Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, September 25, 1913, Page 4, Image 4

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

    OREGON CITY COURIER, THURSDAY SEP 25 1913.
OREGON CITY COURIER
Published Fridays from the Courier Building, Eiyhth and Main streets, and en-
tered in the Postofiice at Oregon City, Ore., as second class niail matter.
The raise in the h'rp market is com
mensurate with the upward tenden
cies of beef steak.
Round Two of the Medicine-Osteo
Dathic bout may be pulled off most
any time now. Watch for it!
.
What has become of the old-fash
ioned man who used to attend the Sun
day morning services, also .'
Tf D...nH ofill nuroicfc In Ilia HnrrcrpH
Official Paoer for the Farmers Society of Equity of Clackamas Co determination to do Chautauqua work,
1 ..U ,.ra .on arA him of fi1nHRtiin
M. J. BROWN, - EDITOR pa,k next July.
OREGON CITV COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANY, PUBLISHER
M. J. BROWN, A. E. FROST, OWNERS.
Subscription Price $1.50.
Telephones, Main 5-1; Home A 5-1
CONSISTENCY
The Courier has not had any choice
in the appointment of a health officer
for the county and has not at this
time, but we would like to know where
the consistency of the matter lies
when Judge Anderson announced that
he would appoint any one of the doc
tors of Oregon City that would accept
it and even did appoint Dr. Schultz
who immediately declined the appoint
ment as did the others of the city
when approached on the subject, and
when he aDDointed Dr. Van Brakle
they immediately went in the air and
said they would not recognize mm.
They urged the appointment of Dr,
Norria which was out of his jurisdic
tion, as he had been removed by a
higher court than Judge Andersons
therefore it was impossible for him to
appoint Dr. Norris, and now the State
Board of Health announce that they
will not recognize Dr. Van Brakle and
have notified the Judge that his ap
Is this a means of trying to force
Judge Anderson to appoint some one
that the doctors of Oregon City want,
or is it that the doctors are fighting
to down a weaker school than theirs
and keep them from becoming strong
er than they and forcing them to rec
ognize some other school of medicine?
Please tell us which.
sure that the identity of the source of Could it be possible that the Clack
the milk may be known, has been up- amas county editor wno spenea
WHY THIS HASTE?
About ten montns ago Oregon City
voted to have an elevator and voted
to bond the city for the money for the
payment of the same. Perhaps you
have heard of the transaction if you
have not forcotten it. In the course of
held by the United States Supremo
Court in a decision sustaining the Mil
waukie milk ordinance. The court
holds with the state ccurt that the
ordinance is not discriminatory, that it
is a reasonable requirement, and that
the court cannot question the purpose
and the necessity for it. The police
power of the state must be declared
adequate to sucn a aesireu purpose;
and the city ordinance, in the section
providing for the destruction of milk
not conforming to its requirements, is
not an arbitrary and unreasonable de
privation of property in a wholesome
food, but a regulation having tne pur.
"Mollalla" was trying to raise a little
'1 in Molalla?
The pure milk show in Portland this
i r.-i..l.l 11 tV. nn HnnV.Ai.nlia
weeK inciuueu u me yaiyiiciiien
far as can be
except the
learned.
pump, as
If you are nursing a grudge against
anybody in particular and wish to get
even, just nave mm appoinieu juuge
of the baby snow.
This is that beautiful season of the
vear when the young man's fancy
pose' of and found to be necessary for turns lightly to thoughts of smashing
. ... .. . . i .. . tJ?i. 70 troika anti a Ti.npn.
the protection oi tne puonc neaitn.
Government Reports Lowest Fire Loss
With the middle of September the
fire season on the national forests has
come practically to an end with
less damaire than ever recorded. There
is always some danger from careless
ness of campers or or settlers burn
ine brush and clearing land, but the
left tackle for 70 yards and a touch
down.
L. Adams, Main Trunk, turned the
current into the dormant Live Wires
at their first regular fall feed Tues
day, and rumor says voltage was
high.
News note says the hot-air system
at a local church is being discarded
human events the council appointed 1 2,260 fires, as against 2,470 last year,
a committee to take charge of the yet the area burned so far this year
real danger season extends only from anj then cautiously remarks that a
tne middle oi June unui me nuuuie
of September.
Forest officers throughout the West
are congratulating themselves on a
season so markedly tree trom heavy
losses. They feel that the immunity
from loss has been due to two prin
cipul cautes, partly to a favorable
season, but largely to a much better
organization for fire prevention than
has been attained heretolore. J. he ef
fectiveness of the organization is
shown particularly by the fact that
while there was in all approximately
proposition and today we point with
pride to a hole in the ground and tell
tne seeker after a location that is
where the elevator is going to be
sometime may be.
If this mutter was going to be done
by a private individual it would havu
been done so long ago that we all
would have forgotten it and the ele
vator would have been erected as a
monument of the wishes of the people
of Oregon City who voted the money
thinkinif thev would live long enough
to enjoy it us well as their grand-children,
who under the present strides
will be old and grey headed by Mfc
time it is completed.
It is strange that municipal corpor
ations will take so much time to trans
act a little business that would take
an individual only a short time to per
form. Is it red tape? Is it lack of in
terest? Or is it that the men handling
the matter are not big enough for the
job? These matters should be looked
into and some action taken.
The Lighting of Schoolrooms
Public school children's eyes are
often seriously damuged by poorly
lighted schoolrooms. This fact should
be remembered in building school
houses. Modern school architects and
hygienists have worked out some def
inite plans to conserve eyesight,
which should not be forgotten. For
instance, in Northern countries,
where sunlight is less prevalent than
in bouthcrn countries, and where log
clouds and smoke are common, school
rooms should have one-fourth as much
window glass as there is floor space.
In Southern, countries, where the at
mosphere is clear, one-sixth window
glass space is sullicient. 1 ho bottom
of the windows should be four feet
above the floor. Windows should be at,
numerous us is consistent with safe
construction. They should be as far
back in the room as possible, and to
the lett ot tile pupils. The windows
should be contained between iron or
steel mullions, und their edges should
be rounded, to permit the ingress of
light and its useful distribution and
to prevent shadows fulling on the
desks. As the best light comes from
above, the windows should extend to
tho ceilings. If hills or tall buildings
are close to the school prismatic or
ribbed glass should bo used in the up
per portions of the windows, but not
in the lower portions, as too much
glare is produced. Sliding or slat
blinds should not be used. They arc
expensive and inefficient. Use double
shades, so huge that chinks of light
cannot enter. They should be fasten
ed in the center of the window und
should roll up or down, so that liirht
can be admitted from either ubove or
below. Tho curtains should be light
green in color. Blackboards absorb
much light, and should be covered by
light curtains on dark days and
when not in use.
is only about 60.000 acres as against
230,000 acres in 1912, and 780,000
in 1911.
A single administrative district
which covers the intermountain region
of southern Idaho, western Wyoming,
Utah, Nevada, and western Arizona,
(fives an example of the most favor
able situation. Only 43 fires were en
countered, 20 of which originated in
Idaho. The total area burned over
amounted to only 95C acres, which is
conniderably less than four one-hundred-thousandths
of the total area
potrolled by forest officers in these
states.
California, Arizona, and New Mex-
more modern furnace is replacing the
old heating plant.
As the city water commissioners
have refused to connect up for the
new hydraulic elevator, the city dads
may have to resort to juice rather
than fluid in the operation of the
structure.
Possibly fearing that the husband
might talk her out of it, a divorce
applicant here last week, asked the
court to enjoin tne brute irom speaK
ing to her during the pendency of the
suit.
In the natural course of events
Jack Frost will soon effectually re
move the slit skirt, the sillouette
gown and the X-Ray from the fascin
ated irlare of the masculine eye in
Oregon. Not Constable Jack, however,
Evelyn Nesbit Thaw, accompanied
by her little baby "Snooky-ookums,"
will do vaudeville at the Orpheum in
Portland this winter. It's a safe bet
that the audience won't have to lis
ten to any of this "da-da" stuff.
That dainty, slender, little contrap-
ico have suffered most during the past I tion which sister wore on the very
season.
The various causes of fires have not
changed greatly in their relative pro
portions. Railroads and lightning
head the list, with campers next,
There has been, however a marked de
crease in tho number of fires caused
by burning brush, which, according to
tho torest olticers, indicates a closer
cooperation with the settlers in and
near the forests and with timberland
owners in fire prevention and control,
It is still true, nevertheless, that a
large proportion of all fires started
are due to human agencies and mav
generally be charged against careless
ness. 1'ire cused by lightning are of
course not preventable, but the svstem
ot lookouts by which thev mav be de
tected immediately after being set lg
greatly lessening the loss from this
source..
an-About-Town
(By Gideon Cobb)
Bull Run or Bull Con which?
Curtain-raisor to the fall rains was
tn.ioyed last Sunduy.
Power of a City to Demand Pure Milk
The right of a city to demand the
tuberclin testing of cows from which
its milk-supply comes, and to estab
lish such other regulations as will in-
School opened Monday, like the
yawning gates of a prison.
w
Where's Oreiron City's champion
nop-picker Keeping herself ?
m m m
This being a democratic year it mav
noi rain ac the state lair next week.
Jim Petty says the buckimr broncho
at Moiiuia the other day needed "more
power.
Are we going to let it' be said that
the new municipal elevator went up
in smoKe :
Gladstone will soon have the white
lights that is, of course, white street
lights.
Those Molalla bronchos were "spur
red on to greater activity," as it
were,
M. J. Lee is putting his best efforts
into a bigger and better Clackamas
county fair.
PRIDE
A BANK ACCOUNT insures an educa
tion for your children, a buiiness starter
for them, a better chance than you had,
and their respect and love because you
have not neglected them. Makes you a
better citizen, for a country is rich only
as its people save.
The Bank of Oregon City
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
summit of her hat during the summer
months, and which she often spoke
of as her "stick-up," has now grown
into a well-developed feather. Here's
hoping it'll be a "bird" by next spring.
According to Judge Campbell pio
neers at Molalla mistook Henry Pit
tock, editor of the Oregonian, for the
father of the Single Tax in Oregon,
which shows that under primitive
conditions the newspaper man has
some chance.
People got so used to the try-out of
the new fire alarm system last week,
that had a real fire occurred, probably
only tlie immediate friends and rela
tives would have attended the func
tion. Luckily there was no fire and
the newspapermen thereby lost a
great chance to tell the old story of
tne fellow who shouted Wolf."
The Oregon City man who discov-
?i'ed a hunk of well masticated chew
ing gum in the bottom of his milk
lass nt a local restaurant last week
after he had swallowed the milk
s'lould not feel too keenly the humil-
i tion ot being the victim of mis-
p'accd "Spearmint." Suppose it had
bjen a set of false teeth?
Any Oregon City people who antic
ate purchasing new winter styles in
.vooden legs had better order at once.
for according to a news item in Mon-
ly s Journal a serious shortage in
e 101.1 crop of Enirlish willow.
A'hich is used almost universally for
raking artificial limbs is threatened.
It would fceem that this one part of
the Britisher's anatomy is extremely
oopuiar in the u.
As the family and anxious friends
:t about the bedside on the 22nd dav
waiting for the fever to break, so do
the rabid base ball fans of Portland
nid perhaps one or two in Oregon
City sit about the bleachers this
woek watching the Beavers struggle
through the crucial series of the seas
on, it they win the present series
they'll probably annex the pennant. If
I hey lose the Benver obsequies will be
held at an early date, for nothing but
first honors will soothe the frenzied
nerves of the spoiled Portland fans.
Old Indian "Henry" the last of the
Molallas, was there, too, in full ev
ening dress, according to the code of
convention laid down by his fore
fathers. Henry neither brandished his
tomahawk, nor exclaimed "Heap big
engine, ns the first train pulled into
Molalla. He rolled a curarette and
asked if his old friend Sousap had
raised the price of a round-trip ticket.
then mounted his pony and led the
parade up the street. You might en
thuse a young Comanchf by the ad
vent of- a new railroad, but a staid.
stoic, old Buck like Henry-of-the-Mo-
aua never!
Don't Send Your Girl to College
By J. Thomas Heflin, Congressman
trom Alabama
Girls should not be sent to col
lege. Institutions of learning for
women are overrun by Socialism
and the Suffrage craze, those two
deadly poisons to the republic and
the church. Over three-fourths of
the young women graduated from
college are suffragettes and soc
ialists. These are the things your
daughters learn in college. Don't
wend them.
The ideal woman is the home
loving woman, who has been the
inspiration of the American man
in building up the nation and
bringing it to the present state
of developement. Any cause which
creates antagonism between the
sexes and destroys and cricifies
sentiment is fraught with danger
to the home.
I deny that women are ready to
repudiate their fathers, brothers
and sons by the wholesale in or
der to wield the ballot. The pos
session of the ballot means politi
cal warfare.
The above appeared in the Morning
enterprise under the editorial column,
Whether he meant this for a slam on
Socialism, Equal Suffrage, church or
the existing conditions, but anyway
we Socialists are willing to admit that
a good education applied to a reason
able .amount of gray matter would
make any honest person a Socialist,
Kead the above again, then read the
following two clippings. Possibly you
may have a think coming.
W. W. Myers
WATCH FOR THIS ECLIPSE.
E a
Socialism proposes that the machin
ery of production and distribution that
is socially used shall be owned by all
the people and that industry and poll
tics shall both be managed democrat
ically.
The idea of such ownership and con
trol is to make it so all may be mas
ters of their lives and their jobs. It Is
to make possible private property for
all. The owners of a business control
it: they automatically find employ
ment- in it: they receive the benefit
of it, so that profit from the owners
is impossible. The profit system will,
therefore, end under Socialism and
each worker will receive his full soc
ial product.
With all employed at productive
labor all will have incomes sufficient
to banish poverty from the earth; and
more than is now made can be then
produced in three hours each day. Six
hours would provide such bundance
riches would become universal.
The children will be released from
the mills and placed in schools where
industrial training as well as books
will be taught. Women will find their
place in the home, if they wish, and if
they enter industry will receive the
same reward as men.
Socialism will not interfere with
your religious beliefs or with your
home lite except that it will make it
It Will Come In 1991 and Will
Remarkable Onj.
For long disinu' predicting Profes
sor David Todd of Amherst Iiiih inude
bis mark, for he bus expressed the
opinion that on July U. 1001. n the
mountain peak of Poimculepetl or Ori
zaba, In Mexico, there will be a great
gathering of ustronomers and other
scientists, possibly a greater gathering
thau uuy one of I be sort ever taking
place before that time. Hp has deter
mined that on that date there will be
the finest eclipse of the sun ever known
since eclipses were first predicted with
certainty, and these peults will be the
choicest grund stand seats for the per
formance. Ah eclipses are the only opportunities
for studying certain qualities of the
sun and sunlight aud as the energy
from the Hun, wblcb supports all life
on earth. Is u rousing more and more
study because of the possibilities for
huuiun progress It offers, be fee 1 8 cer
tain that In 1901 there will be even
more Interest in eclipses than there Is
at present.
One reason why It will be a remark
able eclipse Is that It will be total for
7 minutes 10 seconds. The longest
one ever known was 0 minutes 20 sec
onds, while the longest one that can
ever happen can only be 7 minutes 58
seconds
Another advuntuge Is (but the sun
will be directly overhead, so that there
will bu the least possible amount of In
terference from the atmosphere. The
great Interest in un eclipse Is the co
rona? a hoop of light that appears
when the moon entirely hides the sun.
It Is from the corona that many of the
most Important secrets of the sun have
been learned.
Professor Todd has found that In the
next 300 years there will be nine total
eclipses of the sun visible In Mexico,
many of tbeni fine ones, though noue
o valuable for study as that of 1001.
Saturday Evening Post.
SPRUCE UP, OLD MEN.
Cultivate Neatneai and Maintain a
Youthful Spirit.
Neatness, bu thing and massage are
recommended to men past middle age
who would avoid manifestations of de
cline. Dr. I. L. Nuscher of Boston
writes In the New York Medical Jour
nal:
"The improvement In the general ap
pearance has a profound psychic In
fluence, uot only directly through the
stimulation of the sense of pride In ap
pearance, lint Indirectly through the
flattering comments which It arouses.
This Important measure is generally
neirlected bv num. vet aside from the
possible for all to have a home and neneflc-hil nsvcblc Influence, for npsthe-
will protect orphaned and unfortunate tL. reuSous alone the old man should
endeavor to make himself appear as
attractive as possible.
'This does not mean that he should
resort to the artificial devices that
middle aged and elderly women em
ploy to enhance their charms. It docs
mean that he old man should stimulate
the surface circulation by means of
children.
Socialism will end the barbarism of
war: tne profits mat support prosti
tution and the liquor traffic; the dread
of unemployment; the horrors of pov
erty; the arrogance of dominating
canital.
It will altord an opportunity to
work and to rest, to have homes, to
travel, to get an education, to develop baths aud massage, remove wrinkles
as tney may wish ana to realize tne ana roiaH oy inunction with animal
irood thev dream.
It will lift the world to a higher
olane of civilization and provide se
curity, certainty and happiness for
all.
An editorial in the Washington Her
ald shows with unusual frankness the
tender feeling for private profit tak
ers that shapes the policy of the aver
age daily newspaper:
Efforts are now made in some ot
our large cities to establish a munic
ipal svstem of food distribution so as
to benefit both the producer and the
consumer. It is claimed that in New
York City alone the consumers would
save something like $60,000,000, or
even more a vear.
But would it not be a vast upneaval
if a similar scheme were to be prac-
ced in all of our cities before the so-
called middlemen had a chance of pro
curing other avenues of income? The
disturbance would be almost like a
panic. A thousand million dollars, or
even more, miirnt oe savea tne con
sumers, but what is to become of the
myriads of men, and their dependant
families were they suddenly to lose
their avenue of income .'
Note the admission that a thousand
million dollars or even more might be
saved, and "myriads" of men released
to more useful employment. All of
which is to be accomplished by collec
tive ownership ot means ot distribu
tion of food. This would be a saving
ot about $11) a year for every man,
woman and child in the United States.
What would be saved by the collec
tive ownership of all socially used
means of production and distribution?
fats, try to stlnmlute the growth of
hair on the bend and remove hair from
abnormal situations as the ears, use a
cane and wear braces to overcome the
tendency to stoop, employ harmless
cosmetic measures to Improve bis ap
pearanfe, and, above all, observe a
sense of neatness In dress.
"Instead of decrying such a course
as vanity It should be encouraged as
a laudable effort to maintain a youth
ful spirit"
A Peculiar Cold.
Sims Reeves had been announced to
sing at a small public dinner at which
Dickens presided, and, ns happened not
Infrequently, Sims Reeves had some
thing the matter with his throat and
was unable to attend. Dickens an
nounced this, and the announcement
was received with a general laugh of
Incredulity. This made Dickens very
angry, aud he rose manfully to the de
fense of the delinquent "My friend,
Sims Reeves." he said quietly, "re
grets his Inability to fulfill his engage
ment owing," he added, with caustic
severity, "to an unfortunately amusing
and highly facetious cold."
Card of Thanks
We wish to extend our thanks for
tne many kindnesses shown us during
the illness and death of our beloved I
wife and mother, especially the Lad
ies' Improvement Club of Maple Lane
tor the beautiful flowers given, also
all others who so kindly gave flowers
at the funeral.
W. F. Adams and Son
Otto Adams.
Holme and Philadelphia.
The gridiron pattern upon which
Philadelphia was laid out was the
work of Thomas Holme, the surveyor
general of Pennsylvania. The design,
however, was Peun's own. Little
seems to be popularly known or
Thomas Holme, although some of his
descendants still live In the city and
bear his name, but It Is said that nil of
his vast tract of land and his city lots
have loug since passed out of the pos
session of bis family.
Miss C. Goldsmith has on exhibition
the latest styles in millinery.
Two Views.
The senior partner was talking to the
Junior partner.
"1 notice the bookkeeper stays after
office every evening."
"Good sign He's willing' to work."
"Bad sign. Must be monkeying with
the books "- Louisville Courier-Journal.
( all it the wild-and-woolv West if
you will, but when it comes to down-
ight cold-blooded "ornervness" New
York has us backed off the map in a
thousand ways. The mere thought of
the gruesome particulars of that re
cent murder case, when the dismem
bered parts of a girl's body were
found sunk m the river, would send
the creeps scampering up and down
the backbone of the lowest and most
hardened criminal that ever claimed
the West as his stamping ground. And
that priest-poser, Schmidt, the mur
derer, well, after stern law deals with
him, he'll have to climb up a ladder
and several flights of stairs to get in
to noil.
Dr. L. G. ICE
DENTIST
Beaver Building Oregon Cit
Phonea Paolflo, 1221. Homt A 19
IN WOMAN'S BREAST
ALWAYS BEGINS a SMALL LUMP LIKE
THIS and ALWAYS POISONS DEEP GLANDS
IN THE ARMPIT AN0 KILLS QUICKLY
3? Si
A True Optimist.
An optimist Is a man who, despite
experience, hopes to recover from the
exeuses of his summer vacation In
time to meet his Christmas bills In
January.- Louisville Courier-Journal.
p JllliJ
III. II I
Hi
m
mm
.yaw
mm
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT.
Age(able PreprtionforAs
similalinOiticFooifanirapiiiila
ting (lie Siomachs aMBowcls of
Promotes DigestionjLTicerful
ness and Rest.ContalrtsneiU.icr
Opiuni.Morphinc nor Mineral.
NOT NARCOTIC,
jtopetoMfirSimzimiiai
Rnniiin Seed"
jShcSmna
IluwoMbSoJa
CtaHM Sfipir
ADerfectRemedv for Consulta
tion. Sour Siomacli,Dlarrlwa
Worms .Convulsioiis.rcvensti
ness andLoss ofSleep.
' Facsimile Signature of
NEW YORK,
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
AW
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
I.r.t Copy of Wrapper.
THt ointau nanw, new vorh oitv.
INDIVIDUALITY IN DESIGN.
Design 736, by Glenn I. Saxton, Architect, Minneapolis, Minn.
fym iff npifnfT
PERSPECTIVE VIEVV-FROM A PHOTOGRAPH.
PANTRY ' CL J " 1 CL
I "tHAMftCR , 13ATH
f .12-0X1-0 ll
I KITCHCN OlNING ROOM U CL0f"V 1
f 12-to Xll-0 14-OXll-O I f I
L 1 J " CHAMT3ETR I
r.WT'M uvingkoom R n H
RCCCPTRM l4.pxi3-0 J P
I U f CHAMT3Er? CL CHAMT3CT?
fm III II bL j JmJ 12-GXIS-fe' mJ H-0XI3-fo
PIAZZA A ' "
Tktf ' n 1
FIRST FLOOR PLAN.
SECOND FLOOR PLAN.
The exterior of this house represents Individuality In design. The roof
treatment gives the appearance of a story and n half bungalow, yet all of the
windows are full height There are four good sized rooms In the first story,
besides a large pantry and den. Size, 28 feet wide and 32 feet deep over the
main part Full basement First story, 9 feet: second story. 8 feet. Finish iu
first story clear quality of red oak, with birch or southern pine throughout sec
ond story. Maple or birch floors throughout both stories. Cost to build, exclu
sive of heating and plumbing, $3,500.
Upon receipt of $1 the publisher of tills paper will supply a copy of Saxton's
book of plans, "American Dwellings." It contains about 230 up to date designs
of cottages, bungalows aud residences costing from $1,000 to $0,000.
When in town call at the Courier
office and let us tell you what it will
cost to have the name of your farm
printed on your letterheads and en
velopes. A little advertising will pay
you big interest on the money invest
ed. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gard and their
daughter of Clarkes, were in this city
Friday.
i Will If $1000
IF I FA!LT3 CUREsr.; CAKC3 or TOR
I TREAT BEFORE it Poisons BsneorDefi? Glands
HOKNiFE or PA!N
nu I CI w ttkii ttui
No
plant wakra tin euro
Any TUtoUR, tUVi? o.
Sore on tiie lit, taco
or body long i O-i.t
It K r Pamj until fet
tan 129-PAtic BCOK
tat frf; U-sliuiociub ,it
tlh'iiisiti-ts n-rti at liwo
whii'g ni sov;b
ANY LUMP IN WOMAN'S BREAST
W refuse thousand Pytnn.
1 a have curtd UWv in 0 yra.
! CANCER.
Cim Tim titi.
Address OR. U'RS. CS. CHMEH CO.
A 436 VALENCIA ST, SAN FRANCISCO, GIL
KINDLY MAIL this to seme oae wit'u CANCER
This Coupon Good for
JO 2C Gfeen Stamps
FREE
If presented upon making purchase of
50 cents or more, these stamps will be
in addition to the regular stamp given
with purchase.
BANNON & COMPANY
DEPARTMENT STORE
Oregon City, - - - Oregon
I 1
A CARRIAGE THAT IS RE
PAIRED AND RE-PAINTED
by us you couldn't tell from the
new article, for we will make it
just as good as it ever was. If
your horses need shoeing you
will find us good judges of a
horse's hoof and what kind of
a shoe it needs, and our work
will be properly and scientific
ally done. If you want anything
done in our line we guarantee
satisfaction.
Owen G. Thomas
Oregon City, Ore.