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About Eastern Clackamas news. (Estacada, Or.) 1916-1928 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1920)
' /-."î wnfflJI /firì / 7 ÏÏ] ü-f'i ■*'■:'>.i n h h r / r a p 1 » I ? r | t * te l i ï s i i s u s S h PAINTS, VARNISHES, ENAMELS, Etc. Cr ./ _ j, < •’ l. - : • ‘T preserve and beautify- \ -U W t f > — \ 7Î\ -t / ':/ m ,: 3p *. I I I \ s X: ' r v - M>K ^ >n .?■ • • ■ ..... 1 < v>. \r>r r ■* »*, ^■¿z^zzizizJ' HE first essential of paint is to preserve, fécond, to beautify. Too many people make the mistake of eo" , n,.;; o. \j tho lat ter, consequently buy paints o f inferior qu.-Ji y. T The result is a temporary beautifying the wood. effect, without preserving FULLER Paints and other products are of that quality which preservos and beautifies. Through their use, inside and out, years ci; 1 fc wi.’i be added to your home and it will be made more livable to yourself and family. Look Up a FULLER DEALER in Your Town Seventy-one years of paint-making experience are back* of every brushful of FULLER Products. Insist on F U L L E R ’S and you’ll be sure of results. And remember, there’s a FU LLER Product for every pairtab’e suriace— inside and out. W. P. Fuller & Co 1 1849-1920 Northwest Branch Houses at. Portland, Seattle, Tacoma, Spolotr.c, Boise. ■' j r ; - m br:'- LaFoilett For Road Bonds cronies passed the time of day Miracle of miracles, the impos- and looked at some of Chapman’s sible has happend. hogs and calves. In the legislature, Seator A. “ Chapman, I ’ m for the bonds,” M. LaFoilett of Marion County,, finally blurted out the old sena- fought against every road bond tor who had led the fight against measure. His opposition to good evefy s t a t e and county bond roads was intense, hitter and issue that had been up for years, habitual. I t was supposed “ W h a t bonds?” demanded nothing could change it. Chapman, amazed. Yesterday he dropped in to ste “ The state road bonds, the his neighbor, C. C. Chapman of amendment I voted against, rais- Hopewell, just across the Will- ing the limit from 2% t o 4 ' » , ” he amette River from the celebrated responded. “ I’ m for the measure. LaFoilett peach orchard in Mis- 1 lookei over the figures that sion Bottom, where the senator those expert accountants figured grew the first loganberries that up. and I ’ m satisfied the bonds ever were grown in Oregon on a won't raise my taxes, so I’ m for commercial s c a l e . T h e two ’em, as I want all the good roads I can get. If they are going to before the people at the May 21 be built in time for me to use Election. them, they had better hurry up and build them, for I am getting End orse Educational Bills old. I really don’ t deserve any roads, the way I’ ve fought ’em, About360 Oregon organizations but b guess I’ ll get them all have endorsed the Higher Educa right,” he c o n t i n u e d with a tional Tax Act, providing 1.26 wink. “ I ’ m getting a l l my neighbors to vote for the meas mills for the State Agricultural College, State University, and ure.” “ Yes, I v o t e d against the State Normal School. These or measure, hut I ’ m for it now,” ganizations i n c l u d e Oranges, he concluded. “ Let’s get the" farm bureaus, commercial clubs, roads built just as soon as we can. women’s clubs, women’s clubs, We are paying our license fees labor unions, and groups in every and gas tax, and we may as well kind of occupation and walk in get the roads.” The bonding measure comes up life.