The banner-courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1919-1950, July 06, 1922, Page Page Four, Image 4

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    THE BANNER-COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1922
Page Four
THE BANNER COURIER
The Clackamas County Banner and the Oregon City Courier, Consolidated
July 8th, 1919, and Published by the Clackamas County Banner Publishing
Company, Incorporated.
F. J. TOOZE, Editor
H. A. KIRK, Advertising
Published Thursdays from the Banner Building at Ninth and Main Streets
and Entered in the Postoffice at Oregon City, Oregon as Second Class Mail
Matter. .
Subscription Price, $1.50 per year in advance.
Telephone 417
MEMBER OF WILLAMETTE VALLEY EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION
MEMBER OF OREGON STATE EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION
Official Paper of City of Oregon City
"Flag of the free-"heart's . hope and
home!
By Angels' hands to valor given;
Thy stars have lit the welkin dome,
And all thy hues were born in
Heaven.
Forever float that standard sheet!
Where breathes the foe but falls be
fore us.
TRAINING LITTLE CITIZENS
These Articles published weekly in thesecolumns are
Issued by the National Kindergarten Associ
ation, New York City
Fear A Menace to Children
By Bertha Mason
It is surprising how many children
leave their homes to enter a larger
social sphere with fear instilled into
their thoughts. If all mothers could
realize that fear is a most menacing
disease surely fewer children would
enter the kindergarten with trembling.
Most kindergarten or primary teach
ers have at some time felt the paag of
seeing aN child show fear. Frequently
a teaoher wonders why she does not
win the whole-hearted, loving re
sponse which most children so readily
.give to the efforts of a sympathetic
'friend. No child can give his best
attention when there is present a
dread of what might happen if he
makes a mistake. Be' that sensation
o er us.
JOSEPH DRAKE.
With Freedom's soil beneath our feet, j of fear ever so vague it will cnecu
And Freedom's banner streaming ! ready .expression 01 mougnws auu i-
itard natural, normal, meniai aeveiup-
ment.
All -teachers and public welfare
workers will testify that many parents
and relatives threaten children with
various direful punishments to be ad
ministered by policemen, doctors,
teachers, goblins and numerous imagi-
THE PROGRESSIVE SPIRIT
She seemed quite proud that her boy
would "obey" not s,eeming to consider
that submission is not always discipline-'
To the teacher it was pitiful.
The child's effort to see resulted in an
inevitable nervous strain. Through
fear of consequences if he answered
questions incorrectly he was no doubt
silent at times when he could have re:
sponded. And he probably made other
mistakes through nervousness.
It is not only teachers who must
contend with consequences of euch a
course. A few days ago I- saw a child
who was ill scream and pull the covers
over her head as soon as the physician
neared the bed. "If you don't hush the
doctor will grab your tongue," said
the mother. Of course the child's fear
was only increased. Naturally it was
impossible to accurately diagnose her
case as she had worked herself into a
serious nervous state. ,
Later the same physician remarked
to me, "Why won't people teach
children that we want to help, not
hurt them?" He then cited many in
stances where adults had threatened
children with "the doctor" if they
didn't obey. For obvious reasons such
a course is very unfair to the physi
cians and the children who gain such
harmful conceptions.
Every child -should learn that un
pleasant consequences inevitably fol
m-! low certain actions. But to teach a
variably crouched to one side and child to fear individuals, real or fanci
never once responded with more than 'ful, is an injustice to the, child, to those
The progressive element ili the State Of North Da- j a five year old boy entered a prim-
kota have elected Lynn J. Frazer to the United 'TS'mS
senate over Porter J. McCumber a member ot the upper Ws evident fear of the teacher, if
Ishe aDDroached to help him he in-
Frazer who was governor under the non-partisan re
ffime IS a progressive Who put UP an Unusually Strong Cam- a questioning half smile to her efforts ; who are to share the responsibility of
6 . T,- -I- ,r 'to put him at ease. Of course she call- : guiding him and to each member of
paign against his opponent in this progressive year, wnen ied upon lthe child.s mother. During ; the society of which he becomes a part
fhp srsnrlnar. plpmpnt. is fPnerallv PTanted a vacation bv 'the conversation the mother said, "We It is through knowledge and not fear
,r . i want him to mind and we told him you that he learns self-control and respect
the VOterS. I woui,j almost beat him to death if he for principles of right and laws of so-
The election of Frazier as a Droerressive does not 'didn't, i think he believes us too." ciety.
mean that non-partisanship has in his election received an
exclusive endorsement. Nestor the recall candidate for
governor against the non-partisan incumbent has been re
elected by a decisive majority all of which shows the pro
gressive spirit in politics this year.
djusted accordingly.
Freight rates are chang
ing to lower scale to meet
conditions necessary to
imulate transportation of :
arm products essential to
the lives of the workers in
cities and towns. The mer
chant and manufacturers
cannot hold to war prices.
All must yield to reductions
in the imperative readjust
ment andln these reductions
all ven those who oppose
hem will profit.
The president is right in
his demand that the public
must not be made to suffer
as the result of the strike.
he government has taken a
step in the direction of gen
eral readjustment.
The strikers have by their
action put this government
to this test there can be but
one action one reply. The
government must go, for
ward, sustaimng its own
agencies and the public it
represents.
NOTIC OF BOND SALE
THE CONVICTION OF HECKER
The jurors spent but little time in clebating the guilt
of Russell Hecker, murderer. It was apparent and con
clusive, and so they found. To read that the defendant
bowed his head in his hands when he heard it, and seemed
dazed by the grim finality of one word, is to reflect that
.his meditation must have been unpleasant to an extreme.
The horror "that sands one's throat" was upon him. But
of pity for Hecker, of sorrow at his plight, there can in
reason be none. He reaps as he sowed.
A preposterous defense, denied any element of the
betrav him as ne of those dapper young materialists who
hold in scorn every convention and who live, as the saying
has it. bv their wits. Their lives are more subnormal than
abnormal, and their development ceases early, owing to
the shameful insufficiency of their aims and their fixed
belief that trash in morals and habit is worth the price
of self-respect.
The legal conflict which waged about Hecker's life
would not have been complete without its touch of maudlin
sentiment. " There are always those whose ill-considered
uitv. whose ready, anxjeus sniffles, await but such a
drama t find vent. Traces of this maudlinism even found
a way into print, and rang the changes quite fetchingly
upon the youth ot the deienaant, tne styie 01 nis nair, nis
surpnsinglyihoughtlul manner in court, and the altogeth
er extraordinary predicament in which he found himself.
Hecker's nersonaiitv was not the issue at any time the
issue was murder And in the light of his crime the per
plausible, had fallen. Tares were the seed he chose for the
field of life, and such is his harvest. He was a youth who j sonality that sentiment sought to bestow upon him was
sought to iorce the world to keep him m ease at a mini- clearly lictitious,
mum of exertion, and who chose a criminal craft. To be
come a bootlegger does not necessarily mean that one will
in time take a human life, but it does mean that such dis
respect for law and authority, moral as well as legal, is
prone to engender far more flagrant and sinful violations
than those of its inception. A bootlegger who has slain his
"pal", much as one wolf turns on another, cannot hope to
bring clean hands or clean heart to trial. '
Hecker did not. Bit by bit the evidence against him
proved that he had planned with deliberation the murder
of Frank Bowker. The borrowed revolver, the empty hop
sck, the possession of the dead man's money, point both to
premeditation and motive. These two 'on an unlawful
mission, each with suspicion of the other, each armed to
kill, and both holding the law in light regard, provided
such a situation as murder thrives upon.. So damning and
complete was the evidence, despite the absence of witness
es of the act itself, that Hecker's plea of self-defense was
stripped of all its distortion and thrust aside by the men
who judged him. He might well drop his head in his hands.
He was a man undone by his own viciousness and his own
folly.
It were entirely possible, and even permissible, to read
a homily upon this crime and its criminal. But it is wholly
unnecessary. The youths who correspond to Hecker, out
side of prison, would not listen; others might find it but a
tedious bit of moralizing. It suffices that we consider
Hecker as a type, and his plight as one that is not uncom
mon to his kind. There was sufficient evidence at the
trial, apart from that relating specifically to the crime, to
But sentiment did not save the defendant, for which
society wholly without hard-heartedness may be thankful
He is convicted of his crime, and one cannot but surmise
that if there were more convictions there would be fewer
murders. After all, there is no lesson quite so convincing
as an objct lesson. Morning Oregonian.
GOOD ADVICE
Judge Campbell's admonition to the young man con
demned to die "Get right-with God during the few weeks
left here on earth", is of first importance to every boy and
girl, man or woman under every circumstance in life.
With the Creator as the guardian and director o
men's footsteps there would be no such tragedies as re
cited in the Clackamas County courtroom last week.
. :r t-rtr i
' y
a ,
Your Own
Home
is your castle. That's where you'll want to take
your bride and make your little nest- Begin now
to save a part of your earnings and it "won't seem
any time" until you have funds to buy some prop
erty and take. your place as a substantial citizen.
START A SAVINGS ACCOUNT WITH US AND
DRAW INTEREST ON IT
4 Interest Paid on Savings Deposits
First National Bank
OF OREGON CITY
512 Main St.
Oregon City
OF
COMMERCES
7
The working power
of money
Sealed bids will be received until
the hour of 2 o'clock p. m. on the 10th
day of July, 1922, and immediately
thereafter publicly opened by the
County Court of Clackamas County,
Oregon, for the purchase of bonds of
aid county issued for the construction
of permanent roads therein in the
sum of one hundred fifty-three thous
and nine hundred fifty ($153,950.00)
dollars, Clackamas County 5 Road
Bonds dated July 1, 1922, due serially
as follows : '
$13,500 to run to May 1, 1928.
$30,000 to run for a period of nine
years.
$25,000 to run for a period of ten
years.
$25,000 to run for a period of eleven
years, i
$25,000 to run for a period of twelve
years.
$35,450 to run for a period of thirteen
years.-
Said bonds to bear interest at the
rate of not to exceed five per cent-
(5) per annum, payable semi-annual
ly on the 1st days of January and July,
principal and interest payable in Unit
ed States gold coin of the present
standard of value at the fiscal agency
of the State of Oregon in New York
City.
Said bids must be unconditional and
accompanied by a check certified by a
bank in Clackamas County, of a draft
upon a bank in Clackamas County, for
an amount equal to 5 of the amount
bid. That upon the acceptance of any
'bid by the County Court, the check or
draft accompanying the bid so accept
ed be cashed by the County Clerk of
Clackamas -County, and the (money
held by him as a guarantee that the
party or parties making the bid so ac
cepted will take delivery of the bonds
under said bid; and, upon the failure
so to take delivery of the bonds so
awarded, the money held by the Coun
ty Clerk to become the absolute prop
erty of Clackamas County.
The right to reject aUy and all bids
is hereby reserved.
Dated at Oregon City, Oregon, June
21, 1922.
FtfED A. MILLER,
County Clerk of Clackamas County.
First Publication June 22, 1922.
Last Publication June 29, 1922.?????
is great when it is deposited
promptly with the Bank of Com
merce and is allowed to remain
at compound interest. It is a
pleasant experience to "have an
account with us. v
First Bank in Oregon City to pay 4
Per Cent Interest on Savings Accounts
1" MEMBERWg
FEDERAL RESERVE
Mil SYSTEMdgj
Bank of Commerce
Oregon City, Ore .
THOS F RYAN present Dh.HUGH S MOUNTvut pbes JOHN R HUMPHRYS cashier
K E.BAUERSFELD, Asst Cashier
OWNED. MANAGED AND CONTROLLED
BY CLACKAMAS COUNTY -PEOPLE
REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE-
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
At Oregon City in the State of Oregon
AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS ON JUNE 3J)th, 1922
Charter No. 8556 Reserved District No. 12
RESOURCES
Loans and discounts
Overdrafts -
$215,679.09
995.21
U. S. Government securities owned:
Deposited to secure circulation
All other United States Government Securities
TOTAL
Other bonds, stocks, securities, etc., .
Banking House, $14,000.00. Furniture and
fixtures, $6,000.00
$ 12,500.00
241,350.00
NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT
Lawful reserve "with Federal Reserve. Bank
Cash in vault and amount due from national banks .
Amount due from State banks in the United States,
Checks on other banks in the same city
. Total of Items 1
Checks and drafts on banks, located outside of city,
Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer
TOTAL ...
78,687.57
LIABILITIES
Capital stock paid in
Surplus fund
Undivided profits
Circulating notes outstanding
Amount due to national banks
Certified checks outstanding '.
Total of Items .
Demand deposits subject to Reserve
Individual deposits subject to check
Certificates of deposit due in. less than 30 days
Slate, county, or other municipal deposits secured
by pledge of assets of this bank
253,850.00
217,045.94
20,000.00
37,327.12
38,387.81
7,415.96
2,883.80
416.43
625.00
794,626.36
50,000.00
25,000.00
311.66
12,300.00
156.20
50.00
206.20
Total of demand deposits, subject to reserve, 390,762.59
Time deposits subject to Reserve
Certificates of deposU .
Other time deposits
Postal savings deposits
366,435.48
6,327.11
18,000.00
Total of time deposits subject to reserve, 316,045.91
TOTAL
141,792.46
169,604.84
4,648.61
794,626.36
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned, as Executor of the estate
of Bridget Gaffney, deceased has filed
his final account in the office of the
County Clerk of Clackamas Conuty,
Oregon, and that Monday, the 7th day
Fines for moonshiners, booze drivers, and speed man-
iacs should cover the cost of law enforcement. Jail sent- J t5lSnrti5
ences snouia oe ooiigatory upon judges wno haven z nerve j county court Room of said court has
enough to thus punish the guilty and deter others from
playing with human life.
The man who will during this dry weather leave fires
burning or throw cigaret stubs where there is danger of a
general conflagration is either guilty of criminal careless
ness or hasn't common sense enough to be at large.
A chautauqua speaker declares that the world is grow
ing better, which is encouraging. And he might have add
ed that Chautauqua is one of the great agencies in this pro
gressive betterment.
The weather, man' sends a thrill of joy through the
minds of his f ellowmen every now and then with his "cool
er soon" predictions.
A TEST OF GOVERNMENT
In a formal resolution the United Spates Labor Board
declared upon the walk-out of the six railway crafts on
Friday last, that they had forfeited their rights as railway
employes before the board and invited the new shopmen
taking the place of the strikers to form new union organi
zations to represent them in disputes before the board.
The same invitation was extended to those employes re
maining in the service.
The board made the statement also that men remain
ing in their positions should not be considered as "strike
breakers," that they were within their rights and have
both the legal and moral right to assist in avoiding inter
ruption of necessary railway transportation.
This attitude and action of the governments agency
representing both the public and the workers in the trans
portation system makes of the situation a governmental
matter. It is not a blow struck at the labor unions.
The strike is not the employe against the employer as
a protest against inadequate pay or unfair working condi
tions. The members of the Board have investigated wage
conditions, costs of living and hours and conditions of
work and hay? decided that in ordei;to hasten reconstruc
tion and to strike a fair balance in industry and commerce
the wages of the railway crafts now out of proportion to
the compensation of other wake earners, must -be re-
been appointed by said Court as the
time and place for the hearing of ob
jections thereto and the settlement
thereof. ,
Dated and first published July 6,
1922.
Last publication, August 3, 1922.
MICHAEL E. GAFFNEY,
Executor of the; estate of Bridget
Gaffney, deceased.
WM. HAMMOND,
Attorney for Executor.
fc? 1? tf v Jyj
WILLAMETTE
Beulah Sniaow
j? j? j? j? j? & a? jp j? j? j? jf jt j?
- The annual Sunday school picnic
was held at Shnoers park Saturday
July 1. The children enjoyed them
selves immensely playing on the merry-go
round ad swings and at noon
were refreshed by the contents of well
filled lunch baskets. -
Mr. and Mrs. Josiah Rogers, Miss
Alta Wooden, Miss Marion Porter and
Robert Mantha have gone to Pacific
City for the Fourth.
The pupils of Misses Beatrice Oliver
and Anna Isnogle gave a pleasing re
cital at the church Friday evening. A
large audience attended and were
greatly pleased by the excellence of
the music.
Miss Genevieve Fromong, accom
panied Mr. and Mrs. Hammerlee and
Gordon Hmmerlee on their trip to the
beach.
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Junken, Fred
Junken and Misses Blanche, Elsie and
Ruth -Junken motored to the coast for
their Fourth of July vacation.
Miss Margaret Manning and Miss
Frances Waldron returned ,home Sat
urdayfrom Monmouth where they are
attending summer school. They will
return Tuesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Leavens and chil
dren Virginia, Camille and Bill yhave
returned to their home in Washing
ton. They have been visiting Mrs.
Leavens parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.-Edmonds.
Mr. and Mrs. Clem Dollar and Mrs.
A. Fromong left Monday morning for a
trip to the coast.
Mr. and Mrs. McLean and children
Jean, Margaret and Robert left Wed
nesday for Vancouver B. C, where
they will spend a month.
State of Oregon, County of Clackamas, (ss):I, F. J. Meyer, Cashier of the
above named ibank do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the
best of mjj knowledge and belief. ,
F. J. MEYER, Cashier.
Correct Attest:
D. C. LATOURETTE,
C. D. LATOURETTE,
M. D. LATOURETTE.
Directors.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 3rd day of July, 1922.
. - EARL C. LATOURETTE,
Notary Public. "
(SEAL) My Commission expires July 22nd, 1923
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