Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, October 23, 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, OCT. 23, 1913
OREGON CITY COURIER
Published Fridays from the Courier Building, Eighth and Main streets, and en
tered in the Postoffice at Oregon City, Ore., as second class mail matter.
OREGON CITY COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANY, PUBLISHER
M. J. BROWN, A. E. FROST, OWNERS.
Subscription Price $1.50.
Telephones, Main 3-1; Home A 5-1
Official Paper for- the Farmers Society of Equity of Clackamas Co
M. J. BROWN,
EDITOR
Sulzer, impeached as governor of
New York, has been nominated by the
Progressives for member of the state
legislature.
The Buffalo, N. Y., Enquirer says
jignoes who insist on intervention in
Mexico would neither fight nor pay
any more war taxes than they could
help.
There is a recall election on at Hood
River for the entire county court, and
the charges are extravagance, waste
01 pumic money, eic. me campaign in
causing much excitement and both
sides are working hard for the women
vote.
. Governor Foss of Massachusetts,
has Haney of California, skinned in
jumping sideways. A few years ago
he was an ardent Republican, then he
went over to the Democrats long
enough to be made governor, and now
he is out as a candidate on tne inae
pendent ticket.
Remember. On election day you
will vote on the bills as passed by the
legislature, not on the matter or sus
taining or rejecting the referendums.
You will vote as if the measures were
simply handed you from the legisla
ture for your approval or rejection.
The question 13 shall tne dm De
law that's all.
The Salem Journal says of the com
mission form of government:
Running a city is as much a
matter of business as any other
businesss, and certainly no busi
ness man would consider for a
a moment the idea of allowing his
business to be managed by a com
mittee even of his friends, yet
that is the way city affairs are
now managed.
Ex-Senator Bourne has been
up to Eugene talking his national
good roads bonding scheme.
Wouldn't it jar you if he were
yet to ride into the senate on this
hobby ? Telephone Register, Mc-Minnville.
What? Jar one to ride into the U.
S. senate on roads thatc ost $1,500,
000,000? That is the kind of a hobby
that doesn't hit the low places.
In answer to Mr. Hicinbotham's
question last week permit me to say
that there is no local or special law
proposed for a county public library
in iiiucKumtia vuuiuy.
The County Court has power, with'
out a referendum vote, to levy as pec-
ial tax for a county public library and
to establish branches. The law grant
ing this power to the court is on page
'iOb of the Session Laws or mi ana
in sections 4346 to 4359 of Lord's Ore
gon Laws.
Judge Anderson and the commiss
ioners will not make the levy nor es
tablish the library unless the people
vote for it. Therefore they ordered the
question on the ballot for the election
which is to be held on the 4th of No
vember. If a majority of those voting on the
question vote for the library, the court
will make the levy and establish a
county library with branches. If the
people vote "no" the Court will takt
no further action.
HOME MADE LAW
In Maryland some of the well to do
negros have been purchasing prop
erty in a fashionable neighborhood.
The whites objected.
A handy judge of the Humphries
type, was appealed to.
He issued an order that thereofter
colored people should not be permit
ted to own land or build houses in that
locality, or live there except as ser
vants.
Where will these judges go, if al
lowed the limit?
Suppose we should ordain that only
blondes would bo allowed to own land
or live on Knob Hill in Portland 1
Just as much justice in such a de
cision as the one in Maryland.
Court made law and government by
injunction are putting the judiciary
in wrong, very, very fast.
SOME DAY, PERHAPS
Here are a few ideas the lawyers
may not think judicially sound, but
I have an idea the common fellows
will cotton to them somewhat.
They are not original reforms the
Courier dug out by hard thinking, but
stolen from a little dinkey island, New
Zealand, that little country of proerres
sion that but a few years ago was
classed as an island of savages.
Take the civil cases where less than
$400 is involved and have them set
tled by an arbitration board of three
with no appeal from the verdict only
on proof of corruption of one or more
of the board. The plaintiff picks one
man, the defendant one man and the
Justice of the Peace acts as the third,
They are allowed pay for one day'
work as arbitrators. A majority ren
ders the verdict. Both sides to the
case are stated to the arbitrators by
tne parties in disagreement.
There are no lawyers' fees, no court
costs, no appeals, no delays. The mat
ter is simply presented by the princi
pals, a verdict rendered the same day
and it is ended.
Here a man brings action for per
haps $50. It goes into the circuit
court for trial, with court expenses
and attorneys lees. If either party
hard headed enough, the case is ap
pealed to the supreme court, and
again come the expenses. When the
case is ended the lawyers on both
sides get many times the amount su
ed for, and on top of this come the
court cost. And on top of them the
worry and uneasiness.
Then ero a little further and Dut
time limit on criminal cases and: mis
demeanors, to be tried before the
court, and you have shortened up the
work or judges and juries so that
will not be necessary to have addition
al ones.
But we will never get such a law
through the legislature. The only way
is tnrouen tne neooie. via the miti
ative, and some day, when we have
had a lew more Judge Humphries, the
people will take hold of some, such
proposition, add to the amendment
few more short cuts, and the peopl
will pass it.
Put as bx-Governor Hughes of New
xork once said, it takes an earth
quake to stir tne masses, but once
aroused they move.
REASONS FOR KILLING
Frost and Green Win
Jack Frost and S. R. Green, ex-po-liccmen,
won their suit against the
city last week, when Justice Sievers
gave them a judgement for $78 for
pay during vacation.
This claim had been rejected by the
city council and suit was brought. N.
B. Hicks was attorney for Frost and
Green and City Attorney Stone for defendants.
The following reasons for defeat
ing the sterilization law are given in
circular letter sent out from Port
land, which we are requested to pub
usn:
"If this law is approved by the
people and is constitutional, it will be
possible for only two men, one a sup
erintendent of a State Asylum, with
out an oath or affidavit, without
trial or hearing, without a notice to
the insane person or prisoner, or to
any friend, relative or guardian, to
cause any insane person in the State
istitutions to be sterilized, spayed,
castrated or otherwise mutilated by
any "surgical operation" the State
Hoard of Health may be nleased to
order. Nothing is required by law but
approval by the State Board of the
reports of the superintendent.
There is nothing in the law to pre
vent all of thiB being done before any
of the work is made public. We do not
think any two men or any combinat
ion of men snould have this power
over the bodies of insane persons or
prisoners. It is true that the law says
the insane person or prisoner may ap
peal from the order of the State Board
but it does not require that he or she
shall have any notice whatever, and
this makes appeal impossible, except
by the kindness of the superintend
ent of the asylum or penitentiary.
"We recommend that this law be
rejected by voting 305 X No.
"We do not say the present officers
would abuse the authority granted
tnem by this law, but wo believe the
history of mankind proves that such
secret power is too great to be given
any body of men over other men, wo
men, and most of all over the helpless
insane persons and prisoners.
THE GANG WON
Governor Sulzer of New York, has
been carried out on a stretcher and
it was the anticipated end.
His impeachment was a mockery on
justice.
He was tried by the men who hate
him, by the men who brought the
chnrsres acrainst him.
Murphy and his grafting associates,
the Republican organization and the
Wall Streot crowd, framed up the deal
to null down Sulzer through his wife
leading her on to speculate with the
money she should not have used, and
BANK SERVICE
You cannot accomplish much in a bus
iness way without the service of a bank.
. And when it comes to the question of
whether or not you should have some
bank connections, there is only one an
swer. Any business will derive great
benefit from a bank's service.
The Bank of Oregon City
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
then steering the market to swallow
up that money.
The New York political grafters
have for scores of years handled and
used the governors of New York state,
and Democratic Tammany Murphy
and Republican Boss Barnes, and
their disciples have played the game
together'and divided the spoils.
Hughes, when governor, would not
play the grafting game, and the gang
had to go to spineless Taft and have
him remove him by the gift or a su
preme court judgeship and to the dis
honor of Hughes, he accepted and left
the masses who believed in him and
made him.
Sulzer would not graft the peopl
or permit the gangs to do so. There
were no bribes that dared be offered
him. He was a menace to Tammany
and its Republican half brothers. It
was a case of kill Sulzer or ruin him,
The latter was safer, and the bunch
of character assassins framed up the
dishonorable, criminal deal and plug
ged it to an end through its handy
men in the JNew York legislature.
But the end is not yet in New York.
An outraged, sandbagged people,
which has repeatedly tried for relief
in both parties, will soon break up the
looters and by sheer . force of num
bers elect legislators pledged to give
them political powers, and when New
York does get direct primaries, the
initiative, referendum and recall, then
mere win be a cleaning out of cess
pools that will smell to heaven.
A BILL FOR THE WORKERS
At the state meeting of the Far
mers' Society of Equity, held in the
court house in Portland last week
the proposed U'Ren $1500 exemption
measure was unanimously adopted, by
the passage of a resolution, and with
out a word of argument against the
resolution. The farmers knqw this
proposed amendment favors the little
man and the worker, and they realize
it puts more taxation on those who
should pay more of it.
Exempting taxation from certain
forms of industry may be class legis
lation, but it appears to be about the
only means under our present unjust
system of assessments to get any
where near to forcing those who
should pay more to come to the rack,
Exempting $1500 from homes, live
stock, improvements, etc., will force
the amounts exempted to be raised on
other property, and perhaps it will
make such property as the Mock Bot
toms in Portland, assessed for $600 an
acre, and which the owners asked
$3,000 an acre, come through with a
little more state and county revenue,
and the farmer and laborer have a lit
tle less to pay.
I he Orange and the Farmers Union
should back up the Eouitv in its
stand, as the exemption bill is clearly
in iavor oi me masses.
THE EFFECTIVE WAY
The findings of the state health of
ficer in this city has caused no end of
talk, and it is said one business man
will bring action for damages against
tne newspapers that publish the re
porton the ground that the nubli-
cation has seriously injured his business.
If this man's nlace had been kent
as u snouia nave Deen kept, ir it was
clean and sanitary, there would have
been no such report to publish.
The newspaper that publishes the
news of a grocer being caught short
weigning, aoes an injury to the bus
iness of the grocer, but the grocer is
himself to blame.
The publication of the erand iurv
indictments and the trial jury verdicts
injure the convicted parties, but it is
tne guilty ones, not the newspapers,
that are responsible.
It is argued that the state inspector
might have made his reports privately
and that the conditions could have
been remedied just as well.
They COULD have but they would
not have. People who consume have
a right to know under what conditions
their goods come to them, and publi
city has a punch behind it that any
man or any business fears when that
man or that business is not what
should be.
There will be more cleanliness and
more sanitary conditions around food.
stuffs in Oregon City from now on.
It will mighty soon ruin any man's
business to have many such reports as
some of the business places got last
week.
And when they offer us food under
such filthy conditions, the sooner they
are ruined the better. 1
The state inspectors and rnrintv
health officer did a splendid work for
uregon uity last week.
WHY?
judge and a district attorney in every
county there would be a wonderful
shortening up of the docket A man
arrested lor a crime would nave a
speedy trial, he would not have to
lay in jail for weeks at the county's
expense, and in case of innocence, and
where he could not get bail, he would
not have to serve time for a crime he
did not commit.
The Courier believes the county at
torney law is a move for reform, and
that justice demands it.
It gives every county an attorney
and makes him responsible.
It will cut out delays in trials and
county expenses.
It will result in more justice, vigor
ous prosecutions, will cut out the de
puties and give each county its own
management.
Clackamas county isg oing for the
County attorney bill and going hard,
and there is every reason to think the
state will vote It.
Vote 306 yes, if you want this re
form law.
TAKE IT, OR LOOK OUT
The Richmond, Cat., Tribune says of
the Democratic currency bill that the
bankers had better take what is of
fered and look pleasant, for just as
sure as the sun shines and God reigns,
if they undertake to balk at these
needed reforms the government will
do the banking business itself, and the
people will furnish all the money
needed at -he five per cent interest
which the government will pay. They
can easily do this by withdrawn g
from the savings banks the FOUK
BILLION DOLLARS they havo in
them at three and four percent. The
fact that they would not hesitate a
minute to do this is made plain by the
fact that, they are already keeping
with the postal savings banks some
thing like $33,000,000 at only thrsc
per cent The time for bank making
money panics is passed. There will
be no more of them tolerated.
THE LOG ROLLING WAY
Senator Hal D. Patton of Salem,
gives the Statesman an interview in
which he declares emphatically that
the University of Oregon is entitled
to the - appropriations made by the
last legislature. He has a right so to
vote with thousands of others, but he
unwittingly shows how legislation is
brought about in the "tickle-me-and-
I'll-tickle-you" system in vogue in the
sacred precincts of legislative halls at
Salem. Here are nis own words: "The
Lane county delegation was only too
willing to support the thousands ap
propriated for Salem and vicinity and
it ill becomes us to withhold our sup
port at the polls for the neighboring
! i -1 i et . . ... l .
institution. aaiem wantea mucii;
Eugene wanted something; they help
ed us and we will help them. Here's
the argument, concise, cogent and
relevant Is it not? McMinnville
News-Reporter.
PRINCIPAL PORTLAND AGENTS FOR LADIES HOME JOURNAL PATTERNS,
THE LATEST
STYLES"INALL SIZES AT 10c & 15c EACH FULL LINE OF EMBROIDERY PATTERNS PRICED AT
107& 15c MAIL ORDERS CAREFULLY FILLED PARCEL POST PACKAGES SENT PREPAID TO
ALL POINTS WHERE CHARGES DO NOT EXCEED 5 PER CENT OF THE PURCHASE PRICE.
The state board of health comes tn
Oregon City, investigates the causes
i typnoid, closes a dairy and forbids
t do business for a stated time be
cause the water it washed its cans in
contained typhoid germs.
The state pure food commissioners
come to Oregon Citv. arrest a mmt
dealer and scare others for unsanl-
ivry conditions under which tnmi la
sold.
But the stinkin? Willamette, fho fil
thy sewer water, the fluid that has
killed and will continue to kill the
vile stuff that is poison and as danger
ous as poison how about IT?
uo they forbid the city to serve it?
Do they have the citv official nrrsst.
ed for serving it, after they have had
positive knowledge of its danger thru
their own analysis?
No. They simply tell you to disin
fect it, to boil it
Might just as well tell a meat mar
ket which has rotten meat to embalm
it before selling it?
isnt water of as much importance
meat or groceries? Isn't wator
that is taken out of the river and
drank by our people as dangerous as
the same water used in washing milk
cans?
Hadn't the state officials hettor it
onto the WHOLE job?
NEEDED LEGISLATION
Oregon is one of a few atata that
still clings to the system of the days
of the circuit rider in the matter of
district attorney covering territory.
There is little doubt but th
will do away with this antiouatd
system November 4, and sustain the
law passed by the last legislature,
giving to each county its own nnuie.
cuting attorney.
And after this will come the same
needed legislation along iurlo-esMn
ines. If the referendum is voted down
ind the countv attomev law nnholH
there is little doubt but what the
iicav legislature win pass a compan
ion law, giving to each county a cir
cuit court judge.
We should have it, it is needed leg
islation. If we had both a circuit
REST
I wish 1 waa a rock
A-alttln' on bill,
A-doln' nothln' all day loaf '
But Juat a-alttln' atllL
I wouldn't alep; 1 wouldn't Mt;
I wouldn't even waah;
I'd Just alt atlll tbouaand year
And rat myaelf, by tosh I
Funny, Isn't It? I confessed I laugh
ed when I read It first. It seemed ao
good an expression of the Inmost feel
tags of the man who U "tired of It air
and Juat wanta to "let everything
slide.-
We all have those ttmea when noth
ing seema to matter, when the work
we are doing seems not worth while.
when we aoem to have accomplished
nothing and the future Is not a blank
pnge to be written on anew, but al
ready scrawled orer with the ugly rec
ords of foreordained failure.
That's when we want to Juat alt still
a tbouanud year ana real ourselves.
Of course thoae momenta come more
often In summer, when moving a little
finger la work and hoeing a row of
beans or hitting a typewriter la ardu
ous toll, but the other three seasons of
the year are not free from them.
Even when the air is Oiled with snow
and the icicles hang from the eaves
there will come times when all seems
vanity and nothing Is worth while.
But do you really think you could
sit still like a rock for thousand
years and rest yourself I Too couldn't
and you know you couldn't If you
could yon would be renting more than
even the rock. That disintegrates
In the summer heat and the winter
snow aud irlves of Its substance to en
rli'b the neighboring fields.
The eternal law of satisfied life if
not take, but give. When you rest
really rest- you do nut iflTS, but take in
preparation for el Ting. You take in
fresh atrt-uirUi aud Inspiration for the
work which you must do, for the en
ergy which you must give, if you are a
real, true man r woman.
When you feel really "tired out" and
ready to rest a thousand years or any
considerable fraction of that long
stretch of time yon are Ms a storage
battery that has been exhausted. You
need recharging. Yon must be taken
or must take yourself to the great
central station of nature and fill your
cells with the current of Itfe.
Then, when yon are fnlly charged,
you can go back to the business of life,
which Is not resting, but doing. Rest
ing h good In Its proper place and
time, but too much resting ts not really
resting. It ts rusting.
Can't look well, eat well, or feel
well with impure blood. Keep the blood
pure with Burdock Blood Bitters. Eat
simply, take exercise, kaep dean and
good health Is pretty sure to follow.
$1.00 a bottle.
PORTLAND, OREGON
Luxurious Comfort in the New Fru Fabric
Coats, Unmatchable values at $9.9()-$30.00
Astrachan, Arabian Lamb, Caracul, Plush and
other Fur Fabric Coats that combine many new, novel
and practical points of comfort with all the becoming
features the most particular woman wants are ready
for first showing and selling tomorrow. Primarily in
tended for the cold, blustering days, but quite as de
sirable for the cool nights and mornings that are with
us now. We request your inspection NOW. We prom-
The Modish Cutaway and
Square FrontV Styles in
All Sizes for Women and
Misses
4 ise you values that are unmatchable elsewhere.
The most fashionable threequarter and full length
styles in cutaway and straight front models various
ly trimmed and perfectly finished. Included are the
most fashionable materials Astrachan, Salt's Ara
bian Lamb-Saltex Fur Fabrics, ZibelinesI( Hairline
and Novelty Mixtures and the popular plain colored
fabrics. Come and judge for yourself the worthiness
of this great showing and its many points of super
iority. It is something more than simply interesting.
It is profitable both from the view point of quality
and value. Every taste and every purse may be
suited for prices range from
$30 Down To $9.90
1?wmo f Pronounced Goodness and
$6.50-$50
In no former season have the changes in fur
styles been so pronounced as those which stand for
the accepted vogue for the Winter of 1913-14 And
never has greater charm of design been shown. Be
comingness is featured in many novel ways the
lines are graceful and taken all in all the sets,
neckpieces and muffs embody ideas which combine
the artistic with the practical most happily.
Our opening display embraces only Quality
furs whose workmanship is of the bestthe same
fur pieces would -cost you a great deal more at the
exclusive fur stores than they do here
WOMEN'S AND MISSES FUR SETS, Neckpieces
and Muffs, in all kinds and styles are here at all
prices from $50.00 down to
$6.50
Complete New Lines in Royal Society and Artamo Packages 25c to $1.50
A wonderful assortment of useful and novel
things are ready for the lover of art needlework
one visit here will send you away inspired by a dozen
new ideas for gifts or to brighten the home Just to
see them is really a privilege and you are welcome
if only to look.
We have prepared for your inspection a complete
line of Royal Society and Artamo Packages. You
may fashion many dainty and useful articles in your
spare moments at very little cost, for each outfit
is complete, containing in addition to the stamped
article, sufficient floss in the correct size and twist
to complete the embroidery, and the carefully pre
pared working instructions included in each pack
age makes it possible for even beginners to execute
the embroidery. The materials used are absolutely
the best obtainable for the various uses. A closely
woven, chalk-finish nainsook for all underwear ar
ticles; a real linen-finish lawn for shirtwaists. The
most effective art fabrics for pillows, scarfs, etc.
You have an unlimited variety to choose from
Infant's Caps, Children's Dresses, Made-Up Combi
nation Suits, Made-Up Nightgowns, Corset Covers,
Princess Slips, Dressing Sacques, Lingerie Waists,
Fancy Aprons, Pillow Tops, Centerpieces, Scarfs,
Coat Hangers, Fancy Bags, Necktie Racks and a
great many other articles FROM 25c UP TO $1.50
PACKAGE.
BOW MUCH IS A ROSE WORTH 7
The Panama-Pacific exposition, to be
held In 1816, offers a trophy valued at $1,
000 for the finest unnamed rose shown
that year. News Item.
How much Is u rose worth to you?
Nothing, you say. You have a whole
gardenful of roses, and you don't both,
er much about them. Oh, yes; 'of
course mother and the'glrls like to fuss
around the bushes and decorate the
bouse with the flowers, but you tire too
busy to think about them.
It Is a mistake, friend. Think a bit
about the rose and what it means.
You will leurn nut only to love the fru
grant flower, but will acquire a new
outlook on life. The rose Is worth n
good deal, you see.
The man who does not lore roses has
missed a great thing. Into his life has
never come In all likelihood the thought
that perhaps, after all, life was made
to be filled with sweetness and beauty
and fragrance and not with gloom uud
bitterness aud disappointment. Such
Is the lesson of the rose, and It Is a lex
son that Is worth learning.
Every mau on earth may have his
roses. If he Is walled up In u city and
bis lot Is cast In rigid, unyielding lines
of stone aud brick De may still see the
rose of life blooming on the cheek of a
little child; be may And Its fragrance
In the holy odor of u good deed; be may
read Its lesson In the beauty of unself
ish lives lived uncomplainingly umki
hardship and privation.
All such are aklu to the rose All
open their petals to the sun thnt mot.
may see them and rejoice. The spirt
of the rose is found everywhere.
Yes, but the rose has thorns? True
we cannot deny the tlmrns. Thej
prick, aud thpy miike difficult the
culling of the roses. Hut (he thorn.-
have their reason and their purpose,
sluee In the great plan which rules the
world nothing Is uiude without reason
They protect the rose from foes.
And In the lives which seem to be all
thorns and. oh. such few blossoms!
may It not be t tin t the thorns, will b;
fouud to linve their uses when the flnnl
reckoning Is cast?
The world can well afford to pay
$1,000 for a uew rose. The price is low
for an addition lo the stork of beauty
represented by the queen of flowers.
Other flowers inny come and go In pop
nlnr favor, hut the rose remains th
favorite it h:is deen since the first nv
took note of the beautiful bloom
I have a client that wants to borrow
S1.000. good farm security given. I
also have several good mortgages for
sale. If you wish to loan your money
se me, over BanK oi uregon uuy,
Charles T. Tooze.
A
UWLSIOK
coeinrioa.
jcoitssoa
1
A Carelessly Treated Cold
aaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaBaaaaBaaaaaaBaaaaaBBaBaBaaaBBBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaMBaHBBaai
is the source of most sickness because drugged
pills, syrups and alcoholic mixtures are
uncertain and unsafe.
Scott's Emulsion has been relied upon by
physicians for forty years as the safe and sensible
remedy to suppress the cold and build up the
enfeebled forces to avert throat and lung troubles.
Don't tolerate alcoholic substitutes, bat insist
the Qonulnc Scotfs Emulsion One bottle usually
las is longer than a cold. Every druggist has it. u 73
Naming the Order.
Among the many names or titles
suggested for the Order of Tatrons of
Husbandry when It was being Institut
ed, these were most to the point: "The
Independent Order of Progressive
Farmers," "Knights of the Plow,"
"Lords of the Soil," and in place of
calling it a "lodge" to name it a "gar
den," "arbor" or simply "home." In
1807 Mr. Kelley wrote, "How would it
do to call the lodges 'granges.?' " He
says that he took the name "grange"
from on order advertised at that time.
In reply came the query as to how
"Patrons of Husbandry" would do.
This name was endorsed nt a nieettng
held In the office of William Saunders
'in Washington on Nov. 15, 1807. It
was also decided at this meeting that
the branches of the order should be
known as granges Instead of lodges.
William M. Ireland presided at this
meeting, and O. H. Kelley acted as
secretary.
Unique Field Day.
4 ratherjiiniisu.nl way to celebrate a
grangers' field d:iy was tlmf employed
at Westwood, Muss. After an Illus
trated lecture on clearing rock cover
ed fields by dynamite a demonstration
was given In n pasture field. The
dynamite was applied to a great rock,
which was torn from Its moorings and
thrown high In the air. One section,
weighing about thirty pounds, crashed
through the roof of an adjoining cot
tage, but no one was In the house at
the time.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
Thee hangeable waether of early
fall brings on coughs and colds that
have a weakening effect on the sys
tem, and may become chronic. Use
Foley's Honey and Tar Compound. It
has a very soothing and healing ef
fect on the irritated and inflamed air
passages, and will help very quickly.
It is a well known family medicine
that gives results. Huntley Bros. Co.
Iflpltlllllli
S ; I .
V'J ! . "f jfl W 4aler abont theBew'''!
Mm. iWt PRESENTS W
s v 11 y ill 1 for aDd eirl th t with ' ?!'' :
FM-1 'fL ' A Hearts M
MM gat Justthe dandiest, catch- ' j
llfi 1 Portland Flouring I
Officephones: Main 50, A50; Res, phones, M. 2524 175
Home D251
WILLIAMS BROS. TRANSFER & STORAGE
Office 612 Main Street
Safe, Piano, and Furniture Moving a Specialty
Sand, Gravel, Cement, Lime, Plaster, Common
iirick, j) ace Brick, Fire Brick
C D. LATOURETTE; President F. J .MEYER, Cashier.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of OREGON CITY, OREGON
(Successor Commercial Bank")
Transaota a Qonwal Banking Bus Iness Open from 0 a. m. to a