Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, June 17, 1915, Page 6, Image 6

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    6
OREGON CITY COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1915
COUNTY COURT
W. L. Mulvey and Diraick &
Dimick
A. H. Knight
W. II. Mattoon
COURT HOUSE
Frank Busch
V. Harris
James Adkins Lbre. Co
Williams Bros
Theo. G. Miller
Geo. Calahan
J. A. Confer
Bnnon & Co
J. K. Morris
H. E. Woodward
Straight & Salisbury
J. W. Jones
f Pac. Paper Co.
Estacada Tel. & Tel. Co.!..
Pac. Tel. Co
Home Tel. Co
CIRCUIT COURT
Huntley Bros. Co
Mrs. Moreland
J. C. Bradley
O. F. I'rentris
E. N. Bates ...
C. C. McLaughlin
W. H. Bonney
J. A. Lizberg
F. C. Burk
Ward B. Lawton
W. H. Counsell
P. J. Winkle
E. R. Leek
Thos. E. Gault
C. E. Moldrum
John F. Risley
John G. Moehnke
P. J. Winkle
W. C. Green
D. M. Marshall
Mark Seely
W. A. Wood
Fred Gerber
G. Hanson
A. W. Cooke ....
H. S. Gibson
S. B. Berg
A. M. Kirchem
W. F. Stanton
George Brown
Antonetto Kramer
Mrs. Mary McLarty
Mary Faulkner
Roy Otty
Arvilla Kirk
W. H. Timmons ...
Elsie Kirk
Alfred Green
A. 0. Carlson
Conrad Krigbaum
M. J. Baker
Frank Brokaw ,
Anna Roley
Bertha Curnutt
Axel Sandstrom
Wm. Wilson
Andrew Kane
Caroline Stier
Samuel Riley .i.
J. E. Downey
Adam Foshag ,
Chas. E. Hill ...
Fred Anderson
Charles Waer
W. A. Hanson
Oral Welch
C. C. Gibbs
Frances Toates
W. J. Howe
Hortense Bleker
0 .M. Ausve
Florence Keller
Charles Otty
D. E. Frost :
D. E. Frost ,
Martha Studer ,
B. L. Jewell
210.00
45.00
45.00
2.50
.. .55
5.71
69.72
2.95
22.50
26.00
2.03
33.00
5.00
10.40
22.50
5.00
4.25
35.85
14.05
2.00
13.00
15.00
22.00
24.80
21.C0
21.20
18.40
18.40
19.00
69.20
30.20
3G.50
39.40
21.70
19.40
41.00
36.20
39.00
41.00
42;00
42.40
44.40
39.60
40.80
40.80
41.40
38.00
45.00
7.00
3.40
2.20
2.20
3.60
4.80
2.40
4,80
8.00
8.00
7.80
6.60
3.40
3.40
3.40
5.00
2.20
7.00
4.80
3.40
2.40
3.60
5.00
2.30
2.30
3.40
2.20
3.40
3.40
5.00
3.40
4.40
3.40
3.60
6.60
' 6.60
2.40
2.30
Laurence Waer 2.30
Walter Strunk 6.00
Frank Gray : 7.20
Al. Haven 7.00
Frarik Lingelbach 7.60
Calvy Beebe 7.60
Forest Johnson 7.60
C. S. Herman 5.95
A. G. Ames 14.00
C. A. Ramsay 7.00
L. C. Hubbard 5.60
Antonia Petrasso 7.00
J. C. Duus 7.00
A. J. MacDonald 3.40
Wm. Dale 7.00
Bergoss Ford 7.00
M. C. Strickland 2.20
Clara Rometsch 7.80
Ben S. Patton 7.00
W. A. Rhodes 7.00
Frank Rhodes 7.80
Fred Lins 8.00
C. H. Wheeler 5.00
G. R. Crawford 7.60
E. G. Caufield 8.80
August Olson 10.00
Susan Dhoades 3.00
Amelia Rhoades 7.80
JUSTICE PEACE
D. E. Frost 43.30
John N. Sievers 67.30
George Brown - 1.70
J. Y. Humphreys 1.70
Wm. Freeman 1.70
Bert Jewell 1.70
E. II. Clark 1.70
John Albright 170
Frank Busch 1-70
Chas. Wawr - 1.70
F. A. Miles 7.45
J. E. Pomeroy 12.75
F. L. Mack 8.40
J. P. Jones 2.70
T. D. Phelps 1.00
James Bell 1.00
F. E. McGugin 1.00
John Scales 1.00
R. A. TenEyck 1.00
H. Richards 1.00
J. W. Holman 2.50
Mrs. S. E. Jones 2.70
Grace Jones , 2.70
A. K. Jones 2.70
Claude W. Devore 28.60
A. ,G Ames 62.40
II. N. Wallace 1.00
A. W. Love , 1.00
Alice Dibble 2.80
George E. Dibble 2.80
Lewis Nelson 2.80
Ed. Strunk 2.80
George Brown 1.00
Andrew Kane 1.00
Wilbur Simmons 12.00
CORONER
B. H. White 1.20
J. M. Erickson 1.20
II. C. Howe 1.20
S. Erickson 1.20
A. W. Briggs 1-20
C. E. Bowman 1.20
II. B. Keebaugh 1.70
F. G. Burdick 1.70
C. L. Wolf 1.70
II. A. Dedman . 10.00
C. T. Sievers 18.50
W. E. Hempstead 38.90
SURVEYOR
John H. Mitchell 2.50
W. Strohmeyer 12.50
II. 11. Johnson 93.50
Wesley Green 2.50
Paul Dun 19.00
Bud Thompson 19.60
D. Thompson Meldrum 88.00
INSANE
M. C. Strickland 5.00
Guy Mount 5.00
SUPT. OF SCHOOLS
D. E. Frost 2.12
Office phones: Main 50, A50; Res. pliones, M. 2524, 1715
Home 1325 1, 1)251
WILLIAMS BROS. TRANSFER & STORAGE
Office 612 Main Street
Safe, Piano, and Furniture Moving a Specialty
Sand, Gravel, Cement, Lime, Piaster, Common
Brick, Face Brick, Five Brick
Oreqon City Wood & Fuel Company
Wood, Coal and Feed Yard
F. M. BLUHM, Prop.
Horses bought and sold. Furms and wagons for hire by the day, week
or month. Your patronage solicited, call and see us when in town.
Home Phone S ,116. Pacific Phone 137-J.
D. C. LATOURETTE, President.
F. J. MEYER, Cashier,
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
CAPITAL $50,000.00.
Transact a General Hanking Business Open Fror.i 9 A. M. to 3 P. M.
W. S. U'RKN, formerly of
Oregon City
FRANK C. HESSE
Phone Main 6:176
U'REN & HESSE
Attorneys at Law
DEUTSCHE ADVOKATEN
G01-2-3-4 RAILWAY EX. HLDG. PORTLAND OREGON
100,000 FT. LUMBER FOR SALE -:- $10 Pr. M
Delivered Any Place in City.
3,200 lb. fine dapple gray Team; Harness and Wagon; 1-3
Horse Gas Engine; 2 Cows; 2 Brood Sows; 1 Hay Rope;
1 House, 16x24; Delivered any place in town Cheap;
Slabwood $3.00 per Cord Delivered.
GEORGE LAMMERS' SAWMILL,
OREGON CITY, ORE., ROUTE NO. 3.
W. E. Finzer & Co 4.06
Northwest School Fur. Co 15.80
Leila Ulen 9.00
E. S. McCormick 130.00
P. D. Cunningham Co , 5.50
J. E. Calavan 43.36
Huntley Bros. Co 20.70
Brenton Vedder 130.00
Gussie Hull 9.00
Carl F. Anderson 9.00
Minnie B. Altman 9.00
BOAKI) OF HEALTH
Huntley Bros. Co 40.50
J. A. VanBrakle 34.24
Jones Drug Co 7.00
C. Curtain 6.00
J. G. Avers . 38.50
COUNTY VETERINARIAN
C. II. Sloop 12.50
H. G. Mullenhoff 37.50
E. L. Walters 12.50
Wm. A. Metier 25.00
W.. S. Eddy 20.00
INDIGENT SOLDIER
Meade Post No. 2 G. A. R 25.00
COUNTY POOR
Wm. Panforth 10.00
Ore. Com. Co. (Tom Jones).... 8.00
Boys' & Girls' Aid Soc 10.00
Mrs. Bradtl (J. McNamar).... 10.00
J. B. Sallee (W. T. Tinsley).. 20.00
Sam Booher 16.00
Dock Mosier 10.00
Mrs. Jessie Allen 20.00
Patton Home (Mrs. J. Avin).. 16.00
A. J. Rosenthal 20.00
Mary Buol (Robt. Trimble).. 6.00
Peter Erickson 15.00
Sarah Gibbons 20.00
Ella Payne 10.00
Henry Spiess (Mr. and Mrs.
Chalk) 10.00
W. J. Moldenhauer 10.00
Louise Ballou 15.00
Mrs. Galbraith 15.00
Harry Cooper :. 20.00
Kate Gardner 15.00
L. P. Williamson 5.00
Anna L. Snyder 15.00
Mrs. G. W. Thompson 10.00
Gustav Greble 10.00
A. C Sleight 10.00
Ada Le Bow 8.00
HE Z....THM HTII TH THHH
Katie Pluard 8.00
C. J. Wollertz (Martin Olson) 10.00
Ella Tracy (Eunice Horner).. 10.00
Jos. E. Hedges (Mrs. M. J. Trul-
linger) 12.00
Maggie A. Johnson (E. M. Valen
tine) 7.00
Huntley Bros. Co. (G. Con
rad) 3.10
Huntley Bros. Co. (Claud La
Course) 1.25
Pctzold Meat Market (Mrs. E.
Smith) 5.00
Holman & Randall (John C.
Dean) 20.00
Holman & Randall (Peter Erick
son) 20.00
Denis Donovan (Jerome Hamil
ton) 12.50
Larson & Co. (Albert Pegu-
erin) 18.00
A. B. Buckles (B. Landis).... 7.50
Robbins Bros. (James Russel) 5.45
Robbins Bros. (Eliza Siam).. 4.80
W. A. Holmes (E, E. Baker) 8.00
L. Adams (Mrs. Osborn) 3.00
L. Adams 17.38
McKinley & Bundy (Mrs. J. C.
Smith) , 5.00
Jones Drug Co. (Mr. William
son) 50
Batdorf Bros. (Mrs. Bushen-
ville) 10.00
MU..J TIIMT IIAR THARR
J. W. Roots & Co. (Adams).. 4.50
Farr Bros. (Tom Garner).... 35.00
L. G. Ice (Annio Moore) 4.50
F. T. Barlow (Mrs. Marco).... 15.00
F. T. Barlow (Mrs. Lock) 3.00
F. T. Barlow (Logan) 12.55
F. T. Barlow (Mrs. Osborn).. 15.00
F. T. Barlow (Wm. Dicker-
man) 10.00
D(4man)' lOrTIIM TIIM TIIM TH
W. W. Pollock (Chas. McKin-
nis) 10.00
Mary Baker 8.25
E. O. Logan (Mis. Josselyn) 10.00
Mary Baker 8.25
C. C. Store (B. Caseday) 0.65
Electric Hotel (Mrs. Klock).. 6.00
R. Morse (Ripley) 7.50
Mrs. A. S. Brown (Mrs. doss
ier) 3.00
L. VanVirst (W. M. Sullivan) 5.00
Fml Clack (Mrs. Micho) 7.00
Wm. Dahlke (Mis. Pierza).... 7.00
II. V. Adix (Rinlev) 10.00
Board of Water Com. (M. J. Trul-
lingor) 1.00
Board of Water Com. (A. Per-
izi) " 1.00
Board of Water Com. (C. II.
Willoughby) 1.00
Mrs, (leorgo Minder (Mr. Mathe
son) 20.00
Mrs. T. L. Smith (Sullivan) 3.00
Mrs. T. L. Smith (Dick Mey
er) 18.00
I.. A. Woodward (Ericson).... 5.85
I. . A. Woodard (Mrs. Pierzo) 3.00
Mrs. F. Bnllard (Mr. William
son) 50
II. S. Anderson (tiusljifso) . 5.00
11. S. Anderson (Dick Meyer) 1.00
11. S. Anderson (Henry Pel
key) .' 1.50
II. S. Anderson (Oscar Case
day) 4.65
Geo. Kcdduwny (Mrs. Erick
son) 5.00
Estes & Nichols (Mrs Pierzo) 10.00
Estoa & Nichols (Mrs. West) 5.00
C. J. Hood (Albert Pegurin) 4.50
i JAIL
jW. J. Wilson 84.70
! Jl'YKMLE COURT
j Minda E. Church 59.03
i C. C. Store 3.73
ID. E. Frost 52.50
j TAX REBATE
i Mrs. C. E. Corrick 3S
D. J. Switzer 2.94
Goo. T. & Delia Parry 9.35
PRINTING & ADVERTISING
Oregon City Enterprise 494.15
Tho Courier Press 143.60
Estacada Progress..,
TAX DEPARTMENT
The London Assur. Corp..
5.5)5
85.00
rush is bound with red tape, that it,
too, may have the spirit of the sun
shine and flowers; and baskets are
,1 ...ih vni.no
M. E. Dunn 3.61 i :""e" u l" '
uuuercups anu uaiiuuns. .even
G. W. Harrington 75.00
M. E. Dunn 50.00
George Nelson 60.00
THE FH5H1S
New York, June 10, 1915.
"What is so rare as a day in June,
When earth tries heaven if it be in
tune?"
So thinks the girl who gathers up
her gaily painted sprinkling pot, her
shears, her basket, and her kneeling
pad, and trudges off to the garden to
enjoy an hour or two of solitude and
intimate association with the sun
shine and flowers. It is quite a fad
this pottering among your own pos
ies; a phenomenon one might almost
call it, wherein the artistic finds ex
pression in paraphanalia which blends
with the landscape.
The shops abound with gay im
portations, smocks, bonnets and
aprons, to tempt those who tarry
within the garden gate. The smocks
in themselves are enough to turn one
to rakes, spades and garden baskets.
I am told the fad originated in Eng
land; certainly it is charming enough
to belong to old Bntany. This gar
ment has much the appearance of. a
middy, grown to greater length,
coming just below the knee, being
slashed to slip on over the head.
Usually it is made with set-in-sleeves
and yoke, and smocked front and
hack, and on pockets and sleeves.
For the most part linen, unbleached
muslin, cretonne aind silk are used
in the making.
AH a garden, with cockle-shells
and silver bells, needs is a Mistress
Mary, quite contrary, in one of these
fetching garden smocks. Can you
picture anything more charming than
a bright-eyed girl in a blue smock,
white hat, skirt and shoes, among
the roses in an old garden? Per
chance, there is a woven wicker bas
ket on a can, stuck in the ground to
hold the posies, and a few plant
sticks, with parrots, cardinals,' and
bluebirds, perched on top, scattered
among the flowers to make the pic
ture by nature quite complete. Just
looking at a yellow linen smock, with
flowered cretonne collar, hat and
skirt to match, brings to mind an
old-fashioned garden with its
straight rows of hollyhocks. So it
goes that there is a smock for every
garden, and no garden is complete
without one.
Watching passing events, the
shopkeeper concludes that all the
world is a garden, and straightway
fills his window with giddy wheel-
ml lit
aprons take on a gala day aspect, be
ing made of chintz, cretonne, or
quaint, checked pink gingham.
The woman who makes gardening
her summer pastime may even go
farther and select the dress she
wears with the apron to harmonize
with grass, flowers and dovecote. A
brown burlap or dark blue linen will
give the desired effect, made with
plain waist, full skirt, and the broad
organdy collar and cuffs that we have
come to call Quaker. She will have
no trouble in finding these accessor
ies. The sports shops must have
anticipated the craze, for there are
hats, gloves, and shoes, galore for
the purpose. First come the peanut
straws and cane-bottom-chair hats,
with floppy brims to protect the
wearer from the sun. These are
trimmed with a rosette of cretonne
to match the smock, or apron, a vel
vet bow or a cluster of straw flow
ers. Then there are poke shapes
and sunbonnets with streamers of
cretonne which have taken their
style from a peep in a 1915 fashino
book; but the Chinese coolie hats are
the novelties of the season. With
streamers attatched at the side, mi
lady can wear the plateau on her
head, or when the sun is yet in the
East, use it as a basket to carry her
flowers.
Since gloves must be worn to pro
tect the hands, the stores are show
ing chamois and canvas for this pur
pose, and if you listen close you will
hear the girl behind the counter tell
each customer in a bored voice to buy
a size larger than they usually wear.
It is easy to tell that this girl, too,
has been caught in the thrall of the
gardening craze, and is thinking no
doubt, of larkspur and roses, instead
of the gloves her customer wears.
Garden etiquette even reaches to
shoes. White canvas is the approv
ed material, and you may have a
comfortable, flat sneaker, or trim
pump, with medium heel in this fab
ric. With such settings, fittings and
clothes, gardening becomes more
than a mere pleasure. It now is a
real sport of the summer; when you
meet a friend, it's not how many
miles you have motored, or how many
tournaments won, but how does your
garden grow since the' last drought,
rain or storm of the season?
For the first time in three long
years, waistlines return to their nor
mal nlace. A loeical review of the
past few months discloses two dis
tinct reasons for this change in fash;
ion: first, the full skirt, and second,
the corset. It is not surprising that
the waistline capered about wnen cor
sets were trico and the silhouette
straight up and down; but now that
skirts are voluminous and corsets real
stays, nipped in at the sides, the
ioininir of the waist and skirt natur
ally comes at the smallest part of
the form, namely, the waistline,, as
nature placed it.
It has taken many months to bring
about the evolution, and. even yet
there are those who are loath to give
up their stay-belts and back to na
ture corsets. When Joseph, in the
early season exhibited silk frocks
with normal waistlines, many admir
ed this couturier's courage; ubt few
recognized the step as a style pre
diction so soon to be realized.
To-day, smart frocks have trim
waists, definitely marked. Whether
you are summering at Hopatcong, es
caping the heat at a beach resort, or
passing the early season in town, it
is impossible to be oblivious to this
one feature, at least, of the mode.
Again and again, fashion repeats
herself in the ever prevalent blue taf
feta dress. Wherever the New York
er goes, you see it. If any one
thinks she can dodge the clothes issue
by packing up and hiking off to the
country, the mountains or the shore,
she is sadly but surely mistaken. In
the Adirondacks you will find all the
(Continued on Page 8)
BKMiMMMBHBwBlBtfBBWBBBBH
.a
Red ucing the Cost or
Upkeep
iIbs pi
Ball Bearing ; Long Wearing
THE INSTALLATION of
L. C. Smith Bros.
Typewriters
is invariably followed by trie discovery that
the hills for ribbons are much less than he
fore. A large corporation recently found
that its ribhon expense was cut m two.
This is not an accident. It is the result of
the mechanical construction that makes the
L. C. Smith id Bros, cheapest to maintain.
The tall hearings give light touch and eliminate
pounding impact. The ribbon is actuated by the
carriage, not the typebar. The ribbon mechanism
is automatic, so that the ribbon reverses at tbe in
stant the end is reached and without added strain.
Low ribbon cost, low cost of maintenance and
tbe highest efficiency ; these are guaranteed to
L. C. Smith id Bros, users.
DEMONSTRATION FOR THE ASKING
L. C. SMITH is BROS. TYPEWRITER C?
Home Offk, and Factory, SYRACUSE. N. Y.
Branches in All Principal Cities
k 207 MORGAN BUILDING, PORTLAND, ORE.
Put Electric Lights
barrows a'l painted with flowers;
green basket kits with English tools;
smocks, aprons and a thousand and
one things suggesting neatness, care
and comfort for garden work. There
was a garden set offered the other
day in one of the shops for $12 com
plete, consisting of a flat, boat
shaped basket of brown wicker, fit
ted with shears, a collapsible ruler,
grubber, marker, rake, brown bur
lap kneoling-pad, and an apron of the
brown burlap. In fact, all the tools
now come light in weight to fill the
requirements of the woman garden
er; and the fixture sin bright colors
to catch her eye.
A Belgian, who keeps a shop in
the down-town section of the city,
made a name for himself in the early
season, by introducing the garden
sticks these are wooden canes point
ed at one end with figures of ani
mals, people, and flowers on the top,
to slick in the ground and tie the
plants to. A maiden all forlorn
stands side by side with the man all
shaven and shorn; for $'2.f0 the pair
will hold up your pet rose bush all
summer, or keep the golden-glow in
order. A black cat with back hump
ed, ad tail skyward, is another fa
miliar figure on the sticks, and blue
birds, and red cardinals, make
bright spots in the green shrubbery.
Some importations have Dutch wind
mills on top and an expensixe stick
has a fairy, gracefully poised on a
toadstool. One man has even gone
so far as to use bonny rabbits in
place of the birds, and an ingenous
friend ties on the gift card:
"Standing in your garden trim,
May the plant-stick straight and
tall
In the warm sun,
By its brightness gladden all."
No need, however, to rely wholly
on the sticks for color. Bamboo bas
kets for weeds and knees, are made
bright with cushions of figured cre
tonne; the kneeling-pad of woven
IN YOUR HOME
NO IMPROVEMENT IN YOUR RESIDENCE
WILL BRING YOU RIGGER RETURNS IN CON
VENIENCE, COMFORT, CLEANLINESS AND
SAVING OF LABOR..
IT ADDS TO THE VALUE OF YOUR PROPERTY
ADDS TO THE PLEASURE OF LIVING FOR
ALL IN THE HOUSEHOLD.
IT MEANS NOT ONLY THE COOLEST, SAFEST,
LIGHTING, BUT THE ABILITY TO USE MANY
TIME AND LABOR SAVING DEVICES SUCH AS
ELECTRIC FLATIRONS, VACUUM CLEANERS
AND SWEEPERS, TOASTERS, TABLE STOVES,
WATER HEATERS, SEWING MACHINE MO
TORS, WASHING MACHINES, ETC.
Portland Railway, Light & Power Company
THE ELECTRIC STORE
Phonos Homo A-229; Pacific Main 115 Beaver Bldg., Main St.