Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, July 03, 1919, Page 2, Image 2

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    OREGON CITY, COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON, JULY 3, 1919
OREGON CITY COURIER
AID DAIRY COWS
KEEPOFF FLIES
Stop Decrease in Milk Production
in Hot Weather by Elimi
nating Insects.
2
pecially true of a post master, who
is the target for all manner of abuse
from a certain class. If a little mis
take is made it is magnified a thou
sand times and sometimes a lie is
circulated, made out of whole cloth.
All postmasters that the writer, has
interviewed, have the same exper
ience. TKB department is aware of
this state of affairs and pays but
little attention to these childish com
plaints. Oh! How dry we are!
Well, they've igned another "scrap
of paper."
Not much prospect of rain until
fall now; the Id-timers say.
S. C. Runyan has gone to Oregon
C. W. ROBEY, Editor and Business Manager
Published Thursdays from the Courier Building, Eighth Street, and entered
in the Postoffica at Oregon City, Ore., as 2nd class mail matter.
Subscription Price $1.50.
Telephones: Pacific 61; Home A-61.
MEMBER OF WILLAMETTE VALLEY EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION
MEMBER OF OREGON STATE EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION
THIS PAPER REPRESENTED rOn FOREIGN
ADVERTISING BVT"E
OSNERAL OFFICES
NEW YORK AND CHICAGO
BRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES
COUNTY AND
CITY LOCALS
Miss Betty Lantz, who has been in
this city attending the high school,
has returned to her home at Tilla
mook City, where she will spend her
summer vacation. While in Uregon
City Miss Lantz made her home with
her sister, Mrs. Hal Hoss.
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.
M. E. Gaffney, of Harmony, was
in Oregon City Saturday.
Sergeant Ward Hammond, who has
but recently arrived from overseas,
expects to be home before long. He
is with a headquarters company.
Richard Davis and John Davis, of
Carus, were Oregon City visitors
Saturday.
There is nothing worse than bad,
foul smelling breath; get rid of it
for your friend's sake anyway. Hol
lister's Rocky Mountain Tea will
clean and purify your stomach and
bowels; your breath will be sweet,
your disposition improved, your
friends increased. 35c. Tea or Tab
lets. Huntley Drug Co.
Captain Charles Parker sends word
to his friends that he expects to leave
Franle for the United States before
long.
Ensign Charles Mulvey, of Seattle,
who has been visiting in Oregon City
as a guest of his grandmother, Mrs.
Margaret Mulvey, and also of his
unlle, William Mulvey, returned to
his home Sunday.
West Linn C. W. Inn will buy your
pig and pay cash. Call on Mr. Bar
low when next in town.
Gordon Fauley returned Saturday
evening from Newpor t,where he
spent two weeks as the guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Wm. Andresen.
Mrs. W. A. White, of this iity, left
Tuesday evening for Bly, Southern
Oregon, where she will visit with her
son, Norman White, and family. She
expelts to be gone a month or six
weeks.
You can get 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. b. Haircut 35c.
Shave 20c. Same place.
Mr. and Mrs. James D. Olson, of
Portland, accompanied by their small
daughter, spent StintViy in Oregon
mother, Mrs. D. A. Dillman. .
Obituaries
Mrs. Virginia Saulsbury
Mrs. Virginia Soulsbury, wife of
John C. Saulsbury, of Willamette,
died Shnday morning at the family
home. Deceased was born in Illi
nois, November 19, 1863, and for the
past seven years has resided in Ore
gon. She is survived by her hus
band, John Saulsbury, of Willamette;
two sons, S. E. and R. C. Saulsbury,
of Bolton; and a daughter, Virginia
Saulsbury, of Willamette. Funeral
services were held in Willamette
Tuesday afternoon from the Metho
dist church at that place, and inter
ment took place m the Mountain
View remetery here.
ADDS TO DAIRYMAN'S INCOME
Incorporation Papers Filed
Letters of incorporation were filed
Friday in this city for a First Pente
costal church to be erected at Canby.
The incorporation papers were filed
by Harry Sherwood, of Canby; A. H.
Sage, of Portland, and Sophia An
drews of Barlow.
Courier and Farmer $1.00 year
George Goos
George Goos, formerly of this
city, died at his home in Walla
Walla Friday evening, after an ill
ness of several weeks. He was well
known in this city and county, and
was. engaged in the hotel business at
Walla Walla. The remains were
brought to Portland Monday morn
ing, where they were incinerated in
the Portland crematorium. Mrs.
Good, his wife, and one son, Eugene
Good, accompanied the remains to
Portland from Washington.
Jean Larson
Jean, the infant daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Otto Larson, of Oswego,
died at the family home Sunday. The
funeral services over the remain's of
the iittle girl were held Tuesday af
ternoon at the home, and interment
took place in the Oswego cemetery.
Rev. E. E. Gilbert, of the Methodist
church here, officiated.
Losses of Live Weight, Discontent and
Unrest Are Promoted Among Ani
mals In Summer as Conse
quence of Little Pests.
(Prepared by the United States Depart
ment or Agriculture.)
Help dairy cows fight flies, for It Is
worth while, not only because of the
comfort It gives the anlmuls but be
cause It adds to the Income of the
dairyman by Increasing the milk yields,
Decrease iu milk production, losses
of live weight, discontent and unrest
ara promoted among herds during the
summer months as the consequence of
the activities of the common stable fly
and horn fly. An average decrease in
milk flow of from 25 to 40 per cent is
not uncommon as the direct result of
flies and the extreme heat of summer,
Under existing conditions with a keen
demand for dnlry products and with
prices at a high mark, it is highly de
sirable that every dairy farmer exer-
else a maximum of care and caution to
eliminate the fly evil.
Some Practical Remedies.
Remedies are darkened barns, stable
sanitation and spraying with fly re
pellents. Thorough treatment of ma
nure, its daily removal from the barn
to a distance, the use of hanging bur
lap or other devices In the barn doors
to brush flies from the animals, baited
fly traps placed outside the barn and
closed milk palls are among the neces
sary requirements for keeping flies
away.
The stable fly, armed with biting
mouth parts, punctures the hide of
cows and sucks their blood, while the
horn fly locates at the base of the
horns where It irritates the skin and
TRAINING LITTLE CHILDREN
WORRY
It is a scientific fact that
more people die from
WORRY than from over
work. The greatest cause of
worry is lack of money. The
majority of people who
worry from this cause are
those who never appreciat
ed the value of a BANK AC
COUNT. A growing Bank
Account eliminates worry of
this kind. With your mind
FREE from worry, you can
work better, eat better,
sleep better and be more
successful iu your , business
and a happier man. Under
these circumstances, isn't a
bank account worth while?
THE BANK OF
OREGON CITY
Oldest Bank in Clackamas County
(By Dr. David Starr Jordan, Chan
cellor, Leland Stanford Junior Uni
versity.) -
Note: Dr. Jordan writes in this
article about much older children
than this series is concerned with,
but he gives such helpful advice that
we feel it should be included.
Fathers are quite as hard to train
as boys, and from experience all
along the line, I have come to the
conclusion that fathers and boys alike
will mostly go their own way, in the
long run getting "what is coming to
them."
But it is the power of the father
to help a boy to realize his best in
stead of his worst tendencies and
possibilities. To this end, a father
should be sympathetic and natient.
helping the development of whatever
natural taste or genius a boy may
have. Virtue is never negative and
a boy is held from idleness or vice
by giving him something better to
work at. If a boy has a real love for
some study or for some worthy line
of work, encourage that. It marks
the way out from temptation. A boy
needs in his development sympathy
rather than financial help. His ideals
n A LI f ...
necu tureuginening, not nis purse.
To have money to burn will ruin all
those who burn it. It is hard to raise
a boy who is rich and knows that
whatever he wants is his for the ask
ing. He is likely to be content with
what money can buy, and it cannot
ouy very much that is worth having.
It can help in many things, but a
mere aid is not the thing itself.
The father can promote the plain
virtues of sobriety, honesty, toler
ance, and kindliness. The most ef
fective way of teaching these vir
tues is for him to illustrate them in
himself to- show how righteousness
looks when it is lived. Occasionally
a father successfully Droves hia nnint.
by becoming the awful example. But
that is not the best way, and right
living can be most effectively taught,
not by precept but by practice. And
remember always that right living is
a positive thing. It is not secured bv
inhibitions. "Don't, don't, don't"
never leads to anything worth while.
uont say to boys: "Keep off the
grass. Keep out of the dirt. KeeD
away from the slums." Rather in
dicate places it is better to go to:
inis way to citizenship; this way to
science, to art, to a worthy profession."
It is worth while to remember that
the boy is the germ of what the man
is to be. You cannot phcancre hia na
ture much, but you can develop the
best in him till it overshadows the
worst, the life of a man at forty
win do wnnc was m his heart at
twenty-one.
And a father may say to his boys
something like this, which in one
way or another I have said to thou
sands of boys in this and other coun
tries:
"Your first duty in life is toward
your AFTERSELF. So live that
your afterself the man von nnrrhfr in
, - -t,..v Fv
oe may in nis time be possible and
actual.
"Far away in the years he ia wait.
ing his turn. His bodv. hia hmin
his soul, are in your boyish hands!
He cannot help himself.
What will you leave for him?
"Will it be a bodv unsnoileH
or dissipation: a mind trni
think and act; a nervous system true
as a uiai in its response to the truth
about you. Will you, Boy, let him
Keep Cows Contented.
causes the formation of congestions
which resemble mosquito bites. Both
species of these flies propagate rapid
ly nnd require only from 10 to 16 days
In which to hatch their eggs and pro
duce new hordes of pests which oper
ate for cow discomfort.
Meant of Eliminating Evil.
The stabling of cows during, the
heat of the day in cool, darkened barns
is recommended as one of the best
means of eliminating the fly evil, pro
vided adequate labor is available to
keep the stables clean and sanitary.
As manure provides an ideal breeding
material for flies it Is imperative that
none of it be allowed to accumulate In
or around the stable. Spraying the
animals with some fly repellent, such
as kerosene emulsion, is an effective
remedy, but requires repeated appli
cations. Repellents should be used
with great care, as no good one has
yet been devised which is not likely to
slightly taint the milk. It is best to
spray the cows Just before milking
each evening, using a hand spray pump
or applying it with a brush or a
sponge. There are some.nntlfly solu
tions on the market which are more or
less effective. Most of them consist
of some coal-tar product combined
with either fish oil, oil of tar, or rosin.
Lime sprinkled about the barn on ma
nure Is also useful in destroying flies.
Cheap Fly Repellent.
To prepare kerosene emulsion one
of the cheapest and best home-made
fly repellents dissolve one-half pound
of yellow soap in a gallon of soft wa
terlieated to the boiling point andwlth
this combine two gallons of kerosene
In a bnrrel where the solution can be
churned vigorously. Dilute this mix
ture with six gallons of water. This
amount of emulsion is sufficient for
spraying 100 cows and should be pre
pared only as needed. When smaller
amounts are required they should be
prepared in the proportions given.
City, where he has a position in the
paper mills. His family will remain
here until fall.
The busy season is at hand for the
farmers, as haying and harvest will
begin after the Fourth. It will be
a busy season for the president, too
as he will be home after the Fourth
and get busy, with the Senate, re
garding the League. The senators
will sign like the Germans for all
their bluffing and,bellowing. They
know tha tthe people demand that
this League be ratified and every
senator who has been in active op
position to it is dead politically,
Borah, Johnson and Poindexter have
knocked themselves oc of the Christ
mas tree. The Republicans will prob
ably nominate General Wood) next
year. He is a good man, being fear-
and a man of astion, not more
so than McAdoo, whom the Demo
crats are likely to nominate. Really,
both are able men and a credit to
the American nation. A certain
clique of eastern Republicans would
like to nominate "Boob" Penrose, of
Penn., or "Blackguard" Sherman, of
ill., but they know they would not be
elected.
The president has had a wonder
ful run of good fortune. Twice
elected on a minority ticket. Tri
umphant with his League of Na
tions in the face of strong opposi
tion, and now it is almost a dead
certainty that he will succeed
getting his League ratified by this
country.
The Bohemians (i. e., the Catholic
element,) have demanded that their
priests be allowed to marry and
that they be preached to in their
native language instead of Latin,
The writer never supposed he would
live long enough to see any progress
made by this institution of the
Dark Ages. One thing certain, there
e no intelligent Americans among
em.
Dave Douglas will soon begin the
erection of a new house on his ranch
north of town. Archie Averill will
begin building it after the Fourth
Let the eagle scream! The Great
Republic now stands first and fore
most in the list of nations, with a
history unexcelled in peace and
war among all nations.
Mexico seems to be breeding a scab
its nose, so tIspealtrftsa little
more trouble doAvKjhere, and Uncle
Sam will take a hand. Carranza.
however, is trying to placate the
people by thyidjpst. upjarge tracts
for the poor peons into small tracts
of 2 acres, providing they will
live on them and cultivate them.
It appearsthat the Dominion of
Canada does not Sell land to specu
lators to hold it out of use until
active settlers, developing the coun
try, cause an increase in value. They
give land to actual settlers and help
them to get a start. In the city of
camonton, a body of land was held
by the Hudson Bay company under
an- early grant and they would not
sen at any price. The city soon cot
busy and raised their assessment so
high that they were glad to ell.
Land alone is taxtil accordine to
rental value, but improvements are
not taxed. Then as soon as a man
begins to make improvements, his
taxes are raised yearly.
The radical element in this coun
try will do well to consider the work
of the Non-Partisan League in
North Dakota. The farmers there.
who are in a big majority, knowing
they had the votes if thev stuck to
gether, have swept everything be
fore them, electing all state and
national officers. Lately they have
ratified radical measures at the polls.
enacted last winter by the legislature.
Didn't Discount the Rumor
"I hear that Jinks is going in for
settlement work."
"Yes; he compromised his debts
for fifty cents on the dollar."
Cartoons Magazine
tSSM,''! .fflaffi5i7tIM l'' I IU"
Coprritht un
bv
suit H. J. Hynold
Tobacco Co.
PLAY the smokegame with a jimmy
pipe if you're hankering for a hand
out for what ails your smokeappetitet
For, with Prince Albert, you've got a new listen on the pipe question
that cuts you loose from old stung tongue and dry throat worries I
Made by our exclusive patented process, Prince Albert is scotfree
from bite and parch and hands you about the biggest lot of smokefun
that ever was scheduled in your direction!
Prince Albert is a pippin of a pipe-pal; rolled into a cigarette it
beats the band I Get the slant that P. A. is simply everything any
man ever longed for in" tobacco! You never will be willing to
figure up the sport you've slipped-on once you get that Prince
Albert quality flavor and quality satisfaction into your smokesystem!
You'll talk kind words every time you get on the firing line I
Toppy rmd bata, tidy rod Una, handaomo pound and half-pound tin huml
dora and that claaay, practical pound cryatal flan humidor with
apongo moiatencr top that hcapa thm tobacco in auch perfect condition,
R. J. Reynolds Tobaccq Company, Winston-Salem, N. C
DAILY AUTO STAGE
Effective July 1st, 1919
DAILY AND SUNDAY
Leave Leave
CANBY OREGON CITY
7:45 a.m. 9:00 a.m.
9:45 a.m. 11:00 a.m.
12:45 p.m. 2:00 p.m.
4:15 p.m. 6:00 p.m.
6:15 p.m. 7:00 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday only
7:45 p.m. 8:25 p.m.
This trip omitted on Sunday
Fare 25 cents to all points between
Canby and Oregon City
During Chautauqua, stage will go
through to park on 6:15 P. M. from
eOrlpa frfoffmfffff MHTAR HTAR
Canby and lay over at grounds till
after evening program, returning,
will leave Oregon City about 11 P. M.
after arrival of Portland car. Late
trips 40 cents from either Gladstone
or Oregon City.
M. J. LEE, Stage Driver
Canby, Oregon
Farmers' Exchange Successful
County farm bureaus in New
Hampshire are conducting exchang
es with excellent results. One hun
dred and twenty-five farmers attend
ed a meeting to oreanize an ex
change in Belknap county and in 15
minutes raised . $2,300 of the $3,000
capital needed. The members of the
Grafton county bureau will purchase
tons ot limestone this sprine
through their exchange. Hillsboro
farmers have pooled orders for fer
tilizers and have placed them with
dealers; Merrimack County farmers
in four weeks unloaded 5 cars of
grain and 300 tons of lime. The Feb
ruary business of the exchange in
Rockingham county amounted to $8,-
800. Stratford county farmers have
formed a cooperative grain company
and purchased a mill. The capital
stock is $15,000 in shares at $25 each.
in all, 40 tons of fertilizers and 90
tons of limestone have been ordered,
am
I7i n n
rare rtamrr;
I -w-w - ll P Mtoat V
mm
irc hitch lYamrr; MJvnrrtu
suit Friday against R. J. Ellis to
collect a back bill in the sum of
$276.68, alleged due for lumber,
which was sold by Mortenson to Ellis
June 12, 1913. Plaintiff alleges that
nothing has been paid on the bill,
and asks the court to allow him the
full amount with interest at six per
cent.
The COURIER is the best paper in
Clackamas county subscribe now!
Sues on Bank Bill
L. O. Nightengale, trustee in bank
ruptcy of F. C. Mortenson, entered
PREVENT DISEASE IN FLOCKS
Po'ultrymen Should Secure Thorough
Sanitation to Avoid Ailments and
Insect Pests.
(Prepared by the United States Depart
ment or Agriculture.)
Toultry breeders should he more
careful than ever to secure thorough
sanitation and thus prevent disease In
their flocks. Good sanitation nlso
checks tho rapid multiplication of lice
and mites, hut does not destroy them.
For this, an appropriate insecticide
Should be used.
HOW THIS
NERVOUS WOMAN
GOT WELL
Told by Herself. Her Sin-
canty Should Con
vince Others.
CORRESPONDENCE
(Continued from Page 2)
no competent medical authority will
so state.
(Continued on Page 6)
High kickers abound here as else
where, nor are they exactly chorus
girls either, but just plain ordinary
kickers. An old settler savs this is
a great country for gossiping and
back-biting and anyone serving the
public gets a big share of criticism,
no matter what he does. This is es-
Christopher, 111. "For four years I
suffered from irregularities, weakness.
nervousness, and
was in a run down
condition. Two of
our best doctors
failed to do me any
good. I heard so
much about what
LydiaE.Pinkham'8
Vegetable Com
pound had done for
others,- I tried it
and was cured. I
am no longer ner
vous, am regular,
nnd in eYPallpnfc
health. I believe the Compound will
cure any female trouble." Mrs. ALICS
Heller, Christopher, 111.
Nervousness is often a symptom of
Weakness or some functional derange
ment, which may be overcome by this
famous root and herb remedy, Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, as
thousands of women have found by
experience.
If complications exist, write Lydia B.
Pinkham Medicine Co. , Lynn, Mass. , for
suggestions in regard to vour ailment.
The result of its long experience is
at your service.
N
"In the Public Eye"
WHATEVER the
of jour present
eye t i' o u b 1 e whether
your vision has always
been defective or strain
and age have impaired
it you should no longer
neglect it. You may
simply need resting
glasses to allow your
eye muscles to regain
their vigor or you may
be in need of lenses that
will aid your eye
muscles to properly fo
cus images upon your
retina. "We are thor
oughly dependable.
0
OPTOMETRIST
612 Main St Oregon City
P. H. G.
That might mean purchase honest goods
and it does but it also means Pacific nigh
way Garage, and, provided you have an
honest desire to qualify on the former, we
feel no concern but that you' will event
ually come to the latter as a place of busi
ness. We have made it a business principle
to sell only the lines we consider best and
would want to invest in ourselves, if we
were the customer. That is the reason we
Lave so little trouble in convincing others
of the merit of our goods we must' first
be thoroughly convinced on thjs point our
selves. Pacific Highway Garage, Inc.
Wallace B. Caufield
President
Charles H. Caufield
Vice President
BOUGHT
SOLD
LIBERTY BONDS
If you have any back payments on your
bonds, I will buy your receipts.
Pacific 377 Home B-38
8th and Main Sts.
Oregon City, Ore.