Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County observer. (Moro, Sherman County, Or.) 1897-1931 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1921)
te r - . O » *e rv e r. Iw A S ^ S O Ñ .' ' MUCH UNISON O'11U A Y.,.„..„J. »»ary 21? 1921 Writer Comp’ains Americans Are ANCIENT LEGEND OF JAPAN Unable to Act Alone. Many Steriee Teld-W W m ¿VI» Fbd4r 1 “Moto-Minded," Is Expression He Usas as a Whole a» Easy to Stamped« as a Hard of Texas Steer». Stories sod legends concerning ris ers abound In Japes. <»oe reason la The only way to accomplish the that tbs liv e n »m Meuarolly troach- laudable purpose of bvkiglng down th^ eroog strMRns which s greater part price of clothing woulo be to start the of th e peer-ore (Urie more th a n d ry *n»hiou of being out of fashion and gravelly beds, but which sometimes »hnt would he the hardest kind of a suddenly overflow their banks carry* lesson to teach the A merlán» people. Ing destruction to the fields and to They have learned to a<1 m s one— the bouses glbng their way. The story sg lbs Kappa la told on the oe- which Is a good thing sometimes. Thej lave yet to learn how to art ns one* nip^xi, of river festivals, which are vhlch la a good filing most of the time. bi Id In July. We nre roob-mlnded njid that 1« the,| The ftapiia Is supposed to be a hairy cause of many of our troubles. Includ creature with scaly limbs and the body of a tortoise; Ms bead resembles tliat ing the high cost of living. Everybody wants to read the same novel the same of so ape. and In the top of It Is a week. Consequently the library cannot cavity containing a mysterious fluid, said to be the source of the Kappa’s supply Its readers, while equally good novels, a fow mouths old. are stacked power. The chief delight of the Kap ip unread on tlw shelves. There la a t»a. who la fierce and quarrelsome. Is worldwide shortage of wheat. “Use <* challenge hutsan beings to eorabst, mii Invitation that cannot bo refused. other Tfrtilns.” says llooveT. Every body does for a while, then after a To defeat a Kappa Is as unfortunate hs to be wur-ted by him. as the victor while ‘everybody govs back to wheat mil the supply again runs short. All »•gins Immediately to waste away. tl.e housewives onler the best cuts of Tlie Kappa always * lives in 1 rivers, meat, but-cattle c»m t be grown that and there were Kappas to soma dls- are all beat cuts. Tlie department of rrlcra which dentunded two victims a agriculture »«Ivlses some other cut and If a person began suddenly to then every housewife orders that ami a pule and thin, It was said that wliraccept no substitute. x ’ tppM had claJined him. <•••-»- > Someone auggests that a fegf young means "CMId Of the River.” •nen und women might learn Spifhlsh im e la a shrine In lauroo called to their advantage and Immediately ! • ako-no-mlya which la said to coo 10,000 In a single city start Spanish ii >« document signed by; the Kappa end there are not teachers and text • once lived in a neighboring stream, books enough to go around. If an ex ms goblin was exceedingly ferocious and many a villager » o r-a ▼lllager’e cursion boat tips and the ooptaln calls out, “Too many on one side,” the animal fell victim. One day the Kap- crowd unanImously rushes to the oppo « .it'«eked » horse which bad stepped h r doing so. the Kap- site side and the boat lists more than ever. A millionaire, asked for his « rk hut still clung to ■ a i lumse.- which dashed 1 recipe for rtchns, said: “Go whort* 'river and to his master’s everybody Is doing the same thing and do wontethlng different." He had got v I lagers captured, the Kap- ala money mit of the Klondike by sell nted to kill It, but the own- • horse protested that We had ing groceries. We declared our Independence as a / • ei plan. nation, but we have not yet declared The Kappa was tightly honed and our Independence as Individuals. We • -d with a document which i nt he would never molest do everything In mass movements, by <»r rh d r animals again, campaigns, drives, booms, erases, fads ¡u order, to save, bi» life» and reviváis. .We cannot even fulfill the simplest civic or family duties I c - i Ms east to the t nipping h it band Into the i with on t calling on all our fellow d tl- cena to aid. It la only by the procla d pressing It to the paper. He mation of a “<So to Church Sunday.” •’ ~n allowed to return to the that we are enabled to «make a batting • from that day to this he average In religion of one hit out of a Manned the villagers. possible 62. The rest of the calendar ia lapsn'eoe today will aeknowl- « that he haa heard of Kappa but Is filled Up with "W rite to “Mother Day." “Clean-Up Day." “Plant a Tree •••ive -»een one.—Sarah Moffatt rtiF- Japan Advertiser. Day," "Ba Patriotic Day," “Be Thank ful Day," and the like. "All together now," cries our gubernatorial or pres idential cheer leader, “one, two. three, . gemeua Rida. n hero of many a ro- let ’er go I* And we all go through the • end one of ' the most motions of the designated emotions < niidmg figures In the history of with the precision of a rhythm ma nglisb highwaymen, once made a chino. rte that, for distance covered and "The strongest man In the world," oad maintained, has never been dû pays Ibsen, “la he who stands moat alone." That la, I suppose, his way of tes ted. ns fa r as any record er saying that nobody but a strong man ......... *• rs Turpin was In danger of capture, could stand alone In a democracy like ♦!>-• •< ”< * id capture meant death ■ beyond ‘ teat loo. He had beneath him a •The American people la ns easy to wee of uneqoaled speed and endnr- stampede as a herd of Texas steera ica, and before him an earthen knd any one who tries to stand ngulnst ■th leading from London’s cobble the rush gets trampled Into the ground. ones to York, a distance of 200 — Edwin Be Slosson In the New York Has. 8pur was touched .to the mare,' Independent. «—« ;> I ' i ...' ' ■■ nee famed In song and story as Black. Bess,” apd Just aai the ann Powerful Wireless Station. as sinking to rest the highwayman The greatest wireless station In the sd the eager mount took up the long world Is soon to rise near New York d ty. I t Is known as a five-way sta ML , The same sun rose 12 hours later tion. In other words. It will transmit rer the housetops of York, and the and receive ldng-dlatance wireless mes iriy-rtslng cltlaena who peered sages In five directions at the same om shattered windows saw a great Vn»c. The greatztoa«ts which raise ack horse, dripping w ith nweot. (he antennae to the Okies will be 660 res starting foots ' h e *' bend- and feet In height or J00 feet higher than reath coming In gasps, thundering the Washington monument. Messages own the main street, while a dust- win ho trtMtomKted at once to England rvered rider swayed in 'th e saddle and central Europe, to South America ad made futile efforts to whip the and south-eeas and to the Pacific coast -nvel stains from bis -gay costume end Japan. The station will he calla It had completed the distance In 12 ble of sending 500 words and receiving ours, and without changing mounts. 600 words every minute. Messages may be sent from the great station for 10.000 miles. The power of the send - Fiber Box doves W ood., ing apparatus will be so great that the The fiber box la considered an Im- radio aaaáaagee wMÍpdnetrate the most rtant factor In fooest ^conservation. m o only about one-alxth of Its raw difficult weather and static conditions for thousands of m ile * '- It la estimat iterial la new wood pulp. The real ed that the coat of building such a sta almost wholly wnsto, according to b forest bureau of the department of tion will be ouly about one-tenth as much as to lay cables under the At riefetnre. which says: lantic or Pacific oceans.—Boys* Life, ■At least half of fiber la old newspa- i. r »» ■' »"■ ' * * '* » '■ ra. screenings, wrapping paper, po- FeRewiag Doctor's Orders. r boxes and ruoh mstartal. B a t rope 8peaklng of Jaxx music, which with d bagging are no leas products of out doubt has a atroag appeal to the » waste heap. The .Increased, price American public, a writer in Along id for old papers since fiber board Broadway tails of a doctor In New sea stimulated the demand haa ra York who het laves It helps keep hls iled In drawing supplies from small waiting patients to a cheerful frame m s and rural oommuQltJes, »here of m in d .'T h ia physician said: rmerly no one went to the- trouble of . “I ’ve watched the crowd« In ray llectlng such material. . I t «has en waiting room and It la most remark- traced also the diligence of ncaveng aide bow music-affects them. I ’ve seen i who search the alloys, ash -cane, ten or B dozen people sitting In the d public garbage dumps In cities.” room all staring at the floor or out of the window and getting more morosr every minute, when suddenly my from Parts says tliat daughters would start singing and dor Secretory of Rtsfe for the Post, playing. Almost Immediately the at- egragb'-iOMt <i «endwue riervhvw mowpherv of the waiting room changes «ritampa has announced that the from gloom to Joy. My daughters are meb government plans for an elab- Instructed to play only the latest airs to wireless system jpboae canter Including ) • * • —ohd the Jaralar- the 1 be In Ports and which gJU oovei bettor.i I < rape. Asia. Africa te n d Booth a. u; »■ *■ »erica. I f this systeik. «art « f lL * Make Room fee Another. t«b la already in existence, Is to- ’ ^What does thia fellow do for a Mv- applied as non .proposed, IB tT ’ wireless communications “H e’s a foot profiteer." the world will he able to “Sella shoes?" ftl Orest Britain's onble inl- * “ No. ho charges »10 to give one dnnclng lesson.”—Ólrmlngham Age- V ’ ' *g A /a * -r AT tori»1 *• Herald. r the Rhine, "t lantry— Who m**« there? rateo1" '• Arbeiter. Q«nuin« Nutmeg. ienfry Come aealg ^ Yeu’f * . the Nutmegs are kernels of the fruit of th men I ’ve Hiooftrd with that } :i tree cultivated In Sumatra, Java, and ne to «0 m in in e * !--K t’a ra Mild the West bidioo. The shape and else i'V f ihla fruit resembles a penCh and. c. 1 when ripe. It easily splits In two parts, Ut wing the kern si ><or outmeg) and | iaa<O. which «irnonoda IL ’ «. Always Burs to Pleas« __;<tt R ohe» fllwaya on Jttd Tunblnsweya a campaign speak special supplies and casket» er 1« always sure of applause because __ d at any (ime moat of bis audteoco la already on bis S 4 n Rriabinp> M o r n . O re g o ra of tho a rjm M n t. * t and Fereofoue QonHtMs of Riven- Dwelling Mappe — iii * IggB ' •* O ¡A wwd , ,,, w NEWS NO OFGEKMl o r a SENATOR WILLIS ■ asllls at *bprtngh«ld, employing'seven ty-five toon, aloead down last week. I • -V >JK-<I Blxort aMhoufices the w ill not be reopened until the eondltlona of the lumber market are Principal Events of the Week Briefly Sketched for Infor A to to opening season at Crater Lake tor 1921' la forecast by a report re ceived by Alexander Sparrow, super mation of Our R tadert. intendent of the park, that the snow la now 81-8 toot deep St tha rim. Last year at this time, tha depth was only 2 Thera were »1» births and 1ST 81-1 toet * deaths In Eugeae and Lana oounty dur Thrashing la still to progress in ing 1920. Lake county and it IS possible that It The statistical report shows that the wlU h e finished before spring work city of Portland now has 1948 em forces a stop. Bound grain that was ployee on Ito payrolL stacked properly la turning out well, Tho dtook County bank of Prine while headed grain haa bean injured ville, recently closed w ill bo opened more or less. within tho next thirty days. < , When a carrier upon which he was Prom 165 9-yeaiM>ld. Grltooo Golden riding gave way with the result that apple trees Dugald Campbell of Eu he feU 8« feet with lioOG feet of lum gene netted »1929 thia season. ber on top of him, Ed Dempsey, a mill The -atoto highway eontortpslon,' at employs at Mabel, suffered concus a mooting In Portland February 1, sion Of tha brain and many other wlU open bids on ILWO^OOO of state serious Injuries. highway bonda. The Portland city council haa pass Approxlihataly 1250 students of Q»e ed a atriageat ordinance governing the elementary dchoola and 160 students manufacture and sale of “soft" d rin ks of tha high oohoola w ill gdeduate In Including cider In all its various guises Portland Jan u a r y 28» « and allaaaa Tha ordinance la aimed Fire -of unknown origin destroyed to prevent the marketing of fermented the Oregon Trunk railroad pumping and IntoxkMUtlng “eeft” d rin ks < atatlop at Metolius, causing a loss of The seal aple for Oregon during the Frank B. W illis of Ohio, who took approximately »12,000. 1920 holidays w ill surpass that of 191» hla seat In tha senate Saturday as SUO- 1« Heavy snows are driving deer from by »5000 la the report given to the eeaaor of President elect Harding. the mountMna to tha desert altitude executive committee of the Oregon in eastern Oregon, and as a result Il Tuberculosis association. Tbe Port legal M lllng hasAMgun, land aalq. amounted to over »80,000 T h a gnnual report of the Lane Coun and the state sale w ill total »37,000. ty Fnrgt Loan ■ aeooctgtlon for) 1920 The largest sale of Clatsop county shows that the .erganlaatJow has made timber land reported for many months loans totaling MOWQOv“ was made last week, when the Minne t — ' Work of completion of a new hotat sota Oregon Land « Timber company Dublin.— A11 of North Dublin was at Unlog. |g going Moug nicely gn^ wlH of Minnesota sold to the Crossitt T im cordoned by soldiers and police Sun be finished In about three months. Ita ber company of Iowa a tract o f 7808.31 day. Street railway service along tha eoat w ill ha nearly 880,000. acres of fir tim ber for a consideration Total cost o( building construction north quay was suspended. The cen-- of »1,200,000. '.er of the district tiucludqs Churrti In Klamath Falla last year amounted To determine just how great la the street and the place wljiere the soldiers to $75«,160. Of which 818M 08 « M health menace from the Increased con were ambushed recently and North spent on 187 new dwellings. sumption of moonshine liquor, the King street, the scene of fierce fight The real property of-Jahm.T. Albert, state board of health has decided to ing In the Easter rebellion. Salem banker, who died- reeegtly, Waa analyse a number of sample« from the A square mile was surrounded and- valued a t 892,8«0. and the <pgreonal stocks seised by the authorities and tbe biggest raid Dublin has experi property at »85,000, a total of »177, determine to 'What extent the bever enced has-been under way. Only tho «60. : ' ages are poisonous. Because of depleted reserve, the m ilitary have been engaged Inside the There were two1 fatalities in Oregon Savings Bank of Kla due to Industrial accidents during the cordon and It was believed every house First Btato w ill be systematically searched, the math Falls wae dosed by Frank C. week ended January 13, according to raid lasting several days. Hundreds Bramwelk State superintendent of repdrt prepared by the state Industrial X *” : t * J-* of soldiers were taking part and field banks. accident commission. The victims are A perfect mastodon tooth, together W. R. Plumlee, engineer, 8t. Helen«; kitchens v^ere provided. Houses commanding the street* In with tbe end of a maatodon rib, was Thomas Dunsmore, laborer. Salem. A the occupied district were entered and found by p. A. Read of The Dallcs as total of 488 accidents were reported. inhabitants from the upper floors gtv- he was wandering dow» a gully on-Ms • The Oregon Agricultural College Ra ranch. • *•’ » dio cltob baa been negotiating with the , 20 minutes to move downstaira., District attorneys of Oregon to con radio club St the University of Wash Machine guns were placed In win dows and barled wire entanglements vention In Portland voted to adopt a ington for the establishment of a sys uniform policy wbtoh w fll taean the erected. * * -* tem of wireless communication be - T i e area was enclosed and the In suppressing of punch-beard operation tween the two schools, eventually to i ‘ habitants virtually were made prison In the sU^a. , it m. Include stations at the University of The pe»g industry ranks third to Oregon, Leland Stanford and the Uni ers. Searchlights made the streets as fruits to Oregon, with apples first end versity of California. bright as day. , - prunes seopnd. Tha apple acreage la W hy the state of Oregon should be about 50,000, that of prunes 40,000 and compelled to sell ita bonda at a heavy EfilEF GENERAL NEWS pears 12A00. discount, while the little state of The s t a n d a r d 011 company paid to Rhode Island disposes of Its «eceri- The population of Brazil now la 80,- the gtate total of |81,T43.95 ns tax on tlM tfi local banking Institutions at 663,509. l«a sale» of gaeohne and flisttHate to M ary Garden, American grand opera im w u - —- prices ranging above par. was tbe star, was elected general director of; Oregon daring th« yegr ended D«c«m- question directed to the money ln- the Chicago Grand Opera association bar 81. 1820. teresta of the »tate In a statement The Philippine senate paused a bill - The Lane County 8portamen*a asso given Out by Governor Olcott last providing for flotation of $10,000,000 ciation la arranging a big trap shoot week. of bonds In the United States, for eon for Lincoln's, birthday, February 12, W ith alarming divorce statistics fac atructlon of Irrigation systems apd to take plaee on tha user state game ing them and the uncontradicted asser farm , n eaf. R m a n a * ».vt tion, th a t Oregon haa mors divorces other permanent public; works. ' Senator IfcNayy appeared recently per oaplta than any state In the union, More than 200,000 Armenian refu- gees between Kars and Alexandropol before the senate finance committee district attorney« of Oregon, to con are dying because of lack of food* aud and offered gruNPdftt to 8»vgr g f a pension In Portland, recommended the fuel, and anarchy sta/ks among them, ta riff of 5 cants .a pound on cherries gjneBdmeqt Of existing divorce laws ao t h a t interlocutory decrees only may be according to latest advices frqm A r In brine, filberts and. wblnntt. C. C. Fulton, attorney for the port granted at the conclttalon qf a hearing, menia. President-elect Harding’s sugges of Astoria, has stated that he w ill file and canaOt be made final until three a petition wlth -the toteretat« com tion that hls lnauguratlou take place months latpr, after the (aahion of the merce commission for >a reheuring of on the east portico of the capítol was, “ *t** 7 ^ Q a llfo ra to tow-.., . • .. the Portland*Aatoria rate 1 W ith thelf, contention baaed upon an ratified formally by a joint congree- Many*new buildings at Astoria are old treaty; Jeff Riddle, Joe Ball and aional committee In charge of the cere being held up on account Of the high Clayton K irk, members ef tha Klamath aÚMÑMu'. ■, , , ,» ;q i - > coats, and an effort la being made to Trib al council, hays gone to Waabing- Captain Emmett Kilpatrick. Ameri enforoe a gradual M a M M T < tha ,top, D. where they w lli appear be can Red Cross worker, who was re wages of carpenter« add p a in te r ^ -' fore the secretary of the Interior and ported last Novomber to have been Zero weather has goreed’ tbo Union [SPdesYor to relocate the boundary of killed by the Bolshevlkl, In in Jail at high school at Malin to move It« elan the Klamath reservation as now rec Moscow, advices to the state depart rooms from the c ity , haU to a recently ognised by the government The In ment said. ‘ Two hundred million dollars’ worth ooropleted building, designed to - ba . dian« assert the boundary should be of insurance was placed on Idaho prop used as a barber shop but p o t y H tour miles south of the present line. *"* ’Anont 700,000 acres are Involved and erty during 1920 and the total sum of apaflsdt The Indian school at Salam, whlqh the value of this land la estimated at Insurance in force and effect Is 1185,- la educatlag 800 In d ia n . puplla, some »10,004,000. 000,000. It Is estimated by H. J. Brace, of whom ware brought $rwp A la s k a r " (to-Aperatlve non-profit associations director of the fta te bureau of insur WlU receive $147.000 according to , the of farmers, for the marketing of the ance. Indian approprlat/og h ill reported to Vfheat crop of the state, and the wool congress. i . . . . . . and mohair produced in western Ore- Would A««l«t Idaho Veterans. P^natpr Chamberlain appears to be gpp. arera definitely launched at the Boise, Idaho —A 5100,000 appropria feeling morq oomfortable and hopeful «eselog at the Oregon Farm Bureau tion bill, drawn for tho benefit of o*- gfter gevsr4 gethasks. A t thai beaL te l oration to Portias« last wssk. A aervlce men, was Introduced in the It Is R id , ho oMMtot lwps' to » •* * • to« nesting tor perfoettox the erganlx% senate by Senator Burky of Jerome, hospital to. W tobtofttNk IL 0 * tor Mon ef tha proposed association for the an ex-service member. It provides for many, weeks- •• »■-" '<»•/* marketing ol wb««t wlU be held at the creation of a veterans’ welfare The Harpsy Valley Improvement T^s Dalle« gp soon as plans for th« commission to render assistance to company of* Portland has ^ffled w ith ’ ooptract can be perfected In the case disabled or destitute veterans of the the state englnaar applleatloa to ap of the wool and mohair growers, a war With Germany and their depend propriate water from Roak ereek d o r meeting w ill be held at Albany on Jan ents. the Irrigation of 816 aoeee of land to uary 21. at which the plane w ill be Harney county. p. as f definitely outlined and presented for Curb on Packers Urged. The Bhqll OU company of Onllforala El #aso, Tex.— The American Na haa remitted to the eegretoyr pi atoto tlonal Livestock association In con a check In the sum of »1^88.64» vention here adopted a resolution rec Ing the tax on sales of gasoline an< Brewing Tea In Tibet, ommending enactment by congress of dtotiiinta in Oregon tor tbe month sat In Tibet that the art of making constructive federal legislation regula tea la raallir enflerstood. 1 To begin ed Decemher 11, M88. ting the packers, commission men and Not less than 1608 veterans of tha with, the ten cesses to bricks, fetched traders. United States Senator Kend world -war, at an UR8O •asaton-ln th« h j «eravgn faeaa China, r Mixed with rick of Wyoming, president of the a few suaN Portland armory U a t week, called by » the tea leaves are nasally - association, was re-elected. Portland poet of the .American L e g i s t ^ o l t o e ^ N Z o k ^ R Is roared affirmation to a resolution calk 1 • A »•«<* a brick, ground to One powder In a Qoodlng Now Senator From Idaho. Ing upon the Oregon legislature -to al-^ mortar sad boiled la water for five Washington. — Former Governor low ex-aervlee mpn (th*. optlqg, of llf> mlnate% minatea, a Mttla aaM 1« added, toys the Qoodlng of Idaho was sworn In Satur for each month eervieb h r a 88484 Kansas City Star. Tbe field then la day as a member of the senate to suo- farm or borne loan. 4 < , ? t pooraS'through a bamboo strainer Into oood Senator Nugent of that state. 1 churn. A piece of batter H. H. Coray, member of tha Oreget perched barley meal are con- public servlee commission, hex bees Toads Aid Horticulturists. end the mixture Is churned ' In Europe tond« are carried to th« Appointed on the service, accommoda • r or ua. " The ted now Is citlae to market and aré purchased by tlona and claim» eomaritt«« M th« na Into a srapof a n d js ready to tbs bonicaIturista, who by their aid tional Association e f R a ilw ty and h. Rack partaker flrewe from ora enabled to keep In check the multi public Utilities Cemmlaeloff»«. , m or hl* «pua IP ’ a wooden bowl plico tlor; of the Insects that prey upon Oregon apples wgn five ftret prizes to serve as Â<*up. their fruita. flowers, etc. In the fruit show conducted In Louisi ana. Mo., by tha Mtoataalppl Valley Ap Different From American Qama. •hock of explosion Carried Far. Tbs JnpoUenp game df SfothSR lb Ftve tons of nitroglycerin exploded pie Orowera* aaeoriatfcm. aeeordlag tc In a powder mill In Canr. la. and Inci a notice received by A Johnsen, gf the played with greet ceremony and de Tbe players west tbe so- dentally «battered every pane of gta«* Boran Oaks Orchard eompaay, In Ask corum. riant court coetqme and queer bead* la tbe windows of a train crossing a - „-a- I ’ ' 1 ’ ' Ul * ' bridge o rtr the Richelieu river, tuorv Tha EooU KsOy Lumbar ramps«? gray perched <ra top a t their heads ’ . t. * -d r < ' tho » alto ira j- The G enesee P u r e Food Com pany, L e R o y .N .Y . ALL NORTH DUBLIN RAISED BY TROOPS 6 A N y o u r p la n n in g , d o n o t o v e rlo o k th e g re a t assistance y o u c a n o b ta in fr o m a lly in g y o u rs e lf w ith a s tro n g w e ll m a n a g e d h a n k . O p e n a n ac c o u n t w it h ua to -d a y an d th u s b eg in a business atcquaintance w h ic h w ill s ta n d y o u in good stead d u rin g y e a rs to com e. W e a re a lw a y s re a d y to a d v is e w ith y o u concerning in v e s tm e n ts a n d to assist y o u in e v e ry w a y io o u r p o w e r. Our m o tto service a n d s m a ll accounts an w«U a* la rg e a re welcom e. I . X >• in FARMERS’ STATE BANK a M o ro - - - O re g o n P ain less Parker T h e F am ou s D en tist eople tw enty-eig h t offices, and all m y axaocl- atea la these offices have been t a u g h t how to p r a c t l e a p a in le s s dentistry as w e ll as I can do ’ it m yself. W e have fixed up the teeth - o f over a m illio n people, av d call our w a y o f p ra c tic in g "th e E . R. P a r k e r System.*« I f y o u r teeth are bothering yon, «nd you w a n t them put in good shape W ithout h u rt-r in g and w i t h o u t pay-, ing a fan cy p ric e , cones to our n e a r e s t office, w h i c h y o u w i l l f in d located at . liv in g a hundred miles o r m ore aw ay come to m y offices to have th e ir teeth fixed up. I make it a rule th a t those fro m a d is t a n c e s h a ll b e w a i t e d u p o n im m ed iately xand th e ir w o rk ba com pleted first, ao they can go b a c k h o rn s as soon as possible. Years ago I discovered h o w to extract and fix teeth w ith out hurtirffc, and was so s n c e e s s fu l th a t people c a ll e d m a " P a i n l e i » " P arker. M y p ractice has grow n u n til I n ow have P 3 3 6 W a s h in g t o n S t ., P o r t la n d , O re g o n . / - WRITE, PHONE OR CALL UPON! ,'DUFLB, OHE IN FARMUPROPERTIES ’ If is 8 p t c l il Attention Given W h t it and 8tock Farm I m m Id » » » H - i -S H I I I I I d I I H H I I I I 1 4 S p e c ia l R a te s NEW HOTEL PERKINS! • r .ta « 4 W uUwtM Sb. PORTLAND, »1 t t« té«. . . . . . 11 1 n 1 D H It ¿J dflg. Room with privilege of bath, riagle, 81,00 up; double »1 50 up Room with private bath, «¡agle 81.80 ep; double 82.50 up, Auto Meet« Train«. Street can from ; < ' < Union Depot peee our doors. ’ Transfer «t 5th and Gliasn street« from ' North Bank Depot. H H I I 18-S- w- 4- I I ll»484ff44< l U 1