Falls City news. (Falls City, Or.) 190?-19??, July 24, 1915, Image 1

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    FALLS eiTY NEWS
VOL. XI
No. 47
KALLS CITY. OREGON, SATURDAY. JULY 24. 1915
11
were comparatively slight and that any
attempt at segregation of consumptives
during transportation was Impraettra
ble.
I If ihe federal government were to
| undertake restriction of the travel of
eonsumplhes In Ihe I’ nlted States, he
said. It could do so only If the nuisance
were very real. One thing to be con­
sidered, he said, was the fart that
most cases of tubercular Infection oc­
curred during childhood and that the
large proportion of travelers were
adults. Again. If tlicre were special
dangers to the traveling public we
The American Truth Society of
should And passenger hrakeinen and
New
York give out the following
conductors showing a higher consump­
tive rate than similar employees on warning:
freight tralna. But Ihe reverse Is the
case, he said, and ipioted a uumber of
' We doubt if the American
authorltlea to that effect.
E n t a r p r ls a a
PERIL OF AMERI
GAN FINANCE
WILL CONSERVE
WORKERS’HEALTH
British Raid Upon Our
Resources
Three Score and Ten Heritage
of All Men.
BIBLICAL LIFE LINE THE AIM
M any
L arga
In d u s t r ia l
jieoplc share the inspired idiocy
H a v a D s v s l o p s d J u a t aa E ffic ie n t O a -
p a rt m a n t a
of
H a a lt h
aa
A rs
to
Bs
F o u n d In M o a t A d v o n e a d M u n ic ip a l! -
tiaa— S o a k L o n g s r L i f a o f E m p lo y « « *.
Han Krani'lai-o. Thn lillillral limit of
throMKore nnd ton will eventually be
thn natural heritage o f every mau, ami
thn railroad« am engaged In un earnest
effort to bring about thla condition aa
promptly aa possible, said Itr. C. W.
llopklna, chief aurgnon o f the Chicago
and Northwestern Hallway company. In
a paper present td to thn Academy of
Medicine on "The Hospital Organlxa
tlon of the Railway System."
Dr. Hopkins pointed out that many
large Industrial enterprises had devel­
oped Just as efficient departments o f
health aa were to be found In the most
advanced municipalities nnd sometimes
made even greater per capita expendi­
ture. The railroad physician or sur­
geon hnd an especially due Held before
him, aa the railways were finding tt
their duty not only to prevent acci­
dents, but to prevent dlaeaae from crip­
pling the efficiency of their armlea of
employees. "It la now a well recog­
nized fact among the managements of
the railroad." he said, “ that It la Just
as Important to care for their sick aud
Injured ns it is to maintain a certain
standard of efficiency or perfection of
their rolling stock and roadbed."
In considering the organization of
such work he said the drat considera­
tion was the proper housing of rail­
way employees, In order that the man
could feel well In the environment o f
a home and be free from worry and
anxiety. The next step toward effl
clency lay in the direction of physical
examination to determine the approach
of disease in Its incipient stage.
"There should be nu understanding
with the workmen that this examina­
tion Is not for the purpose of prepar­
ing him for the scrap pile." he said,
"but for the purpose- of maintaining a
condition of bodily health that will
materially prolong his working days,
together with a higher degree of earn­
ing capacity and efficiency.
"T w o general methods hnve been In
use for some years by forty two repre­
sentative railroads of this country,
with the general predominance In fa­
vor of the hospital organization, where
the men themselves contribute a < cr
tain monthly amount toward tbelr
maintenance. Twenty-four of the for­
ty-two railroads are today using the
hospital organizations, some of which
were established ns long as dfty years
ago. This was primarily brought about
on account o f a certain uumber of
these roads running through a very
sparsely settled country, where settle­
ments nnd doctors were few find far
between, and there were no hospitals,
nnd where It was found that men of
ten suffered and sometimes illed be­
cause of lick of Immediate nml proper
care. By a small contrlbutloiij by the
mpti they were enabled to receive the
proper care by good men and to enjoy
the comforts that were necessary to­
ward their well being, nnd 'Vlth but
small cost to themselves.
"The other eighteen roads employ
surgeons nnd hospitals and trqwt their
men for occupational Injuries, paying
nil hills for such treatment and care
without the small monthly assessment
contributed hy the men. There have
been many arguments by learned eeon
omlsts both for nnd against each
method."
"The Transportation o f (.'onautup-
tives” was exhaustively considered In
a paper by Dr. Henry B. Hcmenway of
Evanston, III. Dr. Hemeinvay said
that, although consumptives were
prone to travel In greater numbers
than any other one class o f persons af­
flicted with disease, humnnltnrlantsm.
as well ns law, would protect them In
their desire to travel unless It he shown
that their Journeys particularly endan­
gered their fellow travelers. The con­
clusion to which he came nfter review­
ing statistics snd laws bearing on the
subject was that.the dangers Ipyolved
Basks Aid of Employers.
o f the military experts of our
New York. It was announced at the
newspapers who report Allied
offices of ihe National Security league
losses on th" front page and
that the league has begun a nation
wide campaign to Induce large corpora­
manufacture Allied optimistic
tions and other employer* of Inbor to
| forecasts on their editorial pages
encourage their employees to Join the
national guard or naval militia organl | for the gratification of fails.
rations.
00 YOU KNOW
Financing The Allies
That Eastern financiers have
already loaned to the Allies from
their proprietary hanks $ 200 , 000 ,-
(XX) and are arranging to borrow
$300,(XX),000 more of your money
solely for Great Britian?
That material amounting to one
billion five hundred million dollars
in value has been contracted for
by the Allies with American Man­
ufacturers?
That, being now on a paper
basis, the Allied governments can­
not pay for these goods in gold
and are offering instead their
promises to pay at some future
date, which promises are being
discounted and re-discounted by
American banks throughout th e ,
country?
The hank» o f this city have been
given permission by the federal
reserve hoard o f Washington to
accept bills o f exchange, based
on foreign trade, up to the
amount of its capital and surplus.
Heretofore the restriction has
been at 50 per cent o f a hank’s
capital and surplus. In the fu­
ture such national hanks as desire
may buy accepted bills o f ex­
change in wider latitude and the
immediate effect will be to enable
local hanks to handle bills o f ex­
change in larger volume, if nec­
essary, covering shipments of
wheat, flour, luml»er and other
products o f the Pacific North­
west. - Portland Telegraph.
00 YOU KNOW
EVERYTHIIM<Q YOU R E Q U IR E
1
ÌÌ
IT
PLEASING
PRICES
SA V E M O N EY NOW
DOLLARS ALWAYS HAVE A LONG REACH IN
OUR STORE. BUT RIGHT NOW. TO CLOSE OUT
OUR SUMMER GOODS. YOUR DOLLARS WILL
REACH FARTHER.
BRING IN THE WHOLE FAMILY NOW AND RIG
THEM OUT FROM FOOT TO HEAD. WE WILL
SELL YOU THE SAME HIGH QUALITY MERCHAN­
DISE WE ALWAYS CARRY. BUT GIVE YOU NOW
OUR LOWEST REDUCED PRICES.
N. S E L IG 'S
FALLS C ITY D E P A R T M E N T STO R E
That the estimated profit on
three hundred million dollars on |
these war contracts goes into the
treasuries of a few trusts and wealth and diversified business of
corporations while legitimate busi- j the country is even now in process
ness, merchants are deprived of t of transformation and absorption
Justice of tho Peace at Medford Holds credit, and labor of its ordinary-
into sinews of war for the Allied
That Possession Amounts to Vio­
employment?
powers. Under various disguises
Prepare fo “Shed”
Your Elk Horns
lation of the Law.
Marshfield, Or,, July 17-—A
decision given by Justice C. L.
Pennock here in Elk horn case
has caused some anxiety on the
part of owners of such orna­
ments,
Pennock found Jordan Schapers
guilty o f violation o f the law, and
fined him $50 for having in his
possession a pair o f Elk horns
which it was shown had been
killed by his dead brother in 1910
and which were in Schapers’
possession before 1913, when the
present law went into effect.
Notwithstanding this, Pennock
held Schapers guilty because he
had the horns. He holds that
there is no qualifying clause in
the law. It is taken that anyone
owning elk horns is subject to
the same prosecution.
Alfred Bayne gathered 19 pair
o f old horns, claiming that he
was to use them at the Elk’ s
convention in Los Angeles. One
pair he secured fiom Schapers.
The state game warden has
ordered Deputy Game Warden
Thomas o f this place to ship all
the horns to Portland.
Bayne was also tried but the
decision in his case has not yet
been given.
By the Grace of England
and pretense o f vast and immedi­
ate profits the whole machinery of
the Federal Reserve Banks may-
soon be called upon and utilized to
discount hundreds of millions of
manufacturers and foreign mer­
cantile paper now held by outside
banking institutions. Thus, asset
currency resulting from these dis­
counts, will finally be lodged in
the hands of our people without
notice to them that its character
Questionable Schemes
has been changed and that its
Exclusive sales of our raw and
value is dependent upon the issue
manufactured products to a single
of the war in Europe.
customer, the profits resulting
therefrom and the various devices DO YOU KNOW
That similar transformations of
which this customer, with the con­
nivance of international bankers, the people’s deposits has already-
has concocted to postpone and fi­ taken place abroad though skill­
nally at its pleasure to avoid pay­ fully disguised and covered up by
ment therefor, altogether consti­ arch manipulators of high finance
tute a bunco operation compared in London and Paris.
Much of the paper there, though
with which John Law’s Mississip­
pi scheme pales into insignificance. nominally redeemable in gold,
can not be so redeemed and is ac­
DO YOU REALIZE
tually fiat currency and currency
That unless our representatives
which has lost the value of asset
at Washington who founded that
once standing behind it.
great democratic institution, the
Depositor's Money Invested for Po­
Federal Reserve Banking System
litical Reasons
in order to emancipate our mer­
Even before the war English
chants and borrowers generally
from the one-man power money and French bankers, committed
trusts, rouse themselves to imme­ to vast schemes of conquest and
diate action, it may soon be too developement around the globe,
had filled the vaults of their banks
late?
and
strong boxes o f their clients
The domestic loans and deposits
with
stocks and bonds of Russia,
of these banks which should ordi­
the
Balkans,
South America, Jap-
narily, represent the legitimate
Our raw products, grain, cotton
copper, etc., are prevented from
reaching neutral ports, while the
material necessary for the opera­
tion o f our largest industries may
only be imported on sufference or
by grace of a nation which with­
out our markets and our money
could not carry on its war another
six months.
© * '» * ! * ’
an, China and Mexico. These in­
vestments have proved ruinously
unsound. French money invested
in Russia in order to prepare the
way for a Muscovite invasion of
Germany is hopelessly lost now
that that invasion has hopelessly-
failed. The condition of the Eng­
lish joint stock banks with similar
holdings of depreciated paper
everywhere is no less deplorable
and threatening.
To cover the failure of such pol­
icies and in the hope— which, with
odds in their favor, seemed a cer­
tainty—of recouping their for­
tunes in one final and desperate
throw of» prepared dice through
the conquest of Germany, finan­
ciers in both countries welcomed
the great war.
00 YOU KNOW
#
That when Premier Asqiiith said
lately- in Parliment that “ rather
than sacrifice the cause of liberty,
the English would fight to the last
drop of bloed and the last farth­
ing of money,” he meant French,
Russian and Italian blood and
American money?
England Demoralized
To this conclusion has it come.
An English financial expert t Hec­
tor J. Boon1 recently admitted to
a representative of the New York
World that ‘ ‘the Allies only hope
of winning lies in getting aid from
American manufacturers. Eng-
is almost totally disorganized and
it is up to America to win the war
for us.”
The Macedonian cry from Eng-
(Continued on 4th page)