, and if the
earth could be made as small as a
baseball it -would be practically a per
fect sphere and absolutely smooth.
This Is because the highest mountains
of the earth and the deepest valleys
would be millions upon millions of
times smaller In comparison with the
rough uneven places on a baseball If
either the earth were reduced to the
size of a baseball or a baseball enlarg
ed to the size of the earth.
If this were uot true the earth would
not revolve so regularly upon its axis.
It would perform an "In shoot" or
"out shoot" and curve off through
space.
Even the billiard ball has a surface
much rougher In comparison to Its size
than the surface of the earth, and we
refer to a billiard ball as about the
smoothest thing known. "As smooth
as a billiard ball" Is a well known
simile. For the same reason that a
perfectly smooth baseball could not be
curved, a perfectly smooth and per
fectly round billiard ball could not be
made to curve on the table. It would
not take "English," as billiard players
call It when they make a ball go for
ward and then roll backward or In any
direction Just by the manner In which
they strike it with a chalked cue.
This fact of roughness causing it to
spin becomes all too evident when a
player forgets to chalk his cue and
plays several shots thereafter. If the
leather Up of the cue becomes shiny
It will slip on the ball. There is no
pnrchnse with which It can take hold.
But chalk is sticky stuff, and the gran
ules are large, so that a well chalked
cue has a very rough surface, and this
rough surfuoe of the tip of the cue fits
Into the rough projections on the ball,
and thereby a ball can be given a lot
of twist In order to accomplish this
successfully, moreover, the billiard
cloth nap mtiBt be new and therefore
rough.
During recent experimentation with
regard to the kinetic theory of gases
n Belgian scientist desired to fjud out
how perfect a sphere could be made In
order thnt by the clashing of these to
gether an Idea might be secured of the
effect of the collisions of the spherical
stoma thnt make up a gas. The proj
ect bad to be abandoned at last be
cause do machinery could be construct
ed thut would turn out a perfect
sphere artificially, and nature has no
perfect sphere of large size In all ber
many forms of matter. Perfect disks
could be made, but a round ball was
beyond the limits of human accomplishment-New
Turk American.
The greatest pleasure is the power to
elve It
Spring chickens wanted at th
Clackamas Hotel. Call Main 8051.
August Erickson.
ALONG THE ROAD.
I wulked a mile with Pleasure.
She chattered all the way,
But left me none the wiser
For all she had to say.
1 walked a mile with Sorrow,
Aud ne'er a word said she
But, oh, the things I learned
from her
When Sorrow walked with
me!
TtoDert Browning Hamilton.
THE NEED OF A NAVY.
We see before our eyes at this
moment a great and populous
empire, now a great aud popu
lous republic China, which has
suffered partial dismemberment
purely because she has permit
ted herself to become Impotent
in war, so that she has no navy
and not an adequate army. In
consequence Uussia, Japan, Ger
many, England and France now
hold Chinese provinces, some of
them themselves the size of em
pires. If the American people
deliberately chose to follow in
Chinese footsteps, doubtless
some decades would pass before
we should suffer to the exteut
of China, but long before that
time had come we should have
had to abandon all pretense of
upholding the Monroe doctrine,
we should have had to abandon
Pamunu and Alaska and every
insular possession, and we
should have had to surrender all
right to say what immigrants
shall and what Immigrants shall
not be admitted to our country
and the terms upon which they
shall come here and become
citizens or hold land. Let It be
understood that every man who
votes to stop building up the
navy or stop fortifying the canal
is voting to put us in a position
where we cannot even resent In
sult, let alone ourselves Insult
ing others with impunity. Let
us remember that the policy of
uniting the unbridled tongue
and the unready hand Is a pol
icy of criminal folly. The most
dangerous of all positions for
any nation is to be opulent, ag
gressive and unarmed. Theo
dore Roosevelt.
C. D. LATOURETTE, President
THE FiRST national bank
of OREGON CITY, OREGON
(Successor , Commercial Bank) , " ;
Transaots a General Banking Bus Iness Open from 0 a. m. to 3
Office phones: Main 50, A50; Res. phones, M. 2524, 1751
Home B251, 1)251
WILLIAMS BROS. TRANSFER & STORAGE
Office. 612 Main Street
Safe, Piano, and Furniture Moving a Specialty
Sand, Gravel, Cement, Lime, Plaster, Common
Brick, Face Brick, Five Brick
Te Best Light
AT
Lowest Cost
ELECTRIC LIGHT is 'the most
suitable for homes, offices, shops and
other places needing light. Electric
ity can he used in any quantity, large
or small, thereby furnishing any re
quired amount of light. Furthermore
electric lamps can be located in any
place, thus affording any desired dis
tribution of light.
No other lamps possess these qual
ifications, therefore it is not surprising
that electric lamps are rapidly replac
ing all others in modern establish
ments. Portland Railway. Light &
Power Company
MAIN OFFICE SEVENTHWALDEfc
PORTLAND
Phones Main 6688 and A. 0131
SUFFERED ECZEMA FIFTY
YEARS NOW WELL
Seems a long time to endure the
awful burning, itching, smarting,
skin-disease known as "tetter" an
other name for Eczema. Seems good
to realize, also, that DR. HOBSQN'S
ECZEMA OINTMENT has proven a
perfect cure.
Mrs. D. L. Kenney writes: "I can
not sufficiently express my thanks to
you for your Dr. Hobson's Eczema
Ointment. It has cured my tetter,
which has troubled me for over fifty
years." All druggists, or by mail
50c.
PFEIFFER CHEMICAL CO.
St. Louis, Mo. Philadelphia, Pa.
THE BEST PAIN KILLER.
Bucklen's Arnica Salve when ap
plied to a cut, bruise, burn or scald,
or other injury of the skin will im
Chamberlain of Clinton, Me., says:
"It robe cuts and other injuries of
their terrors. As a healing remedy
it's equal don't exist." Will do good
for you. Only 25c at Huntley Bros.
State of Onio. Citt or ltLEio, (
LucAd County. f s.
Fiiank J. CHENcr makes bntli thnt ho l sentoi
partner or the Arm of P. J. cmknev & Co., dolus
buBlm-.u la the City of Toledo, County and state
aforesaid, and that Bold firm will pay the Bum of
ONE HUNDRED DOJ.LAHS for each and every
caw of Catakhh that cuunot be cured Dy the use o
Hall's Cataiiiih Cuke.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence
tills 6th day of December, A. D ISB6.
I SEAL J
A. W. GLEAHUN.
Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure la taken Internally and acta
directly upon the blood and mucous surlaces of the
system. Send for testimonials, frro,
K. J. CHUNK CO., Toledo, 0.
Sold bv all rmitiBlHts, 7 5c.
Take Hall's Family fills for constipation.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTOR I A
Money to Loan.
I have various sums of money
on hand to loan on real property,
for lonjr or short periods of time.
WM. HAMMOND, Lawyer. .
Beaver Bldg., Oregon City.
U'REN & 8CHUEBEL
Attorneys at Law
Will practice in all courts, make
collections and settlements of es
tates, furnish abstracts of title,
and lend you money, or lend your
money on first mortgage. Office
In Enterprl Bldg., Oregon City.
F. J .MEYER, Cashier.
THE