A Page 4 OREGON CITY, ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1921. OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE Published Every Friday. E. E. BRODIE. Editor and Publisher at Oregon City, Oregon, Post tss second-class matter. I ibsorlptlon Rates: ?1.50 .75 Option, Two Months .25 ill find the date of ex ""8ff their papers fol-T-f last payment Is IS natifv via and v& our attention n application. STRAIN JIVM HEAVY ritkamas Well Represented In List of those Attending College at Eugene The Business Situatin UNlTHtSITY OF OREGON, Eu- r TTene, Ore., Dec. 9. (Special). Clack s' amas county has fifty students at the University of Oregon. Eighteen of these are registered from Oregon City, nine from Milwaukie, four from Glad stone, three each from Estacada, Mo- lalla, Oswego, and Sandy; two from Clackamas and one each from Canby, Bullard, West Linn, Willamette and v Wllsonvllle. Fifteen are freshmen, fourteen are sophomores, sixteen are juniors and five are seniors. LOCAL LIST BIG Those from Oregon City are Gordon E. Wilson and Carlotta I. Pace, both freshmen in journalism; Maude L. Lageson, freshmen in music; Ruth Schuebel, freshmen in English liter ature. Alfred L. Beatie, sophomore in Economics and Dan E. Lyons, sophomore in journalism. Marie An dresen and Margaret A. Beatie, both juniors in business administration: Margaret J. Clark, junior in physical education; Marvin R. Eby, junior in zoology; Rosweli M. Holman and toward L. Hull, both juniors in bus iness administration; Florence Jag- ger, junior m Knglisn literature; Frank B. Michels, junior in pre-en-gineering; Nicholas L. Michels, jun ' ior in business administration; Glyde Schuebel, junior in romance lan guages; Everett A. Rosencrans, fresh man in journalism and Grace A. Snook senior in physical education. Registered from Milwaukie are Mar ianne I. Dunham, senior in Economics; Jesse W. .Green, Junior in Architec ture; Irwin S. Adams, sophomore in business' administration; "Victor S. Risley and Marcus L. Youngs, both sophomores in economics; Grace Mur fin, sophomore in romance languages; Martin B. Biddle, sophomore in music; Alton Gabriel, freshman in Chemis-l-iry, and E. C. Tapfer, freshman in bus iness administration. GIRL STUDIES BUSINESS Mary J. Hathaway, freshman in business administration, Marjorie C. - Read, sophomore in sociology, Walton W. Whitcomb, sophomore in law, and Lew J. Tyrell, junior in rhetoric, are registered from Gladstone. Those registered from Molalla are Edward M, Miller, freshman in journ alism, Georgia L. Gregory, junior in music, and Joseph C. Olsen, junior in business administration. Enrolled from Oswego are Frances L. Cochrum, freshman in law, Virgil F. Oliver, junior In rhetoric and Le- lah Stone, sophomore 'in chemistry. Those from Estacada are Leroy P. Anderson, senior in law, Hazel C Lankins, senior in history, and Ray mond F. Lovelace,, freshman in zo ology. Harold W. Dedman, junior in zo ology, and Harvey W. Robertson, freshman in chemistry, are registered from clackamas. Registered from Sandy are Ivy J. TenEyck, freshman in rhetoric, Cora E. TenEyck, sophomore in education, and Jennie V.. TenEyck, sophomore in English literature. Leah M. Wagner, senior in educa tion, is registered from Wilsonville; Fred Sigel Junken, sophomore in Ar chitecture, gives Wilamette as his home address, and Jean Moffatt, fresh man in English literature, comes from West Linn. Mildred E. Dedman, sophomore in romance languages, is registered from Canby and Hazel H. ' Fahy, freshman in music, from Bullard. i f There is one very favorable feature of the business situation, and one that is not fully appreciated. It opens up a wide opportunity for profitable business. That feature is the low rate of interest. Back in 1920, the high charges for interest vere one of the big factors that slowed up business. Producers who had to pay 8 to 1 0 per cent for loans sufficient to finance their undertakings, felt that the overhead charge was too high. The tendency was strong for them to cut down their enterprises and reduce production. The scarcity of capital made it impossible for bus iness men to borrow the money they needed. . Take the case of a man with $50,000 capital, operating in a plant worth $25,000, and having on an average $1 00,000 tied up in materials in process of making, wages paid to la bor, bills receivable, etc. Under the old conditions, he needed to borrow $75,000 after putting $25,000 into his plant. But under the inflated conditions, it would take him $200,000 to finance his material and labor expense, and he would have to borrow $175,000. Where pre viously his own capital had been 66 per cent of his debts, now it would' be only 28 per cent. This was a top-heavy and dangerous condition of credit' and the financial au thorities had to reduce it, and it became necessary to call loans on a vast scale. Producers had to restrict opera tions. The business of the country could not be done on that swollen basis. Now the process of deflation is completed as far as credit goes. Industrial enterprises can get money in the financial centers for 5 to 5 per cent. One of the great est obstacles that has held back business has been re moved. It has been the history of business in the past, that when interest gets down as low as it is now, human enterprise and ambition take advantage of this favorable opportunity and start up new undertakings. It will no doubt prove so at this time. 2y orenceicfcficft Into Each Life Joint Ball, Plan of West Linn Firemen Aurora Hops Are Given First Place At the regular meting of Hose Com pany No. 4 of West Linn held in the fire company's headquarters the elec tion of officers for the ensuing year was among the business transacted during the evening. These are as follows: President, J. A Muench; vice-president, John F. Clark; secre tary, George Addington; treasurer, M. E. Clancey; foreman, Edward Fred ricks; first assistant foreman, Rich ard Bittner; second assistant foreman, Adam Endres; sergeant-at-anns, John Diddier. Hose Company No is presented a suggestion that in the near future all five fire companies of West Linn, to gether with their families, assemble at the' firemen's h-Ul at West Linn and hold a party. Firemen present ath the Monday's evening meeting were in favor of the plan, and appoint ed a committee to take ths matter up with other companies of West Linn. This committee is composed of Ed ward Fredrick, J. F. Clark and Rich ard Bittner. These men will make their report as to what isaccbmpMsh ed in panning for the event at the next regular meeting of Hose Com pany No. 4, which will be held on the first Wednesday evening of January. Following all business . a ban met wag served, when the table, pre tily decorated, was laden with good things to eat. Arranging the banquet v.-ere Joseph Muench and Richard Bittner. John F. Clark was toastmaster, and toasts were responded to by the new ly elected ofifcers and others. There were about 2G firemen enjoying the banquet. Col. Aird Named by State Farm Bureau "But, Vivian, it will be hard," re monstrated Mrs North. "You will have to get up and be at work on time every day whether you feel like it or not, and work all day every day-r-and tke orders from folks who don't love you nor treat you ten derly, and associate will all kinds of people, and do things you're told to do whether you like it or not, and " 'But, Mother," interrupted Vivian, "I despise a molly-coddle; I'm not looking for a soft snap." "And boarding won't be like being in your own home," continued Mrs. North, ignoring the interruption, "and nobody will look after you if you are sick, .and you won't have time for mu sic or dates or anything, and folks won't regard you quite the same. Working for somebody else isn't "But, Mother, I'm tired of being sheltered. I welcome life with its ups and downs, its high spots and sloughs of despond. I've had all roses and I'd like to know what thorn feels like for once,- I " "But Vivian, you're not strong, you couldn't " Enough of that. 1 The long and short of it is: a few weeks found Vivian North installed in the office of the Freemont Mills, a hundred miles from home, in a minor position and glory ing in it .saying, "If I've got the right stuff in me, I'll rise. I'm going to find out." She found out what a thorn felt like. There were plenty- of them not big ones but the work was new, the life strange, the routine wearing to a tenderfoot, people were not consider ate nor awed by the name Vivian North, and she was shown no favors, I but rather, the rough initiating a new comer generally gets. She tried to keep the news of it out of her letters home, but with a moth er's shrewdness, Mrs. North read be tween the lines, and worried, and worried, and worried. By day her vivid (Imagination pictured Vivian collapsed with hardship, fainting on the verge of despair. In the nights she was awkened by "many a night more of which Vivian ws the victim. tl was weeks before the mother was able to fly to her harrassed child, but at last 'she stepped from the train platform into the welcoming arms of Vivian. Such a shock! She wag prepared to see her fragile, martyred. Instead there stood a radi ant, poised .reliant, prosperous Viv ian. "Why Vivian," gasped Mrs. North, "it agrees with you! You look as if you'd never had a trouble, and I know you've had lots of them! Why, . I hardly know you! " It took her whole visit to convince Mrs. North that it was not too good to be true. "Fate is a better Mother than I could have been," she confessed, "I never could have seen you suffer but Fate doesn't mind. She has taken my child, and, with the proper mixture of cloud and sunshine, Jias molded a splendid woman." "Into each like some rain must-fall, Some days must be dark and dreary," laughed Vivian: "But, Mother, 'We should worry'; she's generous with the sunny one." . Mrs. North heaed a gret sigh of relief. "Vivian's brough up"; she said to herself. nieces, grandchildren, married broth ers, sisters and their families, if one can afford to go the rounds. The "spug" agitation has had its ef fect. We are enlarging the list of those whom we remember only with a card of greeting, until it compris es almost all friends. The impulse to lay gifts at the feet of those we love is a beautiful emotion, but the practi cal result of it is a mesh of financial entanglements every Yuletide. It is a brave individual who can break. the tradition and send only cards to those with whom you have exchanged pres ents for years. Once broken it is a relief to all concerned. To give gifts to pay debts, or to cater for favor or for any mercenary purpose is despicable. Its only excuse is love,' and isn't it really finer and more delicate to keep friendship free irom an suggestion or loaves ana fishes" and entirely a matter of the soul? The Woman Citizen Liberty Short Lived For Charlie Wells AURORA, Ore., Dec. 10. Henry L. Bents of Aurora, ' of ten termed as the "hop king," had this year among hop contracts one with Dave Keil, joining Aurora, for 12,000 bales of hops at 25c This week word arrived from Strauss & Co:, London hop dealers, to Mr, Bents that .five baJes of the best hops obtainable was wanteJ as samples to ship to New Zealand. A thorough search of Oregon hop ranches was made' and those of Mr. Keil were pro nounced the choicest to be found any place. They were rebaled with double canvas and started today for New .Zeaand, with Aurora claiming, the hop center and best hops in America. CHURCH INCORPORATES Articles of incorporation were filed here yesterday by the Grace Congre gational church of Jennings Lodge. The church property is valued at S7.000 and the board of trustees is composed of W. I. Blinstone, Bertha Hart and N. T. Humphrys. KRASSIG & HERNS DENTISTS Specialize in Extraction of Teeth Crown and Bridge Work "Plates That Fit" 10-11-12 Andresen Bids. Oregon City, Ore. Charlie Wells is again in jail await ing trial on charges of non-support, after a brief liberty Tuesday. Held for. more than two weeks pending a trial, Wells was released Tuesday by Judge Campbell. Shortly after wards his wife complained to the lo cal police that her husband had come home and beat her. Atho the man denied the charge, Judge Campbell ordered him locked up again. He was taken into custody by Officers May and Wagonblast and Deputy Sheriff Burke, and lodged in the city jail. Wells, when first arrested here, made an attempt to break out of the county jail, sawing several of the window bars before he was discover ed. He has been under constant sur veillance since. Colonel William. A. Aird has been named as secretary-treasurer of the Oregon State Farm Bureau Federa tion. Aird operates the Pansy Dale farm in this county, and was formerly organization" manager of the federa tion, under which all of the county or ganization. rt affiliated. Among the changes made at the last election was the decision to publish a state paper, which will take place of the smaller papers published by each county. The new publication, known as the Oregon State Farm Bur eau News, is edited by Randall R. Howard, formerly editor of the Clack- j amas county farm bureau publication. The paper, sixteen pages in its inni tial is published at the' press of the Oregon City Enterprise and the mail ing list already has 15,000 names. Homer A. Kruse, well known resi dent of the Wilsonville district and one of the biggest growers of nuts in Clackamas county, was elected vice president for Oregon of the Western Walnut association at its annual meet ing in Portland last week. The or ganization changed its name at the closing session to Western Nut Grow ers association. Clackamas county was also honored in having A. M. Gray of Milwaukie made chairman of a committee on resolutions. It was decided to launch a campaign for an experimental nut orchard and Ben F. Dorris, of Springfield, was ap pointed chairman of a committee to produce land in a suitable location for this purpose. An effort will be madeto hold an international , convention of nut grow ers in Portland during the 1925 Expo sition, and a committee was named to look into the proposition and out line plans for gathering. If this con vention materializes, nut growers from all over the world will be invited to attend. Resolutions were adopted against the introduction of Eastern varieties of filberts to the Northwest in fear that fungus diseases prevalent thru- out the .East will be spread thruout this territory. Growers of walnuts and filberts in the Northwest can hope only for the greatest measure of success by or ganized standards of varieties, size and quailty of nuts acocrding to the speakers. r EXPLOSION CASE REVIVED OMAHA, Dec. 9. Mike Stine, a Bul garian, is under arrest here today and the police are investigating his pos sible connection with the -Wall street explosion of September 16, .1920, in which 34 persons "were killed. If a burlesque show has an oriental setting and name, it can get by with anything. CAME FROM MONTANA GREAT FALLS, Mont., Dec. 13. Everett E. Davis, found murdered at his homestead cabin near Molalla, Ore., was, until the first week in Oc tober, a traveling salesman for a rub ber company in Montana territory with headquarters in Great Falls. A leave of absence from his homestead expired October 12 and it was due to that that he resigned, his position and returned to the Coast. He had ex pected to make final proof on his place next spring. Before enlisting in the regular army in 1917 he was prin cipal of the schools of East Helena, Mont. OPEN DOORS IN BUSINESS THE SCHOOL NURSE This is a busine3 constantly grow ing in oportuni-ty. As medical in spection is coining into fayor, espec ially since the draft has revealed to us our need of correcting defects in child hood, nurses of all kinds are in de mand far in excess of the supply. Ainong these the Visiting Nurse leads. Many communities are awaiting their turn to get a visiting nurse and some will have to wait until nurses can be drained, but there' are not enough now in training to supply the demand as it increases. The School Nurse is one kind f Vis iting Nurse She may make inspec tion herself or do followup work after the School Physician has made them, She notes the condition of the school house ,-its water supply, ventilation, and toilet facilities . She observes the children and is able to ward off some epidemics. It is her duty to visit homes, when children stay out, and de termine their physical condition. If children are not doing well, she talks with the mother and tries to help "her arrive at the cause. Besides this she may help the teacher in teaching sani tation, sex-hygiene, and personal health of classes. She needs a regular nurse training, plus social training. Her salry is higher than an unspecialized nurse and may range from $150 to $250 a month. 0 This business has the triple attrac tion of dealing with children, of being largely preventative, and of requiring only regular hours and small if any night work. Eat and Grow Warm This is the season to stoke up the body on fuel foods. These are: cream, butter, cheese, egg yolks, oatmeal and corn meal, nuts, meat fats, olive oil, sugar honey and syrups, dried fruits, potatoes, rice, tapioca and all starch es, in short, the fats, starches, and sugars. As the skilled engineer uses dis criminating judgment about stoking the-engine, so must the wise dietician. Children. Children- need a great deal of fuel food, for they convert it into energy. The thin, scrawny child is not getting enough, but it is dangerous to stuff him on rich things in the attempt to fatten him too suddenly. The trouble may be that he is not- digesting well the fats he is getting, rather than that he is deprived of them. For such a child choose the simplest fats. These are more easily digested than the su gars or starches. Give sugar in moder ation, watching to be sure it is not irri tating his digestive tract. The most easily digested fats are the raw fats: butter, cream, cheese, egg yolks, nuts well chewed and in moderation, and vegetable oils. Bacon is splendid for thin people if not fried too hard. Simple cakes, cookies, custards, co coa, and candies near the close of a meal are good for such children. The over-fat chiM should avoid fuel foods for he is getting too much. . Hardy, .very vigorous, and out-door children may eat heartier foods, richer cakes and candies and fuels, and burn them up all right, in fact they need them, while those would clog the fur nace of more delicate children. The Youhg Adult The adult from twenty to forty is in the stage where, if ever, he may "eat, drinjt and be merry" and give the mat ter little thought. If he is an indoor worker, he needs and can take care of less fuel than if a vigorous, out-door worker. The hardy wood chopper may eat pies, cakes, and everything three times a day. Past Forty. j Forty is the age-limit on fuels. True, older people are colder blooded, but they are also less active, their di gestive organs are less active, and be sides this they are not growing and using up food. The tendency is to grow fat. Each pound above normal weight then is a dangerous encum brance let Shylock have that "pound of flesh." The diseases which take off people of this age are diet diseases, Bright's disease and diabetes, which come from overloading on proteins, starches, sugars and fats. Past forty we need some fuel, but. only the simpler, more easily digested fats, avoiding all but the smallest amount of sugars, and starches, if in clined to be "heavy." With our self denial we are pretty certain to get enough. Our chief foods should be vegetables and fruits with only small servings of other foods. We will have to depend on exercise, plenty of oxy gen, a crackling firef and our "heav ies" to keep us warm. "Make haste slowly" is a proverb which has some sense to it especially as it applies to women's progress in government. As a class we are entire- tirely novices in politics and should take care to inform ourselves very thoroughly on all sides of a question before we push it, to know all the ins and outs of a law before we back I it, to know the needs and situation be fore we advocate a reform, to know a great deal more about government mechanism before we reach out after very responsible offices. In all these lines we want to be a real office for good, to advance; but it is wise to "Make haste slowly." A. EKING FALLS HEIR TO ESTATE ON ISLE OF MAN Sister of Mt. Pleasant Resident Dies; Family- to Make Trip After Holiday Season The A. E. Kins family, of ML Tleas ant knows the meaning of Christmas. Immediately after the holidays they will leave for the Isle of Man to claim a fortune left by a sister of Mr. King. The legacy came as a complete sur prise, for Mr. King had not seen his sister for more than 35 years. Al though there are other members of the family, Mr. King has been named as sole heir to a fortune which, altho the value is not definitely known, is understood to be considerable. The Isle of Man is one of the small er of the British Isles, lying off the coast of Ireand. Mr. and Mrs. King and their daughter Hermia, aged 14 years, will leave about the first of the year to look after their new inter ests, but expect to return to ML Pleas ant. They were formerly residents of Ilwaco, Washington. Mrs. King is the daughter of one of Oregon's pioneers, he late Arthur. Warner, who settled in what is known . as the Locust Farm, near Oregon City. For a number of years Mr. King was a bookkeeper for the Aberdeen Packing company at Ilwaco, and returned to this city some 15 years-ago, where he has resided since. He was born in Oregon City. S 5 S s HAPPY THOUGHT & & S S S S S S i It's a pretty sensible sort of a plan Not to worry o'er what you can't help or can. ; MRS. SOLOMON SAYS: Two Men Jailed for Transporting Liquor Matt and Joseph Waldkirch, Esta cada farmers, started to town Thurs day with two . five-gallon kegs . o f moonshine. They arrived in town with but one keg, and that was in the hands of state prohibition officers. The ' Waldkirchs were met enroute by the officers, and attempted to destroy the liquor. They succeeded in break ing open one keg and pouring its con tents on the road. The officers re turned with them to their ranch, where they found parts of an old stilL They then came on to Oregon City. Taken before Judge E. J. Noble, they both were fined and given a jail sentence. Matt Waldkirch will pay $400 and serve 90 days and the young er man was given a 30 day sentence and a $100 fine. They were commit ted to jail Thursday evening. Before freezing weather settles down to business, tuck in your choice roses for their winter sleep. Hill up the soil about them that they may not have wet feet. Mulch the surface for warmth, to keep in the moisture of the plants, and to enrich the soil. Wrap and tie the branches -with burlap oT loose straw that may not thaw and treeze alternately witn tne warm days and cold nights of early spring. Most climbers need no protection, but" if they do burlap may be used. Christmas Is Coming Counting the weeva that are hurry ing by, we are startled to find them so few until Christmas. That bugaboo, the Christmas list, like Banquo's ghost, refuses to "down" any longer. We must face the situation squarely else there will be the same old Yule tide disappointment. The list so long, the purse so short, we cannot make both ends meet. Why not try the Christmas budget as a remedy? First, let u3 determine how much we may spend for Christmas. Having estimated the supply, let us divide the "demand" like all Gaul into three parts: the inner circle who must have real gifts, the middle circle to whom we want to give some little thing, and the large circle to whom the card of greetings is the most appropriate token. In the inner circle are the members of the household, the one away from home, the old folks and the lonely rela tive. Trifling gifts are for nephews, SSgs$S$8S,$s.$. SMILES 8 Highway Garage Is Sued for Smash-Up The Pacific Highway Garage, Inc., and H. A. Rayner, a salesman and demonstrator for the company have been made defendants in a suit brought by Frank P. Shrobot for $7500 general and $1098 special dam ages, claimed to have been sustained November 18 in Portland when plaint- iff was injured by being struck by an automobile owned by the Pacific High way Garage and driven by Rayner. It is claimed in the complaint that the plaintiff sustained a broken arm and that the ligaments of the right knee were torn. "Let's spin a coin," said students two, I Ng"Vr PrecillCt Is xo uBip ueciue wnat we JWiu oo; Heads, to the dance; tails to the show; If it stands on edge, we'll to study go." JNO, tnanfe you, Mistan, marryin again is far from my intention. That nigger, daid, 's worth more to me Than any living mate could be For now I gets a pension." New Hall Planned hv Warner (Traii(rp Added in County A new voting precinct, making a total of 83, has been established un der an order of the Clackamas county court The new district, known- as Dodge,- is made up from parts taken from the Springwater, Colton and Highland dis tricts. The town of Dodge is the cen ter of the precinct, situated in Town ship 4 South, Ranges 3 and 4 EasL A new grange hall, to be built pro bably next spring, is planned by Warner grange 117, at .New Era. An entertainment given Saturday evening, netted ?9o to tne newly es tablished fund which is to pay for the construction of the new building. The hall is to be built approximate ly 100 feet south of the present build ing where the grange has acquired a piece of the property of Joe Endre of New Era. It is estimated that the building will cost in the neighbor hood of $2,000. Saturday's entertainment and ban quet is the first effort toward the raising of the actual construction fund. It was largely attended. ! GEORGE HOEYE I CHIROPRACTOR Caufield Bldg. Phone 636-W 1 Oregon City, Ore. IIHimillHIUIIIU DAIL EIREANN SPLITS DUBLIN, Dec. 9. Factional strife is threatened in the ranks of the Sinn Fein as a result of the Irish peace agreement. Already two factions have grown up and fears were expressed today that there may be a break when the Dail Eireann meets next Wednes day. However, strong agencies are at work to effect a compromise. Phones Off. 80 Res. 251-W I EMORY J. NOBLE J ' LAWYER I Justice of Peace 1201-2 Masonic Temple, Oregon City. t'tlMIIHIIIHMllllttlMMM(IIIMMMIIIIIIIIIIlltlMMt.ifniMtM tlfllMltmMllimMIIIIIIMtaillMMIHMMaillMIIIIIMMtatllll 6 Per Cent State School Money to Loan on Farms SCHUEBEL & BEATTIE I Bank of Oregon City Bldg. f Oregon City, Ore.- Gas BuggiesHow some cars get a reputation AFTER SAMPTJnS A VARIETY OF By Beck ABOUT HALF WAY HOME -THE STUFF AFTER SAMPLTNS A VARIETY OF j HE STARTS HOME IN A MOffFOR IT j QOOTLEG-PAdGAlNS M A FRIENDS- LESS SEMI-COH5CIOVS CONDITION - ri . . Ff) fi -g - ffi&v W&r - HE IS FOUND EJtfLY IN THE AW THIS IS WHAT TKE PAPZP.S 5AID" AHD THE COffONEf? NOTIFED i 1 SEE BY THE PAPER ANOTHER MAN-KH.-LEP IN UTOMOSLE SM53H- THOUGHT TO CAUSl KNUCKLE --0" T" TX0SE CARS 4Y WHATYCa PLEASE .:?- 0r r i.v,in -y -i si mmmm