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About Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 18, 1917)
4 OREGON CITY COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1917 OREGON CITY COURIER C. W. ROBEY, Editor and Business Manager Published Thursdays from the Courier Building, Eighth Street, and entered in the Postofflce at Oregon City, Ore., as 2nd class mail matter. Subscription Price $1.60. Telephones: Pacific 61; Home A-Bl. MEMBER OP WILLAMETTE VALLEY EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION MEMBER OP OREGON STATE EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION THIS PAPER REPRESENTED FOR FOREIGN , ADVERTISING BY THE GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGO BRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES MINISTERS TO MEN "It gives me a pain in the pit of my stomach to have a full grown man, whom I could wallop with one hand tied behind my back without half trying, or whom, I could out work, outrun or outjump, feel that he has to talk to to me like he would to some ten-year-old kid, or to some old woman, because he has happened to make the discovery that I try to preach once in a while down at the Baptist church. More men are hypo crites in a preacher's company more times than they are anywhere else. When the Lord called me to preach he called me first of all to be a man. And when I can't be a man with other men I consider it time to get out of the ministry. "I have never been a confessor. When a man comes to me to tell his misdeeds, I try to get him to tell to God and to leave me out. "If I have some personal matter with any man I propose to settle it out of the pulpit. If I can settle it with him amicably I endeavor to do so. If one hundred and seventy pounds of Scotch brawn and good na ture can't settle any ordinary trouble without calling in the police or the church session, then I'm willing to take my licking like a man, and keep judiciously quiet about it afterwards." Lo, the millennium has arrived! An Oregon City preacher is guilty guilty of being a man among men, rather than a saint among sinners or a sinner among saints. Shall we burn him at the stake as a heretic or merely banish him from Rome? When did the Lord take to calling men, real honest 170-pound men to do his gracious work? Yet, alas and alack, it is true! An Oregon City preacher signs his name to a statement that he can take his "licking" like a man, that he has oc casionally a pain in the pit of his stomach just like other mortals. The preacher who fills his church to overflowing has discarded the frock coat, the fiat black hat, the long, sour face and the sacred, aged doctrine that to be a Christian a man must be unworldly in the extreme. He buttons his collar in front and, perchance, adorns his manly bosom with a pink necktie if a loving aunt should send it in her Christmas package. The day of the human religion, Christianity for men and women, is upon us. The frock coated Binner who weekly wailed damnation, hellfire and brimstone is rapidly taking a seat , in the rear pews. His old stuff don't touch the modern heart and the mod ern heart refuses to make the modern head believe that it can. Instead, glory be, we have that school in the ministry which pounds its sermon notes out on a typewriter, bolls its coffee in a percolator and reads Charles Van Loan's horse race stories with the same whole souled delight it feels when it lands a two pound Rainbow, or exhibits the horns of its last season's deer. Honest to goodness; friends, some of them don't even think "damn" is a swear word, though their gentlemanly modesty usually forbids its use It is a school of ministers to men, A school whose pupils will accom plish in a single decade more for Christianity in the name of Christ, as he intended it should be accom plished, than all the hypocritical con glomeration that has graced and dis graced the pulpit in 20 centuries. A minister who can take his lick ing like a man without a whimper will appeal to men. A minister who will refuse to shield himself from a wallop behind the spectacles of re ligion will appeal to humanity. He will win human hearts and human minds to the work of the Lord and carry the gleaming standard of man hood's Christianity to the uppermost pinnacle of service. Business mottoes are supplanting time-worn puritanical traditions in Christianity. Black bow ties are giving away, figuratively, to the pink ones and sectarianism is being re placed by real salvation. It is better so! To this real Chris tianity, the Christianity that can take its "licking" manfully and can out work, outrun and outjump the sins that beset this sad old world, we will open our arms and our hearts and receive it with a joyous welcome for a blessing long delayed. May the school of ministers to men human, fighting, fishing, laugh ing, broad-minded men put its pro duct into the pulpit of every church in the land, that the churches may be less and the Christians more. Amen! THE SUNDOWN TRAIL Perhaps those of us who lived at a time when Buffalo Bill's heroism was prominent in thought for its startling reality, when the Indian tribes of a new nation were but be ginning their long ride to the happy hunting ground, when man and beast roamed free in the great west per haps we mourn a little more keenly the passing of Buffalo Bill than do those to whom the great plainsman was but the last of the heroes of fic tion and history. Buffalo Bill has journeyed to the end of the sundown trail, whose rug ged paths he found bravely as he did the trackless prairies of another age, and he rests today beneath the blossom-bower of. love that is a tribute to his sterling manhood, to his valor, to his work. He is not dead, the poet says. Buffalo Bill will live for many years in the fiction of the dead west and his symbolic life will be brought back to us occasionally in the histor ic annals of man's conquest, of heart's truth and mind s mastery. He rests in peace on the plains that have become populous and high ly civilized, the plains whose brushy distances have grown up to humming industry, to tall buildings, to the monuments of man the plains he helped to conquer, the plains he would not leave until the curtain for the last act of a great epic drama of hu man life, venturesome, imaginative, creative, had gone up on a scene where orchards, gardens, factories and cheery homes covered the long trails of the Golden West. Buffalo Bill fought his last big bat tie hand to hand with death with that same brave vigor that he fought in the days when the great divide was opened to him many times by the snapping bullet of an ambushed red skin or the flashing teeth of a moun tain brute. We may forget the man, for in death men are too often out of mind, but forever will remain the monu ment to his works the west. It is a fertile little world within itself that owes its very existence to Buf falo Bill and his like. And other gen erations can do themselves no great er justice nor pay greater respect to the last of the frontiersmen, whose unending day is spent in the cold clay of the prairies he loved so well, than to make his life, from its dawn until the last barrier was down and he stood at the end of the sundown trail, a model for other lives, whose glory may be achieved by clean liv ing and the valor of real manhood. PROGRESS IN 1916 The unexampled economic progress of this nation during 1916 was re fleeted in all the traditional barom eters that measure the rise and fall of business. With trade and indus try booming at record prices, and with speculation in stocks, grain and cotton on a noteworthy scale, bank IlilllllllllllllBllillllillMI llllllliillilllllilllUI clearings naturally made-a phenom enal exhibit; the unequaled railroad earnings and the great freight con gestion testified to the remarkable volume of traffic handled by the com mon carriers; ocean transportation was also taxed beyond its capacity and shipbuilding experienced a strik ing revival, while new construction in other lines participated actively in the forward movement. The demand for skilled labor everywhere largely exceeded the supply, and though the extreme living costs proved burden some in many quarters, savings de posits were swelled materially with wages at the ' highest point ever known. Circulation of money showed a progressive increase, reach ing its maximum in December, and investors received unparalleled sums in interest and dividends, besides ben efitting in the way of large special disbursements. Without exception, leading manu facturing industries have enjoyed the most prosperous year of their his tory, says Dun's Review. Long-established branches have undergone a veritable reconstruction, vastly in creasing their capacity, and produc tion, though hampered by labor scarc ity and wage controversies, as well as by car shortages and paucity of raw materials, largely surpassed all previous records. Yet, in spite of the augmented outputs, supplies were in sufficient and much profitable busi ness was rejected, either because of the inability or disinclination of man ufacturers to commit themselves mur ther. The most astonishing feature was the magnitude and maintenance of demand, notwithstanding the ex traordinary rise of prices. In the rush to cover immediate and far-forward needs the element of cost was of secondary consideration with many buyers and at times some sellers vir tually withdrew from the markets in an effort to check the influx of or ders which they could not. handle, or were not disposed to accept lest quo tations change to their disadvantage. Industrial and commercial develop ment during 1916 differed from the experience of certain other years, in that consumption more than kept pace with production and thus prevented the accumulation of stocks that re sulted disastrously on some former oocasions. THE DEAD WEIGHT cAre You in a Hurry? If you are a Man in a Hurry, by doing business with this Bank you will have prompt, speedy service. But do not think you have to be in a hurry when you come here. Take your time we make our time your time and whether you want a few minutes or many min utes of our time is for you to say. Some people can transact their Bank ing business in 60 seconds. Some take 60 minutes. Both our seconds and our minutes are at your com mand heartily and cordially. The Bank of Oregon City Oldest, Largest and Strongest Bank in Clackamas County iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiB 1 " 1,11 111 if ii ll II la The past year has admittedly been one of the most prosperous for the farmer in recent history. There has been a strong and consistent demand for the products of the farm and prices have been uniformly good. Every productive acre has done its full share toward making profits larger. But in this period of active mar kets and good prices, what have the unproductive acres been doing for their owners? What is the record of the swales and the swamps and the lands that are so low and wet that they cannot be worked early enough in the spring to plant a profitable crop? Have they been doing any thing to add to the general prosper ity? They have not. They have stood idle and useless at the time when they should have been paying for themselves. The drainage propaganda is no "ism" and is no fine-spun theory, It is a straight business problem that must be solved before the upper Wil lamette's prosperity is as great as it ought to be. All the land that is ly ing practically idle because it is not drained ought to be producing good crops. It ought to be an asset to its owners instead of a liability. It ought $o be attracting new population in stead of frightening away the good farmers who see it and jump to the conclusion that the country is no good. It ought to be changed over from the non-productive to the productive vol umn. It cannot be repeated too often that drainage is an investment and not an expense. The man who de cides to drain his land is merely put ting up a few dollars so that he can get more dollars back. The farmer who has low, wet land and fails to drain it is like the merchant who has a . good display and does not use it. Both are neglecting opportunities for profit. Register. Obituaries John Graw John Graw, for many years a night watchman at the Crown-Willamette mills here, died at his home at Bol ton Thursday night, aged 48 years, Mr. Graw is survived by his widow and four children, John, Agnes, Es ther and Joseph. He was a native of Iowa. 25c Per Month is the Average Cost of Operating a Mitchell Water System Don't Envy the City Man's Home Ylake Him Envy Yours! The city man envies the ruralite for his pure air, his elbow room and his broad guage life In general but he pities him for one thingHis Water Supply. A few years ago and this pity was well founded, but now the shoe is on the other foot. Mflwaukfe, Ore. entlemen: About two ver ago you Installed one of your Mitchell Pneumatic Water 8ye terns In my park and I have had tame In continuous use ever since and can recommend It aa being a very satisfactory water system from every viewpoint. We use a great deal of water as at times there are several thou sand people In the park and we find the Mitchell System far su perior to the system which we used prevlourto Installing yours. Our system Is automatic and re aulres little attention aslda from oiling. Yours very truly, W I I O r . WITTE. THE Water The System for the country or suburban home has sol ved vour nrobleni. The time was when you had either to JhPiJL4 be content with an elevated tank, a constant eyesore, MM iiYMlAP C A tYI that served warm water in summer or as likely frozen f tyUjiB f " fcwlll up ja wiuter or do without water pressure entirely. JvSS The MITCHELL SYSTEM enables vou r I MK. REYNOLDS of To use aa MUCH water aa you wish WHEN YOU WISH, to have aa MANY faucets aa yen want WHERE u want them at no extra cost ; to regulate your own pressure as MUCH or as LiTTLE aa you wish ; to uae your water for gar danlng Irrigating sprinkling or for whatever other purpose you may desire. That's why a MITCHELL WATER SYSTEM give you the beat of the City Man. The Mitchell Water System supplies you with unlimited dependable nupily of pure ciml water at no mom cut (umiHlly not as much) per month tlian Is iid by the avt'ruge city niuu for his restricted supply. This Is uot so of other water sys tenia, which often are a source of a great deal mure trouble than mitUfaetUm owing to Improper construction or pour installation. We have installed hun dreds of Mitchell JS.vsteuiH In ull parts of the Northwest they are giving satisfaction to every buyer. We, If given the opportunity, will gladly give you the beuetlt of our six years' experience In tho pneumatic water supply line. We will plan for your home a Mitchell System that will exactly tit your requirements that will give you serv ice which will please you now and continue to do so for years and years that's our policy COM PT-iETB AND FKRMA NHNT SATISFACTION TO KVHKY BUY KB and we have the goods that uphold every claim we make for them. Write us today for our free book on country and suburban water supply systems. Ask for book. Stover Engines Myers Pumps Implaments and Vahlclaa PORTLAND - OREGON Spokane Boise Clackamas, Oregon, has a MITCHELL SYSTEM. t.fcMi? wtmnirm tiWwnfja! W. J. WILSON & CO., Oregon City Agent J. S. Yoder Funeral services for J. S. Yoder, who died at his home at Yoder, were held there on Thursday with the Rev. F. C. Butler of the Congregational church officiating. Six sons were the pallbearers. Mr. Yoder, a native of Missouri, came to Clackamas county in 1889 and had lived on the same farm in the south end of the county ever since, following farming and sawmill occupations He was known as an active worker in the church and his pride was in service. He is sur vived by six grown sons and , two daughters. Many friends and rela tives attended the funeral Thursday and there were many beautiful floral offerings. TALK RURAL CREDITS N. L. Allen N. L. Allen, aged 63, was buried on Saturday from the1 Lutheran church at Canby. Mr. Allen died at his home at New Era on Monday, January 8, but the body had been held at the Holman parlors here pend ing the arrival of a sister from North Dakota. Mr. Allen was a bachelor and a native of Norway. He had been living at New Era for the past 11 years, where he had another sis ter, Mrs. Meten. Mrs. Mary Maple , Funeral services for Mrs. Marv E. Maole. who died at the home of hnr son, William, at Canby Thursday morning, were held from the M. E. church in Oregon Citv on SaturHav morning, the Rev. W. B. Moore of uanby officiating. Interment was in Mountain View. Mrs. Maple was a native of Pennsylvania, where she was born October 22, 1837. She lived in Oregon City until seven years ago, when she moved to Canbv. Mr. Maple died here in 1890. Mrs. Maple is survived by four children: George R. Maple, Portland; William, Canby; E. J., Mulino, and Mrs. Jennie Butts, Parkplace. The body was at the Hol man parlors. Plan to Put Amendment Into Work ing Order Members of the state land board, of the grange and others interested in advancement of rural credits legis lation held a meeting at State Treas urer Kay's offices in Salem last week and formulated the plan for legisla tion desired to place the rural credits amendment in operation as soon as possible. The rules and regulations governing loans under the amendment will be left largely discretionary with the land board, according to the plans outlined. The legislature, will be asked to pass merely the legislation that is specifically pointed out in the amend ment, with one addition, suggested by Mr. Kay relative to loans on adjudi cated water rights appurtenant to ir rigated lands. The amendment, in making it mandatory that the legisla tive assembly provide legislation relative to the rural credits funds provided that "such safeguards shall include clear definitions of the terms 'occupy' and 'operate' used herein." The ligislature is asked to define such terms. Provision also is asked, in line with Mr. Kay's request, that loans shall be made upon adjudicated water rights appurtenant to irrigated lands up to fifty per cent of their value. This is a question which has caused considerable interest in the eastern Oregon counties and it is understood that the eastern Oregon members are anxious that the provision be con tained. Otherwise, it is stated, the question of how loans could be made under the fund on lands of that char acter would be thrown into consider able confusion. As the greater share of the irri gated land is of no value without water, a question is presented as to whether any loans whatever might be made on such lands if no specific pro vision was made relative to the water rights. The outline of the proposed legislation will be turned over to At torney General Brown to draft a bill and it is probable the bill will be pre sented to the legislature some time next week. CLIMBED STAIRS ON HER HANDS Too ill to Walk Upright. Operation Advised. Saved Ly Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. 360 BUSINESS FAILURES Fly-by-Night Merchants Blamed for Oregon Record. Less Than 1916 Although there is encouragement E. H. COOPER M. R. COOPER County Agents OREGON FIRE RELIEFASSOCIATION FARMERS MUTUAL FIRE RELIEF ASSOCIATION and number ol other good companies ALSO AUTOMOBILE, SICK and ACCIDENT INSURANCE Phones: S6 - 237-J - A-ll Better Call Us Dp TheE. H. Cooper Insurance Agency EtUbll.h.d 1902 OREGON CITY. OREGON This woman now raises chickens and ;es manual labor. Reau her story: Richmond, Ind. "Fcr t.vu years I ,vaa so sick and weak with troubles from ny age that when c o i n g up stairs I had to go very siowiy with my hands on the steps, then sit down at the top to rest. The doctor said he thought I should have an operation, and rr.y friends thought J would not live to move into our new house. My daughter asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound as she had taken it with good results. I did so. my weakness dis appeared, I gained in strength, moved into our new home, did all kinds of garden work, shoveled dirt, did build ing and cement work, and raised hun dreds of chickens and ducks. I can not say enough in praise of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and if these facts are useful you may pub lish them for the benefit of other women." Mrs. M. O. Johnston, Route Box 190. Richmond, Ind. in the fact that there were less busi ness and commercial failures in Ore gon this year than there have been for a number of years, there is still a very startling story to be told about the failures of 1916. No doubt the fact that there were 360 business fail ures in Oregon in 1916 is due to the inexperience of those who launched enterprises and because of the prob able inclusion in these figures of those increasing fly-by-night business men, who locate long enough to dispose of a few shoddy pieces of aged mer chandise and move on to greener fields. , In 1916 there were 360 failures in Oregon's business world. During the previous year, 1915, 393 failures were reported. The total assets of business places that failed last year was $2,391,216, and liabilities were $4,243,438. Assets averaged $6642, and liabilities $10,676. With 393 fail ures in 1915 the average liability was $9226. .Therefore, although there were fewer failures last year, it is ap parent that more money was involved. There was no bank failure in this state in the year just past. In 1916 there were five less failures in Wash ngton than in Oregon, in spite of the fact that in 1915 there were 132 more in Washington than in this state. Of the Oregon business fail ures 110 were manufacturing enter prises with total liabilities of $2,698,- 243; 210 trading businesses with lia- biliies totalling $1,206,333 and 31 miscellaneous commercial failures with total liabilities of $338,862. Un the facinc coast, uregon, Washington, California, 2195 business undertakings failed in 1915, as com pared wih 1845 in 1916, and liabili ties were one-third lower this year. The total number of failures in the United States in 1915 was 22,156 and in 1916, 16,993. While there were 133 bank failures in the United States in 1915 there were but 50 in the past year. Of the manufacturing indus tries which failed within the last five years clothing and millinery manu facturers to the number of 3553 have headed the list Last year there were 565 failures in this line, com pared with 858 in 1915. The liabil ities in such firms averaged low, how ever. Grocery, meat and fish trades men failed in greater number last year and within the past five years than any others. There were 3599 such failures last year, bringing the total up to 15,603 for the five year period. The average liability was $3592. Only 11 states in the entire union had a larger number of failures in 1916 than did Oregon. In 1915 Ore gon had less failures in number than 20 other states. The Pacific coast made a better record in reduction of failures in trading enterprises than any other section of the country, having reduced the 1915 number by 323. Oregon was the only state whose previous fail ures had greater liabilities in 1916 that in the previous year. Courier Mid Daily Journul $4.75. Scandinavian Service There will be a Scandinavian ser vice in the Methodist church in Ore gon City next Sunday at 3 o'clock. Rev. John Ovall will preach. Good songs and music will be rendered. The Scandinavian Ladies' Aid will meet at W. Bergsen's, Gladstone, next Tuesday. Courier and Daily Journal $4.75. R. L. Holman, Leading Undertaker, Fifth and Main St.; Telephones: Pa cific 415-J; Home B-18. 0 Do You Know that Saturday, January 20th 1917 is positively the last day of the big closing out sale at Eddy's store, well it absolutely is and you surely will save money by coming to this sale during the next two final days COME Semi -Tropical Southern California CALIFORNIA with its oranges, its Winter flowers, its beaches, its mountain resorts, its time- -stained missions, its delightful sunshine and out-of-door life surely the call is irresistable in January. But a two days journey away on daily trains of the delightful SHASTA ROUTE Shasta Limited California Express San Francisco Express You can secure tickets or complete information from any agent, or write JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent Portland, Oregon Southern Pacific Lines