Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, April 09, 1914, Image 3

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    OREGON CITY COURIER, THURSDAY APRIL 9, 1914.
OREGON
Our County Union
row.
meets tomor-
Our State Union
later.
meets a week
Nearly forty per cent of farmers
are tenants.
This is very scientific as our col
leges say nothing against 11.
' Wb have only a few months' ra
tions ahead for the American people
and no incentive to produce more at
the market price.
Under free trade on farm produce
we ship in food from other countries
and sell it here for less than we can
produce it for under our present mar
ket system. Something wrong.
We ought to ship in a few banks,
railroadsi and commission men and
see if we can t get our marketing
done cheaper.
If our factories are not going to
employ our idle workers we will have
to let down the bars and let foreign
machinery come in. Protection pro
tects out not tne poor, Dut it mignc
be made to do so.
Instead of driving the unemploy
ed out of our cities we might try
driving out some of our boards of
trade, chambers of commerce and a
few more expensive money changers
and we would have no army of un
employed. '
The secret of the Denmark far
mers' success is the price he gets for
his produce. He has long ceased to
see now cheap he could sell his food
but now trys to see how high he can
make it on the market. He is re
garded as a very intelligent busi
ness man.
Mr. Yokum, president of the "Fris
co" railroad, who. makes so many
shady deals and wrecked the financ
es of the road, now wants the gov
ernment to become a sort of part
ner in the road and furnish the mon
ey to satisfy the bankers who bought
"Frisco" bonds at 66 and collected
interest at 100.
George C. Brownell demonstrated
his. literary ability in a very fine let
ter in the Courier two weeks ago. In
it were lofty ideas fundamentals of
justice all pictured in choice models
of literature. The pathos of it is re
served to the memory of the reader
whose mentality drifts backward
only one summer when George C.
stumped this county for extrava
gance. Also to another time, re
mote from antiquity, when the drag
net of justice revealed Binger Her
man with others, trying to sell a
birthright for a mess of pottage.
The American farmer has been
taught by the big newspapers to keep
out of politics. The farmer believed
this bunk and devoted about 16 hours
every week day to hard work trying
t.n see how much cheaper he could
sell than his neighbor. Big Business
with the lawyers and doctors, have
attended to the farmers' politics for
them and the way they have done it
deserves a vote' of thanks and an
honorable discharge by us farmers,
who will dispense with their aid
from now on .and play the gam2
ourselves.
Twilight has a talented linguist
and Mt. Pleasant has seventeen kinds
of people all trying to speak the sami!
language. We finally learned how to
beat Twilight in a game of basket
ball. The assessor and fruit inspec
tor calls on us too, so don't get too
aristocratic, Twilight. W. have
healthy children who play in' the
street, and if they had buttons paint
ed on their backs people would think
they were clothed. May we always
have Twilight. .
Our laws are made by two houses
instead of one. The idea of a sen
ate was brought over here from En
gland as a copy of their House of
Lords, which was a relic of the old
feudal system of wage slavery and a
proteotion to the land owners who
had had the land given them by the
king. Now we are trying to do
away with aristocracy and have no
more use for two houses to make
laws under the referendum than we
have for another world to shave the
unemployed onto. Abolish the sen
ate. President Wilson ran against ex
President Taft for the highest office
in the land and we supposed there
were a great many political differ
ences between these men and the
parties they represented. Now we
read that President Wilson is to ap
point ex-President Taft to a place
in our .supreme court to interpret the
laws made by the Democratic admin
istration. They seem to understand
each other enough to remove the
protection off the farmer and pro
tect the banker. ;
Proportional representation will
give us a legislature which will give
the minority parties a voice in our
law-making body, and also give the
majority party all they are entitled
to. It will avoid the necessity of
overweighing our referendum ballot.
It will curb the extravagance of of
fice seekers in favor of the taxpayers
and it will help to make politics more
an industrial proposition than a
graft. Get all the signers you can
in your locality.
Farmers are feeding and clothing
two armies of the unemployed. One
of these armies has no money and
the other has it all. We feed one
army without pay because i they have
no money to pay with, and the other
army has organized and controled
the markets and prices and given the
farmer 40 cents for his produce and
sell it back to the people at 100 cents
Society must adopt better laws to
protect itself against so much idle
ness of men, money and machinery,
to avoid suffering by those who pro
duce the blessings.
Several Equity members who are
candidates for office have not been
mentioned on this page for several
reasons. One has no opposition and
two others are running against each
other for the same office There are
other candidates who ought to be el
ected for 40 reasons. One is that
thev want the office and the other 39
are fully as logical. Write their
name on the ballot for State Senator.
We paid out last year $300 for
fruit inspection for Clackamas coun
ty We paid out thousands of dol
lars for spraying machines and for
spray dope and spent days of labor
EQUITY NEWS
squirting the scientific fluid on our
trees and when Fall came there
were very few apples that would
pass the standard of inspectors. We
do npt know of a single car load of
first class apples being shipped from
Clackamas County. All this in the
name of science. '
The Rural New orker says: "The
greatest need of our national life to
day is some fair and honest system
which will bring about a fairer
distribution of the consumer's dollar.
Give the producer a fairer share ai.d
the extra money flows back to the
country. There it will be spent to
satisfy legitimate demands or to pur
chase necessities giving the most
wonderful impetus to trade that
America has ever known." And
when this, is done the old system
must be " changed that leads the
stream of gold to our cities with all
their vice, crime and dishonesty. '
Troutdale has a woman mayor who
had her husband arrested and fined
for the illegal sale of liquor.
A woman candidate for congress in
the 6th district of Kansas, Margaret
Gardner, has been made city attor
ney for Los Angeles..
Governor West has a woman pn
his official staff that has become fa
mous over the recent Copperfield ep
isode. ' V
Woman seems to be making good
ot late. Who ever heard ot f ather
Nature anyway ?
The Courier is not losing by keep
ing its columns open to the new as
well as the old ideas.
It is fast becoming ' a literary
clearing house for ideas of real, live
people. The Courier is much dif
ferent, and your neighbor would be
pleased to read a paper so unique,
fair and instructive. We farmers
are anxious that its influence spread.
Equity members get club rates.
Shakespeare says that there is
more truth in nature than we will
ever discover with philosiphy.
Scientific Agriculture under the
present market system is a myth.
Nobody calls for bacon from pure
bred hogs and no one calls for pro
ducts of the scientific farmer. High
priced butter is made from all kinds
of cow fed on all sorts of rations. -
Ih a laving contest a pen of
scrubs are beating some high' priced
purebreds. Might as well talk about
scientific refrigeration or uante s in
ferno.
What do we farmers want? We
want our share ol; all advancement
since the cave man. We want for
ourselves and our families the benefit
of all the discoveries of modern inge
nuity. We want all the develop
ments of education that comes from
leisure. We enjoy music, travel and
to explore that new world where re
ward tor honesty and service to so
ciety in producing the best of things
for material life is developement of
the spiritual where Equality is king
and Love is queen,
Farmers from Minnesota. North
an(j South Dakota, Idaho, Nebraska,
Montana, and Wisconsin, met at
Minneapolis on March 20th wearing
badges inscribed "We want an hon
est market." .
The millers were afraid to, buy
the farmers' wheat because it was
against the rules of the boards of
trade and chambers of commerce.
These combinations of so called bus
iness men have stood in with rail
roads and the bie elevators and fix-
ed the price of grain. Not only that
but the grading and other rules for
robbing the farmer and consumer.
The farmers are going after this
combine in the right manner, iney
are going to raise a fund of $1000
to carry on a campaign. They de
mand that warehouse men stop spec
ulating in products they store. That
the government build and operate
terminal elevators; that millers be
prohibited from operating public ele
vators; that grain gambling be stop
ped; that the state send out crop
and market information. These far
mers made plans to co-operate with
the American Federation of Labor
for a free market.
These farmers have the good wish
es of their Oregon brothers and suc
cess is sure. Congress must act.
The Legislatures must act. Farmr
ers are in no mood just now to be
trifled with. Boards of Trade and
Chambers of Commerce are the dry
land pirates that must cease to live
off the .hard earnings of honest hard
working people from our farms and
f sc tones
The Republicans of Minnesota
have inserted in their platform a
plank for free and open markets for
grain ,and all agricultural products.
Secretary of Commerce, Wm. C.
Redfield, said in a speech in Calif
ornia recently that 650,000 peop e
die every! year- from, preventable
causes. "We know how to prevent
these people from dying but still
they die. We may issue bonds lot
the slaughter of war. We do not is
sue them to save the killing in peace.
Men liave not known that they are
working out a revolution."'
In comment we will say that the
recent action of the doctors trust here
in Clackamas county and the state of
Oregon do not know that they are
working out a revolution. The bank
ers' trust along with the boards of
trade and the army of unemployed,
are working out a revolution. These
measures of the organized farmers
may prove a help but no permanent
relief will come, until the present
ystem of trade and markets are
completely overthrown by a total
change or revolution from greed to
co-operative principles.
Farmers trie world over as well as
those who labor in other productive
industries have organized and come
together in opposition to something
that oppresses them. We know we
ar nnnressed because the worlds
burdens are upon us and we see many
others without burdens ot aruaK
ery who are rewarded with our labor
and giving us but the scraps and
offal of societv. We nre as eager
for the eood things of life as others.
W wish to live a life of happiness
with our wives and children assured
nf peace and plenty and this some
thin? thar denies us and oppresses
ns is po hidden 8nd mysterious that
we seem to be battling with unseen
demons ard ghost? instead of the
pwiTiinr of men. Your editor must
take the part of teacher in an un
cradod school where thre has been
Vnt little progress made to aid u
teach"" since Chrt mystified the
poor fishermen. There are amomr
our readers men who are more ad
v?neH than me End many regard the
P. W. Meredith
Editor
a b c of social Equity as almost the
terminal of the long journey before
us. We are but .little children yet in
the study of freedom. We master
first our own language and then we
will have other languages with their
company of higher lessons to learn.
The responsibility of an editor of this
sort is equal only to the desire of all
to succeed. Knowledge is the pow
er and key that will unlock the fet
ters that bind us. We will some
day match cunning with cunning but
we will be-eenforced with truth.
Meeting of the Clark County Union
Ihe .LlarK County Union held its
regular quarterly meeting on last
Saturday at Brush . Praire in that
county. The meetine was not lartre
ly attended owing perhaps to the bad
weather, Dut thos? present showed an
enthusiasm and determination that
argues well for the cause of equity
in this state.
The question of Clark County's af
filiating with the Ureeon State Uh,
ion was discussed at considerable
length. The delegates without ex
ception, agreed that it would be best
to bring about such a union, but ow
ing to some objections from head
quarters it was thought best by
some not to attempt affiliation at
this time. I was finally voted how
ever, to atniiate so ta as possible.
The question of dairying and the
marketing of dairy products was al
so taken up and the delegates show
ed by their talks their familiarity
with that subject. It was voted to
take up at the state meeting the mat
er of bringing about closer union of
the dairy men of Oregon and Wash
ington, and establishing creameries
in Portland.
Your correspondent, the State
Secretary, was present and tried
from time to time in his humble way
to give advice. : The courteous
treatment received "at the hands of
the members was ample payment for
the trouble of the journey.
What the Oregon State Union caii
do alone it can do better with the
help of Clark County, and what this
county( can accomplish alone it can
accomplish more easily with the help
of the Oregon State Union. "In Un
ion there is strength."
, F. G. Buchanan.
DEBTOR AND CREDITOR
Who Owes the Great Debt, and Who
is it Owed to?
Editor Courier:
Kindly permit me space in your
paper for the following, in regard to
an article in the Oregon City Equity
News, Where it reads: "We owe
eighteen billion in bonds and can not
pay them.' What must we do about
it? It enslaves the working people
to pay just the interest, ihe na
tions of the world owe more than
they can ever pay. What remedy
have you to otter ;
To whom 4 do we owe this great
sum, we never can pay? Possibly to
the man in the moon, if so, forget to
pay the interest once, and if he does
not go on a strike, torget it again.
Possibly we owe it to ourselves. If
so, we cannot stand, as it says in the
great book, the law of nature, in the
12th chapter of Matthew, verse 25,
Every kingdom divided against it
self .is brought to isolation, and
every city or house divided against
itself shall not stand.
But if we owe it to an individual
it verifies the class struggle as it
divides us in two classes; the debtors
and the creditors. And when the
debtors see the debts are too great
and enslaves them too much so they
can stand it no longer, bankruptcy
will follow. Bankruptcy a sort of
confiscation which is going pn daily.
Whoever we owe this great sum to
it is a part of the joke ignorance lays
upon our shoulders, and when edu
cation through study has made us
worthy to- throw that part of the joke
off from our shoulders, we will do It
by confiscation, same as we daily do
do by confiscating progress toward
perfection.
Resolved! 'Kick yourself till you
are awake to see who is the creditor
or who is the debtor, and think be
fore you vote.
G. A.1 HENRIX.
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 today 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. Come1
to the meeting, large numbers signi
fy union. In Union there is strength.
S. L. Casto.
Pres. County Union.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORI A
Clackamas Local
Clackamas Local Union of the F.
S. E. met in regular session at East
Clackamas School House, April 3
The following delegates were elected
to attend the County Union at Ore
gon City April 11: G. H. Bruckman,
R.. B. Holcomb, Gustave Haberlach,
W. S. Daywalt. The Local will be
represented at the State Convention
bv W. S. Davwalt.
H. Klinkey has six small hogs forfl
sale ; K. B. Holcomb has a cow and
prune grader and G. Haberlach has
small potatoes, some good for seed
for sale.
Local will meet in Clackamas May
1st. W. S. Daywalt, Secy.
County Union Meeting
The regular quarterly 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
City, Oregon.
The usual matters of importance
to the . Equity of Clackamas County
will be taken up.
F. G. 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
18, 1914, at 10 o'clock A. M., in Room
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 LocaJ or County Union should fail
to have a representative present.
The following important matters
will be considered:
1 Reports of officers and com
mittees. 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.
Election Dates
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 ofvstate.
The Want Column
FURNISHED FLAT large, pleas
ant rooms. Address given at the
Courier office.
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.
- ONE ACRE 1
in the city limits, high state of
cultivation, sightly and lies level
'and only SbOO. $50 cash, balance
$10 per month. F. B. Madison.,
next to S. r. 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 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 Two two-year old colts.
J. R. Watson, It. D. 1, Oregon City.
FOR SALE Eggs from choice white
leghorn hens. l.uu per . setting',
or $5.00 per hundred. F. G. Bu
chanan, Oregon City, Ore., Main
2264.
v J J . - J t . Jf J J
! Fruit and shade trees, rose
. bushes, holly, cut flowers and !
potted plants. Funeral work J
. done at low prices, rnone zon
at Green House, 3rd and Cen- M
. ter Streets.
i II. J. BIGGER. .
i$ iJJt)ti3tt3iiJ!v tC it it i$
IN A WOMAN'S BREAST
UWAYS BFGIHS I small LUMP LIKE THIS
AND ALWAYS POISONS DEEP Q LANDS IN
THE ARMPIT AND KILLS QUICKLY
IWiLLGIVE$1000
F I FAIL TO CURE any CANCER or TUMOR
NO KNIFE or PAIN
No PAT Until Cured
No X-Ray or other
swlndla. WRITTEH
IBMIUTf GIMBtHTEE
ANY TUMOR, LUMPpp-' lift
or SORE on the UP,U' ? "
FACE or body lonj it tf.YV
CANCER. It mr iVwl
-.ii . ji in Dare
BOOK nt Wee: testi
monial of THOUSANDS
ttmA f ihna Writ tM
ANY LUMP in WOMAN'S. BREAST
K SURE. CERTAIN DEATH , IF HEBlECTtO CUT
Our Pllnlm Island Plam r."r vunca tn i
MILLIONS DIE EVERY YEAH by WiltlnfToo Long
YOU mar rrfuM to believe until iuu mit
1 SWEAR WE HAVE CURED 10.000
Poor cwri tt HALF PRICE If anew It rot (mill
Address Old DR. & MRS. CHAMLEY & CO.
40 iin "8REATEST CANCER SPECIALISTS UVIN8"
A C 436 VALENCIA ST., SAN fKUICIKu, CAT.
KINDLY MAIL THIS to lomeono with CANCER
Get your letterheads and envelopes
printed with the name of your, farm
on them. The Courier will make them
cheap for ou.
0
Portland's Greatest Sale
For the Greatest Good of the Greatest Numbers
MEN'S SUITS
Assortment No. 1 were $10 now $ 5.00
Assortment No. 2 were $12 to $15 now 9.85
Assortment No. 3 were $15 to $18 now 12.50
Assortment No. 4 were $20 to $25 now 14.50
Our Portland tailor shops have been increased in size and capacity to make all the
men's suits we sell in our stores. Everything not made in these shops without
the Made-in-Oregon label must be closed out at once for this reason and because
our Stark Street store is needed for our custom tailoring department.
Railroad fares paid to out-of-town customers who present this ad at time of purchase and
fare does not exceed five percent of total purchase.
OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS This ad will not
it out NOW. It means real money saved for you.
Brownsville Woolen Mills Store
Morrison aL Third Street :: PORTLAND
FOR COUNTY CLERK
John A. Lizberg is a candidate for
Republican nomination for County
Clerk of Clackamas County. '
i 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.)
CLACKAMAS COUNTY FOR $1
Do you know the geography of
your home county ;
Can you give its- boundaries ?
Do you know he 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 voting 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 towns
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. U
staats, and it is accurate. The map
is 36 x 42 inches in size, is of sharp,
clear print and the voting precinctc
are shown by heavy lines. It should
be in every home and every, school
tor the information it contains. in
price is one dollar.
Straight & Salisbury
Agents for the celebrated
r .
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 2682
Residence 612
Center St.
. Phones: Main 1 1 I
r M. J?20
Dr. A. McDonald
Veterinary Sdrgeon
Office, Red Front Barn
Phones: Mam 1 16
B-9
OR.ECON CITY
,.
U'REN & SCHUEBEL
Attorneys tt 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. Offlo
In Enterprise Bldg., Oregon City.
Dr. L. G. ICE
. DENTIST .
Beaver Building - Oregon Cit
Phones Pacific 1221. Home A 19
Fill this OuU It
1
Name
Postoffice Address a
I live .......J...,.....miles from on road near
;' I have . ...acres of land.
There are ....acres under cultivation. There is an incumbrance of
$ : against the property due orr 191....
I would like to borrow $... l...for .'....years, giving this prop
erty as security. Do you want to sell your farm?......!
If you have a mortgage onyour 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 us at
. once. .''.
WILLAMETTE VALLEY MORTGAGE LOAN COMPANY
Aurora State Bank Building Aurora. Oregon
REAL ESTATE CHANCES
FOR SALE 3 acres on the South
End Road. All clear and cultivat
ed. Fruit trees, good well, huose
14 x 24 ft, etc. $1500, half down,
balance terms.
FOR SALE We have several houses
at West Linn, Willamette, on the
Plank Road, Molalla Ave.. 16th
Street, Division Street and 18th
and Mam. For sale, with small
payments down, balance terms.
Prices range' from $700.00 to
$2,000. Buyers should see us
when they want to buy. Mac
donald & Van Auken. . .'
FOR SALE Three-fourths acres at
Clackamas Heights. Small four
room house, $650. $100 balance
terms. Macdonald & Van Auken.
FOR SALE 23 acres, 6 miles out.
New house, cost $1,000; new barn,
etc. Fruit trees too. $4,000.
, Will take Oregon City or West
Linn property, j.art payment.- $800
down, balance terms. Macdonald
, & Van Auken.
EXCHANGE for Clackamas Coun
ty cut over, or partly cleared land.
Lot 50 x 1C0, 4 room house, mod
. em improvements, cement walkb.
shade and fruit trees. Assessed
value $1795.00. $2,500 actual val
ue. Macdonald & Van Auken.
In Oregon City business district Lot
30x80. 8 room house. Everything
'in good order. $3,000.00 cash.
Rent $18.00 month.
40 acres, 5 room house, barn, shed,
etc 15 acres in cultivation. 4 horses
Crops, 5. acres in grain, 5 in pota
toes, and Personal Property for
sale at Sfl.UOO.OU; Kent $200.00.
FOlt SALE 3 room house, lot 55x
a minutes' walk from Mam
St. on' 15th St. Price $750.00. If
you want a home this is a snap.
Macdonald & Van Auken.,
Individual's Money To Loan.
$1,0003 to 5 years.
$15002 years.
$1,0001 to 3 yearB.
$5002 to 3 years.
$6003 years.
$300 2' years. ,
' On real estate, terms reasonable.
JOHN W. LODER.
Stevens Bldg., Oregon City. Ore.
President Title & Investment Co,
uacKamas county Abstracts.
Summons
In the Circuit Court of the State Oi'
Oregon .for Clackamas County.
Leon B. Lewis, Plaintiff,
vs.
May B. Lewis, Defendant,
To May B. Lewis, the above named
defendant:
In the name of the State of Ore
gon, you are hereby required to ap
pear and answer the complaint filed
against you in the above entitled
court within six weeks after the date
of the first publication of this sum
mons, and if ycu fail to so appear
and answer, for want thereof, the
plaintiff will apply to the Court for
the relief demanded in his complaint
to-wit: For a decree of absolute di
vorce from the bonds of matrimony
now existing between you and the
plaintiff.
This summons is published in per
suance to an order of Hon. J. U.
Campell, Judge of the above entit
led court, made and entered on the
8th day of April, 1914.
Date of first publication April 9,
1914. Date of last publication May
21, 1914. .
Robert Scoular,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
' (JliSraWenotanoiiic-inicnt
tney are irnnd in ourUbm&tftiv unrf
Inal r- (U. 1 nov nre tueriAj.'y
dart'. 1 1 1 l!.o Poci'cNorlSwca tnrj .
arfltTicfirr.mA. Oi:r valtia jU rjil
Ur-Altmcu...' occj.. u not, write.
Th Chu. H. Li.:;' Co., 3ltlo
Will Pay You
i
'""!ff'T """"" 1 nwwtMi
111 7TJm Vo'jyK
. ft
r m
1 J
appear again,
Cut
tt at
J
J Circulation Ovei 2600
I, M. J. Brown, editor of J
J the Oregon City Courier, do J
affirm that the average week- 0
vS ly circulation of the paper for J
J the past 12 months has been J
J 2650 copies, printed and cir- J
culated from the Courier of-
fice in the usual manner. , J
M. J. Brown. J
I. 4
Subscribed and sworn to J
! fore me this 24th day of J
J March, 1914. J
J ' Gilbert L. Hedges, J
' Notary Public for Oregon. M
0 J' d& hJa' jt
Foley Kidney Pills Successful for
Rheumatism and Kidney Trouble
Positive in action for backachn.
weak back, rheumatism, gidney and
bladder troubles. P. J. Boyd, Ogle,
Texas, writes: "After taking two
bottles of Foley Kidney Pills my
rheumatism and kidney troubles are
completely gone." Safe and effective.
For sale by all druggists.
- A
CHEAP FOR CASH Two houses
and ' three large ' lots in Cottage
Grove on 5th st.; three blocks
' south of postoffice. One six-room
house and one ten roomjj. All
connected with telephone and elec
tric lights' and sewer. Plenty of
fruit of all kinds and fine garden
ground. - Good title. Wi:ll sell
one or both to suit purchaser.
; ! House' Nos. 304 and 326. For fur
ther particulars, see Leader. Will
exchange for small farm. Mac
Donald, & Van Auken.
3 nice level lots. 1 block from car
line. In city of Gladstone. Quick
sale price $650. MacDonald &
VanAuken.
Why it Suits Particular People
l Foley's Honey and Tar Compound
is prompt and effective for coughs,
colds, croup hoarseness, bronchial
coughs and throat troubles. Thomas
Verron, Hancock, Mich., writes "Fol
ey's Honey and Tar quickly relieves
tickling throat and stops the cough
with no bad after effect." It contains
no opiates and is pure. , That's why
it suits particular people. For sale
by all druggists.
Summons
In the Circuit Court of tho State o!
Oregon for Clackamas County.
Josephine W. Tanner, Plaintiff,
vs.
George W. Tanner, Defendant.
To George W. Tanner, the above
named defendant:
In the name of the State of Ore
gon you are hereby required to ap
pear and answer the complaint filed
against you in "the above entitled
court within six weeks after the date
of the first publication of this sum
mons, and if you fail to so appeaf
and I answer, for want thereof, the
plaintiff will apply to the Court for
the relief demanded in her complaint
to-wit: For a decree of absolute di
vorce from the bonds of matrimony
now existing between you and the
plaintiff.
This summons is published in pur
suance to an order of Hon. J. U.
Campbell, Judge of the above entitled
court, made and entered on the..
8th day of April, 1914.
Date of first publication April 9,
1914. '
Date of last publication May 21,
1914. ......;
Robert Scoular,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
ONLY AS STRONG AS ITS
WEAKEST BOLT
is any carriage, business wagon
or other horse-drawn vehicle.
We don't overlook the smallest
details of our repairing business,
so that when we get through
with "anything on wheels" we
undertake every single part is
as strong as any other it's
strong all over. Cost? Tell
you in a minute when you ask.
Owen G. Thomas
BROWNELL & STONE
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Oregon City, Oregon