The banner-courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1919-1950, February 02, 1922, Page Page Ten, Image 10

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    THE BANNER-COURIER, OREGON CiT Y, OREGON THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1922.
Page Ten
Road Supervisors j
Appointed by Court
Districts of the County All Provided
I-or By the Court Except
Numucrs SO, 5b and bs.
Clackamas County road supervisors
exeeyi. 111 uisuicts uu, io ana tio, wuere:
named sue pending me ouiuuiue ot
tne couiis consiue'iauun, nave Deen
auuiceU lui' J.J.S.
'iuuae buvciisoxs announced are:
tii, Vniluuil., iao.cU llulu U1B SOUlU
pan ui ouiLun.
oo, juouge, la&cn irom the south
pail oi oo, iiuiswater.
tt, i-nvuuu, ian.cu iioiu the east part
of 3Y.
to, N. Colton, tanen from the south
part oi 37.
ot, unuuno, taken from the north
part oi 44, Uuiton.
t7, xiigmanu, taken from the north
part of At.
58, Currinsville, taken from the
south part oi '60, n.agie Creek.
5y, iuast iiagle creek, taiten from
the east part of 30, iiagie Cree.
60, Mew Jura, taKen nom the south
west part of 45. 'Mt. Pieasant-Carus.
61, Twilight, taken irom the north
west part of 45, ML Pleasant-Carus.
62, Jiosemont, taken irom the north
east part oi 15, Mountain -tvoad and a
part of 11, Hazeiia.
63, Peet's Mountain, taken from the
east part of 15, Mountain Koad.
Monitor Subdivided.
64, N. Barlow, taken from the north
part of 48, Monitor.
65, South Needy, taken from the
south part of 48, Monitor.
66, Klliott Prairie, taken from the
southwest part of 48, Monitor.
Supervisors Appointed.
Supervisors for the diiierent dis
tricts have been selected and the ap
pointments confirmed, with the ex
ceptions of listricts 30, 36, and 65,
for which none have yet been named.
Thos appointed follow:
11, Frank Davidson, Oregon City,
route 3; 12, Archie Worthington, Os
wqgo; 13, A. A. Wood, Sherwood, R.
F. D.; 14, John Turner, Sherwood, Rt.
1; 15, SamMosier, Oregon City, route
1; 16, Paul Roethe, Milwaukee, route
1; 17, W. H. Counsell, Milwaukie; IS,
H. W. Kanne, Lents Station, Portland;
19, F. M. Townstnd, Clackamas, R. F.
D.
20, Walter Young, Damascus; 21, J.
De Young, Boring, route 3; 22, M. H.
Wheeler, Boring, route 3; 23, Fred
Wenger, Boring, route 1; 24, J. C. Yan
dell. Bull Run; 25, George Ten Eyck,
Boring, route 1; 26, A. JU Mattingly,
Sandy, and W. A. Stone, Cherryviile;
27, Wm. Bosholm, Boring, route 2; 28,
A. Widmer, Boring route 2; 29, D. L.
Edrman, Boring, route 2.
31, Henry Swales, Oregon City, rt
2; 32, Charles W. Holmberg, Oregon
City, route 2; 23, Charles R. Livesay,
Orefon City, route 6; 34, A. Thomas,
Oregon City, route 4, and C. T. Black
burn, Oregon City, route 4; 35, Wm.
Baraatz, Oregon City, route 2; 37,
xwciiaiu mi iiiiii, xiuii, route x; oo, Jr.
mer Davis, Estacada.
40, Adoiph Miller, Bissell; 41, H. H.
Udell, Eagle Creek; 42, Ed, Johnson,
Colton; 43, G. E. Feyrer, Molalla; 44,
E. X. Palfrey, Molalla; 45, Herman
Fischer, Oregon City route 3; 46,
George Koehler, Canby; 47, Fred W.
Sohn, Aurora; 48, R. Zimmerman, Au
rora, route 2; 49, Rudolph Klays, Au
rora, route 2.
50, G. E. Wyland, Hubbard and
Frank Jackson, Molalla, route 3; 51,
Roy Ridings, Marquam; 52, Albert Gro
shong, Molalla, R. F. D.; 53, J. W.
Marrs, Estacada, R. F. D.; 54, Arnt,
Eimon, Estacada, R. F. D.; 55, John
Putz, Colton; 56, Robert Schuebel, Mu
lino; 57, Nat Scribner, Hoff, route 1;
58, Norman E. Linn, Estacada; 59,
Walter Douglass, Eagle Creek.
60, W. G. Randall, Oregon City, rt
1; 61, Maxwell Telford, Sr., Oregon
City, route 6; 62, D. O. Day, Oregon
City, route 6; 63, G. Notdurft, Oregon
City, route 4; 64, Leonard Parmenter,
Canby, route 66; Will Burket, Wood
burn, route 2.
Local Buying Market
Wheat J1.00 per bu.
Oats, feed, ?27.00 per ton; milling,
J34.00 per ton.
Hay Clover, $12.00 per ton; oat, $13.-
50 per ton.
Straw $9.00 per ton.
Beef live weight. Steers, 5 to 7c lb.
Cows, 3 1-2 to 6c per lb.
Hogs dressed, 12c per lb.
Chickens, light 15c, heavy, 18c to 20c.
Sheep live weight 3 1-2 to 5 c per lb.
Lambs " e weight, 3 1-2 to 5c per lb.
Eggs 28c per doz.
Potatoes $1.50 per 100 lbs.
Hides Calf 9c per lb.; kip 5c per lb.
others.
"Veal dressed, 16c per lb.
Onions $7.00 per 100 lbs.
Cabbage 3c lb.
Portland Buying Market
Buter fat No. 1 grade, 37c per lb.
Eggs 25 and 27c per doz.
Poultry Hens 15 and 24c lb.; springs
22c; ducks, 22 and 28c; geese, 20c;
turkeys, dressed 42c lb.
Pork fancy, 12 l-2c lb. ,
Veal Fancy, 16 1-2 and 17c per lb.
Apples $1.35 and ?3.00 per box.
Potatoes $1.50 to $1.75 per 100 lbs.
Onions Yellow, ?7 to $7.50 per 100
lbs.
Cabbage 3 to 4c per lb.
Carrots $2 to $2.50 per sack.
Celery $7 to $7.50 per crate.
Cauliflower $2 to $2.25 per crate.
Pruning School Is
Scheduled Next Week
At the second meeting of the Clack
amas County Horticultural Commit
tee it was decided to hold a pruning
school consisting of a series of three
meetings, February 13, 14, and 15th,
and conducted by Clayton L. Long,
Extension Horticultural Specialist
from Oregon Agricultural College.
The plan Is that each day a meeting
will be held in the morning in which
Mr. Long will explain the principles
of pruning and orchard management
In the afternoon ar meeting will be
held in a near-by orchard in which
'Mr. Long will demonstrate the the
ory explained in the morning meeting.
Every fruit grower realizes the nec
essity of a proper system of orchard
management, and it Is hoped that none
will miss this opportunity of obtaining
expert advice.
The program is as follows:
Monday, ' February 13th Cams.
Morning meeting in the church. Dem
onstration in the Schmidt orchard.
Tuesday, February 14th Colton.
Morning meeting in the high school
Demonstration meeting place to be an
nounced. Wednesday , February 15th Gar
field. Morning meeting in Grange Hall
Demonstration meeting place to be
announced.
Local Resident
Up for Moonshine
Sheriff Wilson and a U. S. revenue
officer arrested O. C. Miller, 1506
Jackson St. yesterday afternoon on
charges of manufacturing liquor. A
well made, copper wash boiler still
was found on the upper floor of the
building and was so arranged that no
odor escaped..
Three gallons of first run moon
shine was found and some two quarts
of the finished product. A large quan
tity of mash was confiscated.
Miller was captured in Portland and
when the home was raided his wife
was found operating the plant. They
are from Tennessee, it is said and
were making a high grade product
which tested about 160 proof.
Report of Sheriff
Wilson for January
The following is the record of the
Sheriff's office for January and shows
activity in enforcement of the liquor
laws.
Fines
Drunkenness Harry Boehn, $15.00.
Moonshine G. Zeotish, $250.00; Z.
Zito, $250.00; Paul Luscher, $500.00;
William Alder, $300.00; Elick .Becker,
$200.00; W. H. Payne, not fined; Wm.
Gentry, not fined; K. Kato, $500.00;
M. Acyama, $250.00 not paid; T. Hay
ashi, $250.00 not paid; Harry Grisco,
$25.00; Albert Grisco, $25.00; Albert
Martin, $500.00; Martin Chase, $50.00;
Jack Clifford, $25.00.
Total paid $2525.00. Total not
paid $500.00.
THE PUBLIC AWAITS
ACTION BY S. P. R. R.
While the order of the public Ser
vice Commission directing the S. P. to
make improvebents is being held up on
the city's initiative while seeking co
operation of the railroad company in
the opening of Railroad avenue the
public continues to suffer the same
inconveniences that the Commiss
ion's order remedied.
In the meantime H. W. Strebig sus
tained the loss of a beef animal on
account of poor facilities for unload
ing shipments. The owner was put
to the trouble of protest to the com
pany and demand for damages. . An
swering Mr. Strebig's letter to the
Commission, Mr. Buchtel says:
. January -26. 1922.
Mr. H. W. Strebig,
Oregon City, Oregon. .
Dear Sir:
Please be advised that the original
order of the Commission required im
provements as noted in said order, to
be completed on or before December
Is there a drama of untainted
love?
Ask "Dearest."
Ask the "little Lord."
Ask "Grandfather Earl."
MARY
PICKFORD
. in
"LITTLE LORD
FAUNTLEROY"
from
HODGSON BURNETT'S
FRANCES
famous story
Scenario by BERNARD McCONVILLE
Photography by CHARLES ROSHER
Direction by ALFRED E. GREEN &
JACK PICKFORD
Once more Miss Pickford
proves herself the greatest of
all stars, big enough to play
the Mother's heart and tiny
enough to play the child in a
dual role incomparable.
Also
LATEST PATHE NEWS
VAUDEVILLE
MACHEDOW
BROTHERS
EUROPE'S GREATEST
GYMNASTS
PRICES 25c and 50c
SHOWS START 1:30, 4:00,6:30, 9:00. m.
Come to the Matinee if you can
10th, 1921 and that thereafter, due to
reasons set out in a communication
from Ben C. Dey, General Attorney or
the Southern Pacific Company, re
quest was made of the Commission
for an extension of time up to and in
cluding March l-0th, 1922. Notice was
served upon Mr. O. D. Eby. attorney
for Oregon City and no objection be
ing raised, time was extended by the
Commission to the latter date, name
ly, March 10, 1922, within which time
definite action should be taken.
The Commission, however, is direct
ing the attention of the Southern Pa
cific officials to the occurence you
narrate in your communication anu
will endeavor to expedite such im
provements as will obviate the recur
rence of the same.
A copy of the commission's letter
to the Southern Pacific calling atten
tion to the Commission's order and
extension of time for the completion
of the improvements to March 10,
only forty days distant, has been re
, ceived by Mr. Strebig.
' Just what the company or the city
will do in the next 40 days the pub
lic awaits with Interest
0. C. High School
Reports Live Doings
j "bu DVllw Vi lMCi3 LIO, UUiUlSi-
mg ot eignteen pieces, will provide a
part of the entertainment at the meet
ing of the State and County Farm u
reau, which will be held at Clackj
amas on February 2. At this meeting
the assistant secretary of agriculture,
will be the honor guest. Our orches
tra, which is under the direction oi
Miss Catherine Davis, has played on
several occasions at the high. school,
Hit this is the first time that they
h&ve made , a real public appearance.
a.
Who's Who in the Freshman Class
.President, William Osborn; vice
nresidnt, Roland Wilson; secretary,
Harold Sherwood; treasurer, Alice An
dresen; sgt. at arms. John Wheeler;
freshman baskef ball yell leader, Hel
en Phlpps; class editor, Agnes Pet
zold. Debates
Friday, February the 3rd will make
the opening of the debate season. On
this evening, the Oregon City High
school negative team, composed oi
Margurite Jackson and Elof Anderson,
will go to West Linn to match wits
asainst the West Linn affirmative.
The Oregon City hi?h school affirma
tive, composed of Gladys Hannaford
and Gordon Hannaford, will remain at
home to mee the Parkrose nppative.
The question to be debated is "Resolv
ed that the Plumb Plan for the con
trol and management of the railroad
of the United States, should be enact
ed into law."
Debating has always been popular
at O. C. H. S., and many victories
have been won in the past The two
teams are faithfully working and will
be in their best form on the
of e debates: The-"
one ?nd should be JntevesMns;. Tt is
honed that a large group of "rooters"
will accompany the negative team to
West Linn, and on the other hand,
the O. C. H. R. affiiTitie is lookin?
toward upholding their school's honor
before a lare audience. Let's pn!
"Leslie & Martin"
Presents
LITTLE MISS MELODY
0www44,,,,. j
TRAINING LITTLE CITIZENS
These Articles published weekly in these columns are
Issued by the National Kindergarten Associ
ation, New York City
The Educative Value of Mother Goose reeufciuze the same words in different
By Anna Mae Brady jmiiivs. iiuo equina niiu wita a woin.-
Every child shornd have access to '"s vucaumaiy vvmcu is oi inesum
a well illustrated eopy of Mother vaiue wnen no enteis scnoui.
Goose, not oniy because these Utile oi an h nas not ueeu worn out
jingles represent the heart beats of piay.
the race but because they have within ' -a. use ot Mother Goose collections
them great educative value. The tiny -is appended:
babe is lulled by their rhythm, to;-"- iaooa. oi xsuisery Rhymes, Edited
which all the primitive in hi responds! by Cnas. Vveisn, Puousned by D.
; and his eye is caught by the pictures
long before he is able to interpret ;
' them. Grown-ups never outlive them.
I Poor indeed is the child who is denied
this foundation of the classics.
Mother Goose represents the first
attempt of the race to give us a liter
ature. Away back in the beginning of
time, long before the days of books,
these verses developed. The race no
doubt was in that rhythmic stage
where people loved to swing and sway
their bodies to music, queer music it
was too, tod we hear that it was often
made by beating stones or sticks to
gether, but always the rhythm was
the appealing thing. So, too, the
sounds of rhyming words tickled their
ears and when they first developed
these jingles they were so pleased ! voted for the open poolrooms on Sun
with them that they, repeated them ; day. On order from Mayor Shannon
over and over, handing them down j they have been closed during the past
from generation to generation, each,
generation refining yet leaving the
plot unchanged.
These rhymes while but a sentence
or two in length are well-nigh perfect
in construction. They will pass any
test to which we subject adult litera -
ture. There is a plot, introduction,
climax, and conclusion. The charac
ters dance on and off again, yet so
clearly are they represented that as
long as life lasts we have a clear pic
ture of them. With only a few words
to describe them, Little Bo Peep, Jack
and Jill, and Little Miss Muffet, have
as well defined places in our minds
as Othello, Hamlet or Lady MacBeth.
Our children or the pre-school and
Kindergarten age are in this same
stage of development They too are
susceptible to rhythm, they love to
swing and sway and hop to music, and
their ear is also caught by the sound
of rhyming words. They need mater
ial like Mother Goose, for it is ' to
them what Shakespeare is to the
adult. Because these rhymes are the
product of many minds they are rich
er than anything one person can give
them.
Many of us used to -think that
Mother Goose made up these rhymes
in Bosttn Town long age, and we liked
to think of them as distinctly Ameri
can but such is not the case. These
jingles came ijyn to us from the
primiUjArfiiand Mother Goose
y clever teller-of these
'a i. Jan. who mane so fflany
children happy that in"ner honor we
call them Mother Goose rhymes.
The child who is brought up on
Mother Goose learn to read natural
ly. He memorizes the jingles from
hearing mother say them and locates
them by the pictures. Finally he sees
them as word units and is able to
C iieauh & Co., Cnicago $.75
The Nursery Rhyme Book. Edited
by Lang; illustrated by Leslie
Biooks, Published by Frederick
Warne & Co., N. Y. $3.00
Mother Goose, Illustrated by Kate
Greenaway, Published by Fred
erin Warne & Co., N. Y. $1.00
Mother Goose Annual, Illustrated
by Blanche Fisher Wright, Pub
lished by Rand McNaily & Co.,
Chicago ; $1.75
The Volland Mother Goose, Illus
trated by Frederick Richarlson,
Published by
The Volland Co..
Chicago.
Poolrooms Open Sunday.
The Oregon City council last night
month,
Mrs .Minnie Sager Dies.
On Friday last funeral services were
neld for Mrs. Minnie Sager, wife of
Peter Sager. at the church at Clarkes.
jJ - O. Staats officiated.
Mrs .Sager has resided in
Mulino
during the past 15 years.
District Attorney at Meeting.
Livy Stipp, district attorney for
Clackamas county .attended the state
meeting of district attorneys M Port
land, last week.
C. W. Kruse Honored.
At the last meeting of the Lake
Grove Civic club Charles W. Kruse
was endorsed for the office of Clacka
mas county commissioner.
Reasons Given Why
Boost Exposition
Oregon first state in the west It
is 41st in the point of development
California has 22 people to the square
mile; Washington 20. Oregon only 8.
Oregon first to recognize building
of transcontinental highways; first to
present invitation to world to partici
pate in peace jubilee; firat to cele
brate centennial discovery, of electro
magnet; first to point out possible hydro-electric
development of the north
west; first to re-establish commercial
relations with world; first to invite
cooperation of Pacific coast states;
first to receive congressional Recogni
tion; first to claim 1925 as the ex
position year. Oregon by legislation
and enactment has invited the states
of the union to participate. Congress
by joint resolution has given the au
thority to the president of the Unltea
States to invite foreign nations. Gov-
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STEADY DEMAND IS A BIG ASSET
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Added to this is the fact that there is $60,000,000 of property
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Portland Railway, Light and Power Company
OREGON CITY, OREGON
UiuUiiiMaUM
ernors 0f various states have given :
their word of approval to the expo
sition. Over 150 national organiza
tions have unqualifiedly endorsed the
exposition program. Transcontinent
al railroads and steamship lines vol
, unteered their support Portland, the
exposition city, ratified the exposition caPPed mountains of the Cascade
program by a vote of over four to one. ;ranSej our cra,g'ns 0ia streams;
, .. . our virgin fields of Umber; our won-
An Oregon exposition in tie hffljderful ocean shore line a summer
sense of meaning is the object of the j playground; the Pendleton Round-Up
originators of the idea. Every sec-! as the epic drama of frontier life; an
tlon of the state will be exploited.
The wonders of Crater Lake; the de
velopment of Diamond Lake; the pos
sibilities of the Marble Caves; the
magnitude of Pelican Bay and Klam
ath Lake; the beauties of Lithia Park;
Price Bros.
THE BEST PLACE TO
Seventh and Main Streets
Harry Greaves
Life . Fire
Sick and Accident
Auto - Plate Glass
f They'll wear you well, I
my boy
' Mothers know when things are 1
good. That's why they praise B
Oshkosh B'Gosh Overalls. This
. broad guarantee goes with them :
WE PAY
MASONIC BUILDING
Rooms 203-204
Phone 273
itminimnimfflmramimraniminmnimmmiimiifflHifflii
the mineral wealth of southern Ore-
gon; the incomparable value of the
Columbia River highway and the ma
jesty of its water fails and artistic
setting; the prehistoric discoveries of
central and eastern Oregon; the snow-
International regatta at the mouth of
the Columbia river; an international
stock show; a berry festival, and oth
er ideas to enlighten and entertain
the multitude, as the fruit of our labor.
S? , M
OVERALLS
Dept. Store
SHOP AFTER ALL
Oregon City, Oregon
for Insurance
Farm Buildings
and Crop
Insurance
Oregon City