The banner-courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1919-1950, December 21, 1922, Page Page Eleven, Image 11

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THENER-COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGOK
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21,1922.
Parrs Daven
DIRECTORY
OF PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS FIRMS
ALWAYS THE NEW THINGS FIRST.
Ladies' and Children's Ready-To-Wear
209 7th Street
Oregon City
SCHUEBEL & BEATTIE
, ATTO R N E YS-AT-LA W
6 Per Cent State School Money To
Loan on Farms. . -
. General Practice
Bank of Oregon City Building
Oregon City, Oregon
HUTCHINSON MATERNITY
HOME
Mrs. Ida Hutchinson, Prop.
. Reasonable Hates
Sixth and J. Q. Adams Sts.
Phone 498R Oregon City, Oregon
Holman & Pace
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
AND EMBALMERS
MONEY TO LOAN
Paul C. Fischer.
Beaver Bldg. Oregon City
W. G.H. Krueger
CONTRACTOR
House Moving, Raising and Repairing
Concrete, Brick and Hollow Tile
Construction
Estimates -CUven
Phone 607, Res. 162S Washington St
CLASSIFIED ADS
For Sale Live Stock
FOR SALE One registered, two-year-.
old, Holstien bull, or would trade for
good milk, cow. W. O. Dragoo, Sher
wood, Ore., Rt. 5 - 12-20-1
LOANS
Money loaned for you or to you
at current rates. Farm loans only,
GRANT B. DIMICK '
Oregon CltyOregon
Seventh and Water Sts.
Tel. 86
Win. Stone
ATTORN EY-AT-LAW
Beaver Building
OREGON CITY, OREGON
CHARLES T. SIEVERS
LAWYER
Caufield Bldg.
OREGON CITT, OREGON
DR. E. A. GIBBS. -
' ' Nervous and Chronic Diseases
a Specialty.
Room 2 Beaver Block
Oregon City.
PAUL C. FISCHER
Attorney at ( Law
Oregon City, Oregon
Beaver Building
Phones: Office 348 Residence 1F2
Phone 711 J .
Mrs. Emma James
Magnetic Therapeutics and
Maternity Nursing
Room 16 Oregon
C. D. & D. C. Latourette
AND EARL LATOURETTE
Atorneys-at-Law
Estates settled Money loaned Prac
tice in all Courts of the U. S.
First National Bank Building
OREGON CITY, ORE.
Phone Pacific 405
GEO. HOEYE
Chiropractor
Phone 636W
Caufield Bldg.
Oregon City, Ore.
WM. GARDNER
'OPTICIAN, WATCHMAKER
AND JEWELER
719 Main Street Oregon City. Ore.
Dr. L. G. Ice
DENTIST
Oregon City
O. D. Eby
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Over Bank" of Oregon C$y
OREGON CITY, OREGON
HUGH R. ROBERTSON
& COMPANY
Member
American Institute of Accountant
Accountants Income Tax Service
Auditors
Hogg Bldg. City Portland, Ore. Minneapolis, Minn.
Closing Out Sale of Groceries
15 oz. Package Raisins
Bulk Seedless Raisins, lb. .
Two poiTfids
Preferred Stock Peaches and Apricots, per
large can .. ....
Peaches good grade large can
Catsup Preferred Stock pint ....
Solid Pack Tomatoes, 2-size can .
Preferred Stock Peas, 2-size can . .
Pineapple Preferred Stock, 2-size can
two for . ...
45c
Pineapple Preferred Stock, 2-size can...... 35c
Calumet Baking Powder, lb .. 25c
Mattley's Store
306 7th St. Oregon City
BARRED PLYMOUTH ROCKS The
foundation of . this flock came from
the Government Station at Mountain
Grove, jMissouri: Fine color, even
: barring and good layers. Hatching
eggs In season. H. O. Newell, Mo
lalla, Oregon, R. F. D. No 2. 12-21-4tp
FOR SALE Fresh cow, with or with
out calf. Phone 27-F-24. 12-14-3t
FOR SALE St. Andrewsburg rollers,
from Imported stoclc; very pretty,
good songsters; $3.00 per pair. Mrs.
George Bliss, Oregon City, Rt. 3.
(12-1 4-2t)
Wanted Miscellaneous
WANTED To buy ' second hand
goods. Will pay cash for used fur
niture, tools, or any thing of com
mercial value. Large stock of goods
WANTED To hear from owner of
vgood ranch for sale. State cash
price, full particulars. D. F. Bush,
Minneapolis, Minn.
Cost Little, Results
Courier Classified Ad vs.
Big Ban-
LOST One Michelen Ford Disk wheel,
painted orange, with Goodrich tire
and license tag, December 9, on road
between Tualatin and WilsOnville or
Oswego. Write M. C Young, Wil
sonville, Oregon. Reward.
NOTICE. '
In the County Court of the State of
Oregon, for the County of Clack
amas. IN THE MATTER
of
The Estate of BURTON DEAR-
. DORF, Deceased.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned has filed his Final Account
and Report as Administrator of said
Estate, and that the 29th day of Janu
ary, 1923, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock
A. M. and the. Court Room of said
Court have been appointed as the time
and place for hearing saidvAccount and
any objections that may' be made
thereto,
C. R. HUNTER,
Administrator.
J. N. Pearcy,
E. J. Mendenhall.
Attorneys for Administrator. 12-21-ot
THE
KITCHEN
CABINET!
((g), 1923, Western Newspaper Union.)
si
v
id ii aft?1"
Depth bombs, exploded in Puget
Sound near Tacama, by Federal pro
hibition agents, thwarted expected at
tempts to recover from the water a
large quantity of liquor which was re
cently thrown overboard by a smug
glers' launch. The bombs were shot
at the spet where the bottles were seen
to sink. -
JOEORMAN
Tailor
to
Men and Women
207 7th St. Oregon City
For my part, I am not so sure at bot
tom that man is, as he says, the king
of nature; he is far more its devastat
ing tyrant. I believe he has many -.
things to learn from animal societies,
older than his own and of infinite
variety. Romain Holland.
POINTS FOR- HOUSEKEEPERS
To remove fruit stains there is noth
ing better (and perfectly harmless to
cloth) for this purpose
than lemon juice applied
full strength. Rub it in
well with ' the hands,
then rinse In cold water.
Lemon juice and salt-
applied to rust will,
when placed in sunlight,
f remove it at once; If of
long standing, two or
three applications may be needed.
: To remove stains from the hands
lemon juice or vinegar mixed with
corn meal is a fine agent to not only
take off discolorations, but will make
the handssmooth and soft. When the
meal becomes dry moisten It with
water. A dish of cornmeal near the
sink will be found a great conveni
ence. Rose geranium leaves laid In the
cake tins under the greased paper will
give a delightful flavor to layer cake.
A leaf drawn through apple jelly adds
greatly to the flavor of the jelly.
A good butter maker says Never
let a cloth, be It ever " so sweet and
clean, come In contact with butter.
Pack it in Jars and. cover with butter
paper.
Wash hair brushes In hot water to
which baking soda has been added.
Add a small handful to a pint of boil
ing water and when dissolved dip the
brushes into It, using care not to cover
the backs of the brushes. Rinse In cold
water and dry in the sun or a current
of air. The quicker the brushes dry
the stiff er will be the bristles.
When making ginger cookies, fruit
cake, spice cake, or any dark cake,
use cold coffee for the liquid. It not
only adds flavor, but brings out the
flavor of the spices. .
Eat apples; they are good scaven
gers. Apples are said to be good for
brain, workers as they are rich In
phosphorus. They act upon the liver,
and as an old saw puts it, "An apple
a day keeps the doctor away." Surely
such medicine Is a pleasure to take.
Some one has said hat an apple be
fore retiring Is a good thing for the
teeth. Nature seems to recognize its
value for she is more prodigal with
It than with' any other fruit.
Calvin Coolidge says: "In these
days, children get about what they ask
for, not what the wise judgment of
their parents ' should dictate. Their
pockets are filled with money and out
theygo to purchase pleasure, all the
pleasure their easy money will buy.
The taste for pleasure is formed as the
taste for' thrift and work is killed,
later -on, in a natural development Of
things, the taste for pleasure becomes
so strong that it must be satisfied at
any cost. If crime has to be resorted
to, that price is paid."
CORRAL CREEK
By Corral Creek School.
Blanche Brown, Teacher.
The exceptionally good spirit of co
operation which is at all times mani
fested between the Corral Creek school
district and the school, was again evi
denced -last week. Mr. and Mrs. Bid
der served a hot chicken dinner to the
school. This is the second surprise
dinner which has been served to the
school this term by the school patrons.
Alice Baker, three-year-old daughter
ofvMr. and Mrs. Clyde Baker of Port
land," and grand daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Allison Baker of this place, died
at the home of her parents last week.
Funeral services were held in Portland
and interment was made here in Hood
View cemetery.
School visitors last week included:
Miss Josephine Graham, Eleanor Say,
Lena Reissner, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Rid
der and Lloyd Jones.
Miss Norma Carlson, who attends
Miss Catlin's school in Portland, i3
spending her vacation here, at the
home of her uncle and aunt," Mr. and
Mrs Elmer Jones.
Mr.-and Mrs. Doris Young of Wilson
ville spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs
Robert Graham.
Ralph Jones and Mrs. Blanche
Brown spent the week-end in Port
land. "
The school is planning a Christmas
entertainment to be given Friday night.
There will be a program and Christ
mas tree. Everyone is invited to at
tend. ' -
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Jones and fam
ily spent Sunday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. F. 't. Tooze.
Reed Graham was a business visitor
in Wilsonville, Saturday.
Western Literary Magaziffe"
The Lariat of Portland, Oregon,
makes its bow as a literary monthly,
the only publication of the kind west
of New York, "devoted- exclusively to
discussion and . criticism of literary
matters. Western writers will find it
of great interest as voicing western
standards of expression.
The west has never produced a writ
er of the degenerate school, but all
western fiction, poetry and dramas are
clean and wholesome, from the days of
the pioneers in literature down to the
present. The first number is for Janu
ary, 1923, and has just been published.
It is on fine paper and carries no ad
vertisements of trashy books.
Col. E. Hofer, for forty-five years a
newspaper man and writer, is the edi
tor. It is not a money-making ven
ture, but is intended- as an incentive'
to better literary style and writing.
It should find enthusiastic reception
and support. Editor. :
Teachers Banquet
(.Canby Correspondent)
The Canby High and Grommar
school teachers, met at an evening din
ner 'at the Cottage Hotel on Monday
December 18th, where they enjoyed
a feast of good things prepared by Mrs.
Fuller, proprietor.
It was a "Get Together" and good
fellowship meeting of the professors
and teachers of the various grades,
where social and pedagogic methols
were discussed.
Canby is fortunate this year in hav
ing secured the services of a corps of
efficient and progressive leachers,
whose cooperation and congenial
spirits gives to our school a new in
spiration, and hopeful outlook. They
recognize the fact that they are en
gaged in a noble work, and are zeal
ously endeavoring to make it a success.
Those present were: Prof, and Mrs.
R. G. White; Prof, and Mrs. H. H.
Eccles; Clarence Eid and wife; Emily
Spulak; Lucile Cogswell; Arleen Buch
man; Alta Mae Ramsby; D. G. Clark
and wife; and Avis F. Daugherty.
Subscribe for the Banner-Courier.
aU my iFrmtis
Christmas
and
Stent. tear
Dr. Freeze, Eye Specialist
207-8 Masonic Bldg.,
Oregon City, Ore.
":::--jk:::
$ FREE POCKET KNIFE
? Given with every pair of leather shoes costing
I $3.00 until Saturday.
MILLER'S SHOE STORE
419 Main St. , Oregon City.
A solid train of 14 cars of silk, valued
at $5,000,000, recently made an unbrok
en trip from Seattle to New York.
a O ""IjP if Eft 1 A
mm mmim i-
Si I
J r " : T,pr. rltT A
-9 iLWnuii-Iwvi-a
AVeefabtefrepafationEifAs-
" .;miint;ndtheFoodbYBeu&-
j tlngtheStomadiS andBowelscf
j it fWTlTttg
3 ChccffutoCSSanQitesi."--'
neitliarOpltftn,Morphincnor
KiflcraL Not xsaku" "V
Clan.
lis
Ahrfru..- ..
; Constipation an'T'
3 Wrisimess ana
Loss of Sleep
resulting mercfrorajtiManq'.
For Infants and Children.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castona
Always
Bears the
Signature
of
AW
In
Use
for Over
Thirty Years
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY.
Borft wait
dorft buzz-buzz
use
.."Bed Gown"
You don't have to waste time get
ting started these cold mornings.
You don't have to wait for the
starter to warm up your engine.
All you have to do is to fill your
tank with "Red Crown" and noth-
ing else.
,rRed Crown" vaporizes easily and
uniformly in zero weather- It de- -livers
100 power at the jump of
' the spark. -
Fill at the Red Crown sign at
service stations, garages and other
dealers.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
(California)
in
ii
Zerolene good
cold-teat oil flow
freely and lubri
cate perfectly in
rero weather
, protect the bear
inga increase
the power and
flexibility of your
engine.
Her SV.ost Appreciated Gift
Come in our store and see the display of Fine Electrical
Appliances suitable for gifts
SKATES
ROLLER. SKATES
Pair ..:
ICE SKATES
Pair
$1.93
S2.5D
A
fJUffilMft .- OVER
mm
TOA3TER
MOTOMETERS , M
A Motometer is the proper
gift for this time of year.
Prices
$2.50, $3.50, . $5.00,
$7.00 and $10.00
GLOVES
Acceptable gifts for the mo
torist who has to drive dur
ing this cold -weather. Lined
or unlined. . " -
$2.50, $3.00, $4.50
and $6.50
m , STOP SIGNALS !
Give your car a Christmas
present. Stop signals $3.00
REAR VIEW MIRRORS
$2.50, $3.00, $3.50, $3.75
REMINGTON
POCKET KNIVES
The kind the boy has always
wanted. Give .him one for
Christmas. '
HEATERS
Just received a shipment of
Electric Heaters. They will
successfully heat any small
room.
Price
$5.00 and up
ROBES
Robes that are - guaranteed
not to shed or fade. This is
robe weather.
PRICES
$5.75 to $20.00
g CHRISTMAS TREE LIGHTING OUTFITS
B EXTRA LAMPS any color
-.$3.50 up Wi
.25c each H
DAY AND NIGHT
SERVICE
C.G.Miller Co
IWCOttPOQTeD- j
EVEHYNEHJOFAN AUTOMCBLS
PHONE 77
OREGON CITY
cold days Leave your car with us for storage
LL-
A"
V