The banner-courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1919-1950, March 23, 1922, Image 6

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FRANK BUSCH AND SONS
CLACKAMAS COUNTY'S LEADING FURNITURE AND HARDWARE STORE
MUST UNLOAD
A bargain event without an equal staged
on a gigantic scale.
This sale is for cash only.
$65,000.00 worth of Furniture and Hard
ware on sale here at prices that seem unbelievable.
BIG TEN DAY'S SALE
Aluminum Ware at Less
than Half Price
Highly Polished, ' heavy gauge Aluminum
Cooking Utensils The kind that will last
a life time.
1 Quart Sauce Pans 15c
1 Quart Pudding Pans 15c
8 in. Pie Tins 15c
8 in. Cake Pans 15c
Wear Ever 7 in. Size Fry Pans, AQri
Regular $1,20. while they last-
Round Aluminum Roasters CCri
Regular $2.50. Sale price ... :1 JUV
Aluminum Percolators, six cup size CCrf
Regular $2.25 value, sael price
Aluminum Double Boilers CCW
Extra special ;. JJV
Aluminum Collenders . CCrf
Large size
Sauce Pan Sets, 3 nested aluminum CErf
Sauce Pan Sets JJF
Aluminum Dish Pan, 10 quart size with
heavy roll rim, beautifully finished 01 QQ
and highly polished
Beginning
Saturday, March 25
At 8:00 A. M.
Hundreds of Items Not Mentioned Here at Great Reductions
Here Are the Facts Sweeping Reductions
This extraordinary announcement comes as
a result of a backward season and delayed
shipments. We bought new goods at new
lower prices. Thousands and Thousands of
dollars worth, then came the back orders
that factories were unable to deliver before
the first of the year. On account of the
inclement weather conditions people were
unable to get out and do their buying, the
consequences are WE ARE OVERLOAD
ED with merchandise.
We must and will sell regardless of costs
and profits
Sale for
Cash Only
J I' THE HOME 2f GOOD FURNITURE? ' J
We are out to Sell, Unload and turn Thous
ands of Dollars worth of seasonable mer
chandise into cash. These sweeping re
ductions include every article in our im
mense stock (a few contract lines excepted
We are making reductions that seem unbe
lievable, savings that are sensational and
prices that not only defy competition but
rival pre-war values, so come to this great
sale; see for yourself and
buy merchandise you will surely need at
prices that may never be equaled again
Sale for
Cash.Only
A HIGH GRADE HAND SAW
Our "Crusader" Brand 26 in. Blade.' This
is a Winchester product, and represents a
splendid value for the money. Reg- 7CW
ular $2.00 value, Sale Price ; '
BUTCHER KNIVES
6 in. blade extra special -1 7w
While they last I'V
WHEEL GARDEN CULTIVATORS
Just the thing for your garden or berry
patch. A great labor saving device (PC Cfl
Price each only jUtUU
PRUNING SHEARS
Here is a seasonable item that you will
surely need. Buy a pair now Ari
for only
Folding Breakfast Tables, 36 in. PO PC
ize, either round or square sZiUd
CARPENTERS NAIL HAMMER
Our "Cruso" Brand, drop forged steel gen
uine hickory handles PQh
(Regular $1.00, now
Copper Nickel Plated Tea Kettles
Seamless Bottom, electrically welded spout.
$2.75 values, while they last $1.68
REALTY TRANSFERS
Weekly Record of Property
Changes Compiled From County
Recorder's Office. List Includes
Transfers up to Each Wednesday
Albert T. and Leta King to R. P.
and Hulda Killeborn: Lots 32, 34, 35,
36, 37, 38, 39, 40, blk. 17, Minthorn
Add. to Portland.
Moody Investment Co. to N. C. and
Myrtle E. Hall: Lots 17, 18, blk. 13,
Unit "C" West O. C.
Bell Pauling to Phillip and Ruth
M. Puyleart: Lot 7, blk. 26, O. I. &
S. Co.'s first Add to Oswego.
Chas. W. Goodman to A. E. Hur
witz: Tract 31, Bonita Meadows.
A. J. end Anna Bochold to Chas.
Anderson: Lot 1 and 2, blk. 146, Ore
gon City.
Carl Schenk to Lyman E. and Fern
Lemen : Lot -',- blk. 7, South Oregon
City.
J. Arch and Nellie B. Stewart to
Hal Lincoln Watson, MilwaukSe
Heigts.
Moody Investment Co to Ralph S.
Miller: Part of Unit B, West Oregon
City.
Daisy L. Larsen to H. C. and Lil
lian Wenger: Lot 4, blk. 144, Oregon
City.
Iva M. Harrington to Guy E. and
Holo N. Miller: Lots 15 and 16, blk.
38, Gladstone. Ore.
J. L. Sprinkle to Amerson and Ruth
M. Andrews: North half of lots 1 and
2, blk. 1. Carver.
J. B. Plant to Theodore Payne:
Tract 14, Lawton Heights.
Petite Demange to R. and Joseph
ine Honorat: Lots 7, 8, 9, blk. 4, Plea
sant Place.
Ed. Anderson to Julius Kraschneiv
ski: Lot 10, blk. 50, Central Add. to
Oregon City.
W. L. and Anna M. Snider to Laura
B. and Clem Dollar.
P. E. and Henrietta Newell to Dora
Aspinwall: East half of blk. 13, Mil
waukie Park.
Rex. V. Stubbs to Eliza D. Miller:
S. half of lot 4, blk. 2, Everhart's
first add. to Molalla.
Oregon Iron and Steel company to
A. J. and Addie Stoldt: Tract 66 in
Rosewood.
Moody Investment Co. to Alice A.
Miller: Part of unit B, West Oregon
City.
Moody Investmant Co. to Fred A.
and Nettie Shannon.
C. R. and Florence Clee Amrine to
Ida Lapensa Amrine: Lot 4, blk.
7, Gladstone.
Henry and Mary Trickey to S. J.
and Odissah Sarenson: Lots and 8,
13 and 14, blk. 2, Fairview Add. to
Oregon City.
Augusta Ginther to John Jr. and Es
ther Baker: Lots 11 and 12, blk. 14,
Falls View Add. to Oregon City.
Leonie C. and E. Meresse to Chas.
C. and Martha L. Stehman: Lot 8,
blk. 34. Central Add. to Oregon City.
Teresia and Peter Becker to Lars
and Anna Swanberg: Lots 10 and 11,
j and E half by 70 feet or lot 9, blk.
j 13, Falls View Add. to Oregon City.
i Chas. C. and Sophia Knutson to
Herman M. Curry: Lot 49, Canby Gar-
' dens.
D. C. and E. S. Latourette to Lily
Mengel: Pt. of blk. 108, Oregon City.
J. L. and Alverda C. Wolverton to
James Nical: Lots 12 and 13, blk. of
61, O. J. and S. Co.'s Add. to Os
wego. Joseph and Mary W. McConnell, to
James Nical : Lot 20, blk. 61, O. I. and
S. Co.'s Add. to Oswego.
Dora and Wm. Aspinwall to J. M.
and Erna Turner: Pt. of blk. 13, Mil
waukie, Ore.
Geo. E. Morn to Portland Seed Co.:
Lots 10, 18 and 19, First Add. to Jen
nings Lodge.
Geo. C. and Ethel R. Hazelton, to
Shirley and Elizabeth S. Buck: Mil
waukie park.
S. L and Minnie L. Stevens to Arch
C. and Elsie V. Long: Lot 4, blk. 2,
Canemah.
Lucy Mae Reed to Maude Sturgeon:
Lot 1, blk. 7, Estacada, Ore.
Dora E. Wilson to Arthur C. and
Ruth C. Good: Lot 8, blk. 47, O. I.
& S. Co.'s first Add. to Oswego.
A. J. and E. H. Monk to Joseph
R. and Flossie L. Hughes: Lots 7, 8,
and 9, blk. 3, O. I. & S. Co.'s Add.
to Oswego.
Milton F. and Mabel C. Shipley, to
Donald and Helen James: Lot 11,
blk. 16, O. I. & S. Co.'s first Add. to
Oswego.
G. G. and Alice M. Graves, to Wm.
Kaiser: Lots 5 and 6, blk. 7, Willam
ette Falls.
J. W. Reed (est. by admin.) to
Maude Sturgeon: Lot 1, blk. 7, Esta
cada. Ernest R. Baker (est. of by adm.) to
L. D. Mumpower: Lots 1, 2 and 16,
blk. 16, Milwaukie.
Peter Gearhardt to Geo. F and Anna-Boeckman:
Sec. 11, 13, l-W.
Herman and Wilma C. Nelson to
Earl G. Williams: Lots 9 and 10, blk.
54, Gladstone.
C. Rollin and Lizzie A. Meier, to
Horace Williams: 10x100 ft. in Hol
mes' Add. to Oregon City.
Gladstone Real Estate Assn. to Wm.
Hammond: Lots 5 and 6, blk. 61, in
Gladstone.
A. H. and Rose T. Zanders, tto C
S. and Tillie Lincoln: Tract 29, Gib
son's Subd.
OREGON INDUSTRIES
Weekly Record of Industrial
Conditions Gleaned From Re
liable Sources Over The State
Bandon to have new city hall. jor portion of this sum was for pow-
Scio Work begins on new high ; er plaits, sub-stations and distdibu
school gymnasium. j tion services, and $353,086.42 fent into
Eugene Work to start about March steet railway extensions and improve-
Fred C. Chanman Visits City.
The Misses Cochran enjoyed a vis
it from .their nephew, Fred C. Char
rran, who is purser of the steamship
Keystone State, plying between Se
attle and Manila. Mr. Charman re
mained here over Sunday.
All big industries going forward.
Lumbering, mining, manufacturing
and building operations increasing in
volume. Fight on in every western
state for tax reduction.
Salem State prison starts manu
facture of wooden-ware. Number
convicts surpasses all former records
133 having been committed in 1921,
majority for crimes not subject to pa
role. Portland Contracts let for grading
last two units Mt. Hood loop.
Umatilla county to build 30 mile3
market roads in 1921.
Pendleton union painters have re
duced wages.
Marshfield Big logging camp open
ing on Cunningham creek.
Seaside building new pier for sum
mer resorters.
Florence $150,000 to be expended
on Eugene highway.
Kalama Blue Mountain tavern to
be built here.
Lebanon cannery to be refinanced
and operated for 1922.
West Salem seeking to get a post
office. Douglas county jail overflowing
and will be enlarged.
Dallas planning to build miles of
sidewalks. '
Medford $100 a ton gold strike
made in Fick and Carr mine.
Chemawa Congress gives $60,000
for new dormitory.
Oregon ranks second in potential
water power.
Medford power unit will build lines
and develop 66,000 volts.
A 30,000 dollar road to be built from
Powwatka Jo Troy, Wallowa county
Gold Hill Cement company gets 10,-000-barrel
order from power company.
Klamath Falls lumber companies
have adopted 9Miour day.
Astoria has factory to make com
fort stools for auto campers.
Ecola New sawmill and box fac
tory to be erected near here soon.
Bandon Crude oil found on beach
between Floras lake and Cape Arago.
Medford Contract let for 115-miie
line. 1 -
Sheridan New company organised
here to manufacture furniture.
Ashland to have new foundry soon.
Warrenton Clay products plant
here to build more kilns.
Eugene Contract awarded for pub
lic market here.
Eugene U. of O. to have new $12,
000 fraternity house.
North Bend Street improvements
to cost about $75,000, ordered.
Redmond to have fireproof theater
building.
15 on upper McKenzie road
Cottage Grove Latham district to
build $4000 schoolhouse.
Bakefcr-JMans being made for $50,
000 milk condensery.
St. Helens Island mill resumes
operations after long shutdown.
Sweet Home votes to build new j
$5500 grade schoolhouse.
Astoria $150,000 site purchased by
tool factory firm.
Dallas Willamette Valley Flax and
Hemip Growers' association investi
gating desirability of establishing flax
retting plant here.
Tillamook Bids opened for road
from Happy Camp to Oceanside.
Brownsville Woolen mills to open
when new machinery is installed.
Cottage Grove Work to begin soon
on Pacific highway south.
Corvallis-Newport highway to be
completed this year.
Portland Local company to erect
$200,000 furnace to manufacture pig
iron.
Pendleton Shell Oil "company plan
ning construction of $15,000 building
here.
Klamath FaUs votes on $800,000
highway bond issue.
Rainier to pave Water street.
Washington County News-Times
has 20-page industrial edition.
Linn county strongly for tax reduc
tion program.
McCormick sawmills at St. Helens
ship cargo lumber direct to New York.
Riddle Survey made for wagon
road to Silver Peak.
Electric power rates in north Mari
on county have been reduced.
Rufus Holman favors consolidating
Portland and Multnomah county gov
ernment under one commission. It
woHld save millions.
Mountain States Power company
to build into upper Willamina valley.
Hill lines to spend $3,500,000 on
northwest properties in 1922.
ments
Within a few days after this report
was made the state Public Service
commission declared that improve
ments to the company's , properties
must be made.
Mrs. Chandler Visits Children
Mrs. Surman Chandler, who has
been at Lacrosse, iWash., visiting her
three daughters, Mrs. M. P. Moore,
Mrs. M. R. Hoore and Mrs. W. C. Van
Hoy has returned to her .home at
Oregon City.
Earnings Show Increase.
Gross earnings of the company
showed an increase of 3.74 per cent
and net earnings increased 3.31 per
cent. The number of light and power
customers increased from ai,zH5 to
57,477, or a net gain of 4192.
President Griffith commented upon
the gratifying success of the .new
plan of home financing through the
sale of 7-per-cent prior preference
stock of which $472,800 worth had been
sold up to February 28th of this year,
and 2250 new stockholders had been
added to the company's lists. The
entire proceeds from the sale of this
new security, the company announces,
will be put right back into extensions,
betterments and new construction.
Expenditures for last year for bet
terments to the company's properties
amounted to $1,745,795.29. The ma-
Local Anglers Form Club.
Oregon City has a fullfledged sal
mon club, whose purpose is to fish for
the famous meauties with light tack
le. A series of prizes for tne best
salmon caught between April 1 and
May 1 with tackle limited to a seven
ounce rod and a twelve-ounce thread
line.
These are the officers of the club :
Presilent, S. Chambers; vice presi
dent, Dr. L. G. Ice; secretary, Rich
ard Friedrich; treasurer, George Ban
non; directors, E. E. Gabriel, L. A.
King, C. Alldredge, and Robert
Krueger.
Sheep Management
Will Be Demonstrated
The County Agent has arranged for
a sries of demonstrations showing
approved methods of sheep manage
ment. The first meetings are to be
held next week and will cover the sub
ject of shearing, wool grading, fleece
handling, and the care "of lambs. The
work is to be handled by H. A. Lind
gren, Livestock Specialist of the Ore
gon Agricultural College Extension
Service. Following is the schedule of
meetings :
MarchT 28th 9:30 A. M. J. W. Smith
farm at Macksburg.
2:00 P. M S. A. Cordill farm
near Molalla,
March 29th 10:00 A. M. Drexel
White farm near Monitor.
2:00 P. M. Gust Jaeger farm
near Wilsonville.
March 30th 9:30 A. M. W. W. Har-
.xis farm on Beaver Creek road.
1:45 P. M C. B. Sprague farm
upper Logan.
All sheep owners are invited to
these meetings. On these farms there
will be three such meetings during
the year, covering various phases of
sheep management.
Jeff Hart.
By Badger Clark.
Jeff Hart rode out of the gulch to
war,
When the low sun yellowed the
pines
He waved to his folks in the cabin
door,
And yelled to the men at the
mines.
The gulch kept watch till he dropped
from sight
Neighbors and girl and kin.
Jeff Hart, rode out of the gulch one
night;
Next morning the world came in.
His dad went back to the clinking
drills,
And his mother cooked for the men;
The pines branched back on the east
ern hills,
Then back to the west again.
But never again, by dusk or dawn,
Were the days of the gulch the
same.
For back up the trail Jeff Hart had
gone,
The trample of millions came.
Then never a clatter of dynamite
But echoed the guns of the Aisne,
And the coyote's wail in the woods
at night
Was bitter with Belgium's pain.
We heard the snarl of a savage sea
In the pines when the wind went
through.
And the strangers Jeff Hart fought
to free
Grew folks to the folks he knew.
Jeff Hart has drifted for good and
all,
To the ghostly bugles blown,
But the far French valley that saw
him fall,
Blood kin to the gulch is grown;
And his foreign folks are ours by
right
The friends that he died to win.
Jeff Hart rode out of the gulch one
night;
Next morning the world came in.
Colliers.
Statistics in the office of the coun
pecially inconvenient."
During an epidemic of colds or in
fluenza, living quarters and public
buildings should have a surplus of
clean moving air; one school room vis
ited this month showed a tempera
tare of 78 degrees with no outside
ventilation."
"In one room visited during Feb
ruary, where 40 primary children are
enrolled, 16 were absent with severe
colds or grippe; of the remaining 26,
19 drank coffee; 25 had decayed
teeth; 10 had unhealthy looking
throats; only 17 had handkerchiefs.
A child who has been exposed to an
epidemic in a room under such cir
cumstances, would need a collossal re
sistance to avoid infection."
"An epidemic must have cost our
schools a great loss in time and ef
ficiency. Surely without a cooper
ative effort to maintain better health
in the schools, families and commun
ities must suffer a loss of productivity,
comfort and happiness."
South End Road Committees at Work
I. C. Bridges of the City Council
and the Live Wire committee consist
ing of O. D. Eby, L. A. Henderson and
Linn Jones are meeting with the
state highway commission this after
noon in Portland to confer with ref
erence to the south end road project.
County Nurse's Report
ty nurse for the last ten days of Feb
ruary show that in an aggregate
group of 2122 children, 460 were ab
sent with a respiratory affection, pro
nounced by authorities as grippe or
influenza; ear and throat infection
having also been common complica
tions. The schools under special observa
tion for that time were Molalla, Can
by, Oregon City, Oswego, Wichita and
Estacada.
Miss Morris said in an interview
that she felt that the children's lack
of physical resistance and their in
timate associations were largely re
sponsible for the general spread of
the epidemic in the schools.
"There are many children in the
public schools whose habits of living
are from iscuous. They sleep as
little as they like; eat what they like;
do anything in fact that is not es-
Editor Robinson
Neighbor Robinson has an idea that
the Portland Commercial club, 1925
committee or any other organization
could profit from and by which the
state of Oregon could be benefited
greatly.
He proposes to travel from 6 to 9
months; visit the actual farmers di
rect; the small towns and cities; the
"Home Paper" printing offices; camp
grounds-etc. And he says we would
see more "press comments" and re
ceive more inquiries from real home
seekers and farmers from hamlet and
city, from coast to. coast than Frank
Branch Riley ever dreamed of. He
tells us he has submitted a proposi
tion to the 1925 Fair committee.
And here is "dollars to doughnuts"
that i neighbor Robinson will do if
given the opportunity, just what he
says he wil ldo and then some more
honest-to-goodness boosting for the
fair, for Oregon and for all of us.
COURT ACTIONS
Ora E. Bennett vs. Richard A. Ben
nett, divorce, charge of cruel and in
human treatment. Plaintiff also asks
for custody of minor child and $25.00
a month alimony.
Clackamas County Adjsiment Co.
vs. Cesidio Ciafaoni and wife, Luige
Amanda and wife. Suit to recover
$272.51 plus interest, alleged due for
lumber purchased from A. Stefani in
February of 1921.
Clackamas County Adju.-siment Co.
vs. Smith Turner. Suit io collect
$414.75 as a balance due the Pacific
Highway Garage on a FordscD 'fact
or, p'ows, etc. ;
Willis Bancroft vs. Gladys Bancroft,
divorce; charge of desertion.
Edward Case vs. Mary Case, charge
ol' desertion, suit for divorce.