Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, April 17, 1919, Page 2, Image 2

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OREGON CITY COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON, APRIL 17, 1919
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 51; Home A-61.
MEMBER OF WILLAMETTE VALLEY EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION
MEMBER OF OREGON STATE EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION
THIS PAPER REPRESENTED rOR FOREIGN
ADVERTISING BY" THE
mmmm
GENERAL OFFICES
NEW YORK AND CHICAGO
BRANCHES IN AU. THE PRINCIPAL CITH9
GERMANY MAY REJECT PEACE
TERMS
There appears to be a growing
tendency among all parties in Ger
many, radical and conservative alike,
to refuse any treaty of peace which
shall make excessive territorial de
. mands. At first the movement to re
' ject such terms was apparently init
iated by the government in order to
influence the Paris Conference to
make more reasonable terms, but now
the movement has gotten out of gov
ernment control. In the German
newspapers and among all bodies of
people there is a growing unanimity
of opinion against yielding to what
has been called "enslaving terms."
Especially is there protest against
the claims to Danzig and the Saar
valley. The claim to Malmedy is
also now characterized as exhorbi
tant. In a speech at Berlin, Dr. Schiffer,
Minister of Finance m the new Cab
inet, said: "I take a most solemn oath
that the government will not sur
render to the enemy one inch of
German territory, either east or
west." In the Prussian assembly,
Premier Hirsch declared that the gov
ernment had no intention of giving
up the eastern districts of the state
and he considered it the state's chief
duty to ward off all attacks, espec
ially attempts aimed at West Prussia,
Posen, and upper Silesia.
According to a Paris report, the
Prussian National Assembly has vot
ed unanimously against the relin
quishment by Germany of any of the
Rhine territory, especially the Saar
basin. Meetings, of protest, the re
port says, are multiplying all over
Germany. These meetings, it ap
pears, are being organized through
out Germany by- Count von Brock
dorff-Rantzau, the Foreign "Secre
tary.
vide jobs for soldiers whose names
you can find at the bureau.
"The soldier should be urged to go
back to his home town and, unless a
better position can be. obtained for
him, tuke his old job, not because
that is the best he is fitted for, but
because owing to the industrial situ
ation, it is an unfavorable time for
him to seek a different position. He
should certainly not give up his aim
to get the better job, but he should
work for it from his old position and
not from a state of unemployment.
"Some men are probably stranded
in places away from their homes and
have not enough money to take them
back. In such cases it is hoped that
you will pe able to arrange for
financing their return."
SUCCESSFUL FARMER URGES
USE OF LIME FOR GRAIN
COUNTY AND
CITY LOCALS
Miss Iva Harrington, ex-county
clerk, whose home is in Gladstone, is
visiting her sister, Mrs. J. S. Copley,
at Modesto, California. Miss Har
rington left Saturday morning for
California;
West Linn C. W. Inn will buy your
pig and pay cash. Call on Mr. Bar
low when next in town.
Here is a little information for the
people of Clackamas county.
Forty years ago I went to Salem
to get a fan mill. Now the grain
goes all through it and one doesn't
get much seed wheat, so I had to get
another mess to get a quantity of
the seed wheat.
I have plowed under buckwheat,
clover and rye, and I have hauled
manure from five places and applied
it to the soil. I milled some oats
and wheat before the World's Fair
that was too wet I couldn't sow it
right away. So I went and got a
spoonful of black lime and used it.
When the World's Fair was to take
place the county wanted some of my
grain for the exhibition. I sent it
down to the court house, and my
neighbors also sent oats and wheat.
I got a premium on oats and wheat,
but my neighbors did not get any.
Afterwards I found out it was the
use of lime on my wheat ground that
did the trick.
In early days we took the wheat
to the mill to get it ground. The
miller weighed the wheat when he
received it and also when he return
ed. He said that I got more pounds
out of my wheat than anyone else.
Brother Farmer, we have to put
our heads together and get a car
load of lime, for all lime you put in
will help to raise better grain.
GODFRIED WALLACE.
GAS DIDN'T KILL RATS,
DUMB ANIMALS IN WAR
Germans, cooties, mud and rats
were the four most obnoxious things
the American fighting men found
overseas, according to Frank W,
Ryan, a Y. M. C. A. war worker who
accompanied the 91st Division into
the Argonne as an athletic director.
"I have been asked many times
why the deadly gas didn't kill the
rats and other animals when it was
destructive to humans," said Ryan
recently. I have seen birds flying
through the air without taking any
notice of the artillery fire; rats by
WORK FOR SOLDIERS
As chairman of the Emergency
Employment Committee for Soldiers
and Sailors, Colonel Arthur Woods,
who is acting as assistant to the
secretary of war in charge of hand
ling soldier unemployment problems,
has sent a letter to chambers of com
merce throughout the country, find
ing work for soldiers. Colonel Wood
has also sent a similar letter to 5,00,
traae, employers' and industrial or
ganizations. "In some two thousand cities of
the country," says Colonel Woods in
his letter, "there -exists bureaus for
returning soldiers and sailors. These
bureaus have been working in "affil
iation with the Employment Service
of the Department of Labor, but
they are operated and supported by
private agencies. The bureau for re
turning soldiers and sailors is the
established and natural unit for other
organizations to work with and
strengthen. It is hoped, therefore,
tnat your chamber will cooperate
with this bureau in finding for sol
diers of your cities their old -jobs or
better ones, or by forming a com
mittee of the chamber which will pro-
f 1 T -B
inr. .u iurs. i.yuns i ui the thousand and stray dogs and cats
city, have received word from their L.,- , B. ,,, ,
n t- n,4. u u .', feeding upon heaps of waste. All of
a sudden the birds 'Would fly to the
rear, the rats would disappear as if
by magic and cats and dogs find safe
hiding places. By the time the bug
ler had sounded the warning signal
most of us had our masks adiusted
Thus nature took care of the dumb,
and 1 never saw it fail."
Nothing
On Earth
Lasts
Forever
Prosperity is with us. But
adversity has a way of snap
ping at the heels of Pros
perity and sometimes kiting
hard.
Financial health, like phys
ical health, dot's not always
stay at high tide. Some
times it ebbs. Start your
Savings Account, increase
your Checking Account, buy
your Certificates of Deposit
TODAY and you will be
prepared for changing con
ditions. THE BANK OF
OREGON CITY
Oldest Bank
in Clackamas County
son, Dan Jr., that he has arrived
safely in Los Angeles, California,
He made the trip by steamer, and the
voyage was exceedingly rough. The
boat took five days to make the trip
Young Lyons will spend the summer
at Long Beach.
FOR SALE -Seed potatoes, "Ameri
can Wonder" and "Multnomah
Pride." John Vinney, Falls' View,
Call after 6:30 p. m. Bring sacks
with you. .
Miss Ruth Gregory, an instructor
in the Seattle schools, arrived in Ore
gon City Saturday evening, and is
spending her Easter vacation at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry B.
Cartlidge.
If you have any good apples, po
tatoes, beef or other farm produce
for sale see F. T. "Barlow at C. W.
Inn, West Linn, and he will pay you
cash on delivery. Phone 608.
Ivan Frost, who is connected with
the Western Union Telegraph com
pany at Vancouver, Wash., spent
Sunday with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. D. E. Frost.
Mrs. J. P. Lovett and daughter,
Nan, spent Saturday in Portland.
Mrs. Edward Schwab of Portland,
formerly of this city, was a visitor
in Oregon City last week.
Joseph Spees, well . known farm
er of Redland, was in Oregon City
Saturday.
r ii ii
Clarence iviorreu, wno has seen
overseas service with the 373d
Aero Pursuit Squadron, has received
his honorable discharge and is now
back home with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Morrell, of Willamette.
You can got the best 50c meal in
Clackamas county .every day, includ
ing Sunday, at West Linn C. W. Inn,
across the bridge from Oregon City,
6:30 to 8 a. m., 12:00 to 1:00, and
5:30 to 6:30 p. m. Haircut 35c.
Shave 20c. Same place.
Mrs. Copman and daughter, Miss
Rita, of Portland, have rented the
cottage of Mrs. James on Eighth
and Washington streets.
Miss Maude Cook, teacher in the
Portland schools, spent the week-end
in this city visiting with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cooke.
Mrs. Clarence Green and children,
of Clairmont, visited friends in this
city Saturday.
You must clean the stomach and
bowels, purify the blood, each Spring,
or you leave Winter's germs and im
purities in your blood and system.
Drive them away, clean out the stom
ach and bowels, take Hollister's
Rocky Mountain Tea, a Spring cleans-
er-punhcr. 36c. Tea or
Huntley Drug Co.
STEWART-M'KINNIS TRIO
WAIVE FOR FURTHER TIME
Cecil Stewart, Arthur McKinnis
and George McKinnis, arrested some
time ago charged with the delinquen
cy of minors, and indicted by the
grand jury, were arraigned Satur
day, and asked for further time in
which to plead their case,-which was
granted. They will be given a trial
later. All three plead not guilty.
The case is the outgrowth of an auto
ride, in which the three young men
accompanied by three young ladies
from this city were out all night.
One of the girls, afraid to come home
afterward, ran away, and was appre
hended later by the officials. She
was found at the time at Canby, and
brought home to this city. The young
men were arrested afterward.
Obituaries
It has. been proven that the Oldsmobile Economy
Truck will give more service with less cost than
any truck on the market.
SEE THE TRUCK IN OUR SHOW ROOM
Main Street at Ninth
Oregon City, Ore.
TRAINING LITTLE CHILDREN
Suggestions by mothers who have been kindergartners. Issued by the
United States Bureau of Education, Washington, D. C, and the National
Kindergarten Association, 8 West Fortieth Street, New York.
(By Mrs. Ruth Heppner Swaine)
Mrs. Flora A. Dewalt
Mrs. Flora A. Dewalt died at her
home in Clackamas Thursday morn
ing at 6:30 o'clock. Her death was
due to a paralytic stroke. She is the
wife of George T. Dewalt, of Clack
amas. Mrs. Dewalt was born in Illi
nois February 18, 1851, and was 67
years of age. She came to this coun
ty about 10 years ago, and had al
ways1 resided at Clackamas station
since coming to Oregon. Besides her
husband, she is survived by the fol
lowing children: Mrs. Elmer Cagle,
Clackamas; Mrs. Charles F. Kinney,
Portland; Wilson Dewalt, Clackamas;
and two grandchildren, Theodore and
Helen Kinney, Portland. Funeral
services were held from the home
Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock, and
interment took place in the Clacka
mas cemetery.
All kindergartens have one char
acteristic in ' common the . respect
which the children show for the in
dividual rights of others. Where
many little children are gathered to
gether, there must be governing
laws and obedience to these law's.
In the ideal kindergarten these
laws are more feelings than facts.
The children grow to respect and
obey them spontaneously, almost un
consciously. Thus, even when they
are 4 and 5 years old, they can be
led to a right relation toward their
fellow-beings.. Could anything be
more important?
All children do not live near a kin
dergarten, but all children have play
mates. iA wise mother will quickly
establish the law of right relation
ships among the children who play
in her home. Even a busy mother
and are not all real mothers very
busy? can with a word now and
then impart a feeling for the rights
of others and this, once gained, is
never lost through life.
The kindergarten is the most dem
ocratic of institutions. The children
feel no class distinctions in fact,
there are none in the world of the
three-year-old. My Philip plays as
SOME GOOD ADVICE
Miss Roma Stafford, a teacher in
the Portland schools, spent the week
end at her home at Mount Pleasant.
She was accompanied by Miss Porter,
of Boston.
Mr, and Mrs. L. E. Jones left Mon
day evening for Texas, where they
nre to spend about a month visiting
relatives.
Strengthened by Oregon City Ex
periences
Kidney disease is too danirprnns tn
Tablets. , neglect. At the first sign of back-
t .. ..i. i i . i. i.
acne, neauacne, dizziness or urinary
"A Good, Old-Fashioned Physic"
Foley Cathartic Tablets, a whole
some physic, thoroughly cleanse the
bowels, sweeten the stomach, tone up
the liver. For indigestion, bilious
ness, bad breath, bloating, gas, or
constipation, no remedy is more
highly recommended. Wm. O. E.
Bielke, Hancock. Mich., writes: "I
have given Foley Cathartic Tablets
a thorough trial and I can honestly
recommend them as a mild, but sure
laxative. They work without grip
ing." Give stout persons a free,
light feeling. Jones Drug Co.
NOTICE
We will buy all the gooseberries.
raspberries, strawberries, loganber
ries and blackberries that you care
to bring in to us, at a verv unusual
high price. Larsen & Co., Oregon
City.
The Courier and Oregon Farmer.
both for one year, $1.15.
disorders, you should give the weak
ened kidneys prompt attention. Eat
little meat, take things easier and
use a reliable kidney tonic. There's
no other kidney medicine so well
recommended as Doan's Kidney Pills.
Oregon City people rely on them.
Here's one of the many statements
from Oregon City people. ,
Mrs. J. B. Schatz, 213 Seventeenth
St., says: "I know Doan's Kidney
Pills are a medicine of merit and
whenever I can recommend them ' to
others I gladly do so. I have taken
Doan's Kidney Pills at different
times for kidney trouble and back
ache and they have always done me
a lot of good."
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy get
Doan's Kidney Pills the same that
Mrs. fechatz had. Foster-Milburn.
Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. (Adv.)
Soma Job I
Giving a wooden spoon, half nound
of sugar, an ounce of tea, one half
sugar biscuit and ten cigarettes to
20,525 Russian prisoners in Siberia
was a light task for Y. M. C. A. war
work secretaries in comparison to
getting clothing for 1,148 ill-clad and
cold men but it was accomplished re
cently and official cablegrams to the
State Department at Washington
commending the able work of the
Y. M. C. A. in meeting the situation.
iipf
"You don't look
old or cross with
those glasses,
Daddy."
Brown's eyes are now gain
ing in looks as well as in
usefulness. . His eyes are
constantly in focus with
everything within his range
of vision. He can see near
and far with the same pair
of glasses, and no one but
himself knows that they are
two-sight glasses, because
they are
fCRYPTOIT
11. GLASSES 11.
THE INVISIBLE BIFOCALS
entirely free -from seam or
hump that's why they are
universally known as "tie in
visible bifocals."
OPTOMETRIST
612 Main St. Oregon City
joyfully with the little fellow in the
servant quarters next door as he does
with the son of my best friend. The
public school kindergarten is par
ticularly interesting, because all
classes mix freely and are entirely
free from self-consciousness. Each
little individual contributes his per
sonal traits toward the making of
the Whole. A fault may serve as
great purpose as a virtue, and both
may serve as mirrors wherein the
child sees himself. Under the guid
ance of the kindergartner he will see
wisely.
Moreover, the children soon learn
to love the calm of the kindergarten
room, and come readily under the in
fluence of the ruling spirit, the de
nial of self for the good of the whole.
In your own garden, the back
yard, there cannot be the close super
vision that there is in the kinder
garten, and elimination sometimes
becomes a necessity. If you are for
tunate enough to live among your
own kind, where, all the children in
your neighborhood are reared similar
ly, you win prooaoiy not have any
serious problem.. But if you live in a
cosmopolitan neighborhood and there
is an older cjiild with avowedly
wrong tendencies, the safest step is
to encourage him to seek his older
playmates. I would deny him my
babies of 3 to 6. If the child comes
to your gate who has had less of a
chance than your own little ones, it
is surely a privilege to take him in,
for he will soon begin to thrive un
der the new influences. If you have
much spare time, take in as many
children as you can. Supervise them
closely, and rather than let wilful
weeds grow among your flowers,
eliminate.
Be one of the playmates yourself
as otten as possible. Join the little
group in the yard for a few glorious
minutes, and you will come back to
to your housework completely rest
ed. A whistle from mother for a
moving train is such a surprise, or
an unexpected laugh over the tum
bling blocks makes it only a joke
where it might have been a tragedy.
The child feels your interest ever
is back of him then, and it is very
human to desire the interest of
those we love. Toss the ball around
the circle, push the swing, make be
lieve partake of the sand cakes and
observe the new values the old plays
uiKe on.
Draw the children of the neighbor
hood to your own garden if you wish
to experience a delightful sense of
peace and love. No flowers you
might coax to grow there are half
so worth while. With your guidance
and their daily association, they will
learn many lovely tilings, and carry
them through life. Friendship, care
for the weaker ones, unselfishness.
joy in the joy of others and a feeling
for the right are the beautiful things
oi me tnat may be cultivated and
that will be a joy forever.
Mother, Why Don't
You Take Nuxated Iron
And Be Strong and Well and Have Nice Rosy Cheek
Instead of Being Nervous and Irritable All the Time anix
Looking bo Haggard and Old? The
JJoctor Oave borne to Susie Smith i
Mother and She Was Worse Off
Than You Are and Now She
Looks Just Fine
Any Woman who Tires Easily it Irri
table, Nervous and Run-Down, Should
Take Nuxated Iron to Help Increase
Her Health, Strength and Vitality.
"There can be no strong, healthy, beauti
ful, rosy-cheeked women, without iron," says
Dr. Ferdinand King,
a New York ohvsi.
clan and Medical Au
thor. ' ' I have
strongly emphasized
the fact that doctors
ahould prescribemore
organic iron Nux
ated. Iron for their
nervous, run-down,
. weak, haggard-looking
women patients.
Pallor means anae
mia. The skin of an
anaemic woman is
pule, the flesh flabby.
The muscles lack
tone, the brain fngs,
and the memory fails,
and often they be
come weak, nervous,
Irritable, despondent
and melancholy.
When the iron goes
from the blood of
women the roses go
Irora their cheeks.
"In the most common foods of America,
you can walle without
becomirg tired. Nexfl
VfhatU YourAtuwtrt
the Btsrcbes, sugars, table syrups, candies,
polished rice, white bread, soda crackers.
biscuits, macaroni, spaghetti, tapioca, sago.
farina, determinated cornmeal, no longer is
ng processes have
otne:
Iron to be found. Refining
removed the iron of Mother Earth from
these impoverished foods, and silly methods
of home cookery, by throwing down the
waste pipe roe waier in wnicn our vegctaDies
are cooked,are responsible for another grave
Iron tosB. Therefore you Bhould supply the
Iron deficiency in your food by using some
form of organic iron, just as you would use
salt when your food has not enough salt."
Iron is absolutely necessary to enable
your blood to change food into living tissue,
without it, no matter how much or what you
est. your food merely passes through you
without doing you any good. You don't get
the strength out of it, and as a consequence
you become weak, pale and sickly looking,
just like a plant trying to grow in a soil defi
cient in iron. 11 you are not strong or wen,
you owe it to yourself to make the following
take two fivF-grain-tab
ets oi ordinary Nux
ated Iron three times
per day after meala for
two weeks. Then tcBt
your strength again
and see how much you
havegained. Numbers
of nervous, run-down
people who vera ailing all the while have
most astonishingly increased their strength
and endurance Bimply by taking iron in the
proper form and this, after they had in some -cases
been going on for months without get
ting benefit from anything. But don't taka
the old forms of reduced iron, iron acetate,
or tincture of iron simply to save a few cents.
The iron demanded by Mother Nature for
the red coloring matter in the blood of her
children is, alas, not that kind of iron. You
must take iron in a form that can be easily
absorbed and assimilated to do you any
good, otherwise it may prove worse than
useless.
Manufacturers' Note: Nuxated Iron,
which is prescribed and recommended above
by physicians is not a secret remedy, but one
which is well known to druggists, unlike the
older inorganic iron products it is easily ss
similated, does not injure the teeth, make
them black nor upset the stomach. The
manufacturers guarantee successful and en
tirely satisfactory results to every purchaser
or they will refund your money. It is dis
pensedin this city by all good druggist.
GASOLINE PRODUCTION
85,000,000 Barrels in 1918.
Previous Records Broken
All
Please pass this article on to a
friend and thus help Uncle Sam
reach all the mothers of the country.
In a base ball game between the
Barclay school team of this citv and
the Canbv team at the latter place
Friday afternoon, the Barclay team
won by a score of 18 to 8.
"We floated to victory on a wave
of oil," said a British admiral in the
first enthusiastic moments following
the armistice.
Just how much truth there is in
this statement has been disclosed bv
Van H. Manning, Director of the Bu
reau of Mines, Department of the In
terior, in the yearly statement pn the
production of gasoline in this coun
In 1916, before the United States
entered the war. according to the
statement, the production of gaso
line was a little short of 50,000,000
barrels. In 1917, when war activity
was accelerated by the entry of the
United fetates into the war. the pro
duction of gasoline had increased to
nearly 68,000,000 barrels, an increase
of more than 50,000 barrels a day.
It was thought by many that this
must be the peak of American patri
otic effort, but in 1918, when the war
had assumed even greater propor
tions, the production of gasoline was
over 85,000,000 barrels, an increase
for the year of more than 17,000,000
barrels. The daily increase for this
year over the record-breaking year
oi iyi i was about 47,000 barrels for
each of the 365 days, or almost as
much more as the increase of the
previous year.
How this country sent an ever-increasing
flood of this easoline to the
allies and to friendly countries is
seen in the export figures. In 1916
there were 8,473,102 barrels of gas
oline sent abroad. In 1917 this
amount had increased to 9,901,877
barrels, an increase of about 4000
barrels a day. In 1918 these exports
had reached a total of 13,312,508 bar
rels, an increase of nearly 10,000 bar
rels a day over the year 1917.
It is the opinion of Mr. Manning .
that no single industry in this coun
try of so important a nature ever
made such a showing in a sinsrle vear
and he doubts if the future will ever
show such a record of achievement,
LIEUTENANT HENRY RUSSELL
KILLED IN ACTION, FRANCE
Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Hughes are
in receipt of word that Lieutenant
Henry Russell, who had visited at
the Hughes home at Gladstone upon
several occasions, was killed in
France while in action just before
the armistice was signed. Lieuten
ant Russell- is a nephew of Mr.
Hughes, and while visitinir in this In.'
cality, made many friends and ac
quaintances. The young hero waa 24
years of age at the time of his.
death. He entered the service as a
private, and was soon promoted to a
lieutenancy. He is the only son of
mr. ana Mrs. H. W. Russell.
The salmon fishing so far this year
has been very slow, owing to the re
cent rains. The fish are thick in the
river here, but the muddy water
makes it impossible- to catch them
with a "spoon."