Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, August 02, 1917, Page 6, Image 6

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OREGON CITY COURIER, OREGON CITY, OJtEGpN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, pyi
OFFICIAL DRAFT LIST RECEIVED
(Continued from page 1)
159 332 Clyde M. Jaggar
160 2090 Frank Lee Selby
161 379 Herbert William Holmes
162 1560 Charley William Cooper
163 542 George A. Odell
164 2107 Alfred Eugene Thomas
165 194 Palmer Julseth
166 874 Garland Earl Hollowell
107 552 August Biedenstein
168 2595 John Alvin Ream
169 1300 Harry Massey
170 2124 Thomas Gilbert Haines
171 1673 Ray Leigh Francisco
172 1887 Louis Rudolph Noble
173 298 Carl Everett Morris
174 2438 Edward Albert Pamperin
175 675 Harry Plus Cahill
176 2132 Clyde Maxwell Churchill
177 1769 Edward Nevilla Coffey
178 1294 Corwin S. Harvey
179 1148 Raymond Atwell Stevens
180 1647 Orville Clinton Johnson
181 2558 - John P. Sullivan
182 1354 Rolf Lawrence Sandstrom
183 1906 Franklyn Inman Ritenour
184 2017 Valie Allyn
185 2397 Otto Ficken
186 343 Verner Carl Branland
187 2008 John Valentine Gawlista
188 2414 Louis Bruck
189 1613 Walter Harrison Vigles
190 2100 Ranson Pursifull -
191 982 Delbert Austin Norton
192 2467 Joseph Graham, Jr.
193 726 Neel Sarver
194 15 Percy Aldon Jones
195 905 Thomas Roy Peters
196 933 Bert Noli
197 2331 Wallace Washington Sut
ter
198 1531 Dewey Samuel Miller
199 2209 Robert A. Delk
200 1288 George Sherwood Curtis
201 452 George II. Bendshadler
202 355 Carl Fritzof Larson
203 1843 John Christ Busch
204 530 Albert Ross Roadarmel
205 809 Victor Carl Domm
206 2579 Robert Lee Wyrick
207 1114 Peder O. Bolland
208 2607 Aime Beaudoin
209 2473 Roscoe Page
210 1470 Paul Hopp
211 645 Guy Schafer
212 2135 James Vernon Centers
213 2622 Herman Treichler
214 218 David Elmer Fosberg
215 620 Herman Herald Chind-
gren
216 1334 Percy Samuel Lord
217 550 Lloyd L. Corey
218 1611 Gordon Victor Skoog
219 574 Casper Ileimann
220 31 John Garret Pierce
221 1432 Oscar Lee Kayler
222 1727 Sol Elven Cox
223 2047 William John Nichols
224 981 Ralph Bryant Madison
225 1848 Louis Booth Conklin
220 1570 Rudolph Bigge
227 1817 Karl Pradarutti
228 770 Lewie Hiram Cameron
229 882 Axel Carlson
230 2078 Paul R. Faxton
231 677 Roy Douglas
232 2119 Clarence Leslie Haines
233 2360 Newton Ernest Moak
234 749 Frank John Lingelbach
235 2269 Robert Sands Smith
236 2592 Arthur Ernest Sehwerin
1,001 to 1,233
237 1868 Ben Baxter
238 1509 Benjamin R. Wolfer
239 1211 Otto Fred Lucht
210 .525 Rayvel Thomas Landcs
241 1417 Robert Leslie Reed
242 1574 Russel Leonard Chinn
243 2034 Joseph Walker Garner
244 2434 Emil Nordurft
245 760 Frank Ernest Trachsel
240 183 Hjalmer J. Erickson
247 56 Henry Luchs
248 1276 August J. Zimmerman
249 1791 Constantinos Vaseliu
250 792 John W. E. Pattison
251 2128 Pete James Emmott
252 5 George Walter Brown
253 350 Olaf Flodberg
254 1580 Crist Geiger
255 54 James Stuart Hopper
256 2365
257 2615
258 870
259 1714
260 549
261 1132
262 440
263 1485
264 1674
265 741
266 1054
267 2336
268 1275
269 2316
270 2225
271 711
272 1022
273 841
274 638
275 2454
276 1032
277 623
278 269
279 685
280 1141
281 1314
282 1016
283 1688
284 335
285 1430
286 2005
287 493
288 2448
289 2108
290 1358
291 2503
292 923
293 1305
294 341
295 2517
296 2376
297 1007
298 1764
299 391
300 1366
Carl Rudolph Lamp
Ernest Joose
Wilbur Burton Merriam
Cecil V. Redden
John Sutton Greenwood
Rufus H. A. Kraxberger
Theodore Hagen
Edgar Guy Roth
Roland E. Forsberg
Roscoe Chamberlain Dem
ing Henry Wilhelm
Lewis Spady
George Edward Winzen
ried George Wayne Gordon
John Harold Mitchell
Adolf Haidlen
Annan Hostettler
Henning Carl Johnson
Dudley Rexford Helvey
John Zimmerman
Chauncey Lloyd Blosser
Chester Allen Dickey
William Severin
Guy Eugene Munger
Harley Manning
Sadataro Yoshitomi
Alfred Marion Livingston
Jack P. Watts
Earl Herbert Shepherd
Clyde Raymond Walker
Walter Kuzman
Mike Joseph Peringer
Merle Brink Tiedeman
Anton Joseph Schleiss
John Robert Townsley
Reve Jason Hoffman
Seth Addison Cook
Robert J. Paulson
Albert Dave Baurer
Julius Richard Wienert
Orey Erban Howell
Joseph Lester Stanton
James Edgar' Coovert
George Wesley Thiessen
Ora Elwood Coover
URGE MUSICIANS TO JOIN NAVY
BEFORE DRAFT COMES
(Continued from Page 1)
second class (incidentally, only two
a month can be enlisted); Landsmen
for baker; Baker, second class; Mess
Attendants, third class; landsmen for
ship's cook; ship's cooks, fourth class;
landsmen for musician; musicians,
first and second class; Landsmen for
Quartermaster, aviation section; and
Landsmen for Machinist's Mates, avi
ation section.
The special need as outlined is for
musicians and machinists, first and
second class.
There is a real live opportunity for
some band from a live Oregon town
to win a name and real fame.
The Portland Recruiting Office of
the navy is trying to persuade some
band to enlist as a whole, taking in 22
men, the number of a full navy band.
While the Portland Musicians' un
ion is co-operating with the navy of
fice in this endeavor, the opportunity
is still open, and if some crack organ
ization from some Oregon town gets
on the job first, the honor will be
theirs.
All branches of the navy have an
especial need of good musicians, and
the organization that gets this honor
will indeed be an exceptional one.
If such a band is taken in, it will
include the ratings of one bandmas
ter, one chief musician, and one bug
ler, all of which will be quite worth
while to the leader of any organiza
tion which is taken in its entirety.
Are You Unlucky?
Most sickness is traced to care
lessness or neglect, but unfortunates
who suffer from hay fever or asthma
can attribute their ailments to bad
luck. In August the air is full of
pollen and dust that cause trouble for
some, yet others are never bothered.
No remedy does more to relieve hay
fever and asthma than Foley's Honey
and Tar, the well known family med
icine for coughs, colds and croup. It
clears and sooths the afflicted nose,
throat and bronchial tubes. Jones
Drug Co.
Zbe
Tirst national Bank
-of-ORUGOIV
GITY
Gapital Stock
Surplus '
$50,000.00
$25,000.00
Member FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
Member OREGON STATE BANKERS ASSOCIATION
Member AMERICAN BANKERS ASSOCIATION
Under Government Supervision
U. S. Depository for Postal Savings Funds
SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT
INTEREST PAID on Savings Accounts or Time Certificates
We Solicit Your
Banking Business
Our Banking Room has been remodeled to meet the
requirements of our patrons
Have installed a MODERN and up-to-date
VAULT which is mob and
burgulur proof.
(Established 1889)
OFFICERS
D. C. LATOURETTEf President
M. D. LATOURETTE, Vice-Pres.
F. J. MEYER, Cashier
OPEN 9 a. m. to 3 p. m.
DRYING FRUITS
AND VEGETABLES
How to Save Surplus Products
of the Garden.
CHEAP AND USEFUL DRIER
United States Department of Agricul
ture Gives Valuable Directions For
Conserving Food by Simple and In
expensive Home Processes Different
Ways of Drying Food Products.
From United Slates department of agri
culture. Fruits and vegetables may be dried
in the home by simple processes and
stored for future use. The processes
are sun drying, drying by artificial heat
and drying by air blast. These, of
course, may be combined. In general,
most fruits or vegetables to be dried
quickly must be shredded or cut luto
slices, because many are too large to
dry quickly or are covered with a skin,
the purpose of which Is to prevent dry
ing out. When freshly cut fruits or
vegetables are to be dried by means of
artificial beat they should be exposed
first to gentle heut and later to the
higher temperatures. If the air applied
at the outset is of too high a tempera
ture the cut surfaces of the sliced
fruits or vegetables, become hard or
scorched, covering the Juicy Interior
so that It will not dry out. Generally
It Is not desirable that the air tempera
ture in drying should go above 140
degrees to 150 degrees F., and It Is bet
ter to keep It well below this point.
Insects and insect eggs are killed by
exposure to heat of this temperature.
It is important to know the degree
of heat in the drier, and this cannot
be determined very accurately except
by using a thermometer. The reason
sun drylug Is popularly believed to
give fruits and vegetables a sweeter
flavor lies probably in the fact that In
the sun they never are scorched, where
as In the oven or over a stove scorch
ing Is likely to occur unless careful
attention Is given them.
Drying of certain products can be
completed In some driers within two
or three hours. The material should
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PBItt'AKATIUN OF VEUKTAHLES TO BE DlflUU.
be stirred or turned several times dur
ing the drying in order to secure a
uniform product.
When sulllciently dried fruit should
be so dry thiit it is impossible to press
water out of the freshly cut ends of
the pieces and will not show any of
the natural grain of tho fruit on being
broken and yet not so dry that it will
snap or crackle. It Bhould be leathery
and pliable.
Preparation of Food For the Drier.
Iu large factories the vegetables are
put through special shredders and she
ers not adapted for homo use, but
convenient and Inexpensive machines
which can be used to great advantage
are on the market. The meat grinder
with its special disks can be used in
certain cases, tho common kraut sheer
will cut largo vegetables into thin
slices, such as potatoes and cabbage,
and the rotary hand sheer is adapted
for use on a very wide range of mate
rial. A largo sharp kitchen knife may
he used when a handler tutting device
Is not available. Care should be taken
that tho material Is sliced thin enough
but not too thin. From an eighth to a
quarter of uu Inch Is n fair thickness
for most of the common vegetables to
he sliced and dried.
To secure a fine quality of dried prod
ucts much depends upon having the
vegetables absolutely fresh, young;
tender and perfectly clean. If steel
knives are used in paring mid cutting
have them clean and bright so as not
to discolor the vegetable. The earthy
smell and flavor will cling to root crops
If they are not washed thoroughly be
fore slicing, and one decayed root may
flavor several kettles of soup if the
slices from it are scattered through a
whole butch of dried material. High
grade dried "root" vegetables can only
be made from peeled roots.
Ulaiiching of vegetables Is considered
desirable by some housekeepers, al
though It Is not strictly essential to
successful drying. Sun drying has
much to recommend it, since It re
quires no expenditure of fuel and there
Is li'.tlo danger of the product becom
ing overheated. Dust, however, gath
ers on the product, and unless It is pro
tected carefully Hies and especially
certain Insects which habitually attack
dried fruits will lay their eggs upon it.
He Felt Like Ninety
Nothing will make a person feel
old quicker than disordered kidneys,
for when they are not working prop
erly the whole system is infected with
poisons that cause aches and pains in
all parts of the body. A. W. Moor
Kan, Angola, La., writes: "Oh, I suf
fered with pain in my back. I am 43
years old, but I felt like a man 90
years old. Since I took Foley Kidney
Pills I feel like I did when I was 21."
They tone up and strengthen the kid
neys, and promptly relieve annoying
bladder troubles. Jones Drug Co.
A TWICE-TOLD TALE
One of Interest to Our Readers
Good news bears repeating, and
when it is confirmed after a long
lapse of time, even if we hesitated to
believe it at first hearing, we feel se
cure in accepting its truth now. The
following experience of an Oregon
City man is confirmed after three
years.
Thomas Trembath, 310 Sixth
St., says: "I have bought Doan's Kid
ney Pills at Huntley Bros. Co.'s Drug
store and they have my endorsement.
I used them when my back and kid
neys bothered me and they certainly
made the soreness and lameness in
my back disappear in short order."
(Statement given April 4, 1913.)
On April 17, 1916, Mr. Trembath
said: "Doan's Kidney Pills can't be
equaled for backache and other signs
of kidney trouble. Whenever my back
pains or my kidneys are out of order,
a few doses of Doan's Kidney Pills
fix me up all right."
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE
9,000 "Foreign" Cars Pass Through
Yellowstone Park on Way West
The, only advertising done by the
Northwest Tourist Association has
been in automobile magazines in the
west.
The results, however, are shown by
the fact that more "foreign cars"
have already passed through Oregon
in 1917 than were in the state during
all of 1916.
Nine thousand cars have passed
through Yellowstone Park, all headed
west.
Oregon has been included in the
plans of the National Parks Highway
association, the road having been ex
tended through" from Rainier Nation
al Park to Crater Lake National Park.
The Portland Chamber of Commerce
carried the expense of this work for
1917.
Our Hidden Strength
How often it happens that men
who have long been "down-and-out,"
who have been considered "nobodies,"
"good-for-nothings," not well-balanced,
have changed suddenly, as though
touched by a magic wand, and have
quickly become men of power, inspir
ers, helpers of others. Something
happened that quickened this spirit,
and from miserable liabilities they
have suddenly been converted into
rvaluable assets to their community.
John B. Gough was a drunken no
body. All at once, apparently by ac
cident, he was converted. Something
touched Gough and from being a
slave of the bottle he became its mas
ter. From a miserable example he
was transformed into a tremendous
uplifting and inspiring force in the
community. Before he came to him
self he was dragging men down; after
he responded to the call of the divin
ity within he was leading hundreds
and thousands of men to take the
pledge, to lead cleaner and nobler
lives.
When a poor youth working as
scullion in a kitchen in Italy first got
a glimpse of a great painting, the
sight aroused something within him
which he had never felt before. It
revealed a new artistic impulse, and
he exclaimed, "I, too, am an artist!"
Following this inward call, he got a
chance to work in the studio of a
famous artist, and finally became a
greater artist than the painter of the
picture which had inspired him. Or.
ison Swett Marden in August Nau
tilus.
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Marriage Licenses
. Marriage licenses were issued here
to Vica Post, of Dallas, and Chester
A. Minty, of Salem; and Christina
Fischer and Xavier Widner, of Oregon
City. The former couple were united
by Justice of the Peace John N. Siev
ers yesterday morning.
Marriage licenses were issued
here Thursday to Lulu M. Richter and
Abe Johnson, of Canby, and Hannah
Hall and Thomas Snively, of Wood-
burn, Ore.
Has Recovered Her Health
So many women are suffering from
similar afflictions that this testimonial
letter from Mrs. Laura Beall, Platts
burg, Miss., will be read with interest:
"I got in bad health. My left side
hurt all the time. I took doctor's
medicine, but it did me no good.
took two bottles of Foley Kidney Pills
and I feel all right now." Backache,
rheumatic twinges, pains in side,
swollen and sore muscles and kindred
symptoms are quickly relieved by
Foley Kidney Pills. Jones Drug Co.
Congregational Church
There will be only the morning ser
vice at the Congregational church
Sunday. Prayer meeting Wednesday
night. '
GIRL WANTED for general house
work. Apply 1007 Main street or
phone ,'162.
AHnlnh Kturipr Dips
Adolph Studer, 52 years of age,
died at the Oregon City hospital late
Tuesday night following an attack of
nearc trouble.
Courier and Daily Journal $4.75.
WATCH SHOP
Near the Oregon City Elevator is the
place to get first class work done
on watches, clocks and jewelry.
All work warranted and done same
day it is received.
At 220 Seventh Street
FRANK NELDON
Watchmaker & Jeweler
ABSTRACTS
of Clackamas County Property
HAMMOND ABSTRACT CO.
Beaver Building Oregon City
Office with
HAMMOND & HAMMOND
Lawyers.
A
Real
Value
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Price $1025.00 Oregon City
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Ask Any Oregon City Owner What He
Thinks of This Car
We do business right here in Oregon City and Clackamas
county and therefore we are ready to back-up our state
ments about this Saxon "Six." For real value you will
have to look a long while before you will find a better
constructed car for the money.
PORTER C& PORTER
Seventh Street GARAGE Oregon City
Store Opens
' Daily
at 8:30 A. M.
Saturdays
at 9 A. M.
Pacific
Phone:
Marshall 5080
The Most in Value
The Best in Quality
THE MOST IN VALUE
-THE BEST IN QUALITY
Store Closes
Daily
at 5:30 P. M
Saturdays'
at 6 P. M.
Home
Phone:
A 2112
An Unsurpassable Showing and
Sale of Women's Fiber Silk Sweater
Coats at $4.98 to $9.95
The season's most popular garment for street, outing or the seashore. Shown here in all fash
ionable styles and colors. Particularly attractive are those with sailor collar and sash in elastic
rib or jersey weaves. They come in the most desirable shades of gold, Copenhagen, green, old
rose, purple, etc. A price to suit every purse, at$4.98 to $9.95.
35f Wash Goods
A great midseason underpricing of several hundred yards
of crisp, new Wash Goods-Values unmatchable elsewhere
The New Cannon Cloth at 18c Yard
2000 yards of the fashionable new Cannon Cloth a white linen-finish Suiting, full 33 inches wide
laundries beautifully and is exceedingly durable.
Dress Voiles at 19c Yard
About Half Price
Our regular stock of new Dress Voiles, including unlimited choice from the most popular styles
and colors. They come 38 inches wide.
5000 Yards to Close at 12 l-2c Yard
Dainty Lawns, Batistes, Voiles, Figsues, Organdies, etc., in all styles and colors standard widths
and qualities selling regularly to two and three times the above price.
Lion Special Suits
from this long established concern, that supplies the apparel
needs of men and boys, assure of correct garments at econom
ical prices. The utmost in value and lasting satisfaction.
GCS KUHN, President
Two Store. Id Portland-Morrison at Fourth and 166 Third St
Double S. & H. Stamps, good for cash discounts, gictn
vihcn this ad Is presented
O. C. C
8-2-17
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