Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, April 02, 1914, Image 3

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    1
OREGON CITY COURIER, THURSDAY APRIL 2, 1914.
OREGON
Watch Equity grow.
Our Portland warehouse, 54 Front
Street. i
Send in the news from your local,
We would like to hear from other
counties.
We are doing more and more bus
iness through our Equity.
You are going to need the Cour-
Equity members get club rates.
Pass your Courier on to your neigh
bor. It is to be hoped our next Legisla
ture will not spend a million trying
to legislate honesty into present day
business. Remove the necessity to be
dishonest.
i We spent a lot of money on a tim
ber cruise and it has lowered our
taxes upward. Secretary McAdoo
sent us farmers eight hundred thou
sand dollars at two per cent inter
est. Did you ever hear of a farmer
getting one dollar of it?
Our national government appro
priated fifty thousand dollars to es
tablish an office of markets. Has it
done your market any good? This
time it is two hundred thousand and
it will do no good. We must do the
good ourselves.
It is to the interest of the far
mers to own and control their own
markets, which we can do as easy as
they did in Denmark. Scientific
farming has built up a ruling class
of millionaires and made almost pau
pers of us farmers. Please give us
something practical .in marketing.
Even the schools are being worked
by some unseen hand to teach agri
culture by teaching the scholars how
to produce crops and never a word
do you hear about marketing. School
teachers as a rule are not farmers
and how many could tell what it
costs to produce wheat,, corn, wool
or any other crop or what would be
a fair price to the farmer. This is
what needs to be taught everywhere.
We have in the Courier quite a
discussion in regard to Christian
Science. We are not well posted on
the subject but believe part of it to
be true, and some medical colleges
teach k under another name. The
drugless doctors use it by the name
of "suggestion." Strip it of its su
perstition and you have a scientific
fact: "As a Man Thinketh, So is He."
The new psychology is a grand
study and gives a person an insight
to the phenomena of hypnotism, tel
epathy, spiritualism and the whys of
some people being able to control
others.- These new things we are too
apt to make sport of until we learn
enough about them to use them, then
they are as simple as the telegraph.
Our old market system that makes
the farmer poor, but makes rich the
middleman. It must give way to
something new. Study the Equity
system. We must have a new sys-
torn of taxation, and arc going to
try exempting $1500 of improve- j
ments. We must have a better sys-
tem of choosing law makers and we
are going to try the proporti mil
representation plan and have less
lawyers and more farmers in our leg
islature. We can save expense by
doing away with our State Senate.
We must adopt new ways or remain
poor with our old worn-out system. ;
!
The most revolutionary bill ever
introduced in tne American congress la to increase the price paid the iar
has been introduced by ' Senator mer. Farmers will quit raising
L'oi ah of Idaho. ! crops that fail to pay a profit. They
it proposes 10 ao away wicn auu
middlemen, wno are now amassing
huge fortunes between the farmer
and the consumer.
It provides for a general clearing
house like tne equity nas ai inaian
apolis. It provides for county
branches the same as the Equity, and
all to be carried on by co-operation
The membership fee would be $25,
and fifty members be required to
form a county clearing house.
The National clearing house .then
would be governed by a board offif
teen directors. The president and
secretary would draw a salary from
the government of $lb,oou, and tne
other directors $12.0000 per year.
Other government aid is provided for
until the organization got on its
feet.
The bill provides for loaning mon
ey to the members. The organisa
tion would have power to build ware
houses, telegraphs, railroads and al
most everything else used by modern
civilization. It means to adopt the
Equity before it becomes of age and
able to do these things and own and
control them. That's it. .
The Socialist party of Orgeon seem
to be hopelessly divided both on lead
ers and measures. One faction fa
vors the reforms championed by the
different farmers' organizations, and
the others are warm under the col
lar because they didn't get there
first '
The Prohibitionists are beginning
to play politics in earnest and have
added Tennessee and Kentucky that
are soon to vote on state prohibition.
If the Democrats give us a good rur
al credit bank and Senator Borah
persuades Uncle Sam to adopt the
Equity "Where are we at?"
'The . rural credit commission has
recommended to congress that banks
with only $2,000 capital be allowed to
become number banks of the new
system. The commission also rec
ommended that the several states
authorize the creation of credit un
ions and crop credit associations.
-Candidates for the legislature N. B.
also take notice of S. McDonalds
banking plan. The Equity must get
familiar with these schemes and
adept some one of them. We ne.;d a
bank.
Our Parcel Post seems to be grow
ing as spring advances. You can
now send a letter along with yonr
package on the outside at the same
' rate as formerly.
Parcels weighing from 20 to 50
lbs. can be boxed, crated, or packed,
similar to express packages. This is
for poultry, butter, eegs and vege
tables, etc., and will be shipped the
same as express matter packages of
20 lbs or less. This will gon the
mail bags as formerly.
Last summer when the Equity .was
EQUITY NEWS
organizing we were denied the use
of our court house for a committee
meeting. There have been a few
changes since then, fulfilling a polit
ical prophecy appearing on
the
Equity page over a year ago.
Now the whole State of Oregon is
ready for the changes due next No -
vember.
Everyone knows that state extrav
agance has committed suicide with
that last legislature. The time has
come for the working people to come
into their own. There are other or
ganizations to whom some credit is
due,
Last summer some time at our
state meeting we adopted a resolu
tion favoring the Torrens or some
other system of land registration.
Now we have to get an abstract
that costs us our spud crop to pay
for it; then we have to employ an ex
pensive lawyer to investigate that
abstract and we ought to have some
one to investigate the lawyer, but
nevertheless it is all too lull or red
tape and expense. The Torrens sys
tem is simple and does the work.
Under this system the State examin
es your title and issues you a certifi
cate and stands back of it. No more
expense and no more lawyer fees
Ten states now use this system, also
Canada, Australia and other British
colonies.
Candidates for the legislature
should become familiar with this
system and be prepared to push it
at the coming session.
The Pittsburg Kansas Chamber of
Commerce has invited 1,800 tarmers
to a dinner the 27th. They are to
organize a farmers' auxiliary to the
chamber. The Bible says there will
come a time when the lion and the
lamb will lie down together.
They have done so many a time in
the past, but the lamb invariably
was inside the lion and we expect no
change m the program at ritts
burgh.
The largest wooden building ever
built is the new Palace of Machinery
at San Francisco now completed. It
is 968 feet long, 368 feet wide and
13b feet high and costs over half a
million. Oregon's last legislature
gave this world's fair $150,000 and
we farmers who pay taxes are ex
pected to furnish the agricultural ex
hibit free as our time, labor and pro
duce are not considered valuable by
these politicians. We have been
easy picking but changes come.
Suppose we had a land without
criminals. Lawyers would have to
go to work. Suppose we had a land
without disease? Doctors would
have to go to work. Suppose we had
a land without debt. What would
become of the bankers? Yet this is
the kind of a land we want and the
way to get it is to do away with the
political influence of these crafty
fellows, who are living off some other
fellows' hard work.
We believe in the science of chem
istry, botany and other branches be
ing understood by farmers. We be
Imva in farmers acnuirinfr the hitrh-
er education and all this, but being
a practical farmer and not versed in
modern biology we cannot under-
stand the scientific part of fifty cent
SpUds.
We don't appreciate the great help
agricultural colleges have, been to us
jn the science of fifty cents a crate
strawberries. We are tired anyway.
We are not the only ones now pre.
dieting a famine in this country.
i Professor Whitten of the Misouri
1 Agricultural College, says that our
f00(j supply must be increased it we
would avoid suffering from famine,
as Hoes China and Indian. There is
ony 0ne way to increase it and that
have quit. That 8 the trouble.
With nearly five million idle work
ing men who . are practically penni
less it shows that it does not -pay to
work. When . working people, who
create all the wealth, are poor, where
are we farmers going to look for a
market for our produce? Working
people should not be idle until every
body has all the clothes, food and
shelter they can use. Farmers are
going without meat so they can pay
taxes. Somebody gets too much and
we workers too little.
It is very evident that the differ
ent farmers' organizations have stir
red up a reflex action with our wiley
politicians. There is a great deal
more wrong than we have discovered
yet.. If we farmers knew all the
sculdugery and robbing going on've
would want to do something desper
ate. It is time we organized and
helped each other at the polls and on
the market as well as other places.
Have you joined the Equity?
If Congress wants to legislate a
little for the farmer they could low
er the interest rate to actual farmers
as they have done in Denmark, Ger
many, France and other countries.
The farmers 'of America could
have their markets protected the
same as the manufacturers too if con
gress would happen to think of it.
Idle men should be put to work at
good wages and that would help our
home market some. We should not
have a prolonged panic becaube a
few millionaires have everything
they want and the millions of our
people living in want all the time.
In order to have healthy, intelligent
people they must be well fed, well
clothed and well educated. We can
not produce the best people unless
we adopt the best way. When far
mers have more say where profits
shall go the trusts and boards of
trade will ifot fare quite so sump
tuously at ' the expense of American
working' people.
' (Omitted from last week.)
.'Maple Lane Local met in regular
session at the Maple Lane school
Wednesday evening March 18th, 1914
with two officers and twelve mem
bers present.
The motion was made and carried
that this local adept a plan whereby
some subject be discussed at each
regular meeting. Motion made and
carried that members hand in sub
jects to secretary and that some one
subject be selected from the list to
be discussed at next meetkig. The
subject for next meeting, April 1st,
is "Commercial Fertilizers, and their
values." We want all of our members
present this meeting as we expect to
have a good meeting and the bigger
the crowd the better the meeting.
Nearly all members of this local
are buying through the Mt. Pleasant
warehouse, and we find we can make
P. W. Meredith
Editor
a good saving on most everything.
There are listed for sale at this
local: Golden West seed sweet corn,
George brown; S. (J. K. 1. and S. C.
W. L. eggs for hatching, H. M. Rob-
bins; Two goats, r . fc.. rarker;
Young pigs, G. F. Mighills; Nursery
, stock, i. M. Kobbins
G. F. Mighills, Secy.
Not a Grange Official
Oregon City, Ore.
March 28, 1914.
Editor Courier:
I wish to correct a statement in
the Equity Column of last week's
Courier.
In the article mentioning my being
a candidate for the nomination for
Representative, there is a statement
to the effect that I hold official, po
sitions in the Grange. You, without
doubt made this statement in good
faith, but I wish to state that the
last two offices in the Grange that I
held, I resigned about the first of
the year. One was agent for the
Grange Fire Insurance; the other
that of Agent for the Life Insurance,
the latter I have held ever since it
was started, so at present I hold no
official position in the Grange, for
the first time in 18 years. 1 am
still a member of the Grange.
W. Grisenthwaite.
Notice to Berry Growers
A meeting of. the berry growers
adjacent to Oregon City, will be held
at Maple Lane school house Satur
day evening, April 4, 1914, for the
purpose of devising a market system
This meeting is held under the au
spices of the Farmers' Society of
Equity.- All berry growers not con
nected with us will be cordially wel.
corned. The committee has not set
a plan.
Come along and help us effect an
organization of the whole field on
any plan we can agree which may
bring success.
In union there is strength.
By order of Committee.
County Union Meeting
The regular auarterly meeting of
the Clackamas County Union of the
Farmers' Society of Equity will be
held on April 11, 1914. at 10 o'clock
A. M., in the W. O. W. hall. Oregon
CJitv. Ureeon.
The usual matters of importance
to the Eouity of Clackamas County
will be taken up. ,
r . U. Buchanan,
Secretary.
State Meeting
The regular meeting of the Ore
gon State Union of the Farmers' So
ciety of Equity will be held on April
ih, iyi4. at 10 o'clock a. m., in Koom
320, Multnomah County Courhouse,
Portland, Oregon.
Each Local and County Union Is
entitled to one delegate. and as this
is the important meeting of the year
no Local or County Union should fail
to have a representative present.
The following important matters
will be considered:
1 Reports of officers and com
mittoes.
2. Revising the State By-Laws.
3. Election of Officers.
4. Development of plans for the
coming year.
Delegates from Clark County,
Wash., will be admitted to the Con
vention with the same . rights as
those of Oregon.
F. G. Buchanan.
EQUITY MEMBERS, ATTENTION
Let Every Local Have a Delegation
at Oregon City, April 11
To the Members of the Farmers' So
ciety of Equity:
On Saturday, April 11 at the W.
O. W. hall in Oregon City the Coun
ty Union will hold its quarterly meet
ing. It is very necessary that each
Local should have a full delegation
present as there is considerable very
important business that should be at
tended to.
I would like to impress upon your
minds that now, more than ever be
fore, our organization needs the mor
al and loyal support of all its mem
bers. . There are many great things
being projected for the farmers,
some good and some bad, and it be
hooves us as one farmers' organiza
tion to get together in our fullest
strength and give these subjects our
most careful consideration.
Farmers of Oregon, through their
various organizations are coming to
the front, and to3ay are being con
sidered in no small way, as a power
to be reckoned with. A few years
more of the present determinate atti
tude of the individual farmers, and
the profession of farming will come
into its own.
Every farmer should become a
member of some farmer's organiza
tion , and every Equity member
should attend the county union meet
ings whether a delegate or not
Don't think because you may get
your potatoes planted a day later by
attending this meeting, that you have
suffered a substantial loss, for is not
this phase of your profession as vital
to your success as that you sow and
harvest your crops ? Although many
of us may feel that we are not satis
fied with the business as ventures
undertaken, yet let us not forget the
power of our organizations. Let us
get together and study and discuss
the many projects and men that are
appealing to us for our influence
and support.
I make this appeal to the mem
bers fearing that some have become
careless and unmindful of the great
good that can and is being derived
from the farmers organized. Come
to the meeting, large numbers signi
fy union. In Union there is strength. I
s. l. uasto.
Pres. County Union.
Children Cry
' Ffffl FLETCHER'S
CASTOR I A
.Individual' Money To Loan.
$1,0003 to 5 years. .
$15002 years.
$1,0001 to 3 years.
$500 2 to 3 years.
$6003 years.
$3002 years.
On real estate, terms reasonable.
JOHN W. LODER.
Stevens Bldg., Oregon City, Ore.
President Title & Investment Co,
Clackamas County Abstracts. '
dft jt j8 JC jt J$ jJ
J Fruit and shade trees,. rosev5
J bushes, holly, cut flowers and
J potted plants. Funeral work J
J done at low prices. Phone 2511 !
J at Green House, 3rd and Cen- J
J ter Streets. '
J H. J. BIGGER. J
I Election Dates
I April 10 Last day upon which
nominating petitions may be filed
with the secretary of state.
April 15 Last day upon which
nominating petions may be filed with
the county clerk.
May 1 Closing of the registra
tion books by county clerk until af
ter the primary election.
May 15 Primary nominating el
ection for Democratic, Progressive
and Republican parties.
July 2 Last day upon which in
itiative petitions may be filed with
the Secretary of--state.
Card of Thanks
We wish to extend our sincere
thanks and appreciation to the many
kind friends and neighbors for their
kindness and assistance during the
illness and death of our husband and
father, Edward Carpenter.
Mrs. E. D. Carpenter.
Mrs. John Burgman.
Mrs. John Moore.
The Want Column
SIX PER CENT ..LOANS Obtain
able to buy, build or improve farm,
ranch and city property or remove
incumbrance therefrom: Special
Privileges and Reasonable Terms.
For proposition, address: Finance
Dept., 1527 Busch Bldg., Dallas,
Texas.
FOR SALE Fresh cow. C. J. Carl
son, Oregon City, Rt. 1, box 118.
ONE ACRE
in the city limits, high state of
cultivation, sightly and lies level
and only-$600. $50 cash, balance
$10 per month. F. B. Madison.,
next to S. P. Depot, 7th St.
FOR SALE At Meldrum, Oregon
City carline. Alex Gill, with office
1 block east of station or 1 block
N. east of Glen Echo, at brick
house, has several tracts of land
for sale, including lots and acreage
close to the stations on Oregon
City carline. Most of these tracts
are cleared land ready to plow. He
also has 1 7 room house and 2 big
lots at 2nd Ave., near Corner, at
Lents, Oregon.
FOR SALE Thoroughbred Black
Minorca eggs $1.00 setting. P.
Sherefield, Jennings Lodge, Ore.
FOR SALE Three young milk
goats, grade Toggenberg or Swiss,
$50 for 3 if taken at once. Also
heavy work team, harness and
wagon, J. L. Udell, Mulino, Ore.
FOR 'SALE Registered Poland Chi
na Boor for sale cheap. Good pig,
age 2 years. Address W. F. Harris
Oregon City, Rt. 3, Bx. 72.
FOR SALE One filly, 3 years old,
five pigs 8 weeks old. I. C. Under
wood, Oregon City. , .
AUCTION Saturday, April 4, 1914.
At the Jones Place, known as the
Jones Saw Mill, two and one-half
miles from Oregon City on the
Abernathy Road, the following de
scribed property, to-wit: 1 gray
- mare, wt. 1250 lbs; 1 horse, 4-yr.-old,
1100 lbs; brood sow, farrow
May 23; brood sow with 7 pigs,
born March 4; registered Poland
China boar; set work harness;
set three-horse shaft, light spring
wagon, 1 three-quarter wagon, 12
inch plow, side-hill plow, 8-inch
plow, double shovel plow, 1 disc
harrow, 1 8-foot harrow, 1 mower,
1 hay rake, 1 feed grinder. Some
household furniture and small
tools too numerous to mention.
All sums of $10.00 and under cash;
all sums over $10.00 6 months
time will be given at 7 per cent
interest on approved security. 6
per cent discount for cash. Sale to
start at 10 A. M. sharp. F. A.
Jones owner.
FOR SALE Two two-year old colts.
J. R. Watson, R. D. 1, Oregon City.
FOR SALE A few Buff Cochin
Bantam eggs from prize winning
stock; won all first prizes where
exhibited. Price for one doz-
... en $1.50. Will Allen, Oregon City,
Rt. 1., Oregon.
J TRADE
J New Mexico property for J
J Clackamas County land, 160 J
acres in New Mexico, 65 acres
under plow; 100. acres levei, J
J and can be put under plow, J
J balance 60 acres is heavily
J timbered with cedar and Pin- J
J on. Small house and stock J
j& barn. This place adjoins for- J
J est reserve and is an ideal o
J stock farm. Two miles from
a Barton, 21 miles from Albur- J
querque, a town of 25,000 J
J population; 15 miles from R. J
J R. station, 75000 elevation, J
J and one of tne neaitniest
J countries in the world. R. R.
9 survey is near place and prc- J
J pects are that a roaa win
J soon be built. Price $5,000. J
Dillman & Howland, 8th & J
J Main St.
IN'A WOMAN'S BREAST
mm urciN? i mill itiup 1 ikf this
ANO ALWAYS POISONS OIEP QUNO. IN
THE ARMPIT AND KILLS QUICKLY
IWlLLGMSIuOO
IF I FAIL TO CURE any CANCER or TUMOR
NO KNIFE Of PAIN
No PAY Until Curat!
No X-Rty or other
twtndla. WRITTEN
ABSOLUTE GUAHAHTEE
ANY TUMOR, LUMP
or SORE on the UP.
FACE or bodr Knj i
rjur.ru tt Mmr Pita
fctHUstSUft. 120-PGE
BOOK teal (ret: tetti
moniilr. of THOUSANDS
. . .. D.. MtitM ra '
ANY LUMP in WOMAN'S BREAST
IS SURE CERTAIN DEATH IF NESIECTED OR CUT
Our Pilrttu Man! Pl.nl t'.uttf CURES ! 10 SAYS
MILLIONS DIE EVERY YEAR by Wdtim Too Loof
YOU nur renuo to betioro nnui l uu la i c
1 SWEAR WE HAVE CURED 1 0.OOO
Poor cwtt tt HALF PRIOE If ctneor l ri until
Address 0!d DR. & MRS. CHAMLEY & CO.
40 ratn "GREATEST CANCER SPECIALISTS UVINS"
A O 436 VALENCIA o I UN IRANCISCO. ML
KINDLY MAIL THIS to tomeono With CANCER
Get your letterheads and envelopes
printed with the name of your farm
on them. The Courier will make them
cheap for you.
LOGAN
Thomas Anderson was knocked
down recently by a stick of wood fall
ing on his head, but he is up and
aiound again now.
Allen Hutchins is coming back to
Logan again to live and to attend to
Mr. Anderson's farm. Good for you
Allen, there is no place like Logan.
A. A. Allen, the Viola road super
visor, brought a new rock crushed
from Portland 1 last week. When
crossing the old Baker's bridge across
the Clackamas river, it vibrated to
such an extent under the heavy load
that it scared the boys.
EDITOR BRODIE WANTS DOPE
Only $500 Worth. Pshaw 1 That Isn't
Worth Asking For
Brodie, next time make it $5,000.
You will have better success, provid
ed however, that you can keep that
blankety Courier editor, whom Geo.
C. Brownell, candidate for governor,
described in his Canby speech on Aug
9, 1913, as follows: "He has stomach
troubles and any man who has stom
ach troubles is pretty able to have
trouble with his head also'' from
getting onto it or else he will surely
spoil the whole game again.
FOR COUNTY CLERK
John A. Lizberg is a candidate for
Republican nomination for County
Clerk of Clackamas County.
He was born in Chicago, Illinois,
Nov. 1865. From 9 to 12 years of age
he worked in a tailor shop; moved
to a Kansas farm, laboring there
until 21 years of age: took a home
stead in N. W. Kansas and tried dry
farming for a few years, meanwhile
picking up the common and high
school courses and teaching school;
attended Ottawa University and
Kansas State University for 6 years;
was a Register of Deeds; came to
Oregon City about 5 years ago; and
worked in Hawley's paper mills for
a few months and since have been
an abstractor here.
His platform is "His Duty : and
Good Will to All."
Try him. The longer you know
him the better you will like him. So
his wife and children say.
John A. Lizberg.
(Paid Adv.)
County Court Notice
Thef ollowing order of business
will be observed at the regular
monthly terms of the County Court:
Court.
Wednesday Reports of road sup
ervisors, and all matters pertaining
to county roads.
Thursday auditing bills.
Friday Miscellaneous business, i
The principal reason for making
this announcement is that one day
each term may be reserved for aud
iting bills and accounts, in which the
court may not be interrupted.
Thursday is the day set for that
purpose and claims presented to the
County Clerk after twelve o'clock of
said day will be held over to the suc
ceeding term.
H. S. Anderson.
MRS. WILLIAMS'
LONG SICKNESS
Yields To Lydia E Pink
ham's Vegetable
Compound.
Elkhart, Ind.:-" I suffered for four
teen years from organic inflammation,
I e m a I e weanness,
pain and irregulari
ties. The pains in
my sides were In
creased by walking
or standing on my
feet and I had such
awful bearing down
feelings, was de
pressed in spirits'
and became thin and
pale withdull.heavy
eyes. I bad six doc
tors from whom I received only tempo
rary relief. I decided to give Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a fair
trial and also the Sanative Wash. I have
now used the remedies for four months
and cannot express my thanks for what
they have done for me.
"If these lines will be of any benefit
you have my permission to publish
them." Mrs. Sadie Williams, 456
James Street, Elkhart, Indiana.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound,made from native roots and herbs,
contains no narcotic or harmful drugs,
and to-dey holds the record of being the
most successful remedy for female ills
we know of, and thousands of voluntary
testimonials on file in the Pinkham
laboratory at Lynn, Mass., seem to
prove this fact
If you have the slightest doubt
that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta
ble Compound will help you, write
to Lydia K.PinkhamMedicineCo.
(confidential) Lynn, Mass., for, ad
vice. Your letter will be opened,
read and answered by a woman,
and held in strict confidence.
C. D. LATOURETTE, President
THE FiRST national bank
of OREGON CITY, OREGON
(Successor Commercial Bank
Transaota a General Banking Business Open from 0 a. m. to 3
Fill this Out, It
Name
Postoffice Address
I live miles from on road near
I have acres of land.
There are ....acres under cultivation. There is an incumbrance of
$ against the property due on 191....
I would like to borrow $ for years, giving this prop
erty as security. Do you want to sell your farm?
If you have a mortgage on your farm, or if you- wish to bor
row money for development purposes, or if you want to sell your
farm, it will be to your advantage to fill this out and return to ub at
once.
WILLAMETTE VALLEY MORTGAGE LOAN COMPANY
Aurora State Bank Building Aurora, Oregon
Meier & Frank's
New Delivery Schedule
Between Oak Grove
and Oregon City
With the interest of our patrons and the improvement of
our service constantly in mind we have inaugurated a new
route for the delivery of purchases LEAVING OUR DE
LIVERY DEPARTMENT AT 8:30 A. M. EACH MON
DAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY if the business
warrants. This service begins after leaving Oak Grove and
SERVES THE FOLLOWING STATIONS RUPERT,
RISLEY, CONCORD,' VINEYARD, NAEF, ROTIIE,
BOARDMAN, JENNINGS LODGE, MELDRUM, GLEN
ECHO, FERN RIDGE, GLADSTONE, PARK PLACE,
OREGON CITY AND WEST LYNN, and will accomodate
those living between Oak Grove and Oregon City on the "
River Road, and others who live near this road who can
! be reached over good roads by our cars. We will serve
those residing along good roads in Oregon City and West
Lynn.
After leaving Clackamas River Bridge on the return trip
we will serve those living on the County Road leading into
82d Street as far north as Lents. Those living along im
passable roads near. this route, or beyond Oregon City can
have their goods delivered at any available point by noti
fying our Delivery Manager of the location.
Goods Ordered Through our Mail Order Department will
be delivered in the territory covered by this Route
, Marshall 4600 - Telephones - A. 6101
1837
THIr QUALITY STORJE OP PORTLAND
FiftK.. Sixtlx, 'Morrisory, Alder Sta.
CLACKAMAS COUNTY FOR $1
Do you know the geography of
your home county ?
Can you give its boundaries?
Do you know the direction from
your home to its principal points of
interest?
Can you give its aproximate size,
and the amount that is in the Forest
Reserve?
Do you know what votiing pre
cinct you are in and the territory -it
embraces? You will need to know
this for the coming elections.
This office has received a num
ber of blue print maps of Clackamas
County, showing section, township
and range; the streams, the townis
and postoffices, and each of the vot
ing precincts of the county outside
of Oregon City, as outlined by the
County Court. It is drawn by J. O.
Staats, and it is accurate. The map
is 36 x 42 inches in sizo, is of sharp,
clear print and the voting precinctc
are shown by heavy lines. It should
be in every home and every school
for the information it contains. The
price is one dollar.
Straight & Salisbury
Agents for the celebrated
LEADER Water Systems
and
STOVER GASOLINE ENGINES.
We also carry
A full line of MYERS pumps and
Spray Pumps.
We make a specialty of installing
. . Water Systems and Plumb- . .
Ing in the country
20 Main St. Phone 268?
Residence 6 1 2
Center St.
Phones: Main 1 1 I
M. IT20
Dr. A'. McDonald
Veterinary Surgeon
Office, Red Front Barn
Phones: Main 1 16
B-9
OR.E.CON CITY
F. J .MEYER, Cashier.
Will Pay You
Send
for This
Catalog
We know you can ave
money and get belter seeds
by j citing in direa touch
with the leading aeed house.
Correspondence Invited
TheCh..H.LiIlyCo.,Settl.
PEDIGREE SEED OATS
- FREE samples and booklet
"BETTER SEED GRAIN"
BETTER SEED THE FARMERS
NEED
Grow Bumper Crops by planting
these PRIZE winning OATS. Seed
tested for purity and germination.
YOU know what you get.
EQUITY members buy in large
lots and get reduced prices.
DAUGHERTY BROS. '
Molalla, Oregon
U'REN & 8CHUEBEL
Attorneys at Law
Will practice in all courts, make
collections and settlements of es
talcs, furnish abstracts of title,
and lurid you money, or lend your
money on first mortgage. Office
In Enterprise Bldg., Oregon City.
Dr. L. C. ICE
DENTIST
Beaver Building Oregon Cit
Phones Paolfto, 1221. Home A 19
A CARRIAGE
PAIRED AND
THAT IS RE-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
ill
it