Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, September 23, 1913, Image 3

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

    MORNING ENTERPRISE. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1913.
ner Treubre.
"Is the utW nurse kind to your chil
dren?" "Oh. yes. But one always has trou
ble with the nursen The new one
takes such good care of the children
that tlii'.v won't come to me any more."
Mec's 'inlorfer Blatter.
Local Briefs
1 Rurack, from New York, arrived
here Monday.
Mrs. Ramsby is getting along nice
ly after her illness.
I, G. Walker, of San Francisco, is
registered at the Electric.
Harry Young, mayor of "Dutch
Camp" is visiting at LaCamas.
C. EL Brown, a farmer of Central
Point, was in Oregon City Monday.
A son was born to Mir. and Mrs. Ray
Cooper, Saturday, September 20.
William Suburg, of Los Angeles, is
visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. M. White.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Parrish have
gone to Portland to spend the week.
Miss Jenny Sharps and Miss Fran
ces Draper were in Portland Sunday.
A. C. Redman, of Portland, visited
Oregon City, the first part of the
week.
J. G. Gummins, of Oregon City,
passed through here from Yaquina to
Madras.
Fred Vohs, of Highland, made a
short visit to this city during the first
of the week.
Steele Miller, of Pendleton, arrived
Sunday for a visit with Jacob Sharpe,
of Green Point.
Don't forget Nobel, 714 Main St.,
has on hand all kinds of cheese, Swiss
Cream and Limburger, in quantities
to suit.
Joe Aldredge, who has been sick for
the past week, was able to return to
his work Monday.
Thomas Johnson, who lives near
Wifllamtette made a brief stay in the
county seat Monday afternoon.
' Miss Bertha Zwahlen is reported re
covering at the Oregon City hospital
after a long illness of typhoid.
Miss Helen Pollock, of Portland,
and Mr. William Kennedy visited MJr.
and Mrs. Hugh Kennedy Sunday.
Christopher Cruisis of the Willam
ette Pulp & Paper company is rapidly
recovering from a severe case of ty
phoid. Pierce Wright,' a prominent farmer
from the Libera1, district, wrote his
name on the register of the Electric
Hotel Sunday.
MSss Mary Lewthwaite, of the Wil
lamette Pulp & Paper company has
just returned from a two weeks' va
cation to Newport.
Dr. George Hoeye, Mrs. Hoeye, and
their son, Lmerson, will leave Tues
day for Salem, where they will stay
until after the state fair.
Dr. kiumner and Dr. Meisner oper
ated on Harold Nash last Thursday.
The patient is doing well and will be
able to go home in a few days.
"Among those registered at the Elec
tric are: L. Tellefson, of Logan; H.
L. Hoffman, of Portland; W. Griffin,
and J. P. Redman, of Portland.
Mrs. R. E. Wiliams, of The Dalles,
with her son, Robert, and her daugh
ret Mabel, have been visiting Mr. and
Mlrs. W. J. Wilson for a few days.
Mrs. M. J. Vonderahe, with her sons
Frank and Carl and her daughter,
Lorise will move to Hood River for
the winter. Mr. Vonderahe will stay
in Oregon City. ,
If you have stomach or bowel
trouble, heart, liver or kidney disease,
Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea will
do you more good, in less time, than
any other remedy because it re
stores natrral conditions. At all
druggists, 35c. Jones Drug Co.
Jacob Straight left Mbnday for
South Africa, where he will engage
in mining operations. He is well
known in this city, his brother being
Hi. Straight, who has a plumbing
business here.
Mr. and Mrs'. George Woodward,
William Griffith, Joe Cannon, Hilda
Peterson and Kitty Katty Katburg re
turned Monday from a vacation trip
Into the country around the north
forks of the Molalla. They report
that they had a very pleasant trip.
Howard M. Brownell, spent a few
days in Renton, Wash., this week, the
guest of C. D. Ulmer. Mr. Brownell
has been visiting the Sound cities and
British Columbia, and may decide to
go that way and locate in the near
future. He was greatly pleased with
Renton. He returned home Wednes
day night.
The W. O. W. of this city are mak
ing plans for their annual minstrel
show to be given next month. The
committee in charge consists of Cap
tain Philips. Archer Ross, Harold
Swafford, William Haramond, and
Hugh Kennedy. It will hold a meet
ing in a few days and further plans
will be made.
Makes Hair Grow
Parisian Saga an Invigoralor That
Makes Hair Grow Abundantly j
cr Moncv Back I
If your hair is ftinninjc out gradual
ly it won't be long before the baU
spot appears. - .
The time to take car a of th.3 hair
is when you have hair to take care
of.
For thin falling hair tha best rem
edy known to mankind is Parisian
Sage. It is' compounded on scientific
principles and furnishes to tha hair
root a nourishment that act quickly
and promptly and causes the 'hair to
grow.
But remember this: It kills the
dandruff germ, the past that appropri
ates all the natural nourishment that
should go to the hair root.
Parisian Sage is sold by Huntley
Bros. Co. under a positive guarantee
to banish dandruff, stop falling hair
and itching scalp in two weeks or
money back.
It gives to women's hair a lustre
' and radiance that is most fascinating
and causes it to grow abundantly.
Parisian Sage is sold by druggists
in every town in America. A large,
generous bottle costs 50 cents, and
the girl with Auburn hair is on everv
bottle. : .
For Sale By
HUNTLEY BROS. Co.
Mrs. Carrie Richards, wife of A. W.
Richards, died in Oregon City Sun
day, at 311 Eighteenth street; of can
cer. -
The funeral wUl be held Tuesday at
1:30 o'clock from hsr late residence,
Rev. George Nelson Edwards, pastor
of the First Congregational church, of
ficiating, i
Mrs. Richards had been a resident
of Oregon City 12 years. She came
here from New York. Mrs. Frank H.
Cross, xf this cityj is her daughter.
NEWLYWED JOLTED
BY HILL WORKERS
It' is the pouular .thing at the Wil
lamette Pulp & Paper mill to get mar
ried, but it would seem the wise thing
to let everybody know it when it hap
pened, at least this is what "Ad" Rob
erts would tell any prospective bride
and groom.
"Ad" was married about two weeks
ago, but he was very quiet about it
his fellow workers knew nothing of
it until after the newly married couple
were well out of harm's way. This
made the others around the plant
"peeved" and for two long weeks the?
spent most of their time plotting re
venge. Mr. Roberts returned yesterday and
wien he went to his desk he was sur
prised to see it coved completely with
hearts, rice, and old shoes. But this
was not all. His -telephone was full
of rice, a big bell above his desk
showered rice all over him, and then,
to clap the climax, the groom was
compelled to mpunt his desk and
make a speech.
Adger G. Roberts and Miss Mar
guaret Fairclough were married two
weeks ago and they left at once for
Long Beach for their honeymoon.
They returned Sunday and were pre
sented with a complete silver set by
the employees of the mill.
THEY PUZZLE GREAT MINDS.
Simple Words Too Profound For Hu
man Understanding.
Q. Can there lie two kinds of Infini
ties or two infinite spaces?
A. The writer of this question must
dei-idt The nearest star is distant
twenty-five trillion miles. Write a row
of units 111111... to the star and let
each unit represent one mile; then the
distance represented by a line of l's.
twenty-five trillion miles long, sub
merges all human powers of Imagina
tion. But write a row of 222222.. twenty-five
trillion miles long; then the
number of miles represented would be
twice as great Then write a row of
990999... equally long, and the distance
expressed would be nine times as great
as that represented by the l's.
But no human can think of the dis
tance expressed by the l's. Let the
.first row of figures extend twenty-five-
trillion or fifty or a thousand trillion
miles to the east; then a row could be
extended toward the west Many mil
lions of years would be required to
write the long rows. Suppose that
you write 9's both ways during a thou
sand million years'each. Then the dis
tance in miles would be thinner than
a spider's thread when compared to
an infinite distance.
There are possibly fifty persons now
living able to think one new thought
They are the mighty of the earth, and
are all transcendent mathematicians.
Not one of these even tries to begin to
think of infinity or eternity. They all
know better. Only the superficial
strive to think of the two words, so
my questioner must answer his own
question, for 1 cannot even hope to se
cure a glimpse, lasting a thousandth
part of one second, of the meaning of
one of the following list of words:
Mind,, space, time, duration. Infinity,
eternity, beginning, end, space and
electrons. Edgar Lucien Larkin in
New York American.
FARMERS LEARN THE
VALUE OF ADVERTISING
In the current issue of Farm and
Fireside. Nat. T. Frame, a government
employee who has large orchards and
superintends them himself, writes
about the value of advertising to farm
ers. He says in part:
"Advertise, advertising, advertise
ments, advertising campaigns and ad
vertising bills magic words. An-1
even we farmers are catching on.
Didn't John Pickering Ross hit the
nail on the head recently when he
told the sheepmen not to sell their
flocks, but to advertise their mutton?
People do not eat mutton because
they do not know how good it is when
bred right, fed right, butchered right
and cooked right. Some keen organ
ization of sheepmen is going to show
a number of these people who are at
present non-consumers of either lamb,
ram, sheep or mutton how short
sighted they are, and by so doing will
create a more active demand for their
special product.
"So, too, we may expect to see the
day when even the young clerk who
is but beginning his life at the lunch
coounter will put up a kick if his
counter will put up a luck if his
real buckwheat-flour and his mapls
syrup did not come from sugarmaple
sap. That is, if the buckwheat grow
ers and millers and the maple-grove
owners catch on to the value of ad
vertising as earlv as W3 think they
will.
"If we apple-growers do not soon
formulate and put into execution some
comprehensive advertising scheme to
reach the present non-consumers of
apples we may not be able to sell our
crops profitably."
The Busy Editor.
After the fire that destroyed Bar
nuni's museum the proprietor consult
ed his friends as to his' wisest course.
He told them he had a fortune and
could easily retire from active busi
ness. Among his friends was Horace
Greeley.
"What shall I do?" asked Barnum.
"If I were you." replied Greeley, "I
would go fishing. I've been trying for
thirty years to go fishing and have
never been able to do it.''
Some Famous High Notes.
Melba, F sharp; Jenny Lind, B in
alto; Christine Nilsson, G in alto;
Evangeline Florence, G in alto; Ellen
Beach Yaw, C two octaves above; Te
trazzini, D in alto; Carlotta Patti, D in
alto; Adelina Patti, C in alto.
FOUR SOULS EACH.
Curious Beliefs of the Savages of West
Africa.
West African religion is particularly
generous to the human beings, to each
of whom it allots several souls, four
being the usual number. Only one is
Immortal, however. The others, though
troublesome enough during the own
er's life, cease to be at the same time
as the body. They are the shadow
rouI, the dream soul and the bush soul.
One soul seems more than many of
us can manage, but the poor African
has a bad time between the four of
them. He never knows when some
enemy may plunge ya knife into his
shadow, thus causing him to sicken
and die, or when his bush soul, which
takes the form of an animal, may rush
Into danger and get hurt, and. as for
his dream soul, that is particularly
troublesbme. as it wanders from his
body during sleep and runs the risk of
being caught by witch traps. When
this happens its place is often taken
by a nasty stranger spirit called a
"sisa," which seems to have no other
object but to cause misfortune and
sickness to- the being who forms its
temporary habitation.
Most of the tribes have the idea of
an underworld after death, neither
heaven nor hell, but much like the ex
isting world, only dimmer. Among the
Tschwi tribes this idea Is well defined.
Their shadow world has a name
srnhiunudayi and they even know the
way to the entrance, which Is across
the Volta river. This place has its
markets, its town and its interests, but
everything is felt in a more indistinct
way.
Meat For Jurymen.
At one time it was the common duty
of both the plaintiff and defendant in
an action to provide refreshments for
the Jury empaneled to try it, and from
this arose the practice (which surviv
ed until 1870) of denying them "meat,
drink or fire" while deliberating upon
their verdict Later on it became usu
al for the person In whose favor the
verdict was given to offer the Jury a
dinner and sometimes a guinea or so
for their trouble. This practice led to
so much abuse that it was found nec
essary to pass a lawprohibiting it
London Graphic.
Cow Dells.
Stella Why do cows wear bells?
Bella To call the calves to dinner
of course. New York Sun
Meritol Rheumatism Powders
The unusually large sale of this rem
edy is the best evidence we could of
fer you to prove its merit. It is made
of effective ingredients and is guar
anteed to give permanent relief for
rheumatism. We will . gladly show
you the formula and explain its merit
to you. Jones Drug Co., local agents.
This New Illustrated Book For Every Reader!
"
1M AWl inil
PRESENTED-BY THE
CALM
!
OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE
See the Great Canal in Picture amTProse
ElimMAlMJimjmimiWI!
Read How You May Have It Almost Free
Cut out the above coupon, and present It at this office with the ex
pense amount herein set opposite the style selected (which covers the
items of the cost of packing;, express from the factory, checking;, clerk
hire and other necessary EXPENSE items), and receive your choice of
these books:
PANAMA
! AND THE
j CANAL
. Is Pictnra and Pros
ILLUSTRATED
EDITION
This beautiful big volume is written by Willis J. Abbot, i
a writer of international renown, and is the acknowl
edged standard reference work of the great Canal Zone.
It is a splendid large book of almost 500 pages, 9x12
inches in size : printed from new type, large and clear.
on special pager; bound in tropical red vellum cloth;;
title stamped in gold, with inlaid color panel ; contains
more than oUU magnificent illustrations, including beau
tiful pages reproduced from water color studies in col-'
$4
. -l r i r - :t i. rn r-
luimga Miai idr surpass any wurj ui a feiniiiar cituu:icr. ili vvprMca
and see this beautiful book that would sell for $4 under usual I Amosatel
.conditions, but which is presented to our readers for SIX of "
i the above Certificates of consecutive dates, and only the V"1
i Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for $1.59 and 6 Certificates
Panama and
j the tanaf
IO OCTAVO
A EEITI0H
X Sent by Mail. Postage Paid, for 67 Cents and 6 Certificates
iaaiaasiitsifcAaaAAiaasiai
Regular octavo size: text matter practically the same as the $4 vol- (
nme; bound in blue vellum cloth; contains only 100 photo
graphic reproductions, and the color plates are
"rutted. This book would sell at $2 under usual condi
tons, but is presented to our readers for SIX of the
Jiove Certificates of consecutive dates and only the
EXPENSE j
Amount of .
48c
I THE ROAD.
I singr you an ode
Of the country road,
The lumpy roai!
And the bumpy road
That jolts the v.njon and spills th
load;
Mud to the hubs when the rain
come-down;
Filled with ruts when the fields are
brdwn
And the sun is hot and the air is
dry.
It's clogged with gravel and packed
with sand,
So built and graded and laid and
planned
That it takes a team
And sometimes two ' .
To do the work one horse should do.
It racks the wagons with jolts and
Jars.
It ruins horses and motorcars.
Keeps back crops from the market
place,
Piles up debts on the farmer's place.
The old time road is a plain dis
grace. But the modern road is a different
thing. ' .
A worthy, theme for the b'ard to
sing
Put together
For every weather,
Smooth and dustless and good to
see
And graded right, as a road should
be;
Useful always and muddy never,
A thing of beauty, a joy forever.
Bellefontaine (O.) Examiner.
NOVEL SUGGESTION- TO
AVOID MANY ACCIDENTS.
Plan Would Necessitate Slow Speed of
Autos When Crossing Tracks.
In order to avoid accidents at rail
road crossings, which have claimed
such a large death toll In recent
months, a novel suggestion has been
put forth which it appears will at
least lessen the danger of a collision
between a train and passing carriages
or automobiles.
If the highway crossings were divid
ed and offset with sharp turns at the
track, as per the sketch accompanying,
the crossing could not be made at high
HGffWAY
I
, SUGGESTED PLAN FOB CROSSINGS.
speed. Thus the driver would be go
ing slow enough- to see a train and
stop, if he used his senses at all.
In many instances it Is impossible to
build overhead or tunnel crossings, and
aside from that the expenses are very
great Such a scheme as this would
not, of course, eliminate all accidents,
but the number would be greatly di
minished. Colonel Cornell of the National High
ways Protective society- reports that
the number of automobilists killed in
New York state alone in .1913 up to
Aug. 1 has been seventy as compared
with fifty-two last year and seventy
two seriously injured as against fifty
eight in 1912. F. A. Brown of Detroit
says in the current number of the Spec
tator that "more than 95 per cent of
automobile accidents are due to carelessness."
TAR TO SAVE FRENCH ROADS.
Public Works Minister Plans to Spend
$50,000,000 on Them.
Not less than $50,000,000 will be
spent in the next ten or twelve years
putting a tar coat on 6,000 miles of
highway or one-quarter of the roads
of France, according to the minister
of public works, M. Thierry.
The new tourist department at his
ministry Is grappling with the prob
lem of overhauling the roads for the
benefit of the motor traffic, which has
already reached huge proportions and
is threatening to ruin the splendid
highways for which France is famous.
M. Thierry is convinced that the only
way to combat the wear and tear is
to undertake systematic tarring of the
roads. He purposes to meet the heavy
cost by a graduated tax on automo
biles ranging from $10 for twelve
horse power cars to $50 for all over
sixty horsepower.
M. Thierry also says that the tourist
department is going to see France pro
vided with clean, comfortable and hy
gienic hotels, which are found In Ger
many, Austria and Switzerland, but
are lacking in the republic, although
everywhere the food obtainable in
French country inns is excellent.
xowne So you were in London, eh ?
How did you And the weather there?
Browns I didn't have to find it It
came and hunted me up and sur
rounded me in large sized chunks.
Philadelphia Press.
Fred G. Taylor, the gas-blower on
The Enterprise, is about to blow up
according to one of his brainy eds.
A RELIABLE TONIC.
M&ny of the people around here
know a good deal about this splendid
remedy; to" those who do not, we wish
to say that Meritol Tonic Digestive is
the greatest strength renewer, flesh
builder and nerve tonic we have ever
seen. For people in poor health, weak
run down and played out, those not
as strong and vigorous as they should
be, we recommend this tonic. Jones
Drug Co., . sole agents. .
BOUNTIFUL CROPS OF
With the hop -picking finished and
the harvesting of the prune crop well
under way( prospects are bright for
one of the most prosperous years the
Willamette Valey has ever seen.
Reports from up and down the val
ley all bring out the one fact that un
equalled crops are being harvested
and prices are the best they have
been tor years. HoPs are selling in
the neighborhood of SO , cents with
prospects for advance scill higher
while prunes bring five cents and
and above.
All up and down the valley the
prune dryers are operating day and
night and the crop is so bountiful, so
great, that it is feared that, even with
increased facilities, part of the crop
will spoil. Prominent dealers in-the
fruit estimate , that the prune output
this season will total 25,000,000 pounds
or 625 cars.
The hop crop was unusually good
while the price hovers around the 30
cent mark.
Livestock, Meats
BEEF (Live weight) steers 7 and
8c; cows 6 and 7c; bulls 4 to 6c.
MUTTON Sheep 3 to 4c; lambs,
a to 5c.
POULTRY (Buying) Hens 12 and
13c; old roosters 8c; broilers 15c and
16c
WEINIES 15c lb; sausage 15c lb.
PORK 9 12c and 10c.
VEAL Calves 12c to 15c
according to grade.
Fruits
APPLES 50c and $1.
DRIED FRUITS (Buying) Prunes
on basis 4 for 35 to 40c.
ONIONS $1 per sack.
POTATOES 75c and $1.0
BUTTER (Buying) Ordinary
country butter 23c to 25c.
EGGS Oregon ranch, case count
28c; Oregon ranch candled 39c.
Prevailing Oregon City prices are
as follows:
HIDES (Buying) Green salted, 9c.
CORN Whole corn $37; cracked
$38..
SHEEP PELTS 15c to $1.50 each.
FEED (Selling) Shorts $27; bran
$25; feed barley $30 to $31.
FLOUR $4.50 to $5.
HAY (Buying) Clover at $8 and
$9.00; timothy $12.00 tad ?13.00;
oat hay best $10 and $11; mixed $9 to
$13; Idaho and eastern Oregon tim
othy selling $20; valley timothy $12
to $14. -
OATS (Buying) $23.00 and $24,
wheat 79c and 80c; oil meal selling
$38; Shady Brook feed $1.3o per cent.';
THE ISLE OF TABOGA
A Beautiful Spot in the Bay of Panama Where are Located
the Canal Zone Hospitals . ..
By Willis J. Abbott, Author of "Panani a and the Canal in Picture and Prose.'
. A flock of little white boats, each
with a single oarsman, puts out from
the shore to meet you like a flock of
gulls as your little steamer drops an
chor In a bay of truly Mediterransan
hue. To the traveled visitor the scene
is irresistibly reminiscent of some lit
tle port of Southern Italy. But from
the sea one looks upon a towering hill,
bare toward the summit closely cov
ered lower down by mango, wild-fig
and ceiba trees, bordered just abvoe
the red roofs of the little town by a
fringe of th" graceful cocoanut palms.
Then comes the houses, row, below
row, until they descend to the curving,
beach, where the fishing boats are
drawn up out of reach of th etide
which rises some twenty feet.
Taboga once shared in the proserity
of the early Spanish rule, and enjoyed
the honor of having entertained for a
few days Sir Henry Morgan, whom
England made a baronet and a colonial
governor by way of reward for his ex
ploits. Taboga must have treated him
well, for not only did he forbear to
sack the town, but so deep was the
devotion paid by him and his men to
certain tuns of excellent wine there
discovered that they le; a Spanish gal
leon, deep-laden with gold and silver,
slip through their fingers rather than
interrupt their drinking bout.
Just now the wine and wassail of
Taboga is limited to about six grog
shops, which seems an over supply for
the handful of fishermen who inhabit
its tumblexlown hovels. Each bar.
too, has its billiard table and remind
ed one of Mark Twain's islands in the
South Sea, whee the people earned
an honest living by taking in each oth
er's washing, one wonders if the sole
industry of the Tabogans is playing
billiards. Some of the boats at anchor
or drawn up on the beach attest to
some prosperity amongst thsm that go
down to the sea in ships. One that I
saw rigged with a fore and aft sail
and a jigger was hewn out of a single
log like a river cayuco and had a beam
exceeding four feet. Before many of
the houses were lines hung with long
strips of fish hanging out to dry, for
it is a curious property of this atmos
phere that, despite its humidity, it will
cure animal tissues, both fish and
flesh quickly and without taint.
Agriculture in Taboga is limited to
I the culture of the pineapple, and the
local variety is so highly esteemed in
the Panama markets that some meas
ure of prosperity might attend upon
the Tabogans would they but under
take the raising of pines systematical
ly and extensively.' But not they.
Their town was founded in 1549, when
at the instance of Las Casas, the King
of Spain gave freedom to all Indian
slaves. Taboga. was set apart as a res
idence for a certain part " of these
freedmen. Now, what did the freedom
from slavery mean but freedom from
work? This view was probably held
in the 16th century and certainly ob
tains in Taboga today, having been en
chanced no doubt by the liberal mix
ture of negro blood with that of na
tive Indians. If the pineapples grow
without too much attention well and
good. They will be sold and the grog
shops will know that real money has
come into the .town. But as for seri
ously extending the business well,
that is a thing to think of for a long,
long time, and the thought has not yet
ripened.
As to the part of Taboga in the econ
omy of the Canal wnrk wo hatro haa
a sanitarium inherited from the French
ana used as a place of convalescence
for almost recovered patients from the
hospitals of the zone. After breathing
the clear, soft air, glancing at the com
fortable quarters and enjoying to the
fullest a lunch costing fifty cents that
would put Broadway's best to shame,
and make the expensive and ill-ordered
Tivoli dining room seem like a "bean
ery" in comparison, we could well un
derstand why every employee with 30
days' sick leave to his credit gets just
such a slight ailment as needs a rest
at Taboga for its cure.
OREGON CITY A GOOD TOWN
Oregon City is a mighty good town,
worthy of the best of everything.
That's why we have joined the Am
erican Drug and Press Association
and offer to our people the Meritol
line of preparations, made by the As
sociation and sold only through its
members. There is nothing like these
goods, guaranteed in every way. We
want Oregon City people to have the
best there is, so we offer you this
line. Ask to see Meritol goods. Jones
Drug Co. local agents.
ALMOST FREE
There are no expensive preparations; No time lost; Use only
your leisure hours; Sit in your easy chair, and read
PANAMA
An illustra
tion cannot
portray the
beauties o f
this big $4
book bound
iu tropical red
vellum cloth,
it measures 9
xl2 inches in
sixe.
The picture
of the hand
shows the
compara tive
size of the
book
And the
Canal
IN PICTURE PROSE
$3l5sg8fe$AsgSSl i
fSlitiL o oo2!ias
Hi Hps iSi
5 '.
This book first takes you through
the front door of Panama-
through the islands along the wav,
describing the natives in picture
and prose ; thence you are taken
to the isthmus and are shown the
wonders of that unknown country
the people, their strange customs
ind more strange costumes, their
.-eligions and politics, their peculiar
characteristics; how they live
how certain natives eat lizards and
hugely enjoy them how they fish
irid hunt ; their sports and pas
times; marketing bananas, shooting
alligators, burning charcoal ; ALL
there is to know about these queer
people, and MORE than has ever
been told of the great waterway ;
from the whys and wherefore of
its inception to the in sand outs of
its construction- . y
This is a Rare
Treat for Everybody
a 0
aMii!
ENTERPRISE
pr?sems this book to its readers on the popular plan explained in tne .
ama Certificate printed daily in these columns
k-'lUJ
Gut Out the
Panama
Certificate
arid-present at this office with jhe expense amount of $1.18 for
the $4 volume" or 48 cents for the $2 volume (which covers
the items of the cost of packing, express from the factory, check
ing, clerk hire and other necessary EXPENSE items), and re
ceive your choice of these books:
THE
LARGE VOLUME
is printed from new type, large and clear,
splendidly bound, with inlaid panel showing
the famous Culebra Cut in natural iolors, and
filled with magnificent illustrations, many of
which are from water color studies "in .artistic
Mlorings. "
THE
SMANL VOLUME
contains practically the same reading matter;
is bound in blue vellum cloth, but contains
only 100 photographic reproductions, and the
color plates are omitted. : Willis J. Abbot;
America's most versatile writer, is the author
of both books. v '
Mail Ordars filled as
- j
Printed on
in the Certificate
this Page