The banner-courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1919-1950, March 23, 1922, Page Page Twelve, Image 12

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    THE BANNER-COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1922.
Page Twelve
THE UNITED STATES
BALKS5T GENOA
CONFERENCE
Principles Political Rather Than Econ
omic and Financial
to Govern.
Secretary Hughes, representing the
United States declined the invitation
to the government to participate in
the Genoa conference. His ground
for declining is that the conference
is to be political. He suggests how
ever, readiness to take part in a con
ference devoted to the settlement of
economic and financial questions re
lating to European recuperation.
The seriousness of the situation
now lies in the rules and regulations
which the allied countries have hedg
ed about the conference. They have
laid down the principles that each
country is to decide for itself its re
gime of economy, government and
property.
This means capitalistic things for
capitalists' countries, and communist
things for communistic countries. To
be specific, it means that Russia can
expect no help from those who are
able to help her. And with help
from other countries the conference
will be to her of no value. With
foreign capital the soviet can estab
lish prosperity it is believed. With
out it, she must continue her present
struggle. To renounce her com
munism is not likely since she has so
long sacrificed and struggled for it.
Another condition is that all nations
to take part shall be not guilty of
aggression against their neighbors.
This is a tender point since some vie
tors want more than they are entitl
ed to under the peace treaties and
others who were defeated are only
waiting a chance to retrieve.
This country waits fdV Russia to
evolve conditions economic and fin
ancial satisfactory to us before re
sumption of trade. Other nations
hope for the "open door" in order that
Germany may exploit her with the
results that they may get their re
paration share.
CLASSIFIED ADS
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
BABY CHIX White, Brown and Gold
en Buff Leghorns, Anconas, Black
Minorcas, R. I. Reds, Buff Orping
tons. Barred and White Rocks,
every week. Enoch Crews, Sea
bright, California. (3-23-2tp).
WOOD AND WOOD sawing. Prices
right. Wood any quantity deliver
ed in four-foot, 12 or 16-inch lengths.
Phone your orders morning or ev
ening. Office 707 Seventh St.,
327 W. Oregon City Wood & Fuel
Co. . tf
WANT TO RENT About 40 acres
with some equipment, with privilege
of buying. Address W. G. Mc
lean, box 555, or phone Main 8349.
3-23-lt pd
FOR SALE OR TRADE first-class
heavy disk harrow; eight disks 18
inchej in diam. A truck disks; no
tongue; almost new. Will sell or
trade for chunky young horse not
i less than 1300 lbs. A good buy.
J. Tucker, box 4, Oregon City. East
of Oregon City on Ab'ernethy road.
3-23-ltp
FORD ROADSTER WANTED
Late model in good condition. Will
pay $100 cash and $25 per month.
Phone 417.
HIGH SCHOOL NOTES
from West Linn
The sophomore class1 taffy pull held
in the domestic science room last
Tuesday night proved an enjoyable
event for the faculty in attendance as
well as the members of the calss.
Miss Reidman of Oregon Agricul
tural eollege ha sreturned to school
since Miss Minerva Gleason who has
been very ill with influenza is now
able to resume her duties as domestic
art instructor.
Mr. John Frederick Mason of the
Linfield college, McMinville, gave a
short talk concerning a college edu
cation and then gave several readings
which were well taken by the student
body last Wednesday afternoon. All
regretted that it was impossible for
him to stay with them longer.
The cast of the annual senior class
play are practicing for the night of
March 31, when they will present the
play, "The Wrong Mr. Wright." Miss
Margaret Du Bois, who directed the
recent play by an all-star cast, "The
Private Secretary," is directing this
cast, which includes: Arleigh Read,
Mr. Seymour Sites (The Wrong Mr.
Wright); Julia Bonds, his niece; .Fred
Bonds, his nephew; Ralph Crosby, U.
S. army captain; Tillie, Julia's maid;
Dorris Ellis, Lord Brazenfore, a pro
duct of old England, Roy Buckles; Mr.
Wayland Clingstone, "A boy of the
old school," Garnie Cranor'; Arabelle
Clingstone, "Waylands Sweet sister,"
Orilla Oliver; Henrietta Oluru, "Great
woman detective," Marie Bittner;
Clieves, detective, Elwood Thompson;
policemen, George Patterson, Homer
Nussbaum
Word has been received from Miss
Ruth. Embreefrom Honolulu, Hawaii,
and her many friends in school are
glad to hear that Ruth and her moth
er are enjoying their stay on the is
land very much.
Sophomore and senior history clas
ses are planning to take a trip through
the Oregon City Woolen mills some
time in the near future, probably this
afternoon.
Mr. C. O. Main, head of the mathe
matics department, has returned after
a few weeks' illness from influenza.
Mr. F. W. Fletcher of the university
of Oregon extenison department and
a graduate of Princeton university,
gave an interesting talk on the univer
sity at Eugene, Friday morning.
The student body president and sec
retary as well as the usual editor and
manager are contemplating a trip to
the university of Oregon at Eugene
during the week of April 14 and' 15th
to attend the conference. The uni
versity will furnish all entertainment
and supply board and room to the stu
dents who attend.
A student body parliamentary prac
tice meeting was held on St. Patrick's
day morning.
Photographs of the individuals of
the senior and junior classes and of
the various group pictures of the dif
ferent organizations for reproduction
in the high school annual will be tak
en in Calvert's studio this week. Work
on the Green and Gold annual is ra
pidly progressing and it is expected
that the book will go to the press
some time early in May.
The business manager, Marvin Hick
man, and his assistant, Gordon Ham
merle, are now securing ads for the
Green and Gold.
The millinery and sewing classes
under Miss Reidman, of O. A. C, re
cently enrolled in the faculty, will be
gin next week.
Due to the influenza epidemic and
the number of students who were ab
sent on account of the malady, Ue
regular six-week examinations which
were to have been held March 2 and3,
will now take place at the same time
of the next week, Thursday and Fri
day, April 13th and 14th. The Boy Describes the Mule.
Now that the basketball season has ! Being told to write a brief essay on
i ended, the next thing that will hold j the mule, Ralph turned in the follow
the attention of the sudents is ofjing description:
; baseball. Although the field is not ; "The mewl is a hardier bird than
j yet in the best of shape and the weath- the guse or the turkie. It has 2 legs
I er still inclement, some of the candi- to walk with, two more to kick with
dates for the first team are already and wears his wings on the side of
limbering up and prospects for the his head. It is stubornly backward
season are, from the material on hand, j about coming forward.
very bright.
Likely first-team candidates are:
Hammerle Simpson, Pepoon, Hickman,
Patterson, last year lettermen, and
Mootry, Read, Buckles, Donnelly,
Smith and Tuor.
Baseball Manager Elmer Simpson
is now .arranging a schedule for the
ensuing season.
Governor Davis
Gives Fine Lecture
VIENNA CONDITIONS
A wholesale reclamation of the Am
erican home should be made if the
people of the United States are to sub
due the ogre of depression, believes
Governor Davis, of Idaho, who con
stituted the final number of the El-
rjTjrkTTT T" Q1"vri H7THT Tl lison-White presentations, at the Lib
oHUULiD bllK WUKLiD ertjr theater last Thur8day evening.
Ghastly Hopelessness Stalks in the;
City Is the Report of Y. M.
C. A. Secretary.
Conditions in Vienna are so terrible
; that its present tragedy is a blot up
on civilization. So says Miss Clar-
ette Sehon, who has just arrived in
New York from Prague, where she
was active in Y. W. C.
I way of Vienna. ,
"During the war I am happy to say
I made a suggestion which I believe
would have saved the country from
the period of deflation in which we
are now situated. I urged that ev
ery man, woman and child be drafted
into the service of the United States
and paid the same amount per month
as the men in the service. Profit-
would have been eliminated,
A. work bv """s
; and war-time millionaires would nev-
pr havp fYistpH "
"The ghastly depression and hope- j . . . ,
lessness that stalks the city is sol Governor DaviB' life history ,s in-far-reaching
that even the visitor well terestmg' by working m e
fed and transient, cannot escape it,"
mines, as a boy, he worked up to the
manager of the store at the mines,
of thousands, slowly starving to lucu pontics, aiu ia now -
death, a man well educated and ac-!ing his second term as Sovernor
customed to all the comforts of life,; He is red-headed, aggressive, and
said to me We simply cannot stand does not pretend to be an orator,
it any longer, v If the hunger and ; Tne middle west, believes Governor
hopelessness does not lift, we will be ' Davis, is too self centered. Their
killing each other next.' Only a few contention over the irrigation ques
days later the riot started." jtion is that there is enough land un-
Before the war the Austrian kronen der cultivation now. He likened this
were worth five to our America dol- j attitude with that of the American
lar. During Miss Sehbn's stay the!families that feel that their children
exchange was six thousand kronen to are getting along all right, when as
the dollar, and shortly afterwards it ! a mitter o fact' they are going to the
went up to seven thousand.
"One woman told me she could only
dogs" as fast as jazz and moonshine
'can drive them.
Then when inflation JihoilVrt have
get one egg every three weeks and stopped'Armistice day 1918, it went
steadily higher. So that now, when
considered herself lucky at that," said
Miss Sehon. "The universal starva
tion and its acceptance by those help
lessly caught in one of the biggest
after-tragedies of the war is certainly
everything should be normal, it is
found that money is tied up tight, and
everyone holding to any straw they
can find. This condition is the one
a blot upon all other countries. whownlcn must be combatted if another
stand by and allow it to continue
The Friends. Miss Sehon said, are
panic is to be averted. The govern
or's solutio to this problem is for
doing a wonderful work in Vienna, ; everyone t0 put their money m circu-
, feeding thousands ot cnnaren dairy ; lation again t0 take the family heir
and giving clothing to the needy. Miss loom out o the amiiy sock, and put
Sehon who has been overseas with the 1 it in a Dank wnere it may be loaned
: Y. W. C. A., since September, 1920, ,and ioaned some more. Figures
; has left New York for her home in j the governor gays are authentic show
Louisville, Ky. , that jijnO.OOO has been taken out of
-rn nrt . T -vr C 1 circulation these figures the report
GREAT B R 1 1 A I JN b i 0f the U. S. Treasury department. In
PREMIER FACING cold, hard English, what are we com-
Troubles, Industrial, and Sectarian,
Break Out in Several
Countries of Realm.
The British government is having
grave troubles, sectarian strife and
industrial warfare vie wrth each oth
j er in opposition to law and order.
At home there are over a quarter
million machinists, subjects of a lock
! out, who bring the total of idle men
in England up above the million
mark.
I In the Transvaal there is open war
fare with a death list of 40. The
MARKET REPORT
Local and
Portland Quotations on
Stock and Farm Pro
duce Revised Weekly
LOCAL BUYING MARKET
Poultry. Products
Eggs, 18c per doz.; ducks, 20 and
5c per lb.; geese 15 and 20c per lb.;
cause is a strike among the gold min- ; chickens, light 20c, heavy (above 4
AT A SPECIAL PRICE
A Hundred Fine
Spring Suits
$25
Consisting of finished or unfinished
worsteds, men's or young men's in
browns, blues, grays, greens and mix
tures. Very fine materials, also a few
French back suits, sizes 34 to 44.
IF YOU HAVE A SUIT IN
MIND IT WILL PAY YOU
TO LOOK THESE OVER
JOE SWARTZ
OREGON CITY
ers and clash with the poiice.
India faces a revolution on a big
scale. The demand of the Indian
government that the Mohammedan
power shall be restored in the near
east and the subsequent dismissal of
Montague, the Indian agent, popular
with the natives for publication of the
demands, has stimulated revolution.
This arrest of the native leader Ghan
di has added fuel to the probable
flames.
lbs.) 20c per lb.
Dressed Meats
Hogs top 14c per lb.; veal, 13
and. 14c per lb.
Live Stock
Beef steers, top 5 to 7c per lb.;
cows, 5c per lb., sheep 3 to 6c per
lb.; lambs 8c per lb.
Hay and Grain
Hay Clover $14.00 per ton; Oats
$18.00 per ton; straw $8 to $10. per
ton. si 9t
Grain wheat $1.30 per bu.; oats,
Sectarian warfare between Ulster
ites and Sinn Feiners has again brok- i ieedj ?33 0Q per ton; mjning $35.00 per
en out m uenast ana wun tne re-1
suits so far that four of the Crown j Vegetables
forces have met death. Potatoes, $1.00 to $1.10 per cwt.;
Lloyd George, whose resignation ! tancy $150 to $2.25; onions, $6.50 pel
was expected in a few days, will re- cwt . rots, $1.75 per 100.
turn from a vacation in Wales to lead j Hides
the government in its present crisis. Hides Calf 8c per lb.; kip 6c per
, lb., others 3 to 4c lb.
Good Food and
Excellent
Service
Has made for us a long
list of regular custom
ers who know they can
always get the same
high quality at reason
able prices.
Seasonable dishes per
fectly cooked are our
specialty.
Quality Eats
The Falls
Restaurant and
Confectionary
Oregon City
Eyesight Is
PRICELESS
. Care N
For
Your
Eyes
To-day
19 years practical expe
rience al your service.
Dr. Freeze,
EYE SPECIALIST
605!2 Main St. Oregon City
Opposite Postoffice
LENSES GROUND
WHILE YOU WAIT
Price BrosDepartment Store
The Quality Store of Clackamas Co.
The New
Mina Taylor Dresses for Spring
Are Here on Display See Them
The old time theory that wash frocks and
house dresses could not be attractive has
exploded. You'll look pretty all the time
if you
Wear Mina Taylors
There are Mina Taylors here suitable for every occas
ion, from simple "home frocks" to delightfully frilly
ones for afternoon ana street wear. And all of them
are charming in style, flowerlike in coloring and de
pendable for wear.
You'll want pretty wash frocks this summer is just
one way of saying you'll want these.
Like Spring Flowers
Lovely in Colors
Abundant in Variety
No. 34703 at $8.75
A beautiful little model of plaid and plain Gingham
made up in such a delightfully novel way. Waist and
skirts panels of plain Gingham and the skirt of plaid.
Long revere collar of white organdie. All the spring
like colors.
No. 34810 at $5.25
Of Plain Chambray in pink, blue, green or lavender.
White repp colars and cuffs. Wide wash belt and
two slash pockets. .
N. 34706 at $9.50
Colorful and chic is this little dress. Choose from pink,
blue, lavender or green checked Gingham, with organ
die trim of plain contrasting color.
No. 3009 at $3.75
This one is made of plain Chambray in colors of pink,
blue, green and lavender. Plaid trimmed and the skirt
is of the plaid material. Patent leather belt, large
pockets.
AH-
r
7
34706
No 34707 at $10.75
Dainty small checked gingham in all dainty col
ors. Organdie Vestee, large Revere collar, cuffs
and skirt panel. Wide sash Telt. Decidedly at
tractive. Complete line of sizes 36 to 52
No. 3017 Ht $3.75
Checked gingham in blue, pink, green, lavender
and tan. Contrasting plain trimmed collar, cuffs
and belt, sizes 36 to 52.
Mina Taylor Aprons $1.35 and up
See Our Window Displays of These Dresses
VIOLIN AND
CELLO SOLOS
UNIVERSITY
TROUBADOURS
ANNUAL SPRING TOUR
U. of O. Symphony
ORCHESTRA
HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
Friday
March 31
Admission
75 and 50 cents
PORTLAND BUYING MARKET
Butterfat, No. 1 churning cream, 38
and 42c f. o. b. Portland, undergrades
35 and 38c.
Poultry Products
Eggs, 18c to 22 s per doz., delivered.
(Less commission) heavy hens, 23
and 24c lb.; light 20 and 21c; Ducks,
young 27c; stags 17c lb.; turkeys No.
1 dressed 37 and 38c.
Dressed Meats
(Less Commission) Hogs, top 14
and1 15c; undergrades 12 and 14c;
veaL top 13 and 14c; under grades
10 and 13c.
Hay and Grain
Delivered Portland Valley timothy
$15 and $16 per ton; clover $12.00 oat
and vetch, $15.00; straw, $8.00; cheat,
$12.50 and $13.00.
Grain (Track Portland, in car
lots) wheat $1.21 and $125 per bu.;
oats $34.50 and $35.50.
Vegetables
Potatoes No. 1, 90c and $1.00 cwt.;
onions No. 1, $7.00; Oregon cabbage,
2 and 3c per lb.; cauliflower, $1.75
and $2.00 a doz.; parsnips lc lb.; car
rots, 1 and lc lb.
Wool
Coarse valley wool, 13 and 18c; me
dium 20 and 21c; fine 24 and 25c.
Mohair No. 1, long staple, 26c lb.;
short staple 16c.
Church Offers Address on Narcotics
Mr. Thomas J. Taylor of the United
States Customs Department, Portland,
will give an address at the popular
Sundav evening service at the Con
gregational church on The Menace of
the Dope Traffic.
Mr. Tavlor for 15 years haB been
fighting the dope traffic In Portland
and knows the situation as well per
haps as any man in America.
Local Lumber Mill Starts.
HI
m
10 sAp0
Year
The sales of Studebaker cars in
the United States so far this
year have increased 200 per cent
over the same period last year
and last year Studebaker's lead.
We have the new models and will
be pleased to demonstrate them
for you any time.
Clackamas County Auto and Tractor Co.
Cor. Main and 11th Sts.
Oregon City
Phone 711
With the price of labor at $2.50 a company resumed operations on Mon
day, the Willamette River Lumber day this week.