Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, August 24, 1916, Page 7, Image 7

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    OREGON CITY COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1916.
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The constant strain of
factory work very often
results in Headaches,
Backaches and other
Aches, and also weak
ens the Nerves.
DR. MILES'
ANTI-PAIN PILLS
will quickly relieve the
Nerves, or Pain, while
Dr. Miles'
Heart Treatment
is very helpful when
the Heart is overtaxed.
IP FIRST BOX, OR BOTTLE,
FAILS TO BENEFIT YOU, YOUR
MONEY WILL BE REFUNDED.
Sheriff's Sale
In the Circuit Court of the State of
- Oregon for the County of Lane.
Hugh S. Mount and Guy Mount,
Plaintiffs,
vs.
Clair Evans, Defendant.
State of Oregon, County of Clacka
mas, ss.
By virtue of a judgment order,
decree and an execution, duly is
sued out of and under the seal of
the above entitled court, in the
above entitled cause, to me duly di
rected and dated the 14th day of
August, 1916 upon a judgment ren
dered and entered in said court on
the 14th day of August, 1916, in
favor of Hugh S. Mount and Guy
Mount, Plaintiffs, and against Clair
Evans, Defendant, for the sum of
$149.07, with interest thereon at
the rate of 6 per cent per annum
from the 14th day of August 1916,
and the further sum of $11.70 costs
and disbursements, and the costs
of and upon this writ, commanding
me to make sale of the following
described real property, situate in
the county of Clackamas, state of
Oregon, to-wit:
Lot 3 of Block 37, of Oregon
City, Clackamas County, Oregon.
Now, Therefore, by virtue of said
execution, judgment order and de
cree, and in compliance with the
commands of said writ, I will, on
Saturday, the 16th day of Septem
ber, 1916, at the hour of 10 o'clock
A. M., at the front door of the
County Court House in the City of
Oregon City, in said County and
State, sell at public auction, subject
to redemption, to the highest bidder
for U. S. gold coin cash in hand,
t all the right, title and interest
which the within named defendants
or either of them, had on the date
of. the Judgment herein or since
had in or to the above described
real property or any part thereof,
to satisfy said execution, judgment
order, decree, interest, costs and all
accruing costs.
Dated, Oregon City, Ore., Aug.
17, 1916.
W. J. WILSON,
Sheriff of Clackamas County,
Oregon.
By E. C. HACKETT,
14 , Deputy.
Summons
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon, for the County of Clackamas.
Rose Wilkinson, Plaintiff,
vs.
Charles Edward Wilkinson, Defend
ant. To Charles Edward Wilkinson, the
above named Defendant:
In the name of the State of Ore
gon: You are hereby notified and requir
ed to appear or answer the complaint
filed against you in the above entitled
suit on or before Friday the 29th day
of September, 1916, which is more
than six weeks after the first publica
tion of this-summons, said first publi
cation hereof being made on the 10th
day of August, 1916, and if you fail
to appear and answer, for want there
of the plaintiff will apply to the Court
for a decree dissolving the bands of
matrimony existing between the plain
tiff and the defendant herein.
This scmmons is published by an
order of the Honorable J. U. aCmp
bell, Judge of the Circuit Court of the
County of Clackamas, State of Ore
gon, made and entered on the 21st
day of August, 1916.
Date of first publication August 24,
1916.
Date of last publication, September
28, 1916.
E. A. BURT,
Attorney for plaintiff.
Portland, Oregon.
R. L. Holman, Leading Undertaker,
Fifth and Main St.; Telephones: Pa
cific 415-J; Home B-18.
Geo. C. Brownell
LAWYER
Caufield Bldg.
Oregon City Oregon
MONEY TO LOAN
We have several sums of money to
loan on good real estate, from $100.00
to $1,000.00.
HAMMOND & HAMMOND
ATTORNEYS
Beaver Bldg, Oregon City Ore.
a 'a
e3u
DfQaol?
i
f
SEVERE PAIN.
"I used to suffer a great deal
with lumbago In my shoulders
and back. A friend Induced me
to try Dr. Miles' Antl-Paln
Pills and I am only too glad to
be able to attest to the relief
that I got from these splendid
pills. They form a valuable
medicine and do all that it is
claimed they will do."
LEWIS J. CUTTER,
Marietta, Ohio.
Notice to Creditors
In the County Court of the State
of Oregon, for Clackamas County.
In the matter of the estate of Mi
chael Shafer, Deceased.
The undersigned having been ap
pointed by the County Court of the
State of Oregon, for Clackamas Coun
ty, executrices of the estate, of Mi
chael Shafer, deceased, and have qual
ified, notice is hereby given to the
creditors of, and all persons having
claims against said deceased, to pre
sent them verified as required by law,
within six months after the first pub
lication of this notice to us at the
office of the County Clerk, of Clacka
mas County, in Oregon City, Oregon.
Dated and first published August
24, 1916.
SARAH WEBER,
MAGGIE UTZ,
Executrices' of the estate of Michael
Shafer, deceased.
W. S. WARD,
Attorney.
407 Spalding Bldg., Portland, Ore
gon. 21
The Courier $1.00 per year.
Notice to Creditors
In the County Court of the State of
Oregon, for Clackamas County.
In the Matter of the Estate of Pat
rick Harm,, Deceased,
Notice in hereby given that the un
dersigned has been appointed ad
ministrator of the estate of Pat
rick Harris, deceased, by the Coun
ty Court of the State of Oregon
for Clackamas County, and has
qualified, and all persons having
claims against said estate are here
by notified to present the same to
the undersigned at the office of his
attorney, Virgil L. Clarke, 909-13
Wilcox Building, Portland, Oregon,
with the proper vouchers and duly
verified within six (6) months from
the date hereof.
Dated August 10.
ELMON A. GENESTE,
Administrator.
VIRGIL L. CLARKE,
Attorney,
909-13 Wilcox Building, Port
land, Oregon. 14
Notice to Creditors
In the County Court of the State of
Oregon, for Clackamas County.
In the matter of Jens Jensen, deceas
ed.
Notice is hereby given that the under
signed has been appointed admin
istrator of the Estate of Jens Jen
sen, deceased, by the above entitled
Court, and has qualified. All per
sons having any claims against the
said estate are hereby notified to
present same, duly verified, as by
law provided, to Henry Harkson,
administrator, at the office of Cour
ier PreSs, Oregon City, Oregon,
within six Months from the date
hereof.
Dated and first published August
10, 1916.
HENRY HARKSON,
Administrator.
OLSEN & KELLEY,
Attorneys,
413 Chamber of Commerce Bldg.,
Portland, Oregon. 14
Dr. L. G. ICE
DENTIST
Beaver Building Oregon City
Phones Pacific, 1221. Home, A-19.
OREGON FlfOEUEF ASS.N
Strongest Mutual in the West
M. R. COOPER, Agent
Enterprise Bide.. Oregon City.
REAL ESTATE
MONEY LOANED ON IMPROVED
FARMS
Mrs. Delia Etchison John Edwards
401 E. 50th. St. N. Sherwood, Ore.
Phone Tabor 5805. Phone Sherwood.
MONEY TO LOAN
PAUL C. FISCHER
Lawyer
Deutscher Advokat
- Room 2, Beaver Bldg.
Oregon City, Ore.
CAUSE AND CURE OF BIGOTRY
(Continued from Last Issue) "
2. A DIVINE SAVIOUR. Reve
lation teaches that God has sent
Christ Jesus to provide salvation for
sinful man.
3. THE" NEW BIRTH. Science
would have us believe that man is the
son of an r.pe. If this is true he can't
be the son of God and the son of a
monkey by the same birth. "That
which is born of the flesh is flesh."
Revelation says man was created in
the image of God, but that does not
make him anything but a creature
with Godlike Spiritual faculties. But,
"As many as received him, to them
gave He the right to become sons of
God, even to them that believe on His
name." (Revised version). "That
which is born of the Spirit is spirit."
Without this spiritual birth man is
but an intellectual anmal, a creature
of God. These things are not mat
ters of philosophy, but of life and ex
perience. 4. THE SPIRIT-LED LIFE. The
Holy Spirit begins his inner work in
the believer at the new birth. "If a
man have not the Spirit of Christ he
is none of his." He imprints the
character of Christ upon our charac
ters, and leads us to bear the fruit
of the Spirit in our lives. -
5. THE ETERNAL HOPE. This
is the only thing in' the list of great
essentials. But there are some dozen
leading theories about sin; some eight
as to HOW Christ saves: several
about just how God brings about the
new birth; at least a dozen as to how
the Holy Spirit enters men, and HOW
he deals with them, and several as to
what is going to take place by and
by. An old darkey introduced a white
brother who was going to preach for
him by saying:
"Breddern, dis yere highly educat
ed white man am gwine to let yo'
know de unknowable, to explain de un
explainable, and to unscrew de un
scrutable." This is just what these theories as
to HOW God does things are trying
to-do. No man can explain the natur
al life. No man can tell how it comes
into being. How then can" he tell so
surely how God has accomplished the
Spiritual birth that every man is a
heretic who differs from him. Christ
says "The wind bloweth wheie it list
eth and thou heareth the sound there
of, but canst not tell whence it Com
eth and whither it goeth. So is every
one that is born of the Spirit." I
knew all about how it took plaice twen
ty years ago. Had my whole system
of theology worked out. But now
that I have had another twenty years
to think about it I am willing to let
the other fellow have his say about
it, too, and to say: "Maybe, brother,
you are nearer right after all than
I." The essentiul is: has he got the
life ? "By their fruits ye shall know
them." One man is satisfied with
one surrender to God's spirit, and
daily lives God before men. -Another
claims a second definite work of sanc
tification. A third says he has gone
on and has received a third "baptism."
But all threo show equally by their
love for God, their regard for their
neighbors, and their straightforward
lives that they have the Spirit's presence.-
Why quarrel over HOW they
got it? Perhaps God does not need
two shots at some man before He can
bring him up to the standard of the
Kingdom, and three at some other,
while others get it in one. I have
noticed that a great many professors
of those "Higher blessings" lived a
long way below the average Christian
standard before they got it. I don't
care how they explain the fact of the
Spirit's dealings with them so long as
they accord me the same privilege.
All I care about is the FACT as mani
fested in the life. Are they more lov
ing Christians, kinder in thought and
more tender in sympathy? Then I
am willing to accept the fact that they
have the blessing, and I worry very
little about how God gave it to them.
The Center of Bigotry
Now notice this fact. Evangelical
Christians have never scrapped about
the fundamental facts of life; that
man is a sinner, needs a Saviour, can
be born again, live the Spirit-led life,
and gain heaven. But they do scrap
about HOW those things take place.
Where did sin come from ? How does
Christ save? Must man be born
again at the penitent form, the con
firmation class, or how? Does the
Lord need to work him over once,
twice or thrice before he can make
anything of him? Will Christ come
before or after the Millenium? I
have my opinion regarding all of those
things. Just as intelligent men hold
other views with just as great a
chance to be right. I must concede
that they aro as scholarly, as honest
and as earnest as I. God is blessing
them as I believe He is blessing me.
Who then is right? Has God really
taken any. of us into His confidence
and explained the inner workings of
His Infinite Wisdom? Could we un
derstand them if He did ?
Bigotry, then, lies not in the field
of the facts of life, but in that of the
philosophizing about the HOW of
things. Is there any difference be
tween the life of a loyal Presbyterian
and that of a faithful Baptist? Be
tween a consecrated Methodist and a
God-fearing Congregationalist? Can
we not emphasize more the facts of
living communion with Christ, and
give less prominence to those things
which are hot essentially the truths
of God, but are merely our. reason
ings about them ? When we refuse to
count outside the kingdom those who
cannot reason to the same end as our
selves, or to claim special sanctity be
cause we think that God did His work
in us in a special way, we will help
kill bigotry and broaden Christian
helpfulness and sympathy.
Has it ever occurred to you that,
after all, no one but God ever sees
anything as it really is ? We all color
things thru the spectacles of our own
personality. Dr. Hinson of Portland
says four men dwell under one hat
First the man he thinks people think
him to be. Second The man people
really do think him to be. Third
The man he thinks himself to be, and
lastly the man God sees. And how
different the man God sees really is,
even from tho man as he sees himself.
The old Scotch poet reasoned well
when he said: "
"Oh, wad some power the giftie gie
us
Tae see oursel's as ithers see us."
And if we do not know ourselves how
can we know the deeper things of the
mysterious workings of the Almighty
God?
Dear Lord: Thou who knowest all
that is in man all his shortsighted
ness, and prejudice and unreasoning
bigotry help me to realize more ful
ly the essentials of Thy life in my life.
Make us all more tolerant of each
other's explanations as to how Thou
doest things, for some day, dear Mas
ter, we will have to bow before Thee
in acknowledgement that we knew
very little indeed of the methods of
Thy working, and that we have lost
much of the joy of Chrictian fellow
ship because we were too narrow to
look beyond the walls of our own puer
ile reasonings.
W. T. MILLIKEN.
LOAN BOARD MEETS
Hon. Win. G. McAdooo Atten Hear
ing at Portland
A hearing of great importance to
farmers, farm organizations and cit
ies of Oregon will be conducted by the
newly appointed Federal Farm Loan
board in the federal building at Port
land, Ore., on September 7. This
hearing is to secure information to
guide the board in determining the
boundaries of the twelve Federal Land
bank districts into which the United
States is to be divided for the appli
cation of the new rural credits legis
lation.
The members of the Federal Farm
Loan board who will conduct the hear
ing are Hon. Wm. G. McAdoo, Secre
tary of the Treasury; Geo. W. Norris,
Farm Loan commissioner; Herbert
Quick, Capt. W. S. A. Smith and C.
E. Lobdell.
The board has requested farmers
and farm organizations of Oregon to
furnish facts concerning the need of
cheaper farm loans and it has asked
interested cities to present claims for
the location of one of these Njanks.
This will be the only hearing in Ore
gon. The new Federal Farm Loan act
will do for the farmer what the Fed
eral Reserve act is doing for the busi
ness man. Under it the government
provides the machinery for assembling
capital to be loaned to farm owners or
intended farm owners, on first mort
gage farm security. The loans can
not exceed 50 per cent of the value of
the land, nor 20 per cent of the value
of the permanent improvements. The
loans will be made at a low rate of
interest, not yet determined, but not
over 6 per cent, and provision is made
for the borrower to pay off the loan
and interest in small annual or semi
annual payments through a period of
forty years or at his option. Farm
ers, to take advantage of the law,
must associate themselves in groups
of ten or more and form Farm Loan
associations and then make applica
tion to one of the twelve Federal Land
banks.. The land will then be apprais
ed and, if it meets requirements, the
loans will be made.
The new legislation is expected to
prove a great boon to those sections
of the country where development
has been arrested because of high
interest rates and it is predicted that
it will have the effect of making agri
cultural prosperity permanent and
uniform; stabilizing land values, and
greatly improving general farm con
ditions.
Secretary McAdoo predicts that the
banks will be ready for operation
January first or shortly thereafter.
Eelworm Disease in Northwest
The occurrence and spread of the
bulb and stem infesting nematode or
eelworm (Tylenchus dipsaci), which
has been recently found producing a
serious disease of clover jn the state
of Oregon, should receive general at
tention, especially in the northwest.
Since it was discovered in hyacinth
bulbs at Bellingham in 1913, it has
been observed each successive year
ausing damage to strawberries, on
ions, or clover in other localities of
the Pacific northwest.
Various means of controlling the
pest have been tried, but the most
satisfactory as well as the most prac
ticable method consists in the proper
system of crop rotation in combina
tion with sanitary measures. By
planting infested fields for two and,
better still, three successive years to
crops which are immune or resistant
to the nematode, the pest will be
starved out to Buch an extent that
litHft infestation will occur on a sus
ceptible crop planted the following
year. To make the rotation effective,
it is highly important that all weeds
or other plants which might harbor
the parasite be scrupulously elimi
nated. For this reason, it is advisable
Uniting Learning and Labor
THE OREGON
AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
In its Six Schools and Forty-eight De
partments is engaged in the great work
of uniting Learning and Labor.
Forty-eighth School Year Opens
SEPTEMBER 18, 1916.
Degree Courses requiring a four-year
high school preparation, are offered in
the following:
kn-ornm tttbt 1 TVnnrtmeTirji!
W -- w I f
COMMERCE, 4 Departments; ENGIN
EERING, 6 Departments ; MINES, 3
Departments ; ruKtsim, z jjepwv
menu; HOME ECONOMICS, 4 Depart
menu : and PHARMACY.
Vocational Coarse requiring an
Eighth Grade preparation for entrance
are offered in Agriculture, Dairying,
Commerce, Forestry, Home Makers, and
Mechanic Arts. FUarmacy witn a two
ar high school entrance requirement.
SCHOOL OF MDSIC Piano, String,
Catalogue and beautiful Illustrated
booklet free.
tiMrru TrK RRP.IHTBAI.
1 w-7-lS-lt la 9-7-1) COaVAiUS, OtIOOM
cm
I
Columbia Beach Is
Best Bathing Resort in Northwest
Fine For ".The Kiddies
Full Accommodations for 1000
Bathers at a Time
First Class Amusements, Dancing
and Refreshments
Unexcelled For Camping and For
Picnic Parties
30 Minutes From Broadway on the
Vancouver Line
. Portland Railway
Light Power
Company
to plant the immune crops in rows so
that clean cultivation may be prac
ticed. The following plants, most or
all of which are adapted to the Pa
cific northwest, have not been re
ported as subject to the nematodes
and are, therefore, suggested as ro
tation crops: Corn, cowpeas, soy
beans, millets, tomatoes, asparagus,
cabbage, lettuce, cantaloupes, and
celery. Almost any other crop not
listed above under the head of sus
ceptible plants could also be used.
FINDING BUYERS
R. E. Rodgers Tells in Farm and Fire
side How to Sell Produce
The job of raising and harvesting
most farm produce always requires a
certain amount of planning and brains.
But the job of selling is where most
of us fall short, and the peculiar thing
about it is that we usually know it.
We pay tho price the dealer asks for
what we buy and take the prices the
dealer offers us when we sell.
Our particular line of farming runs
to vegetables and small fruits. In
the vegetables we sell more onions
than any other thing. For a year or
so after we started this crop we had
to deal with commission men in To
ledo, Cleveland and Pittsbuigh when
we had a surplus. Since our local
market seldom used more than BOO
bushels in the year we usually had a
surplus. So the plan of discovering a
market for this crop and others where
by we could sell direct to the grocer
or user of the produce occurred to
us.
It so happened at this time that a
coal miner from the southern part of
Ohio moved in our neighborhood and
was able to suggest names of men lo-
aated in the thickly populated mining
districts of Ohio who were absolutely
straight in their dealing and who
bought large amounts of farm pro
ducts. Correspondence was started, and
200 bushels were sold the first trip.
Many satisfactory deals were made
after this. Even this year this man
telegraphed us for a car.
There are several advantages in
such a deal. Wo usually ship the
onions sacked. He sells to the trade,
and is able to keep these empty sacks
for us and returns a couple hundred
sacks after a few weeks at a freight
expense of 25 cents. Since sacking
costs us about three cents a bushel, it
pays to look after this. Having a
store of his own, there is no drayage
to pay for at the other end. The
money is ready as soon as the pro
duce reaches him. In fact, we could
draw on him at our bank with the
shipping bill and contract before the
goods were delivered to him.
Direct sales are the only outlet for
the farmer so far as I can see. There
is the same chance to buy directly,
but that is another story. Look
around a bit before you consign the
next bunch of farm stuff to a dealer
who will deduct commission, freight
and drayage. Possibly you'll save a
good many dollars.
Announcement
The undersigned have a complete
well-drilling outfit and are soliciting
business in Clackamas county. Work
guaranteed. Satisfaction is assured.
Phone Pac. 180-J.
tf STRAIN & BROWN
Now Open
ENDORSES SCHOOL
State Superintendent Asks Public
Support for New Normal
J. A. Churchill, state superintendent
of public instruction, is asking the
voters of the state to support the initi
ative measure on the ballot this fall
providing for tho establishment of a
standard normal school at Pendleton.
The state superintendent's last re
port shows that only thirteen per cent
of the grr.de teachers of the state are
normal school graduates and he, more
than any other one man, appreciates
the need for more competent instruc
tion, particularly in the rural schools.
"Oregon's greatest need for its ru
ral schools is the teacher who has
had full preparation to do her work,"
he said in making public his indorse
ment of the measure. "Such prepara
tion can best come through normal
school training.
"I truat that the voters of the state
will assist in raising the standard of
our sichoofs by establishing a State
Normal school at Pendleton. The lo
cation is central, the interest of the
people of Pendleton in education most
excellent, and the large number of
pupils in the public schools will give
ample opportunity to all students to
get the amount of teaching practice
required in a standard normal school."
Mr. Wilson has hewn to the line,
has kept the faith.
JONES PROFITS
Neighbors Laughed But Farmer Gets
to Smile a Bit Himself
Jerry Jones of Estacada knows the
truth of an old adage: "He who laughs
last laughs best," and he points today
with no small degree of pride to his
Ginseng crop, which will yield, at the
present market price, $6 or $7 a pound
for the roots.
Five years ago Mr. Jones suffered
much joking from his friends and
neighboring farmers for having plant
ed Ginseng, considered a rankly ex
perimental thing to do. Mr. Jones
planted several thousand Ginseng
plants. Today these same friends and
neighbors are directing envious atten
tion to the crop, comprising thousands
of plants from 1 to 5 years old.
The market price for the root,
which has a high medicinal value,
ranges from $6 to $7 a pound and al
ready Mr. Jones has sold a quantity
sufficient to pay the initial expense,
with a promise of several hundred ad
ditional pounds in the spring of 1917.
The friends and neighbors who
laughed five years ago are the same
good people who have planted Gin
seng since they have observed the
success of the Jones experiment.
There are eight plantings in the Esta
cada district and plants are from 1
to 4 years old, the total acreage being
very large.
Mr. Jones says: "'The Oregon Gin
seng plants mature about a year be
fore those planted in the eastern stat
es and 13 plant roots will furnish a
pound of dried product The roots
are ready, for sale after four years
and the following years the roots
bring a higher price."
R. L. Holman, Leading Undertaker,
Fifth and Main St.;-Tclcphones: Pa
cific 415-J; Home B-18.
The Electric
Store
Phones Home A-229
Pacific Main 115
Andresen Bldg. 619 Main St.
ml
R. L. Holman, Leading Undertaker,
Fifth and Main St.; Telephones: Pa
cific 415-J; Home B-18.
New System
Painless
Dentists
First-Class ..Painless Denistry
at Reasonable Prices All
Work Guaranteed
PAINLESS EXTRACTION
EXAMINATION FREE LADY
' ASSISTANT
We Speak German
ROOMS 9-10-11-12
ANDRESEN BLDG.
Phones Pac. 10; Home A-200
WANTED Shoats, 80 to 100 pounds,
at once. E. W. Smith, Rt 1, Box
74. 31
WANTED To buy second hand in
cubators; any kind. Address "B,"
care of this paper. 81
FOR SALE Pony, Wagon and Har
ness for sale at a bargain. George
Lammers, Beaver Creek, Ore. tf
MRS. B. McCLATCHIE Hemstitch
ing, 10c per yard; accordian, side
and sunburst plaiting; scalloping,
buttons covered. Corner 8th and
Main, over Harris' grocery. Phone
148 W. tf,
FOR SALE Team of Horses; weight
1000 lbs.- Drive single or double.
Also 2 good young cows cheap.
Frank Gronlund, Box 130, Route
No. 6, Oregon City, Ore. 2 Yi miles
above Parkplace. 24
FOR SALE I want to sell oft my
surplus stock horses and rigs
good buy for some party. All are
good as new and horses in fine
condition. Fashion Livery Stables,
G. A. Bergren, Prop. tf.
WANTED 200 Hop Pickers Pre
vailing prices; 3 weeks picking.
Boat landing on place; plenty wood
and water. Fine hops and camping
grounds. Address Sandcroft Hop
Farms, Dundee, Ore. 24
FOR SALE Farquhar Threshing Ma
chine; only used 3 years; suitable
for 2 or 3 farms; good condition.
This is a snap; at half its value;
also other farm machinery on same
basis. Rt 2, Box 67. Jtf.
CLASSIFIED HQS