Oregon City Enterprise publish' Evry Friday t E. BRODII. Editor and Publish. Eater at Oregon City. Or, Foal offlea a eondlas mr. a.ibacr'Dtlon Rat VMr H"l Month. I i Twa Xiontml .26. Ob Trial Subscription, Two Month -2 Advertising Rate on application. th mattar will reeolva our attention. Subscriber will find the date of ex piration tumped on their paper fol lowing their name. If last payment I not credited, kindly notify u. and the matter will receive our attention. Advertising Rate on application. THE NEW Today we tand at the YEAR portal of a new year. A new year with all its possi bilities of good and evil, success and HQH C0ST Altor the freight had failure. What are we going to dolQF LV(nq heen paid, and the com with It? "God alone know" sonu mission man pereen- will ay. In the thoroughly human Will ill mi- iuumf"i; effort to place the responsibility on j --. . i. E-.. . . aMAhlin(. i God. Providence, or Fate, according to the point of view of the Individual. But we are large')' masters of our own destiny, and soclallstc theories to the contrary notwithstanding, wc are also responsible for our environment True, with many of u the material environment la neither Inspiring nor elevatiiug, and the sordid circum stance of life compel u to move and have our being amidst surroundings that seem to exist only to afford sta tistic to settlement worker, a fo. example the family which through scanty means is compelled to rent a home In the cheapest and possibly the vilest part of the city. But there Is something far better than mere physical environment, there Is the spir itual nvlronment of the sou.. We may each one of us provide our souls with Ihe purest thoughts of all the ages, nd If we strive to do that, noth n 1 - lng la more sure Utan that our mater-, ial development will cease to affect us. Nay, It will follow most Inevitably that even our physical environment inai evcu i'".--iv -" a tnr !),. hotter Rut the', great majority of us , live midst com-lthe people the benefit of the big bar-! . . .. II ..J . ulHnirl . . u la funi. lortauie surruuuuiuso, mu "i B'"- out of life all. If not more than we give. Why not let us resolve to do more for the other fellow this coming year? The trouble with most of our resolu tions Is that they are too selfish. They concern only ourselves, or at the most those who are dependent upon us, and in that sense part of ourselves. Most of our personal weaknesses arise from the fact that we are too e'f-centered, and consequently mis the uplift that comes from the other fellow's well meant good will. Wheth-! er Christ be the Son of God, a all real Christians believe. or merely a Todllke man of divine attributes, at gome others teach, the one great, sub lime and indisputable fact remains, ;inains, that He taught us that we are merefy ; I part of the whole, and that no man : ,i. . .. 1.1 l t ,..;M pamam. can live to himself. If we will ! ber that eternal fact. we shall be more : careful of our conduct and attitude, towards society, and realize that our , vnrHR. our actions, and even our ap- pareL are exerting an effect on so- ciety, and Influencing for better or j worse the citizens of the futue. Tbere-1 fore let us each resolve to think of fore let us eacn resoive to tuiua u ihA ntner lei ow mis cannuK jeai. jl . will nv ua. individually, and will solve every economic question that now taxes the body politic. . n . . i mi i r 1 . . . I. - ( ... I of rHWI nwoc uer iuc ui.i , . . i """"i'i J", " ' ; .m - nnlAv!n puuuc in uc cu;uiuBtue grade ot petty onenses is oispou-; the Ion? hoped for Parcel Post. That.ed of by one criminal court. Just it has been sorely needed these many think of that being true of 1,500,000 vra the swollen dividends of the : i'e1'1?- . . ,. i , .- express companies have annually tes- titled, dividends the size of which the companies will never see again. Ev-' en now, before the post office Is fair-! .... . . . i lv on the lob. express rates have been i v.- ' ruced somewhat I nothing stronger from the mayoral " GOOD ROADS rado spent con- Ve post office department is lay-jp(n than gU(;h denat,ired epithets as slderable money lin ing dovv a set of rules, based uion ..BOamp There ls orle man at ,aiit proving the roads of the state In 1111, postal expedience, and common sense, I Q) , Qni, Igan(1 whfjM votabuary and as a result 6,000 automobiles vis regulating shipments of food-: rould anJ wouM gupp,y far Btronger j ltel the state last year, and accord stuffs through .'Je mails, which every w d b , th ml.y0T t DaCe. ' to statistics of the Denver Cham housekeeper sho'd become familiar ( with. If the new Ik,-: Is to be a factor in lowering the cost of Improving the standard of living. F0 example, j eggs may be sent any dlsta.ee n en- fefeo wwv x -- closed In secure, wreck-proo., car-j tons: vegetables subject to uc. will be carried within certain limit, fresh meat only within the limits ot Now Here's IK' 3 and Here Happy and Prosperous 1913 to you. Have you ever thought how a bank account in a good reliable bank like this would help you to lighten your work. Have you ever considered the safety and convenience of it. You can open an account with a few dollars. Why'not start the New Year with one? The Bank of Oregon City THE OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY ..... ...h....r' tone: but cured, wilt ed, dried or milked moat and fish will ho carried any distance. .. HV..W thnt the stat f''1'' bring into W any . . .in market, which ' or rarniiioui-e . .. ftr will not In.' the least 01 iii"J "" reaching result. ,f n, termers' wives and ilailgmen. ... i... .Midlines egg, nd other farm prvduce to specl.il customers. All that Is entailed I the buying of . ...(. .iI...t inn. POVI1 'V . ! carton. ban, and otner nun-.. teria'a. together with an accurate knowledge of mall train.. the hour of mall distribution and col lection, postal charges, etc. If llos IMatt. for many yeur sen ,.., from. New York, and head of the express trust, could know what the express tn.st. could Know " deluU.ta0M 0f the capitalistic t has happened to the companies h. valuable ener fathered, he would doubtless turn . over In his grave, to use an old but forcible saying. deducted. n eastern farmer re Ifige UCllUCttHt, an f" j ctlved a iittie 0Ver 30 cents a bushel , . . . w 1 ...1 thl I raised thts ior mo -.! "- - -,eason. He went to the market town a few day later, and In a spirit of curiosity, traced his beans to one of the big retailers. There he fouud his JO cent beans selling at 15 cents a quart, which figures out JI SO a bu shel. A recent magailne artielo says that the farm products raised In this country last year brought the farmer about $t,000.000000. The consumers paid 113.000,000.000 for it. Some where between the farmer and the ultimate Durchaser the price was doubled, and a billion dollars slapped on to make a god job of It. Of course, mere i " , ..... ,niifturine expense. anJ i Of course, there is a legimate soil legitimate profit for all necessary ts based on the assumption that we middlemen. but the proportion noted , nave ,low discharged our trusteeship bove Is colossal robbery. So far the j t0 ,he Ktlipiuo pwile and our n-siwa-consumer It leaving it all to the law. J sit,iiity for them to the world, and i. . n,o,.,tr to the farmers, but ; fht thev are now prepared for self- auu w " 1 - ----- : wln never be any effective re- j dress until the consumer taaes ow : ters Into his on hands, and evolves ' n-hi.-h hnll dn I system ot luiti M unf, - -" - - i !, . .- .v. ami vst five I yestg (0r wnica our cvuiui; , ou. Good or bad harvests effect the'ar0U8e." and would amount in iau. city dweller mighty iittle. Farmers' ! (0 a disguised policy of scuttle." As combinations, brokers, commission men and others, all unite to keep up j high prices, and gouge the ultimate consumer. IRASCIBLE Probably the most de outiio lii'htful letter! uivno r.iVNOR 1 Khtrul tetter writer in Ameri-j I lea Mavor Ga.vnor of New York has' ! .iii,'hi remarkable talent not1 i , n,-n.iniee his friends, but rei,uke his crtiics. He has been , .. . iraScible. but none of his letters warrant the criticism. Aers left with a brood to support and ,,r hnnirrv fur Dublicity. de-i educate, and no funds to do It with. nounced the community in which he : n,iiivn "Thp vestibule of of course is to ucu. ------ ( Nevertheless, the devil takes : ' ! many 'disguises. ..,., r.ovP Mm9. Is not ' .. burd uncomnlain-! ye( fae ,g yery charitabie. i , , , , . .. :,.i mi.:n niavJ ! replying to his clerical critic, the may-.It or says: . There are baj people in Green-' point as everywhere else, we musi , do the best we can to turn them from . ,avl j gee one clergyman ' ... . . . , . . . In our immediate neighborhood says llJCll C H ft w-i CT. that Oreenpoint or urookun, is iu-; "vestibule of hell.- j What a charitable soul be must be, i .i. .-...1. i i i. ra.f.rld , I ue irjiu la ftuuwu uj luc vj.. . i that Brooklyn is more free from crime and vice than any otner equal : - populauon in the world. .puiauou in me in. , ih ent re rr in na bus ntss abovi , or inlnxl him ties lOVi . ..... J: ' Aaa j.et yjgj.g are gcjmpg WD0 caM I!rookivn tne -vesubule of hell." We , must be charitable and kind to them, and try to reclaim them from their ; uncharity and their propensity to: uear laise witness. .... These exasnerat nz cr t cs araw i , j THE BUTTER The telegraph di-1 TRUST patches have been run or j tne butter irust investiga- - - j tlon these last few days, and general , b IquI four Hava tinrl cenerl ! satisfaction is being everywhere ex-! pressed that the Kgin coterie has at j :'-ast been called to account. As a; OliKClON flITY EXTKW1MMRB. VHIUAY. .TAN, a.. 'J, M I utsliy kt I - - - - , , . , "UU'd ,0' . 1 V r . ? ..: J.,r f of o goiornnient. .,, that producer was robbed ou the one hand and tho consumer nibbed U'I worse v..i ih . exercise of the most oruin- jury Intelligence would put thl bucca neering middle man out of business nil rely. Oursonu box. friends are loud In their gwndlira 0U. which ha really reduced the price of oil. wbeu they might do tlltlnlieiy more by getting after tho parasite which fattens on a real estate option, or tho cornering of butter or crops. These parasite are not necessarily resi dent of Nc York, they cau be fouud UCtll Ol .e IV. mKh m.arer home THE DEMOCRATS When Governor AND . PHILIPPINES Wilson was elected presl dent of the l ulled States the new dtspatche told u of bonfire celebra tions to celebrate the event from one end of the rhllliplues to the other. It Is doubtful If any person I more competent to cpeak on thl Important subject than Is I'rosldcut TafL He was their first Anierlea.it governor, and studied sympathetically and ju dicial both tho possibilities and tb limitations of the Klllpluos. Mr. Taft is verr much opposed to Indepvn t ... ... -.t i.. hi. j-mmiinli'AtUin to m - mr, auu i m. rnnuress. says that the "Joues Hill' government as well as national sov- erelgnlty . mese ciarts. "are absolutely without foun- ,n inuf ttli-ntlon." Even a uauuw, - - j- ,,r.,c..nt ,1 ...-I u rii t io ti of future lnde- prudence" woold "n tard progress by .u. . I. ...... un.l ilisiinll-r It WOllId it uir proof that our task of educating tni Kilijiinoa Is still far from finished the President poluts out that at present. under liberal franchise privileges, only about 3 per cent of them vote, and only 5 per cent are able to read.'1 PENSIONING At first thought It MOTHERS does seem a though paying mothers to look after their own children was carry- lng things to an extreme, but when one stops to thmk 0I the many moth- is assumes a totally different color Nor is the suM-ct wanting for ilifT.-r prices of onlnion. Conk Onintv nf - - J I I linols pays K5.UU0 to Institutions for ... I j the care of dependent children. How diB-'mm h hetter it would li If th.it num. ey were uald nut in ln.lk,..r,r m.h..r- t0 lol,k afler ,helr own n(.sh am ,jlu)( t. ... ... . . . .. . seems so absurd to take a child ! from its natural nurse and buila lll!itit,itj0I13i anJ ' ' . . m,.,h, , i ,o ao ""f "urk ,1,at the m,11 only be too happy to do In the first ... instance were It only made possible .... The expense would be infinitely I.-bh , ,ne ,all(ams ' M. liUIS haH enacted an ririUrinnrn - ............ which allows pensions for dependent mothers, the id'-a will travel, and l! is sincerely hoped that the great slat . i 1 h i - . - Of Orei'tin will f:,ll in lim. ll' i"n soldiers who merely take long , dances on being wounded. Why not do a much for the poor woman who tl"" - rf,1' es down la the valley of the shadow ut death, to the end that men might be born. . duii oenouw -tk ... me man- oi i.oio- her of Commerce, no less than U,- 700,000 was left In the state by those viHitors. Ar!,1(, a9 one will lll(.re ,M nQ j,. nyin the fact that there is uj ini, u,e i i an eiiiK'ii . tionaf anrt m(rai ajj W(,n a() monvjr vaiue io gooa roads. Probably the biggest reason why boys and girls nil' not stay on the farm, ls because of the ghastly iaolation which bad roads iinpos Improve the roailn and make it possible for the families of the fanners to have the social In tercourse which the normal human demands, and you will settle for all time the problem of how to keep the young folks on the farm. The state of Oregon has a great deal to learn in this direction, fiefflshness, and a total disregard of the other fellow, has led to road districts refusing to pa.us any levy which might temporar ily hurt them. On the other hand we have districts that cheerfully tax them selves to the limit, not merely that they themselves might benefit, but that the state at large might be able to attract the tourists, to whom good roads are the big attraction. IS WIL80N A When I hear Judge, DEMAGOGUE? reason upon the an alogy of the relation ship that used to exist between work , men and their employer a genera tion ago I wonder If they have not opened their eyes to the modern world. You know, we have a right to expect that Judges will have their i luimuiri i ruiBPti i mil n''" .h he ' t .,,er,d .h. ,.!. 1.." Into the r (union - ismrr iiaiii""" "" -- .iroln. the nowcm of the legl-htUve l uneu s.in- - ' tho courts Is to administer the law atrlctly It stand". It Is dlltliult to m how Judges.-no matter how thoroughly their eve may be open, can alter the law as It stand, even though tho law they Interprot hs not Itself been weakened. The real remedy He not with the Judges, but with the lawmaker. The president elect has the reputation o! being a student of government auu economic. It I difficult to renin die the accepted character of the man. wlih uch a statement. WASHINGTON The Oregon rancher RANCHER might do worse than keep tab on what hi Washington neighbor l doing. The Aberdeen World tells of five carloads of fine young cattle, mostly heifer, shipped In from Molilalia to be turn ed Into the logged off land section of the Wlshkah Valley, for the purpose of tock raising. It I the first large experiment to be tried In Chehall County, but as the winter forage I practically ufflclcnt to carry the herd through, a big profit on the un dertaking I confidently expected. Several additional carload are tu be bought and turned loose In the same wy. Several Aberdeen men of cap ital are said to be Interested In the enterprise. Then .again. In Iteardon. Wash., the West Cresent Cheeso Company imWlshed the facts that In the last year the company had sold a total of 29.i!2 pounds of cheese, which brought In $-'.. S-58 01. Thl reuit was made with the milk of les than seventy five cows, and average t'O for each cow. And all thla In logged off pasture. PURE The almost universal cry of WATER Oregon City i pure water. A large numtwr of her rlt liens have petitioned the Commercial tj ub and the Live Wire Association to lend their aid to the end that the citv vo'e bonds and a proper supply be located, purchased or appropriated and connected with the city's water mill 11.1 The Commercial Club, through the I.lve Wlros Association and the Pub licity Department have been carrying on an advertising campaign both with In and without our city and the result of their labor are everywhere appar ent. but there Is still one great work to be accomplished before Oregon City can stand alone before the world and make people sit up and take m tlio. We must have an absolutely pure water supn'y from every lnt ot ... i i ... ... view, aim villa a new cny aiiiiiiiMHiru tion coining In with the new year good resolutions on the part of every one with their shoulder to the wheel will bring about the desired results Meanwhile, boil the water you drink. As nports come In from district after uistrli t that have levied special road taxes, we may feel like rejolc ln; oer the prospects of better roads fur 1S13. There Is no greater ticud In ClacVamas County. We wish nil our many readers u Happy New Year. ADVERTISING TALKS NO. 8 my Kalph Kaye.) Kvery tli'iu you advertise whether in the newspapers, magazines, hlll boardH, street cars or by word of mouth you give to tho public a cer tain commodity or render n certain service for a given consideration. Woo betide the business man who does not live up to his piiliilshed promises. The public takes his statements on faith and believes ho will live up to them. 11 he (toes make good, his promises he has secured an asset of inestimable value which nobody can take from hltn Confidence, 'ub lic Confidence. Confidence In his i;ooi!h bin Htore his business policy confidence In himself. Hut If he does not make good be Is worse off many times than the sudden ending of bankrupt cy. Oblivion is merciful. In time be becomes a derelict drift ing in t ha wnt em nf hnnlneHH Ntrnnmi. latlon a business leper who will suf- rer a living death and not notice hli disfigurement as he sinks deeper and deeper Into the mires and quicksands of 1'iibllc IJlsgiiHt and Mistrust from where none ever return or care to. EducHd Lions. Although it tnke four yxeni of edu cation to prepare a lion for clrcti lift It Increases the animal's life fivefold. Learning th Rulss. Little KMe - l.el play keeping hoiie. I'll lie Hie Inrijr of the house. Utile Margie-And what will I be? I.lttle Klsie- Oh. you'll Ih- iinollier ludy come to call on me. and I'll pri lend to be glad to see you. -Chicago New. A Curiosity About Ecllpso. The average number of total and partial eclipses in ny one year Is four, the maximum kovoii mid the minimum two. There Is nothing really M-ciillar ill this except the fai-t that where only two occur they i,re always Ixith of the run. There are more solar than lunar eclipses, hut the huh. Ik-Iiix no much larger than the nirlh or iiks.ii. the shadow terminate at s Hot and Is visible ouly hIiiiik a narrow track, while the lunar olmctirntlnn In fro. quetitly visible over half a continent i.t:t. FORUM OF THE PEOPLE HOMl NULC. KHTACADA. De.'. ST. ltt3-(Kdl-tor of Ihe Knlcrpiise I In my plan of district home rule In Ih mad q" l Ion. 1 do not think It wis to mpba Ke the hondlng lemur too tnuigly. There- ar other (.alure really tnor Important. I wish Ihn road district tu have all tlm power that school dl.lrlct enjoy. 1 hava written seven cctluu ol the bl! and ruiiiuuinceil tint eighth. Hectloii t. I'mvlilc that all road dlalilci are Imdle with power to sue and to b sued. ttts lbm J. I'rovldca 'or eliH-llou of three director and clerk, and Iheap polnliiient of ihe supervisor by tlm bmird of director. Section S. Provide that tho voter of lh district shall meet onco a year, the meeting lo b called th Annual Itoad Meeting, and that special meet lugs may be held. Section i. Provide time of holding Annual Hond Meeting and mate the quorum. Heel ion 5. Provide for tho Uh t ton of tho officer. S.'cllou 0. Pnivldu for levying taxes, give rtwd meeting power to direct ihe expenditure of tho money, provide for adjourned meeting of the Annual Itoad Meeting, and the maimer In which busiins may como before th meeting. Scvtlou 7. lilve tho qualification of a li'K-J voter which mut bo tho qualification a laid down In Hec. H, Art. 2. of tho Oregou constitution a ameitdod Nov. ft. ISI2. Tho present district tax law I unconstitutional a It put restrict Ion ou voting ttol countenanced by the constitution. In Section X. I am providing that a district may vote bond by a rigidly guarded vole at an Annual Itoad Meet ing, or a pecl Hireling called (or that put pose. 1 have nut thought this sir Hon out yet. In other sections I shall further do fine tho power of the rad meetings: the Ker ami d ul lea of tho board ol director, the duties of tho clerk and supervisor. It will be a bill of cou slderablo length necessarily, but It will bo patterned closely on school district orgaiiUattnu. I propose to arrange It so that all lax money rais ed on the property of tho district shall be spout In tne district, and 10 leave the county court with as few trouble as possible. I believe wo wl'l gel tnoro and bet ter ronds (or the money under sucil a law than we do now. It will caus people tc take a greater Interest In roads than they do now Thoro I Utile danger but too people will take Interest in the matter a largo um of money will bo spent snd niauy people In tho dlstlcl will get employ ment. I believe there will bo two dollar of ipeclal tax voted under such a system to one that 1 voted now. 1 tlunk that a county I too largo a unit to vote bonds for roads, but I I eel some districts will vote bonds a they will know where the mouey will be expended and who will spend It. It will be directly under their rye. Then too. I am not limiting a dls trlct to a ten nilll tax. I am leaving that to their discretion. H they wish to levy .'o mill It I their own businesi. Please write me suggestion. K. M Cli.U Tht Smsll Girl' Cost A dlstliii tlie fen I u re nf tho cools for children Is the umr of belts The lat ter ciiitilst nf patent leather, sunlo or silk Hashes. Mimt of the 111 sro put 00 wiernl Inches Im-Ihw tho waist line, somewhat III Iturslan style Some aro In Norfolk style, and others aro but toned over the left shoulder and Mulsh ed ou with a lielt Other favored style 4 HOligl, IN IIHOAlH MrrH AND l ). time the single revers and an In rn or are In plain double brei -feet Corduroys und velvets nra w ii nd nre In nnvy blue, brown a for children from two lo six y. lu white for those from one. three yenrs. Cbluchllliis. doul cloths, gllielllie. wool veloun cheviots and houcle ure ah nnvy blue, brown and gray. 1 pictured Is of old rose brontb lc nied with n dark brown fu Nitrroir bunds of tho pelt exte the front. In golden brown this model would lie extreme' and serviceable. Chintss Crsps. Thl fabric 1 extremely fnt . and mnny pretty articles t . from It. When It become soiled strong lather of boiling w white soap. Allow this to -wash (he cmpe by presNlng It v : hands. Hluse It In anlty wnti the colors and dry In th open Wash the crepe a quickly slide to prevent tho color fr Olng. A Light Attack. "Have you any lunrrled t "Nope. One wns engnged one il 'he didn't take."-HoustoQ Post 1 1 " ' - . leil -4 IbsoMelyPore Tlic Woman Makes flic Home Sho makes It best who, looking after tlio culiruiry dcp irtmont, turns her back resolute ly upon tinliculthful, or even suspicious, food accessori-S. Slio is economical; sho knows that true economy docs not consist in tho uso of inferior mcut, flour, or baking powder. Sho is an earnest advocate of homo made, homo buked food, and has proved tho truth of tho statements of tlio experts that tho best cook inn in tho world today b dono with Royul Buking Powder. All Kinds ol Monsy, lllsi k dropped Into While orti - o and Invited hi in to dliiner. staling that he bcid "all kinds of liiuiiry." While ac cepted tho Invitation, and tltvy dined well -so well Hint wbeu tho cbm-k was preM-oliil tu lilat'k he gnxx and III a hoarso whlper roqursiMl a bu of While. 'Thl. cbo. k amoiiul to t Ml." bo etplslued. "ami I'to gel only f I Ul " "Vou ubl you hail all kinds of mou y." While replied dl.gu.ledly. Ho I have." Itlai k n-plll. Willi drawing his kmIoii from bis puck el. "I've got a dollar bill, a fifty cent piece, a quarter, a dime, a nickel and a penny. Now, bow many utore klud ciiiild yuii riiwt a fellow tu bavtT" Kausus Illy Hr Helen Musa to Veronica Hughe, land In iitou 3. township 3 outh. rnngx i east; l. KUanor M. Aldrlch lo Itobert 8. Untune land In t;nrgo Crow l). 1. C., lownshlp S south, rang I east; 1 1,1 Si. II. K. Noble and wife In Kasiern Investment Company, limited, lots 31 and 32. blin k S. In Pleasant Hill Mollies, II. Cbnrle O. Korter and wlfo to U K Mem-fee land In cllon J town ship s south, rango 3 east: I2.1W0. Kdward Wormdahl and wlfo lo Max Hill and wife, laud In iHlion m. township 1 south, range east; 12.4ml. I. II Meliefeo Blul WHO lo nimr Kali Company, land In ectliin J. lownshlp g south, range 3 east; 110. i. t. it. in in T. C. Howell. lot II and' 14 In Mock : ,1,,I",",:..'I K N llosell ami who hi i. ,11 lot 1 and 2 llladstono; 110. Mount Hood Hallway a roer pany to the Portland Hallway. Light it Power Company, lu Multnomah and Clackiiiiiaa Counties. al water lK)wer. dum. bridges, etc.; l. 11..,, i ll.u.il Itnllwar llevetopillellt Company to Portland Hallway, Light t Power Company, lot l ami fis hery; 112 75. It. It. .Mi-tcaKo and wife to h. H. MiMirehouse, lot i and 5, blin k 9, Oak drove Park. 1 10. W. N. Urown lo C. H. H"a and wlfu laud In sci Uon :!''. township I sutilh, range 3 east; 12,000. Joseph II. Mine and wife lo Thom as J. Leonard, li acres In sirtlon 211, township 3 south, ruiige 6 east; II MM) Hhermiin tiels to Joseph II. Hiite. li acres In section ':. township 3 1 Booth, range 6 eimt; 11,1)00. tltlllle 1'rleHti r and wife to Chiitin-1 cey K. Itiirne)-. land In aertlnti II. j township 3 south, range i east; JiiuoO. Mury Irving to Harriet Cbulmers nml Jiiiiii-h It. Irvlria all land ow ned i by grantor In Clnekamiis County, II. ! I.yillu .swunsoti lo Hoy l umplm I and wife tmrt elnliil 4ti. se-tliifl HI!. towiiKhln '2 Hootb rfiniri 1 wet 1100 H. I.. Trulllniter and wife lo William I II. Husbands, hind In section 21, 22. i i i. I - r tl. u - -1 I ' - i' -rl , ' " ' ' "'r - I" !. - I .1 f,-.. REAL ESTATE ji S J K Hlda and wl(o tu I'onlsti Kugoiio A Ksatoru Hallway Conix right of way section rtt, losn.bip i south, tang I oast, 1 Peter M. Moyrr aud wlf, to )V joneo lauu in nunton li. u f, i0i ship ft, rango 1 oaat; !2,4uu j Kdward H. Hart and wlfo to ,. bert and Kill Hurger. land lu s-tk 3u, township 1 south, ranto 1 wm i 110. l.ydia and 8l!aa Wright tu ClsckJ nuts Hi'iiibrrn Hallway l'umit, right of way sections 3o sail ." tosn.hip i south, rango 1 r.t, i. i liala V. MoKgor and Wlto q Sr. uel 8. Wilson tract In seiiion . tnwushlp south, range 3 ia.i, ;, V M. f banco aud wire lu il.tgsr, t). ONeol. trad & In Multuuou. Acrrgo; io. i Kdwln l.lnstedt to ticorkd U t4'. lauilsoit land In am-iiuit 31, ion 3 aoulh, range 3 tail. I.'.tto. t Hoberi Vorpshl and wlfo to A. (.t Phelps and wlti, laud In se ln li township 3 south, rango I tu U.Soo. , j Johi) Helnsmaii to Arthur lleravi. Wluk, land lu aoctlun J, toul, 3 south, range 1 east; l, , Joseph Itrlf and wife lo Artt. Ilenuan U Ink. land D. U C, tui ship 3 south, rango I root; 1 ' l.lllle Wink tu Arthur ll.-ruu Wink, land In sr. t Ion losmhlj ; soiilh, range I east; It. i lira Hlyte and wife to H.-rmi Wluk, laud In erllons 1 and township 3 south, rango 1 emi. I!. . Arthur Herman Wink lu Jul: lleltietiisn, land Joseph Parrot! 1) '., ('., towiishlu 3 south, range I est ' It- f Arthur Herman Wluk lo U! i Wink, land lu Joseph Parrot t ll. i ('., township 3 south, range I eat, I Arthur Herman Wink tu tits li ter and wife, land lu Joseph I'um . i, I.. l. lownshlp 3 (011111, rang t east; 11. I Henry II. (ihllngor and wife i Mrs Paulino K. HchwarU. 3o Ut easterly from the north east tort of Mix k ITJ lu On-gou City; l.'i T. P. Channan and wife to Ili-rmt; l-lsnisii Miid wlfo lot 2, block . liiinelle falls; :mo. j( K'thel K. Ham to Klla Ham. Isnd ; siition IS, township 2 south, nt. 3 ei.i; II. i llesnle L Hosi and W, A. It I It. I.elmnBti and wife ois I!, ll. blc l. Wtllauietln Palls; It 00. (ieorto U Parrlslt to Portland, I ene & Knstem Hallway Company, i' divided miesllltn'nth Interest bVi Houth OswegoJIO. i W. A. Il'inlley and wife to Por'li Kugeiin t Kastern Hnllway Coiiipsi; lots fi m il D, also south half of k T and 0, block 21. Ilnlton recnrdu; I Hnruh J. Parrlsh lo Portland I gene te Kastern Hallway Coiupnnr.n' divided one sixteenth Interest lili". :n, Houth t)sweKo; lit). The Oregon Healty Cumpntiy John M. r!ott and II O. Colton. trr C, 7, K, 1 and 13, Foxier Acres; HO H. K. I'remllss and wife to t Northweatern Trust Company 2i' acre In sec tions 21 and 2M, lownst 1 south, range 2 east; li.)i?2i. ', VIUn V lipi-i sed e"i k'"' ,. -,,-, , . - i i '' '' 'I eu.bi, . . ,"' ; - '.'. . I,. ' I I'll! ,.' I it:-!. V frit ; i "-i In-.: ,.. . --.-! m i,, ,i , i tr.i u ...... i . i- ( i ;-i! '- r 7 -r t I SI I I I.I,. 1, '!.. . .. t -. -, r iff j i , . .1 C:.!. .. .. i j u e. ,,1 i I" ""i . . I....'. K 1 (.,"t.i- .,..n i' .... iueuiica " - 4 - Mln PU III rnone'