Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, August 09, 1912, Page 2, Image 2

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

    2
SGOOP
THE CUB
REPORTER
Know supposing that)
hMEiee is a tvm oh
no ADVANCE HIM TO
SECOND- INSTEAD OF
IT&YlNG-Tb KILLTHEI
lb'fAlU-"TOU WOULD
MORNING ENTERPRISE
OREGON CITY, OREGON
E. E. BRODIE, Editor and Publisher.
"Entered as second-class matter Jan
uary 9, 1911. at the post office at Oregon
City, Oregon, under the Act of March
3, 1879. "
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One Year, by mail $3.00
Six Months, by mail 1.60
Four Months, by mail 1.00
Per Week, by carrier .10
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
8
S THE MORNING ENTERPRISE
S is on sale at the following stores
J every day:
S Huntley Bros. Drugs
S Main Street.
$ . J. W. McAnulty. Cigars
8 Seventh and Main.
"S E. B. Anderson
$
3
$ Main, near Sixth. S
M. E. Dunn Confectionery
S Next door to P. O. 3
8 City Drug Store
Electric Hotel.
$ Schoenborn Confectionery
Seventh and J. Q. Adams.
3
Aug. 9 In American History.
1788 Adoniram Judsou, noted mission
ary iu India, born at Maiden. Mass.;
died 18o0.
1812 Americans under Colonel James
Miller defeated a force of British
and Indians at Maguaga. Mich.,
near Detroit.
1814 War with Creek Indians ended.
18G2 Battle of Cedar Mountain. Va.:
Confederates under General "Stone
wall" Jackson attacked General N.
B. Banks' army and were repulsed.
1905 First session of the Russo-Japanese
peace conference held at
Portsmouth. N. H.
1911 General G. W. Gordon, com
mander in chief of the United Con
federate Veterans, died at Memphis.
: Tenn.; born 1830.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
' (From oon today to noon tomorrow.)
Sun sets 7:05, rises 5:05. Kvening
stars: Mercury. Venus. Mars, Jupiter.
Morning star: Saturn.
THE HIGH PARTY LEVEL MAIN
TAINED Sound principles and manly fidelity
to them are the best things connect
ed with a political party. It would be
better to go to temporary defeat than
to surrender right purposes and
ideals. Such a defeat would be cer
tain to be temporary only. In open
ing his speech of acceptance Presi
dent Taft congratulated the party on
having wisely and courageously met
a crisis in its life. He referred to its
whole attitude in the Chicago conven
tion, not specially to his own nomin
ation. He makes no claim to be in
dispensable. The critical strain was
on the party itself, and President
Taft describes it in these words: "A
faction sought to force the party to
violate a valuable and time-honored
national tradition by entrusting the
power of the presidency for more than
two terms to one man, and that man
one whose recently avowed political
views would have committed the par
ty to radical proposals involving dan
gerous changes in our present consti
. tutional form of representative gov
ernment and our independent judici
ary." The party was true to itself in
meeting the crisis, which the presi
dent holds to he the main considera
tion. In any case the party is pre-
Trusts' Growth Has Added to
Wealth of Country
By TALCOTT WILLIAMS, Dean of School of Journalism
Columbia University
S economic initiative decreasing in the United States through the
1
creation of great combinations and great corporations ? One
test must be the number of separate firms doing business in
, " the United States.
The general organization of trusts and railroad combinations on a
modern scale began in the eighties. Since then the number of firms
in the country has grown from a million to a million and a half.
Plainly, taking the growth of the number of firms, the OPPOR
TUNITIES OF INDIVIDUAL INITIATIVE HAVE IN
CREASED and not diminished.
K K
ECONOMIC QUALITY REQUIRES FAIR, EQUAL AND INCREAS
ING OPPORTUNITY FOR ECONOMIC INVESTMENT. THE WEALTH
OF THE COUNTRY HAS DOUBLED SINCE THE .1EIGN OF THE
GREAT CORPORATIONS BEGAN.
served for future usefulness.
A ne'.v party has been formed to
exploit the third term candidate.
Twice the Republican party in na
tional convention lias rejected the
idea. In the first attempt a great
man failed to get the party approval.
He was not a clamorous candidate,
nor a personal participant in the
movement. No radical program was
put forward by him or in his name.
He manfully accepted the conven
tion's decision and helped elect the
nominee. But after going into the
convention and losing, the third term
candidate of today, who is not a great
man in the opinion of a majority of
the American people, has bolted the
party of which he recently asked the
highest honor. The thTrcl term pre
tensions will now be tried at the bal:
lot box, but not backed by the Re
publican party, which will proceed
unimpaired on its high mission in its
own way. A great party victory has
therefore been won already. The Re
publican party - proved again at Chi
cago that it is true to the best inter
pretation of political duty, responsi
bility and sound progress. Novem
ber can be trusted for an intelligent
judgment of these fundamental facts.
TEMPORARY STREETS
The Enterprise hoped that the in
itiative taken by the property own
ers of North Main street in demand
ing hard surface pavement would be
the signal for the property owners of
Seventh street to emulate the exam
ple of the down-town citizens. But
apparently this hope was a vain one.
Many leading property owners of
Seventh street have petitioned the
city council to macamadmize this
thoroughfare and at the expense of
the entire city, and these owners of
property have remonstrated against
a lasting pavement that would have a
decent wearing surface and would
not put the city to the useless ex
panse of annual repairs.
. Unless the Enterprise is mistaken
the result will he that Seventh street
will get a new macadam street, but
at the expense of the property owners
for we do not believe the street com
mittee or the council will agree to
saddle the entire city with the cost
of the improvement, in view of the
fact that City Attorney Story holds
that the property owners are liable
for not more than 50 per cent of the
value of the property, treating each
lot as a unit in assessing the cost.
It is painfully evident that the re
monstrating property owners are not
looking at this situation far-sightedly.
Twenty-one years ago Seventh street
was improved with macadam, and
since that improvement was made
Oregon City has expended thousands
of dollars to keep the street in re
pair. In recent years the street has
had the appearance of a country road
and not the best of country roads
either. The owners of property on
this street have had to pay their
share of the repair cost, and if the
street is macadamized again, in com
pliance with the wishes of the prop
erty owners, they will continue to
stand for a percentage of the repair
bills.
Taking the figures of the remon
strators themselves, who say the cost
of hard surface to each lot will be
$227, for argumentivfe purposes, we
see nothing exorbitant about the sum.
The Bancroft-bonding act permits
property owners to pay for municipal
" MORNING. ENTERPRISE" FRIDAY, AUGUST
Lesson No.
(vvUEN X PITCH TH& II
bau-Voo Bunt
AMD BEAT NT TO
Fi?5T FORClNCrME.
TO THROW THERE
AMD UETTHE MAN
( OH F1RST.-T--AKE SECTISl
improvements in 10 years, if desired,
and we are loath to believe that any
of the remonstrators would be finan
cially crippled by having to pay $22.70
per annum and 6 per cent -interest for
each lot.
It is high time that Oregon City
took its place along with the other
towns of the Willamette Valley and de
manded hard surface in every section.
It is an almost invariable sequence i
that hard surface pavement carries
with it increasing property values
that equalize the cost of the improve
ment. The whole matter has been re
ferred to the street committee to re
port to the council at a special meet
ing this week. It may be that the
committee will not take the bull by
the horns and recommend durable
pavement, in the face of the petition
of the property owners.. However,
the day will come in Oregon City
when public pride and a growing sent
iment will influence the city council
to put a veto on macadam streets
where the importance of the street
to be improved is sufficient reason
for a refusal to agree to an improve
ment that is at best, a temporary
make-shift.
Dr. Withycombe has got out a very
interesting as well as instructive
booklet explaining the various depart
ments and workings of the Oregon
Agricultural1 College. This publica
tion is in a class of its own as is the
college itself, and any reasonable
minded person would, after thor
oughly understanding the great work
this college is doing, do everything
within his power to the end that noth
ing be put in the way of advance
ment. FORUM OfTHE PEOPLE
MAYOR IS COMMENDED
Morning Enterprise,
To the Editor: I wish to commend
the mayor upon his effort to enforce
the Curfew Ordinance, and hope that
all parents will assist the officers by
keeeping their children at home aft
er curfew hours. It is a difficult task
for our police officers to do their own
work, and to manage the role that
should be played by the parents as
well. Last Saturday I saw both boys
and girls on Main street at midnight.
One saloon closed at twelve. Its pat
rons crossed the street and lined up
at the bar of another that was open,
to my knowledge, at ten minutes past
twelve how much later I do not
know. Passing down the street to
day my attention was called to a pool
room in which the windows were most
effectually screened by tobacco boxes
and signs. Some of our saloons are
so obscured by containing cigar and
boot-blacking stands that the law is
rendered a dead letter. These are
things which any citizen, who takes
the trouble to notice, can see,
things of which, our police should
take cognizance, and which our city
fathers ought to bear in mind when
the men running those establish
ments apply again for license. If a
law is just, enforce it. If it is wrong,
repeal it. But do not ignore it, for
in so doing you encourage lawless
ness, one of the curses of the period
I should like also to suggest that
the curfew age be made eighteen and
not sixteen. The girls doing the most
to lead young men into trouble in
Oregon City are between fifteen and
eighteen. An immoral girl between
fifteen and eighteen is far more lia
ble to land the foolish and fast young
man within the clutches of the law
than one younger. Then the girls
need protection against their own fol
ly it is usually nothing more than
folly at first, and both for their sakes
and for those of the boys, all youtn
under eighteen should be off the
streets at nine o'clock. A curew
ordinance that cuts out a few small
kids - u permits the host of adoles
cents at the most critical period of
tnelr lives to run at large fails utter
ly in its purpose.
Again I wish to laud our mayor and
city officers for their work, and I
nope tney will have the support of all
good citizens.
Sincerely yours,
W. T. MILLIKEN.
"DAM TARIFF" IS
SEAGIRT, N. J., Aug. 8. Governor
Wilson was plainly ill at ease at the
Deginning ot his speech accepting the
Democratic nomination yesterday.
"This might be more interesting,"
he said, "if I did not have to read it."
As it was, the Governor interlopat
ed an epigram here and there which
drew laughter and applause.
"The tariff was once a bulwark;
now it is a dam," the Governor said,
but catching the puzzled look of his
audidtors, he added with a laugh:
"You can spell it either way."
Governor Wilson left for New York
today to have. his portrait drawn.
From the picture will be produced
campaign photographs.
15. Being the Art
fTHATvS THE SYSTEM
M'CREDIE LETS STAR
PLAYERS GET AWAY
' Twice in the1 last few months has
Manager McCredie's opinions of ball
players counted for little by well
known and expert scouts from the
east.
Eddie Mensor, discarded by Mc
Credie as not having enough class to
belong to the Beavers aggregation
was turned over to the Colts.
Eddie kicked up so much dust in
his star playing with the Northwest
ern aggregation that he attracted the
attention of eastern scouts. His pur
chase occurred a few weeks ago the
price being somewhere in the vicinity
of $3000.
Sold to the Pittsburg Nationals,
Mensor made good at once and today
is attracting as much attention in the
biggest league as any other palyer.
Hardly a game is played but what Ed
die doesn't pull off some brilliant
play. He is hitting hard and running
the bases like a fiend.
McCredie's second miss came in
Joe Mathes, outfielder, who was dis
carded by McCredie, turned over to
Nick Williams and then let go by the
blonde leader. Mathes went to
Butte.Montana, where he played crack
ball and has just been purchased by
Dick Kinsella, official scout for the
St. Louis Cardinals. Kinsella arrived
in Portland Wednesday with news of
the purchase.
The former Three I League team
owner will remain in Portland for a
few days, looking for more McCredie
discards and then will leave for the
east. Kinsella is in search of a good
right hitting outfielder.
100 BEING KILLED
BOCHUM, Germany, Aug. 8. A
mining disaster which imperiled the
lives of 650 pit men occurred in the
Lorraine pit near Gerthe today. Many
of the men "were rescued, but it is
feared more than 100 have been kill
ed. Twenty-five bodies have been re
covered, but the rescue parties were
unable to enter the gallery in which
the fire damp explosion occurred,
where it is believed from 50 to 100
men still were entombed. Many of
those rescued are suffering from se
vere injuries and it is expected that
many of them cannot recover.
The rescue detachment which did
such good work at the time of the
French mine disaster at Courrieres,
near Lens, March 10, 1906, when 1230
miners were killed, arrived here, but
were unable to penetrate the galler
ies owing to the flames and poison
ous gases.
The wivesXand families of the doom
ed miners were gathered around the
pit head all day, but were unable to
learn any details, as the officials of
the mines refused information.
At 6 o'clock, 15 more bodies had
been recovered, making the. total
known deaths 40.
The day shift had just descended
and was being distributed along the
various levels when a serious fire
damp explosion occurred.
The detonation was heard at the
surface and the officials on duty im
mediately followed rescue parties,
who rushed back to the pit mouth
with the villagers.
FORMER SULTAN HAY
GET OLDJOB BACK
LONDON, Aug. 8. Near-Eastern
affairs are reaching a crisis, accord
ing to reports from Constantinople,
which say that the committees of Un
ions and Progressive parties have
resolved to summon the dissolved
ChamBeT of Deputies to reassemble
at Adrianople, to which the leaders
have already gone. The government
has proclaimed martial law at Salon
ika, Adrianople and Smyrna.
The Daily Chronicle's correspond
ent, who recently was in Constantin
ople, considers civil war is inevitable
and that it is not unlikely that the
committee's rival parliament will
form a cabinet, and recall and pro
claim the deposed Abdul Hamid as
Sultan. Added to the universal trou
bles are difficulties with Montenegro
and Bulgaria.
A Vienna dispatch says that after
the Ketsehana massacre the Turkish
troops proceeded to Sermenena, mas
sacreeing the people of two Bulgar
ian villages on the way.
The fighting at Sermenena lasted
five hours, and the Bulgarians were
defeated. They fled and the Turks
then butchered the aged men, women
and children who Vere left behind
and set fire to the town, many perish
ing in the flames. This report has
not been confirmed.
HOTEL ARRIVALS
The following registered ' at the
Electric Hotel Thursday: R. H. Rob-
bins, Lebanon, Oregon; J. C. Whal
en, Raymond, Wash.; D. S. H. Sny
der, Salem, Oregon; Edwin Morrison
Sommerville, Oregon; F. Schuiger
and wife; C. H. Holmstrom, Salem,
Oregon; Chas. White and wife, Mc
Minnville, Oregon.
j Now chase Yourself ct they call a
9, 1912
of Sacrificing
s-1
SENATE HAY ALLOW
LORIMER
WASHINGTON, Aug. S. An allow
ance of $35,000 or $40,000 may be
made by' the Senate to help William
Lorimer defray the expenses of his
three-years' fight to retain his seat.
Lorimer has turned in hills amount
ing to $100,000 or $125,000. They
have been referred to the investigat
ing committee, which will make a
statement to the Senate, probably to
morrow, that certain items, amount
ing to from $35,000 to $40,000 would
be a fair allowance, if any be made.
CORRESPONDENCE
STAFFORD.
The weather continues favorable
for harvesting, and all are busy.
Mr. Weddle and Ed Rabie cut and
set up the wheat they had on the
Gage place, and are ready to finish
on their own.
News from Mrs. Aden and Minnie
Boekman at Ocean Park, says they
are enjoying the sea baths, but will
be home this week.
There is a new man under the roof
of Mr. Kellar, but we hear, with pity,
that the old grandmother has become
totally blind.
Mrs. Gillette, of Elyville, and Mrs.
Prindle, an old resident of Stafford,
visited with Mrs. Gage Wednesday.
It was reported that chicken thieves
had again visited Wm. Shaltz, also
Mark Baker.
Ethis Athy was coming home Wed
nesday night from Oregon City, when
two young fellows with white hand
kerchiefs over their faces suddenly
appeared and ordered him to throw
up his hands, which he did to ac
commodate them. They took what
money he had, which amounted to
two dollars, so you see, Stafford. with
its hold ups, chicken thieves, black
hands, etc., is getting to be quite
metropolitan.
Mrs. Sam Moser drove to Oregon
City Wednesday.
No news of Mrs. Nilem, who is still
at the Sellwood hospital, has been re
ceived this week.
Arden Gage motored out to Staf
ford from Sheridan Monday, arriving
at his father's place at noon and went
to Portland Tuesday as a witness in
a case to defraud workmen.
Gus Gerhardt and son, Harry, are
still at work on Charlie Thompson's
new house.
Workmen have suspended work on
Mr. Widdle's house until the hurry
of harvesting is over.
The Ladies' Circle meets next
week, Thursday afternoon, the 15th
with Mrs. Gage, and she hopes to
have a full house. This society was
formed to get the neighbors acquaint
ed, as since the advent of the tele
phone they rarely meet except at
church or a funeral.
MACKSBURG.
The slight rains of the past week
have set the hops, potatoes and corn
forward at a pace most encouraging
to the farmers of Macksburg and vi
cinity. Fishing on the Molalla seems to
be good, judging from the experience
of Jess Heppler, who brought home
45 trout from two hours' fishing Sun
day. Frank Hilton and his party came
home Saturday with a fine supply of
trout, after feasting in their mountain
camp till they were tired.
. The threshing machine owned by
John Heppler and George Walsh be
gan work with a full crew .on the
farm of Charles Kraxberger Monday
morning. From there they go to Mr.
Heppler, Senior.
Work on the Canby and Molalla
railroad goes steadily forward.
George Koch is showing signs of
recovering from a long and severe
illness.
Mrs. Dreir is recovering from a ser
ious illness.
Mrs. Bert Wallace of Mulino drove
over with her little son on Friday to
spend the day with her mother, Mrs.
Seward.
Wilbur Seward is at home spending
his vacation with his mother and sis
ter. The youngest sister, Merle, re
turned on Friday evening. -
Mrs. Seward and daughter, Merle,
were guests of Mrs. Baldwin on
Thursday.
On Tuesday Mrs. Glade, Miss Lizzie
Glade and Mrs. Baldwin visited Mrs.
John Heppler.
Mrs. Frank Hilton and Mrs. George
Walsh drove to Hubbard to spend the
afternoon on Saturday.
Mrs. Arthur Baldwin, with some of
former pupils, Lena Lydia and Hilda
Kummer, Gertrude Bethe and Char
ley Schwauzara, made a hazelnut
party on Friday afternoon. After
enjoying a fine picnic in the woods
they returned with all the hazelnuts
they could carry.
The Maxburg children are longing
for the opening of the Juvenile Fair.
Many are preparing exhibits for it.
Dance
Everybody is Going! Going!
Where? To Busch's Hall Sat
urday Night, Aug. 10, 1912.
Music absolutely first class.
I ; ;
' "4 '
1ISS BOLLINGER TO
TEACH AT HiLSBORO
Miss Helen Bollinger, who is spend
ing the summer at Camp Bolenia on
the Clackamas river, on Thursday
received notice of her appointment to
the chair of Latin in the Hillsoboro
high school. Miss Bollinger lived for
many years in Oregon City, where her
father, Rev. E. S. Bollinger, was pas
tor of the First Congregational
Church, and she is a graduate of Pa
cific University. She taught in the
public schools, of Skamowaka, last
year.
GIRL AND CHAUFFEUR
TAKEN INTO CUSTODY
NEW YORK, Aug. 8. Armed with
warrants for the arrest of Miss Cora
Perkins and Frederick Patterson, who
were arrested for the alleged theft of
a $4500 automobile belonging to Nich
olas J. McNamara of San Mateo, Cal.,
Police Lieutenant McGowan of San
Francisco, arrived here. He also had
a request for the extradition of the
prisoners.
McGowan was accompanied by Miss
Gladys McNamara who hoped to ef
fect a reconciliation between her fath
er and mother.
When McNamara and his daughter
reached the Hotel Knickerbocker,
they learned for the first time that
Mrs. McNamara had started for San
Francisco, accompanied by Patrick
Walsh, her chauffeur. McGowan, with
Miss Perkins and Patterson in cus
tody, started for San Francisco this
afternoon.
Wants, For Sale, Etc
Notices under these classified headings
will be inserted at one cent a word, first
insertion, half a cent additional Inser
tions. One inch card, $2 per month; half
Inch card, (4 lines), $1 per month.
Cash must accompany order unless one
has an open account with the paper. No
nnancial responsibility for errors: where
errors occur free corrected notice will be
printed for patron. Minimum charge 15c.
WANTED
vv .tt.iN Lthu avjiin i : write neanu
& Accident Insurance. Oregon Sur -
ety & Casualty Co., 322 Board of '
Trade, Portland, Oregon.
BOARD AND ROOM
Young married couple both employed, I
desire room and board in private
family with home privileges, no
other boarders. Address "M" care
Enterprise.
WANTED: A chance to show you
how quick a For Rent ad will fill
that vacant house or room.
WANTED: 2 or 3 high school boys
or girls to work during vacation
Address E. B. care Morning Enter
prise. ,
PATENTS
Peter Haberlin, Patent Attorney.
Counselor in Patent and Trade Mark
Causes. Inventors assisted and pat
ents obtained in all countries. Man
ufacturers advised and infringment
litigation conducted. Expert re
ports. Briefs for counsel, Validity
searches. Trade marks designed and
protected. Labels, designs and
copyrights registered. Prelimin
ary consultations without charge.
326 Worcester Bldg., Portland, Ore.
Send for free booklets.
FOUND
FOUND: On car that arrived in
Oregon City at 5 o'clock Tuesday
afternoon a pair of gold-rimmed
spectacles. Owner may have glass
es by applying at Morning Enter
prise office and paying for adver
This Bank
is well prepared to furnish its customers the facilities and
service which assure accuracy and promptness in the hand
ling of their banMng business.
THE BANK OF OREGON CITY
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
D. C. LATOURETTE, President ' F. J. MYER, Cashier.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
CAPITAL $50,000.00
Transacts a General Banking Buslnes s. . Open from 9 A. M. to 3 P, M.
By "HOP
FRANCISCO WINS
IN FINAL INNING
Uftl
SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 8, (Spe
cial.) San Francisco nosed out Port
land today in the ninth, the score be
ing 3 to 2. The home men made 2
in the second as follows:
Corhan singled and out, streching,
Chadbourne to Rodgers. Gideon sing
led. Mohler safe at second and Ged
eon scored on Butcher's error. Berry
doubled, scoring Mohler. Miller out,
Koestner to Rapps. Mundorff out,
Rodgers to Rapps.
Both Koestner and Miller allowed
7 hits.
The results Thursday follow:
Pacific Coast League Standings
W. L. P.C.
Vernon 72 48 .600
Los Angeles 69 50 .580
Oakland ... 69 52 .570
Portland. 48 61 .440
San Francisco . 49 71 .409
Sacramento 45 70 .391
At ' San Francisco San Francisco
3, Portland 2.
At Los Angeles Vernon 3, Los An
geles 1.
At Sacramento Sacramento '"8,
Oakland 6. .
National League
Chicago 7, Philadelphia 4.
Boston 6, Cincinnati 5.
St. Louis 2, Brooklyn 1.
New York 2, Pittsburg 1.
American League
St. Louis 8, Washington 0.
Boston 5, Detroit 0.
Cleveland 8, New York 5.
If you saw it in the Enterprise It's
so.
MISCELLANEOUS.
HOW would you like to talk with
1400 people about that bargain you
have in Real Estate. Use the Enter
prise. F. B. FINLEY, Taxidermist, Tanner
and Furrier. Fur Rugs and Game
Heads in stock. Glass Eyes, 249
Columbia St., Portland, Ore.
DRESS MAKING, Hairdressing and
shampooing. Room 5, Willamette
i ...r
1 BullainS-
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
FRUIT AND FARM LAND FOR SALE
in all parts of Clackamas County.
One acre tracts up. I carry some
city property that you can buy at a
good figure and on terms.
S. O. Dillman, Room 1, Weinhard
Building, Telephone Main 3771.
FOR SALE: Or will rent to right
party, furnished house, Address C.
W. Evans, 407 Center Street, city.
WOOD AND COAL.
OREGON CITY WOOD AND FUEL
CO., F. M. Bluhm. Wood and coal
delivered to all parts of the city.
SAWING A SPECIALTY. Phone
your ordern Pacific 3B02, Home
b a
FOR SALE
FOR SALE: Just as good as new,
one 3 H. P. Gasoline Engine and
one 5- H. P. Motor, cheap. D. A.
Dreblow.
Sawed slab-wood for sale $1.00 a load,
come quick while it lasts. Geo. Lam
mers, Beaver Creek.
FOR SALE OR TRADE: Will trade
- for Improved place near Portland,
48 room house, sleeping and house
keeping, furnished, money-maker,
splendid location. Call or write
3921 E. Burnside Portland.