Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, January 27, 1922, Page Page 4, Image 4

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    OREGON CITY. ENiERPKlSLTTRlDAYTjANUARiTrinJlir
age
OREGON CITV ENTERPRISE
Published Every Friday.
E. E. BRODIE, Editor and Publisher.
Entered at Oregon City, Oregon, Post
office as second-class matter.
OREGON AND THE EXPOSITION
1 925 Fair Held Solution to Big Problem of Industrial
and Commercial Development for State.
THIRTY YEARS
AGO TODAY
4
Subscription Rates:
One
year-
$1.60
Six Months
.75
.25
Trial Subscription, Two Months.
Subscribers will find the date of ex
piration stamped on their papers fol
lowing their name. If last payment is
not credited, kindly notify us, and
the matter will receive our attention
Advertising Rates on application.
PROHIBITION IS
SUCCESS, SAYS
CHUEjCH WORKER
That , prohibition is a success, that
the movies are morally a .failure
though possessed of great potentiali
ties for good, and that the divorce
evil would be largely met through un
iform national laws, was the opinion
voiced by Dr. W- J- Johnson, in a lec
ture at the Presbyterian church
Thursday night. Dr. Johnson who is
a member of the Presbyterian Board
of Temperance and Moral Welfare is
making a several months' tour of the
northwest, and his lecture here is one
of a series being delivered throughout
the Pacific coast states.
-Branding the publicity given to ex
tensive violations of the prohibition
amendment a3 "wet propaganda," Dr.
Johnson stated that if the question
were put to a national vote, 75 per
cent of the people would cast their
ballots for a continuation of the pre
sent laws. "But the man who buys
liquor is as bad as the bootlegger,"
he said. "The 'reputable citizen,'
who buys hi3 moonshine should be
classed with the I. W. W. and the an
narchist, as should any man who is
violating the nation's laws. This type
of action serves to tear down the
structure of constitution and its men
ace is great"- Though voicing faith
in the success of the Volstead act in
general he pointed out the need for
closer enforcement and for general I
public approval of efforts to provide
improved conditions.
The solution of the movie question,
the doctor said, lies 'in their improve
ment, and their extended use along
educational lines. "Morally," he said,
"they are a failure, and are rapidly
becoming more and more a messenger
of vice and corruption. National cen-1
sorship should be provided to care for
those cases where the people cannot
be their own censors. Wider use of
the motion picture in the school and
the church will do much to stimulat
its progressive development."
The greatest step toward improve
ment of domestic relationships, the
doctor said, is the enactment of na-1
tional marriage and divorce laws,
thus giving the uniformity so sadly j
lacking under state supervision,
There are, in America, forty-four
causes for divorce. Under a uniform j
statute, this, he said could be reduced
to four with better result. One
trouble, he pointed out, is that the
general public condones, to a certain
degree, unfaithfulness in martial re
lations. "The deserter of a wife and
children, "he stated," is guilty of the
blackest crime. He should become
an outcase along with the deserter
from the army who is shunned by his
fellows and one unworthy of their
association. Laws dealing: with de
sertion should be strict, not as mea
sures of retaliation, but in the nature
Of prevention." There are. he point
ed out, more than a half million child
ren in the United States, deserted by
either one or two of their parents.
The movement, under which Dr.
Johnson spoke Friday night, is one
being conducted over the entire na
tion by the Presbyterian church. The
work, he said, is primarily of an edu
cational nature. Since the adoption
of prohibition, the activities have
been extended to include other moral
questions, and the board has, for the
past three years, used its influence in
a diversified field. touching upon
many pressing national morality pro
lems. 10 HOURS CUT FROM
TIME FOR SHASTA RUN
On February 12 faster train sched
ules will be put into effect on the
Southern Pacific lines which will cut
the runninsr time considerably be
tween Portland, San Francisco and
Los Angeles. Some of the passenger
trainn will be operated as fast or
faster than duirng the pre-war days.
The Shasta train again will become
the Shasta limited and will make the
run between Portland and San Fran
cisco in 28 hours instead of 30
hours, which will still be an hour
slower than the old Shasta's schedule.
It will leave Portland at 4 p. m., as
at present, arriving at San Francisco
at 8:30 the following evening. The
same schedule northbound will be fol
lowed. Train 14 will leave San Francisco
at 9:20 a. m. instead of 10:20, and ar
rive Portland at 8:20 p. m., one hour
earlier than now.
One hour wil lbe cut off the sched
ule of the Seashore express between
San Francisco and Los Angeles.
H. C. L. DOWN 1 CENT
WASHINGTON, Jan. 20. The re
tail cost of food is coming down, but
the decrease is so small as to be al
most negligible, amounting to only 1
per cent in. December as compared
with November 1921, the department
of labor announced.
KRASSIG & HERNS
DENTISTS
Specialize in
Extraction of Teeth
Crown and Bridge Work
"Plates That Fit"
10-11-12 Andresen BJdg.
Oregon City, Ore.
Something is the matter with the
economic conditions of Oregon. The
state was first to be settled in the
west and last to match up with the
progress of its sister states.
Washington state has a population
of 1,500,000. California enjoys a popu
lation of 3,500,000. Oregon is trailing
along with less than 800,000 people
and a fixed overhead, better named
taxes, that calls for some remedy to
adjust.
Men well versed in the art of adver
tising; those having a vision for cap
italizing new resources; industrial
leaders who are familiar with the
needs of trade and the unemployment
situation, have sele"ted the principal of
a national advertising program as the
means by which to lift Oregon out of
the mud and place the state in the
path of progress.
Analysizing the needs of the farm
ing districts; counting the importance
of opening new avenues of trade; plac
ing Oregon's scenic charms before the
traveling public, and discounting the
theories advanced that Oregon would
advance on account of its national re
sources, has all been weighed and
found in need of one big thing ad
vertising.
1925 Held Opportune
Just how to reach the great mass of
people to set before them the mighty
possibilities of the west, came like a
flash of light when the Exposition ap
peared on the horizen.
The idea soon crystal ized when the
plan was found feasible. A small
group of industrial captains found a
few obstacles in the way for holding
an exposition. They quickly remov
ed all conflicting dates; set about to
gain national recognition by act of
congress; tied in the support of the
states west of the Rocky mountains
that were in the path of travel by
means of the many highways leading
across the American continent, and
behold, the preliminary work was
done. The state is committed to the
nation to present the first great peace
demonstration since the close of the
war, and what promises to be the most
brilliant undertaking of its kind is
accepted for Oregon In 1925.
The financial scheme adopted calls
for raising $6,000,000. Of this sum $1,-
000,000 is to be subscribed directly
from from large corporations and
firms directly benefitting; $3,000,000
from the state at large by means of a
one mill tax over a period of three
ye'ars, and $2,000,000 by a 2 -S mill
levy on the property in the city of
Portland covering a three year period.
The financial plan means that Port-
land will provide $4,000,000 of the sum
total and the state at large $2,00'0,000,
because Portland participates in the
state election in addition to the city
election thereby paying one third of
the state tax on account of its dense
population.
The state tax is a nominal one con
sidering the resultant benefits. The
one mill levy on the assessable pro
perty of the state means that a farm
assessed at $1,000 will be called upon
to pay $1 per year or $3 for the three
years. On an assessment of $5,000 the
tax levy is graduated at $5 or $15 for
the three year period, payable in six
installments. The first tax will fall
due on April 5, 1923; the second in
1924 and the third in 1925. Care has
been exercised to guard the taxpayers
interests. A commission of represen
tative men from the state will be se-
lected to dispense the funds, and
should there h a balance on hand at
the close of the Exposition, the money
will be returned to the treasury of the
tax payers in proportion to the tax
paid. It is planned to hold the state
election at the primaries in May 1922.
What Will the Exposition Bring.
The natural question arising at this j
tune win ne tne Denetus or a worm
exposition in the state at this time?
The answer is: Will it profit the
farmer, the home owner, the merchant,
the transportation line, the manufac
turer, to invite the world to come to
his community. The answer is obvi
ous. Its the only way to lower taxes
by inviting more people . to settle
among us and pay them. More people
is the only remedy to increase pro
perty values.
The tourist is the pioneer of develop
ment. With thousands of miles of new
highways leading into Oregon; with
12,000,000 automobiles having a great
objective in the west to draw them,
what will the harvest be from this re
source alone? It simply means that mil
lions of dollars wil lbe spent in tour
ing the state by auto. Transportation
lions of dollars will be spent in tour
lines will inaugurate reduced rates,
gon's great harbor and the marts of
the world, bringing people to the state
that otherwise Would never be induced
to come. In short the Exposition plans,
is nothing more than a great national
advertising program that has for it3
object to advance the state's growth
during the exposition period fully 25
years over its normal advancement. It
is estimated by men knowing the value
of advertising that Oregon will profit
not only in financial gain, but increas-
GAS BUGGIES Explaining the heavy demand for closed
YOU GO OVEf? AND If Af? U j HM-M- I SAY MY t, ! TwEP &E DELI6HTEPP ' If T" -.
(P j GOOD M4N WOULD? TO OUR J Jl .SHOULD ;
!E pr nn-r -mJ20 lAHV ,NP r 1YOU CARE TO RIPE J . (cAR WITH YOU-Jj JH AN SAY NOT-
4up,,mtLvN jThT0 KJ .JOUT INTO THE S (OPEN F tfS I U J , O -
THE NTU OF WMj rjg&l BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY J CAR-?)? jgglL S C n
ed population, educational advance
ment, spiritual growth and a better
understanding of the world's needs
witn a far greater field of distribution
than it ever enjoyed before.
Oregon's Farm Lands Fertile
James -J. Hill, the great empire
builder, said that ten acres of land
apywhere in Oregon was equal to 160
acres in the Dakotas in point, of pro
duction. This being the case why not
capitalize the 3,500,000 acres of tillable
land in the irrigated districts. Why
not place the 15,000,000 acres of good
idle land in the hands of th.e tiller? By
adding 20,000 families on the lands of
Oregon a conservative figure would
place their annual crop returns to the
state at $100,000,000. Would this not
increase the taxable wealth and lower
taxes?
The $50,000,000 expended by the peo
ple of Oregon in paving its 550 miles
of hard surfaced highways will be
returned to the state by the tourists
attracted to the west during he pre
exposition period. Long before the ex
position open, the result of the ad
ertising during the construction period
will bring enough new wealth into the
state to return the capital the taxpay
ers provide.
Solve Unemployment Problem
The Exposition as a business and in
vestment getter has no equal. The
money provided by the people to fin
ance the Exposition will be returned
directly by the employment of labor
and the purchase of material. The
millions of dollars brought into the
state from foreign countries will reach
every branch of industry. The partici
pation of the United States in build
ings and exhibits will add additional
millions, which total will reach $45,
000,000 as a direct investment.
This coupled with the expenditure
of those who will come by auto, train,
steamers and airplanes, including dele-
gates to various national conventions
already planning to spending their va
cation in Oregon during 1925, will
reach up to $150,000,000, thus making
the Exposition an investment, not a
liability.
The educational advantages to tne
state and the Northwest is immeasur
able . The 1925 Exposition will multi
ply many times the effort put forth in
1905 when the Lewis and Clark fail
was held. The outstanding feature of
the 1905 fair proved that the state of
Oregon had the vision, the ability and
the hospitality to entertain and attract
One feature ot the Lewis and ClarK
fair alone was worth millions to the
aatural resources of Oregon-its timber
wealth. Not until the investors of the
east were made acquainted with Ore
gon's virgin forests by means of the
famous Oregon Forestry Building
(which still stands) did the people of
the west realize what its standing tim
ber resource was worth. The result of
the Forestry Building alone brought
capital into the state which is difficult
to compute. Again the late James J.
Hill saw a vision. When he visited
the Lewis and Clark fair near its close
he wandered thru the Forestry Build-
I ing and was amazed at its proportions.
When told it was representative of
the hills of Oregon contained in end
less quantity, that grand old man au
thorized a concrete foundation placed
beneath the building that it might bt
preserved for all mankind to hold and
enjoy, lie paid the bill for this work
and the state of Oregon can thank
j this empire builder, and the Forestry
Building, for having unfolded to its
eyes a new source of wealth from the
primeval forest for the time. The ben
efits seem to be good, at least for the
present generations.
In 1925 Oregon may look forward to j
greater benefits thru its commerce by
land and sea. With a vast empire of
225.000 snnarf mites hv tVio
mightv Columbia river, the seventh
,.,,, j ti, nrH
with an incom
parable harbor and shipping facilities,
what will the harvest be when direct
steamship lines traverse the sea lanes
between the mouth of the Columbia
and Europe. The distance thru the
Panama canal between the old world
and the new has been reduced 8,000
miles making possible to ship the pro
ducts from the farm and field by wa
ter to new markets at a cost no great
er than by rail over the United States.
This is Oregon's opportunity This
generation will never have a similar
chance at international advertising.
The state cannot afford to stand still.
God has provided every resource. The
rest remains in the hands of the peo
ple. The spirit that prompted the pio
neers to blaze the first trail of western
civilization should be the clarion call
to make the Exposition in 1925 worthy
of the name and frame of Old Oregon.
STEAMER SAID SUNK
BOSTON, Mass, Jan. 23. T h e
steamer Centennial State reported by
radio last night that the new Norwe
gian freight steamer Mod had sunk in
mid-oceam.
The message said that survivors
were on board the steamer Melmore
Head, but did not indicate whether
any members of the crew were lost.
Ail Inventory Reversed
Think not I shall attempt to name
The longitude and latitude
Of my possessions which, I claim,
Give me great cause for gratitude.
Instead, I shall expatiate
Upon my happy lot,.
Because I can enumerate
So much that I have NOT.
I have no mortal malady
Tq shed its glowering gloom.
Oh, count me not invalid, pray,
Nor nearing, yet, the tomb.
I have no rank revenge, nor hate
To smolder in my breast
And like some dire, pursuing Fate
To rob me of my rest.
I have no fabulous riches;
I'm lucky bereft.
OPEN DOORS
m BUSINESS
Professional Housecleaners.
New times and new conditions
bring new business opportunities.
Among these ia the business of Pro
fessional Housecleaning. It is done by
cleaners who visit their patrons regu
larly and go over their house at so
much an hour. They come with their
own tools and vacuum cleaners, wash
windows, wipe up the floors, clean the
rugs and do all that is necessary to
leave the house neat and clean. They
will visit weekly or whenever called
and have regular patrons.
This business will probaly-increase
as more women take part in business
and are less at home to do their own
housework. Domestic help, too, grows
more scarce and, as all other occupa
tions are being specialized, so with
the weekly housecleaning. In cities,
offices and apartment buildings are
daily cleaned by professionals.
The income from this work depends
on the skill of the workers, the cla3
of people they serve, and the outfit
required to, do their work well. It
ranges from forty cents per "hand" 'o
ssventy-five cents. The work is some
times contracted for by a manager
who brings her own help and pays
them at terms arranged between them
selves. In such, cases the manager
makes something for the work, of her
helpers besides her own labor.
For the energetic and businesslike
woman who is able to do such work
there is better income in this occupa
tion than in almost any other kind of
housework. It may bs enlarged un
til quite a business is built up.
Finicky Appetites
Parents who, as children, had
hearty appetites cannot understand
why children of today sit listlessly at
table and don't like this, or won't eat
that, and ask "Do we HAVH to "eat
breakfast?"
Perhaps the main cause of their
food revolt is that we supply our
tables too lavishly and with too much
variety so that nothing is a treat any
more. Persons who work in a bakery
or at candy or ice-cream counters
seldom taste the dainties they serve.
We overstock our tables with rich and .
lancy iooas unin our cnuaren are, Appiied to Child Welfare problems,
thus surfeited and disgusted with the : what will Mrg Gulid's management
business of eating. , not accomplish.?
Then, too, they never have a chance ,
toget really hungry. They run at all,..,,
hours to the corner grocery, the ice-!
cream parlors and the cafeteria. j. MRS. SOLOMON SAYS: S
In the old time home, the attitude,. j
was entirely different. Mother contin- . sssss?gs8ssi,s.?1 ?
ually marvelled at the bottomless pit ' . . . , , ...
which was our appetite and wondered n f the-best materials for the
anxiously if her jam could be made to Sundry Bag is heavy canvas ou
stretch over another meal. Food wasP eaS1ytcl y" Dame .,mt ne
scarce and this added to the piquancy forDer of tbis- rw 11 u wlt,h havy
of it. In the modern home the mother ! Pe and you will have a laundry bags
constantly urges more food upon her j whlch last a life-time, look appro
children and pleads. "It's good for j Pralte and can stand being out in a
you.'" This, of itself, condemns her to j he"7 ram wltIlout tne contents be
disappointment or people never like coming wet.
what is "good for them." ; '
But we adults tackle bravely the 4 '-
proposition of getting away with the j
iuou we nave proviuea ana tue resuii.
is stuffing and indigestion. I
A friend told me recently of being
at a party of society women where
the most delicious refreshments wers
served 4ieavy salads with whipped
cream and rich cakes and confections.
Every one of those women was over
heavy to begin with but they ate the
whole menu and afterward some of
them actually panted.
I visited once a wealthy home where
the scientific mother had consulted a
child specialist about the food needs
of her children and lived scrupulously
No thieving finger iches
For the litle I have left.
I have no super-sense nor
wit
To dole out of my kind.
The consciousnes of being IT
Is not upon mind.
No blue blood, running in my veins,
Demands my artisocracy;
But I can live without that pains
In sociable democracy.
No particular code nor patent creed
Is shouldered onto me;
But I can think as fits my need
From entanglements quite free.
And though you may not value much
The negatives I boast,
My small endowment is just such
As really suits me most.
by his directions. She fed her four
rosy little ones at a table by them
selves and the meal I saw them eat
consisted solely of creamed peas on
toast. They rolicked all the meal
thru and ther was no coaxing and no
complaint. The plan seemed to me a
bit stern and unsociable on the part
of the parents, but the sturdy children
were proof of the wisdom of it.
Long enough abstinence between
meals will make the simplest food
delectable. I had vainly tried to get
my youngest child to eat lettuce on
acount of the vitamines therein, but
she would have none of it, until once,
after missing two meals with a slight
illness, a dish of merely salted head
lettucg was brought 4o her with the
caution to eat it slowly as that was all
there was of it. Never had food seem
ed more choice to her and now she
asks for a generous serving whenever
it appears on the table. I, myself, have
the pleasantest recollections, of deli
cious potato soup or mush-and-milk on
chilly nights camping in the north
woods. WTiat would happen in our house
holds if we served simpler meals,
mostly fruit, until our families got
back to hearty appetites; and then
kept the menu very frugal and whole
some after that? Wouldn't it save a lot
of time, and money, and diabetes and
gout?
The Efficient
Mrs. Guild
Simple, substantial, capable is Mrs.
H. A. Guild, of Phoenix, Arizona, the
first woman head of a State Depart
ment,, being recently apopinted to
supervise Child Welfare in her state.
A wife, a mother, a club woman, a
farmer, and a State officer, she has
yet time to cultivate roses, a vast pro
usion of them just for fun. Her lit
tle farm of ten acres, Mrs. Guild
manages, doing much of the actual
work herself, while her husband and
son attend to their work in the city.
Six annlal crops of alfalfa, two each
of strawberries and peaches, grapes
in numerous varieties, butter and
cream, contribute to the income Mrs.
Guild extracts from her small farm.
The soil is intensively cutlivated and
Vi-ops so arranged that each month
brings its own peculiar harvest and
distributes the rush season so that the
; work may be managed with little out-
sj,je help.
WOMAM-I-TORIALS
S Q Q g y 5 s A
Honored For Service
The Four women names, recently
inscribed in the Hall of Fame, are ot
women who have contributed gener
ously toward the welfare or happiness
of their generation. They are: Har
riet Beecher Stowe, so influential in
freeing the slaves; Frances E. Wil
lard, the great temperence leader,
Alice Freeman Palmer, educator and
Charlotte Cushman, actress. Other
such names, dear for the service they i
cars.
COPYRIGHTED
have rendered, are Madame Curie, the
discoverer of radiirm, and Julia Lath
rop, who served for years quietly but
efectively in the United Staes Chil
dren's Bureau.
Miss Ida Verdon, working her way
up, first as tsenographer, then private
secretary, has now been made manag
ing editor of the Cosmospolitan maga
zine. A pitiful phase ot the Chinese fam--ist
on social hygine, has been chosen
sold their children into slavery of a
mild form to save them from starva-tion.-
Woman Health Speaker.
Dr. Valeria Parker, a woman special
ist on social hygient, has been chosen
to make speeches at the various
Health Institutes which will be held
each for a week, in the leading cities
of the United States during the next
five months.
THE WOMAN CITIZEN
Investigating First
Some women's Clubs are doing a
fine thing in making visiting tours to
factories and public utilities to knew
conditions thoroughly before they lay
out any program of welfare work. Wel
afre work is needed; and they are
noble souls who give time and effort
to it. Equally benevolent and intelli
gent persons often differ on methods
and means and even what is and what
is not "betterment." It is well to base
all our enterprise on statistics and
surveys, plus the personal touch, and
common sense. Who was it said "Be
SURE you are right, then go ahead?"
After Independent Citizenship.
The National League of Women
Voters is about to concentrate on an
effort to obtain independent citizen
ship for women in the United States.
Mrs. Richard Edwards is enthusiastic
for this reform, having recently won
out with it in her own state of Indiana.
At present a wife takes the citizen
ship of her husband. If he is an
American citizen, she is! if an alien,
then she is-an alien. Women feel that
this is unjust and that every woman
should be an American or ajien by her
own birth or naturalization, regardless
of the citizenship of her husband.
Since the cause is based on fairness
and backed by more than two million
women, it is a safe guess that it will
speedily suceed.
? S 4 $
$ fc
3
SMILES
SS$--8&'SSS-3SS-S
Once a young fellow named TS
Asked K8 if she'd be his mS.
"I'm sorry to staS
' I'm married," said K8,
And such was the young fellow's fS.
Pathfinder.
s 6 v s i fc S ' -
HAPPY THOUGHT
-j
1922 is a clean slate.
FIFTY-THREE
YEARS AGO
Taken from the Oregon City Enter
prise January 18, 1868.
Members of Clackamas Baseball
Club will meet today at 1 o'clock on
the lake near Highland ground for
practice.
Steam On Yesterday about 1:30
o'clock p. m., we heard the familiar
bosnd of a steam whistle, the first
since our trip to Milwoukie last Sat
urday. By Monday it is thought that
river will be open to Salem so that
the boats can run.
Portland is moving to abate the nui
sance of so many runaway teams. We
advised them to do this three ears
ago, and had it been attended to then,
there would now probably b three de
formed beings less in world, that we
think of.
EUROPE TO BUY GRAIN
WASHINGTON, Ja. 19. American
farmers will pocket in excess of
$100,000,000 in cash from grain pur
chases which Europe will make in
the United States to supply her pop
ulation until next harvest, govern
ment experts estimated today.
Taken from the Oregon City Enter
prise January 22, 1892.
Shively's opera house on Seventh
street was formally dedicated on Sat
urday at night by the French Star
Company, of oPrtland, when the tom
edy, "The Golden Giant" was present
ed. The new opera house has good
stage room and ful complement of
scenery that painters have been at
work a month on. The auditorium
will "be comfortably seat 500 people.
The young people of Canemah gave
a dancing party at Stokes' ,hall Sat
urday night. '
Messrs, A. J. Lewthwaite Hd Al
bert Fuller have formed a partnership
under the name of Lethwaite & Fuller,
and will open a stock of boots and
shoes in store No. 2, next to the corn
er in the new Commercial bank.
Mrs. C. D. Latourette is suffering
from a severe attack of la grippe and
her many friends here are looking for
an early recovery.
Arthur Graham, master . of the
steamer Altona, is laid up with the
grip, an Aid en Graham, his brother,
is running the boat. Purser T. P. Ran
dall, who is also attacked by the pre
vailing malady, has gone to Califor
nia. Live Wires
(Cont'-jued from Page One.)
was explained by Linn E. Jones, a
member of the committee, who out
lined the work already done and dis
cussed briefly what general method .
of proceedure is to be followed. A
sub-committee is now ' at work with
Professor J. D. Barnett, head of the
department of Political Science of
the University of Oregon, conducting
a research over the city's particular
problems and outlining the best ad
ministrative system. Their conclu
sions are to be presented at a general
mass meeting for ratification, or
change, after which proper proceedure
to call. an election will be take.
RAIL EXTENSION URGED
L. I Pickens, of West Linn, spoke
regarding the proposed extension of
the Southern Pacific railroad electric
line from Oswego to Willamette, dis
tance of 3-4 of a mile, which would
give the entire Wrest Side- a direct
connection with Portland. "We be
lieve," he said, "that the business
there now and which would be foster
ed, would justify the extension."
A. L. Barbur, of Portland, who was
scheduled to speak at the meeting,
was unable to be here and according
to the announcement of F. J. Tooze,
head of the program committee, had
been called away by urgent city bus
iness a few hours before he had in
tended to leave for Oregon City.
3 JAPANESE ARRESTED
LIQUOR
Three Japanese, K. Kato, J. Marl
and J. Hazoshi were arrested on their
ranch a mile east of Tualatin Monday
afternoon for manufacture and poses
sion of liquor.
Sheriff Wilson and Deputies Long
and Hughes found two complete Saki
presses, one of which was in operation
and 230 gallons of the finished li
quor. More than 1000 gallons of
mash in process of fermentation was
found.
Justice of the Peace W. M. Moore,
of Tualatin was called to witness the
destruction of the liquor and the
presses. Six gallons of the contra
band was brought to Oregon City for
evidence. Kato is held for $500 bail
and $250 a piece for the others is
asked. The case is to be heard before
Judge E. J. Noble today.
Cleansing the teeth properly calls
for the expenditure of at least one
minute and a half each time the brush
is used.
1 GEORGE HOEYE
CHIROPRACTOR
5 Caufield Bldg.
Phone 63G-W
Oregon City, Ore.
" '1 ,..,.,..-......M....K
Phones-: Off. 80 Res. 251-W
EMORY J. NOBLE
i LAWYER ' I
' Justice of Peace ,
201-2 Masonic Temple, Oregon City.
By BECK