Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, August 02, 1913, Page 4, Image 4

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    4
OREGON CITY. OREGON. SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 1913
FORUM OF THE PEOPLE
AS TO MR. SMITH
AURORA, Ore., Aug. 1, 1913 (Edi
tor, The Enterprise) In regard to
this recall -election, the mothers j,i
Clackamas county may not know thac
X W. Smith, running for county com
missioner, helps break the laws of
this state by renting his grove to pic
nic parties and lets tiiem sail beer on
Sundays on his place. If he was- a
(aw-abiding man he would not permu
this to commence with.
Haw far better is he than Mr. Blair?
There i3 no use for mothers to jump
from the frying pan into the fire.
H. H. GORTZEN.
ANOTHER VIEW OF IT
" OREGON CITY, Aug. 1. 1913. (Ed
itor, The Enterprise) Your com
ments in a late editorial in regard to
the attempt to enforce. the Sabbatar
ian blue laws of a bigotted past ware
very just and timely. -There are many
laws still standing on the statute
books of this and other states, be
queathed by our Puritanical forefath
ers, which are "more honored in the
treach than in the observonce."
The three clerical gentlemen who
are seeking to resuscitate these obso
lete laws are simply anachronistic.
They ought to have lived a few hun
dred years ago when "orthodoxy" had
the power to enforce its dogmas by
means of the faggot, te ax and the
halter. They display exactly the same
spirit today, but happily the civiliza
tion of the twentieth century has de
prived them of their power.
Their names suggest their origin,
probably from the Scotch, of whom
it has been jocularly said that "they
are famed for keeping the Sabbath
and everything else."
Less than five percent of the peo
ple of Oregon City, all told, belong to
the three churches of our esteemed
monitors, and for such a "corporal's
guard" to dictate to the overwhelming
majority how they must keep Sunday,
or any other day, is ludicrous in the
extreme. To be consistent they should
labor to put an embargo on Sunday
papers, running of cars and automo
biles, cooking Sunday dinners, etc.,
.and Bet the examples themselves. The
crowds that swarm the banks of the
Clackamas river, Canemah, Schnoerr's
park and other resorts every fair Sun
day morning, picnicing, dancing,
frolicking and carousing ought to be
arrested and compelled to go to
church to sleep through dry sermons
full of dreary platitudes and regale
themselves with "psalms and hymns
spiritual songs." To quote from a re
cent writer:
"No intelligent man, clergyman or
otherwise, now accepts or preaches
the sudden creation in one week of
tho earth and man, and the animals
upon it. Every human being knows,
if he knows anything, that this earth
is millions of years old, that the an
imals lived here millions upon mil
lions of years before man appeared,
and that man himself has been on this
planet for at least a quarter of a mil
lion years, and probably longer."
This planet on which we live is one
of the smallest bodies - revolving
around one of the smallest suns in our
infinite universe, containing endless
billions of such system larger than
our own. For preachers, now; to try
to make us believe that the Infinite
ceaselessly and sleeplessly at work
from all eternity took six days to
make this mite of an earth less than
a grain of sand by the seashore
-rew tired and rested on the seventh
day is simply to stultify themselves
and their hearers.
Professor Delitsch, in his lecture
before the German Emperor, entitled
"Babel and Bible," shows conclusive
ly how such erroneous Babylonian
ideas became accidentally incorporat
ed in our Sacred Book. As all Bible
students know, the so-called "Books
of the Law" were entirely lost for
many years during the Babylonian ex
ile. After the return to the Holy
Land, Ezra understook to restore the
lost books from memory, from tradi
tion, from detached fragments still in
existence, and from the folk-lore cur
rent among people largely influenced
by their Babylonian environment dur
ing seventy years. In what a patch
work style the work was done a verv
cursory examination of the Bible will
abundantly show.
As one example among dozens,
compare Chaters XXXVI, XXXVTI,
XXXVIII and XXXIX of Isaiah- with
chapter XVIII of the Second Book of
Kings, beginning at verse 13 to-verse
19, chapter XX. They will be found
to agree "verbatim, et literatum."
But this opens up a subject too ex
tensive and far-reaching to be taken
up in a short article.
(Dr.) W. C. SCHULTZE.
DENIAL IS MADE
William Grissenthwaite telephones
to The Enterprise that he is not and
never has been secretary nor held of
fice in the Beaver Creek local, Farm
ers' Society of Equity. He says the
recall matter has never been mention
ed in "Equity meetings at Beaver
Creek.
DRILL INTO JAIL
Men who have been at work upon
the rewiring of the city hall say that
it was ot seeking out old wires that
took them two hours, as mentioned in
The Enterprise Thursday. The parti
cular "long job" to which reference
was made consisted in boring four
holes for wire-conduits through the
brick, steel and timbered walls of the
city jail. They feel that getting
these holes through the escape-proof
walls of the building in two hours was
as gocd as establishing a record.
NOTICE!
Homesteads
Worthwhile
Am living on homestead in Cen
tral Oregon. Been there three
years. We have large valley, good
schools, Sunday schools, etc., two
mails each day, cheese factory,
sawmills, small towns, etc. The
ValeCrescent (Oregon and East
ern) Ry. is now building, right-of-way
runs lengthwise our valley.
This is a good grain, dairying, hog
and poultry country not just' a
theory but are raising these
things and have them to show for
themselves. If you want a GOOD
homestead in this tried-out locality
see me at ELECTRIC HOTEL,
FRIDAY EVENING AND SATUR
DAY, AUGUST 1ST AND 2ND.
ALVIN S, HAWK.
(No deposit on location fee. You
pay only If you file.)
GOVERNOR WEST
SENDSJOH HERE
(Continued from Page 1.)
as far as the district attorney tells
me I can go."
"Then I shall have to take action,"
shouted Mr. Schuebel, and he hurried
out, presumably to get in communica
tion with- Governor West. Later in
the day, when questioned as to the
interview. Mr. Schuebel said that
when he had asked the sheriff wheth
er or not he would stop the circus the
sheriff had answered that he would
not commit himself.
W. E. Burlock, in advance of tho
coming show, was in Oregon City Fri
day afternoon, making further ar
rangements for the performance. Tie
announced that in order to prove to
the public that the management was
not mercenary, and that the were
merely putting on their performance
because they believed they had a leg
al right so to do, that one-haif of the
profits of the performance would be
offered to Mayor Linn E. Tones, of
Oregon City, to give to any charity
which he might choose.
"We offer this money just to show
that we are no mercenary," said Sir.
Burlock. "The mayor may direct that
it be given to any charity which he
sees fit. Or he may refuse tho offer.
But the money will be offered, and
will be cheerfully given if he will indi
cate where he thinks it will accom
plish the most good."
WOMEN PROTEST
We, the undersigned, Christian
women, readers and patrons of the
Morning Enterprise, do earnestly pro
test against the influence it, as a pub
lic educator, exerts in 'favor of the
proposed circus on Sunday.
Surely the crying need for better
moral conditions, so well understood
by thinking people points out the need
of deeper Christian principles in the
young, since this alone will insure bet
ter morals.
Julia J.Tingle, Mrs. J. L. Swafford,
Miss Elva Blanchard, Eunice Mattoon,
Elizabeth Humphreys, Mary E. Case,
Mrs. Blanchard, Mrs. C. E. Myers, E.
K. Horton, Mrs. T. E. Gault, Mrs. F.
E. Walling, Mrs. W. M. Stone, Mrs.
Ed Young, Mrs. A. O. Hollingsworth,
Mrs. L. S. Frink, Mrs. McCulloch, Mrs.
W. E Johnston, Mrs. M. E. Burley,
Mrs. Martha Ross, Mrs. Carrie Good
win, Mrs. F. H. McAnulty, Mrs. Mary
Sievers, Mrs. Carrie N. Parker, Mrs.
Eva Frost, Mary Mumpower, Mrs.
Mary Lewis, Mrs. Nancy L. Majors,
Mrs. A. M. Porter, Mrs. W. R. U'Ren,
Mrs. A. H. Mulkey, Mrs. O. Thoen,
Mrs. Ella Kennedy, Mrs. R. L. Dunn,
Mrs. L. A. Mills, Mrs. Follansbee,
Mrs. Emily Prater, Mrs. M. A. Beach,
Mrs. Tillie Edwards, Mrs. E. H. Hold
ren, Mrs. A. Simmons, Mrs. R. M. Mc
Getchie, Mrs. J. M. Hollowell, Mrs. F.
L. Oswald, Mrs. J. McGetchie, Mirs. L.
A. Read, Mrs. Emma Bell, Mrs. Ed
ward Harrington, Mrs. Hugh Hall,
Mrs. A. W. Blount, Mrs. Emma Welle,
Mrs. T. B. Barlow, Mrs. W. A. Rivers.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
C. H. Dye, trustee, and wife to Ella
A Johnson, lot 8, block 31, Oregon Iron
& bteei company s first addition to
Oswego; $10.
H. A. Kayler to Inga Beck, lots 5
6 and 7, block 2, Kayler's addition to
toplla; $10.
Same to Walter A. Beck, lots 8 and
10, block 2, Kayler's addition to Mo-'
lalla; $250. -
Elmer F. Veteto and wife to R. L.
Holman 3.14 acres in Sec. 23, T. 3 S.,
R. 1 E.; $1.
R. L. Holman to Elmer F. Veteto
and wife, as a common law estate in
entirety, above property; $1.
Julian Leroy Paul and wife to Mary
T. Hungate, lot 8, block 83, Oregon
City; $1.
M. D. Austin to Siver O. Grindelan,
east "half of the south half of N. W.
Sec. 7, T. 4 S., R. 1 E.; $3,825.
Fred Marshall and wife to E. VV.
Reder, tract 70, Oak Grove; $1.
William. Stuart to Hannah J. Pet
erson, lot 3, block 105, Oregon City;
$1,100.
A. E. Lindsey and wife to D. N.
Roberts, tract in Sec. 9, T. 3 S., R. 7
E.; $10. "
STUDENTS WED
GREENCASTLE, Ind., Aug. 1. Two
pretty romances which had their be
ginning at DePauw University culmin
ated today, when Miss Imogene Mc
Lean and Charles O'Dell, and Miss
Hazel Ayres and Arthur C. Woodward
were married at a double ceremony.
All four of the contracting parties
wore students at DePauw.
House Ready for Currency Bill
WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. The house
is ready for the currency bill which
is expected to reach that body now
within a day or two. There will prob
ably be several amendments offered
when the bill reaches the house.
Vaise and Bayley to Fight
VANCOUVER, B. C, Aug. 1
Fenchy Vaise, of Renton, Canadian
lightweight champion, and Joe Bayley
the former titleholder, meet here to
night in a return enagagement. The
boys will go 15 rounds, at 133 pounds.
PARTY TO CAMP BY SEA
Among the parties of local foik
who have gone to Seaside to spend
the rest of the summer is one com
posed of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Tidd,
Master Billie Tidd, Miss Laura Green,
Miss Helen Green, Miss Ruth Pick
thorne, E'.den Aldridge and "Bob"
Green. They will camp at the beach.
GUARANTEED FOR TENDER FEET
Nothing is more embarrassing than
bad-smelling feet. Keeping the feet
clean does not alwayssuffico to dispel
these odors. Just as soon as they per
spire, the odor begins, and: finally the
leather is so saturated that fresh hosi
ery will not entirely remove it, even
when your feet are dry.
There are people all around you who
will tell you that Rexall Foot Powder,
used according to directions, will pre
vent the odor or your money back.
Besides it tends to keep the feet from
becoming itcny ana tender and re
lieves foot weariness and pain.
When you dust Rexall Foot Powder
in your shoes, you bring its antiseptic,
soothing deodorizing properties In di
rect contact with the oversensitive
and too-open pores. - Relief is felt at
once. .Rexall Foot Powder is sold at
25 cents, with a full money-back guar
antee. It can be obtained in this com
munity only at our store. The Rexall
Store. Huntley Bros. Co.
YOSEHITE RESE VE
IIS OPEN TO AUTOS
SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 1. The
Yosemite National park was opened to
automobilists today and the throwing
open of the gates of this wonderland
was the occasion of a big celebration
The.f ight to have the barriers against
the automobile raised was a long one
and motorists met reversal after re-
versal in treating with the department
of the interior at Washington.
While the Coultervilje road will be
the first one that will be opened to
motor traffic, it is most likely that if
no serious mishaps occur the Big Oak
Flat and Wawona roads will be open
ed also in a season or two. - -
The opening of the Yosemite valley
to motor traffic will mean much to
California, for thousands of motorists
from all points of the United States
will now tour to the Golden state for
the pleasure of driving into this nat
ural wonderland instead of taking va
cations in other lands. Thsr fame of
the Yosemite is worldwide, and the
fact that a person can now comforta
bly make the trip into the valley in
motor car instead of being crammed
in a jerky horsedrawn stage, is sure
to increase the yearly list of visitors,
who, while in the state, will also tour
to other scenic districts.
PREVENT ODORS FROM PERSPIR
ATION We guarantee that Rexall Nice not
only will help relieve you from the un
pleasantness of bodily odors, of which
perspiration is one of the most fre
quent causes, but that its use will also
impart to the skin a delightful and
delicate odor.
Rexall Nice is an exquisite comfort
to the woman or man who aims at per
fect personal cleanliness that is ap
parent to the senses as well as the
eyes of those with whom they come in
contact. It is especially designed for
perfect personal cleanliness. That
Rexall Nice will please is guaranteed
by us, but should it fail to meet your
expectations, we will gladly give back
your money. Price 25 cents. Sold in
this community only at our store. The
Rexall store. Huntley Bros. Co.
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS
BOSTON, Mass., Aug. 1. Great
preparations are being made for the
entertainment of the delegates and
visitors who are coming here from all
parts of the United States and Can
ada next week for the international
convention of the Knights of Colum
bus. Besides the usual church ceremon
ies and parade there will be an ban
quet, a grand reception and ball and
numerous automobile and boat trips
to places of interest in Boston and vi
cinity. The business sessions of the
convention will begin Tuesday and
continue until Friday. Supreme Mas
ter John H. Reddin of Denver, will
preside.
Anything which benefits mankind
Is a treasure to you and me.
What a wondrous blessing to us ail
Is Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea.
Jones Drug Co.
BELL THEATRE
"Evelyn's Strategy"
(Reliance) A very nice little drama
"The Tangled Affair"
(Keystone) This is a Keystone
Comedy which everybody likes.
"The Homestead Race"
(An American Flying A) Where
wit matches wit in the race for home
and love.
A big vaudeville feature, "The Fish
er Maidens," singing and dancing act
direct from Oaks Park, Portland.
Pretty girls, pretty songs, elegant
wardrobes.
Coming Sunday, August 3rd: The
famous ventriloquist, Harry Hart and
Fatty Kelley and wife, comedians.
Here for the week the best act ever
in Oregon City.
VACATION DAYS
(OREGON CITY PUBLICITY)
The diversity of healthful recreation
which may be enjoyed in the summer
days by the fortunate dwellers with
in the bounds of the Willamette Val
ley, and very especially by the people
of Clackamas County is truly surpris
ing. Passing lightly over the delights of
a trip to the coast less than a hun
dred miles away, by rail to various
points, and by auto or team to many
others, we find very close at hand to
us of Clackamas County, so many
places to go and so many things to
do that it is not easy to make a choice.
All up and down the Oregon Coast
there are resorts, some of which aro
suited to the person who wishes to
rough it," to put on his or her old
clothes and hunt and fish and dig for
clams and the delicious rock oystt-r,
and to go for crabs, to climb tho cliffs,
make trips out to sea for deep sea
fishing, and up and down the co&t to
the light-houses or to the life saving
stations. Bathing and c?st.le builling
on the sands or .just sitting on ome
cliff and watching the waves dash
themselves in fury upou its walls and
breaking in great clouds of spray are
pastimes enjoyed by young and old
Those who wish something less
strenuous but not less simple, will find
it in tire larger play places,- where
there are splendid hotels, golf and ten
nis grounds, and mucn social life, but
no where on the Oregon Coast do we
find a Newport of the East, or an At
lantic City. The Western people are
aa yet too near to the beginning of
things ever quite to forget that Na
ture has more to offer than man can
devise for his entertainment.
But within easy reach are found play
places where one may rest, and for
get that one of the big beautiful cities
of the world is not 'so very far away.
The banks of the Clackamas, which
-A SCIENTIFIC ACHIEVEMENT
Modern science has produced no
such effective agency in the relief of
indigestion, dyspepsia, constipation,
biliousness or Impure blood as Meri-
tol Tonic Digestive, the result of the
best minds of the American Drug and
Press Association, composed of drug
gists, and newspaper men all over the
country. Try this great remedy.
Jones Drug Co., association members.
Kipling has made famous,' but not
more enjoyable by bis fishing . trip
along its shores, affords delightful
camping places from, its mouth at
Gladstone - to its head waters away
up in the foot hills. Several good ho
tels are kept filled almost the year
around by enthusiastic fishermen who
come from all over the country to
enjoy this healthful . and delightful
sport. At Estacada there is a natural
park on the Clackamas were there is
located a first class hotel, where the
fisherman is sure he'll find excellent
fish. The Sandy and the Salmon and
the Molalla and the Pudding Rivers
are all places of resort, and separate
ly or in groups along their banks are
to be found camping parties.
Wilhoit Springs affords a resting
place for many tired city dwellers, and i
one may take one's own camping out- j
fit or find aceommodations. ' The wat
ers are healthful and tha country
around furnishes 3cenery, fishing,
hunting, or ideal quiet and rest for
the weary.
All along the banks of the Willam
ette there are summer cottages and
father, after a day's work in the city
steps into his launch or auto in the
evening, or on the electric car and is.
whisked to -his summer abiding place
in short order. Fin ley, the naturalist
(and State Game Warden) is the hap
py possessor of one of these riverside
homes surrounded by giants of the
forest.
the year around making weekly tramps
to interesting points, making them
selves fit for the supreme effort of the
year, when two or more weeks will be
spent scaling the great, grand snowy
mountains of which we Westerners
are so proud and which never lose
their appeal to one's sense of awe and
wonder at their majesty and awful
granduer.
Mount Hood, seventy miles- east of
Oregon City, perpetually covered with
snow, lures to her snowy stretches ev
ery year a great concourse of visitors.
Camps are established as soon as
roads are passable, and for miles al
most up to the snow line they may be
found. A trip to the summit occupies
several days, hunting and fishing are
nowhere better, and huckleberrying is
a fascinating source of amusement.
Berries are almost as large as cher
ries and are delicious. The trip to
the mountain and back may be made
in a day but so speedy a visit does not
give time for the enjoyment of much
besides tha trip.
Boating canoe and launch and mot
or boat and steamboat all find their
place tinder this heading), offers a
cool and glorious pastime. House
boats line the shores of the river
some floating palaces, others merely
comfortable abiding places for a sum
mer stay.
Autos and motor cycles make a trip
of a day or two into the wooded re
treats of mountain or countryside pos
sible, and even the pocket book which
looks as thought it had been rudely
stepped upon by the proverbial ele
pant provides a few nickels for a Sun
day afternoon trip to the woods which
are not far distant from any place, and
Mountain climbing clubs such as tie
famous Mazamas of Portland are all
best of all a two weeks' sojourn at
that delightful camping spot, Glad
stone park, where a Chautauqua has
been in annual session for twenty
years, may be enjoyed. -
Many more delightful places are to
be found where a long or a short va
cation may be passed.
The Willamette Climate.
(OREGON CITY' PUBLICITY)
By James Barton Adams.
Do I like the climate, stranger, in this
valley? Well, i guess'
That there ain't no proper answer to
. your' question only "yes,"
An' it mightn't be a-stretfchin' o' the
honest truth to say -
That I worship it, an' tell it so a dozen
times a day.
Listen to my wife a-singing', voice as
clear as any bell;
See the spring that'3 in her action
drawin' water' at the well;
See them youngsters playin' yonder
an' a-hollerin' in glee
Then switch' round your eyes a trifle
till you focus iliem on me.
Jes' two. year ago tomorrer if my mem
ory's got no flaw
Since we clum into the wagon fur to
leave ol' Arkansaw.
Faces all about the color of the yal-
lerest corn pones
An' the ager havin' shaken all the
flesh off of our bones.
Sca'cely looked like human bein's,
more like skeletons were we;
Wife a-hackin' with consumption that
was ketchin' hold o' her,
An' the younguns both a-coughin', me
a-worry in' till well.
Got discouraged till I wasn't wuth a
pinch o' salt in hell.
Tuk a ranch here in this valley, an'
we wondered if the same
Mightn't some day he our graveyard
as a windup of the game;
Slep' with doors an' winders open for
to let the climate in, c
An' we soon obsarved that somethin'
was a-paddin' out our skin.
Wife got skittish in her action, kids
begun to romp an' play,
'Stead o' mopin' round complainin' an'
a-crying.all the day.
As fur me, I quit my frettin', an' be
gun to take on meat,
n' 't'.d make a lean dog jealous for
to see the way I eat.
Do I like the climate, stranger? Likin'
ain't no proper word.
Fur I wuship it, by jingo, nex' to wush-
ippin' the Lord;
Fur it,'s rid the whole caboodle of the
freezin' breakbone chills,
An' the Arkansaw attachments shape
o'- country doctor bills.'
An' the lungs my wife's a-usin'; well,
jes' listen to her sing,
They're as sound as any dollar in their
clear an' silvery ring.
An' there ain't a man a-livin' in this
whole Willamette stretch
That xkin down me in a rassel, any
holt they want to ketch.
Unqualifiedly the Best
LEDGER
The De Luxe Steel Back
New improved CURVED HINGE
allows the covers to drop back on the desk
without throwing the leaves into a curved
position.
Sises 8 1-4 to 20 inches
OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE
Headquarters for
Loose Leaf Systems
Shines In Society
Women With Fascinating . Hair Al
ways Attract Attention
If you are a woman with dull, life
less, ordinary hair, do not feel dis
tressed. Just make up your mind now
that you can have just as luxuriant
and captivating a head of hair as any
other woman; and quickly too.
Just go to Huntley Bros. Ce. this
very day and get a bottle of Parisian
Sage. Use it as directed, and in two
weeks your scalp will be free of dand
ruff, your hair will be soft, lustrous
and beautiful.
If your hair is falling out, Parisian
Sage will stop it.
If jour hair is thin, Parisian Sage
I. C. S. An Ethical Power
Now, gentlement, just for a moment, I would speak to you, not as
an educationalist, but as a preacher of manhood and a lover of his
kind. The question of the use of alchohol by the student when study
ing, has carried me back to the thought The International Correspond
ence Schools are not simply educational, they are ethical; they not
only . make foremen and craftsmen and draftsmen, but they make .
MEN in capital letters. For you can never awaken any ona to his
commercial possibilities without stirring up all other possibilities so
cial, patriotic, philanthropic, intellectual, moral. The moment you suc
ceed breaking up one area of inertia you set vibration moving through
every part of the being and all kinds of dormant and stagnant powers
are set into healthy motion. When a man's mind gets engrossed with
an intellectual occupation and he finds that he has a grip upon the
laws and forces oi the universe, the saloon, the vulgar and degrading
o..ow, the curb-stone loafing, and the hours of inane and ribald waste
all seem to be unworthy of him and his self-respect clothes him in a
protective armor which helps to keep his entire manhood inviolate. A
great American preacher used to speak much about 'the expulsive pow
er of a new affection," and, having as your life work the duty of both
supplying and developing this "new affection" the love cf the best, by
which the unworthy and base will be expelled, perhaps unconsciously
but surely, from many and many a man. Success to you in your work!
The Trained Man Never Worries
When the chiefs put theip heads together to hire or "fire," the
trained man doesn't worry. He knows that there is always a place for
him.
You can look your job and every man in the face if you possess the
training so much in demand everywhere today. The International
Correspondence Scuools will go to you in your spare time, whereever
you live, and will train you to become an expert in your chosen line
of work. Such a training will forever take you off the "anxious" seat.
It costs you nothing to find how the I. C. S. can nelp you. Mark
the coupon opposite the occupation for which you have a natural lik
ing, mail the coupon today, and the I. C. S. will send you facts showing
: how you can earn more money in the occupation of your own choice.
INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS
H. H. HARR IS, Local Mgr.
, 505 McKay Building, Portland, Oregon.
Explain without, further obligations on my part, how I can qual
ify for the position before which I . mark X.
Salesmanship
Electrical Engineer
Electric Lighting Supt.
Telephone Expert "
Architect
Building Contractor
Architectural Draftsman
Structural Engineer
Concrete Construction.
Mechanical Engineer .
Mechanical Draftsman
Civil Engineer
Mine Superintendent
Stationary Engineer
Plumbing and Steam Fitting
Gas Engines ,
Name
Present Occupation
Street and No
City
will make it grow In heavily.
If you have dandruff it will quickly
vanish when Parisian Sage is used.
It prevents hair from turning gray;
stops itching scalp almost instantly
and is the ideal dressing for daily
use.
A large bottla costs only 50 cents
at druggists everywhere and Huntley
Bros. Co.; Giroux Mfg. Co., Buffalo
N. Y., are the American makers.
For Sale By
HUNTLEY BROS. Ci.
BRUSSELS, Aug. 1. Leaders in
medical science from many countries,
including the United States and Can
ada, assembled in Brussels today to
take part in the Third International
Cancer Congress.
Civil Service
Bookkeeping
Stenography and Typewriting
Window Trimming
Show Card Writing
Letter and Sign Painting
Advertising
Commercial Illustrating
Industrial Designing
Commercial Law
Automobile Running
English Branches
Poultry Farming
Teacher Spanish
Agriculture French
Chemist German
State
5