The Meridian Tribune (Meridian, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, January 24, 1936 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Meridian Tribune and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Meridian Public Library.
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PAGE TWO
THE MERIDIAN TRIBUNE
Friday, January 24, 1936
Friday,
Wrap-Around Makes
Good Utility Frock
PATTERN 2539
Dn.John McLoughlin,
the “White-Headed Sat
AVY**
Improved
Uniform
International
SUNDAY
SCHOOL
-LESSON -
By REV. P. B. FITZWATER. D. D.,
Member of Faculty, Moody Bible
Institute of Chicago.
© Western Newspaper Union.
INITIATIVE
It is true that some people lack
Initiative, leadership, and executive
ability sufficient to enable them to go
into business for themselves wherein
they must employ others; but there
are a great many things which even
these people can do which will not
require the employment of others,
which would give them the ineffable
boon of independence.—O. S. M.
THE
52
Does household routine demand
that you be the first downstairs in
the morning? Then here’s a frock
that makes it possible. A jiffy wrap-
around, with smart shirtwaist air, is
grand for general utility wear from
early morning until you’ve time to
change. Easy to make, it slips on as
smoothly as a coat, opens out flat for
ironing, and no petticoat is necessary
with it due to the generous over-lap
in front. Unequaled for comfort and
slenderizing effect
Pattern 2539 is available in sizes
14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36. 38. 40, 42,
44, 46 and 48. Size 16 takes 3% yards
36-inch fabric. Illustrated step-by-
step sewing instructions included.
SEND FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in
coins or stamps (coins preferred) for
this pattern. Write plainly name,
address and style number. BE SURE
TO STATE SIZE.
Address orders to the Sewing Cir-
cle Pattern Dept., 243 W. Seven-
teenth St., New York City.
By ELMO SCOTT WATSON
ECENTLY newspapers in many parts
of the United States printed this
story:
"OREGON CITY, ORE.—Naturaliza-
tion papers of Dr. John McLoughlin.
‘Father of Oregon,’ have been discov-
ered in the vaults of the county re-
corder’s 'office here.
"Doctor McLoughlin, factor of the
British Hudson Bay Fur company, be
friended American settlers in Oregon
in the early days. When the fur post
was discontinued, after Oregon was
ceded to the United States, Doctor
McLoughlin remained and took a farm. The
naturalization papers were issued by the Second
District court of Oregon Territory, September 5,
1851.”
Back of that brief news item lies one of the
most romantic and significant—and at the same
time one of the most tragic—stories in American
history. For this Dr. John McLoughlin was more
than just a “factor of the British Hudson Bay
Fur company”—yes, even more than the “Father
of Oregon.” There was a time when he was
known far and wide as the “Emperor of the
West,” a wilderness king whose word was abso-
lute law over 400,000 square miles, an empire
that extended all along the Pacific coast from
California to Alaska and as far east as the Great
Salt lake in Utah. There was a time when he
held an influence over the Indians such as no
white man had since the days of Sir William
Johnspra’s dominance over the Iroquois on the
other side of the continent.
There was a time when he, by speaking a few
words, could have embroiled the United States
and Great Britain in a third war and if that had
happened it is doubtful if the Pacific Northwest
would now be under the American flag. But he
refrained from speaking those words and by re-
fraining saved the lives of hundreds of Ameri-
can settlers and probably thousands of American
and British soldiers and sailors.
Thus the romance and the historical signifi-
cance in the life story of Dr. John McLoughlin.
As for the tragedy, it was the tragedy of a
“king” who lost his kingdom and of a real “man
without a country,” a more pitiful figure than
the fictitious hero of Edward Everett Hale’s fa-
mous book.
Such is the story, in part, back of the discov
ery, after more than three-quarters of a century,
of the document which made John McLoughlin
Fort Vancouver
Dr. John McLoughlin
Marker in Vancouver, Wash. House of Dr McLoughlin in Oregon City, Ore.
* ----------..... cxxnd
Grave Stones of Dr. McLoughlin and His Wife
The 109 Year-Old Apple Tree
Lesson for January 26
JESUS DECLARES HIS PURPOSE
LESSON TEXT—Luke 4:16-30.
GOLDEN TEXT—The Spirit of the
Lord is upon me, because he hath
anointed me to preach the gospel to
the poor; he hath sent me to heal
the broken-hearted, to preach deliv-
erance to the captives, and recover-
ing of sight to the blind, to set at
liberty them that are bruised,. to
preach the acceptable year of the
Lord.—Luke 4:18, 19.
PRIMARY TOPIC—Jesus Preaches
to His Home Folks...
JUNIOR TOPIC—Jesus' First Ser-
mon.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR
TOPIC—Choosing a Life Purpose.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT
TOPIC—What Jesus Came to Do.
Gentle Peace
Among the instrumentalities
love and peace, surely there
of
can
be no sweeter, softer, more effec-
tive voice than that of gentle peace
—breathing music.
Don’t
Guess But
Know
Whether the "Pain"
Remedy You Use
is SAFE?
Don’t Entrust Your
Own or Your Family’s
Well - Being to Unknown
Preparations
‘THE person to ask whether the
A preparation you or your family
are taking for the relief of headaches
is SAFE to use regularly is your
family doctor. Ask him particularly
about Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN.
He will tell you that before the
discovery of Bayer Aspirin most
“pain” remedies were advised
against by physicians as bad for the
stomach and, often, for the heart.
Which is food for thought if you
seek quick, safe relief.
Scientists rate Bayer Aspirin
among the fastest methods yet dis-
covered for the relief of headaches
and the pains of rheumatism, neu-
ritis and neuralgia. And the experi-
ence of millions of users has proved
it safe for the average person to use
regularly. In your own interest re-
member this.
You can get Genuine Bayer
Aspirin at any drug store — simply
by asking for it by its full name,
BAYER ASPIRIN. Make it a
point to do this — and see that you
get what you want.
Bayer Aspirin
an American citizen.. But even though he was
no longer a “man without a country,” that docu-
ment could not save him from going to his grave
six years later, a broken-hearted old man, the
victim of the selfishness and the basest ingrati
tude on the part of those who had best reason to
be grateful to him—the American settlers he had
“befriended.”
The complete story is told in a new biography
which, by an interesting coincidence, appeared a
short time after the discovery of the McLough-
lin naturalization papers in the vault in Oregon
City. This biography is “The White-Headed
Eagle: John McLoughlin, Builder of an Empire,”
written by Richard G. Montgomery of Portland,
Ore., and published by the Macmillan company
of New York. Much has been written about (Mc-
Loughlin (the list of authorities occupies five
full pages at the end of this biography) but Mr.
Montgomery’s book is one of the most authori-
tative and most interesting word portraits of
McLoughlin that has yet appeared.
McLoughlin was born at Riviere du Loup some
120 miles below Quebec on the St. Lawrence in
1784. x His father was an Irishman, his mother,
a Fraser in whom French blood was mixed with
the Scotch. As a boy he was serious-minded
and very religious, with none of the dashing reck-
lessness that characterized the men engaged in
the business in which he was to become famous
—the fur trade. Due to the influence of one of
his uncles, Dr. Simon Fraser, it appeared certain
that young John would become a doctor and at
the age of sixteen he began studying medicine.
Although he practiced for a while in Montreal,
it soon became apparent that “a professional ca-
reer in a well-settled community held no fascina-
tion for him. The lad’s gray eyes were focused
on the West—there was no hankering for city
life in his nature.” That was largely due to
another uncle—Alexander Fraser, who had be-
come prominent in the affairs of the North West
company, which had been organized in 1784, the
year young John was born, to compete with the
Hudson’s Bay company for the rich prize of the
fur trade throughout Canada. Through Uncle
Alexander’s influence the young doctor received
an appointment as resident physician in the
North West company and in the winter of 1803-04
proceeded to Fort William, the company’s chief
depot and factory on Lake Superior.
This marked the beginning of that amazing
career which resulted in McLoughlin’s becoming
charge in 1824, abandoned Astoria and moved
up the river to establish Fort Vancouver it be-
came apparent that here was the man who could
rule both the Indians and the turbulent trappers
and fur traders. Rule he did, Sternly but justly,
and the Indians, who called McLoughlin the
“White-Headed Eagle” because of his shock of
snow-white hair, respected and loved him quite
as much as they feared him.
For a period of ten years Fort Vancouver was
the center of a feudal empire the like of which
the New World never before, and seldom since,
has seen. It was a “sanctuary of civilization
INDIVIDUAL COMMUNION SERVICE-
every church should use this cleanly meth-
od. Send for folder and special offer.
Thomas Communion Co., Box 20, Lima, O.
RADIOS FOR SALE
FARM RADIO, $9.95. Complete. Wind
Chargers. 50% off. Catalog free. Agents
wanted. 20th Century Co., B-2053, K. C.,Mo.
the “Emperor of the West.” From being a medi-
cal officer he soon progressed to the position of
chief trader. In 1820, when the bitter rivalry
between the Hudson’s Bay company and tile
North Westers ended in a truce, young McLough-
lin went to London as a North West represen-
tative to drive the bargain which consolidated
the two companies. He then became a Hudson’s
Bay man and continued as such through the
remainder of his active life.
For a time he served as chief factor at Bart
Francis on the Lake of the woods. Then Gov.
George Simpson, head of the H. B. C., recogniz-
ing the great ability of the young doctor, made
him assistant to Chief Factor Alexander Ken-
nedy on the Columbia river, with the idea of his
eventually superseding Kennedy there. This was
all a part of the bold scheme which Simpson had
in mind.
The American, John Jacob Astor, had failed
In his attempt to found a fur empire in the
Pacific Northwest and his post, Astoria, at the
month of the Columbia had fallen into the hands
of the North West company first and then the
Hudson’s Bay company. The Oregon country
was held jointly by Great Britain and the United
States, but Simpson planned to win this vast
region with its wealth of furs for England but
more particularly to “bring all the territory west
of the Rocky mountains within a single Hudson’s
Bay company jurisdiction.”
McLoughlin was selected as the instrument to
bring this about and there could have been no
better one selected. From the moment he took
in the heart of the savage western country” and
to it came many a traveler and explorer whose
name is written large in the history of the West
—Jedediah Smith, Nathaniel J. Wyeth, Hall J.
Kelly, Jason Lee, Marcus Whitman, Captain
Bonneville and a host of others.
One of the notables who came to Vancouver
was Capt. Aemilius Simpson of the British navy
and a symbol of his visit is to be seen near the
site of Fort Vancouver to this day.
“During his sojourn at Vancouver, Simpson
unwittingly contributed in no small degree to-
ward the agricultural progress of the commu-
nity,” writes Montgomery. “While dining one
evening with the doctor he was reminded by one
of his men of a promise he had made a certain
young lady back in London. It appears that dur-
ing the dessert course of a farewell banquet
given in his honor, this young lady had extracted
the seeds from an apple and had laughingly pre-
sented them to Simpson with the request that
he plant them when he reached his destination
in the Northwest wilderness. The incident had
been forgotten until that moment, but when the
captain’s attention was called to it by his aide,
he reached- into his coat pocket and there repos-
ing under his kid gloves, he found the little
packet of seeds. A ripple of laughter ran around
the table as he handed them over to his host.
“Doctor John was not the man to underrate
such a gift. The very next day he entrusted the
apple seeds to Robert Bruce, the venerable
Scotch gardener of the fort, who planted them
with great care under glass. Thus, in the spirit
of jest, the redoubtable white-gloved Aemilius
made possible the first Oregon apple.” That was
109 years ago. One of the trees which sprang
from those seeds still stands where the venerable
Robert Bruce planted them and it still bears
fruit, as the writer of this article, who took the
photograph of it shown above, can testify.
Unhappily for McLoughlin other seeds were
also being planted in the fertile soil of the Ore-'
gon country and they bore a crop of trouble
for him. For just when he was well established
as the “Emperor of the West,” the energetic
Yankees who were to dispute with Great Brit-
ain ownership of the Northwest began to appear
—first as competitive fur traders and later as
missionaries and settlers.
The doctor, being of a pious disposition, (he
was baptized a Catholic, his mother’s faith, but
.grew up an Episcopalian, the faith of his father),
was naturally well-disposed toward the mission-
aries and he gave both medical and other aid
to them when, as so often happened in their
early days, they were in distress. For that mat-
ter, he did the same for the settlers even though
he, as factor for the Hudson’s Bay company and
therefore obligated to consider its interests first,
would have been justified, by the rules of “big
business” which were even then in vogue, in
letting them starve.
Instead of doing that he gave generously from
his own resources and that very generosity re-
sulted in his downfall. Governor Simpson had
never approved of his open-handed hospitality
to the American settlers and that, combined with
innumerable other disagreements between the
head of the Hudson’s Bay company and its rep-
resentative in Oregon, resulted in 1845* in Mc-
Loughlin’s retirement from the H. B. C., a re-
tirement which seems to have been little more
than a summary dismissal.
In the meantime the American settlers, who
had been coming into Oregon in ever-increasing
unmbers since 1842, had been beseeching con-
gress to guarantee their land titles on the Colum-
bia and had taken steps to form a local gov-
the political maneuverings incident to that action
and made a number of enemies among the future
leaders of the new American territory.
After retiring from the Hudson Bay company
service he moved to the present site of Oregon
City where “he had every reason to expect that
his new neighbors, so extensively the recipients
of his largess, would welcome him as a bene-
factor rather than spurn him as a fallen auto-
crat. He made the very human mistake of count-
ing too heavily on the religious tolerance and
anticipated gratitude of these people.” For they
were Protestants and he was a Catholic, having
returned once more to the religious faith of his
youth; he was also a British subject and they
were roused to a high pitch of patriotic ardor
over the Oregon boundary dispute.
Although he immediately took steps to become
an American citizen, his motives were suspected
and there were numerous annoying delays before
his final citizenship papers were signed. But
even that did not end his troubles. American
settlers had squatted on some of his lands and
there were disputes over land titles. After Ore-
gon became a territory, its first delegate to con-
gress, an enemy of the doctor, influenced the
passage of legislation, the Oregon Donation Land
Law, which cheated McLoughlin out of real
estate that was rightfully his. )
■ No wonder that toward the close of his career
the embittered old man penned these lines: “By
British demagogues I have been represented as
a traitor. For what? Because I acted as a Chris-
tian, saved American citizens, men, women and
children from the Indian tomahawk and enabled
them to take farms to support their families.'
American demagogues have been base enough to
assert that I had caused American citizens to be
massacred by hundreds by the savages. I, who
saved all that I could . . . I could not have done
more for the settlers if they had been brothers
and sisters ... To be brief, I founded this set-
tlement and prevented a war . . . and for doing
this peacably and quietly, I was treated by the
British in such a manner that, from self-respect,
I resigned my situation in the Hudson’s Bay com-
pany’s service, by which I sacrificed $12,000 per
annum, and the Oregon Land Bill shows the
treatment I received from the Americans.”
The end of his troubles came on September 3,
1857, when he died peacefully in his home in
Oregon City. Five years later the Oregon legis-
lature made partial amends for the injustices he
had suffered by passing an act which permitted
his heirs to acquire all of his original land
claims, with the exception of one island, upon
the payment of $1,000 which was designated for
the University Fund of Oregon.
Although he is generally hailed as the “Father
of Oregon,” no monument in keeping with his
importance in the history of the Pacific North-
west has ever been erected in his memory. The
simple, white-painted frame dwelling in Oregon
City where he spent his last days is preserved
as a museum and a memorial to him. The in-
scription on his old-fashioned tombstone, set in
the brick foundations of the brown-painted Cath-
olic church where he lies buried, records the
fact that he was “The Pioneer and Friend of
Oregon. Also the founder of this city.”
The magnificent column at Astoria, Ore., hon-
ors the names of Capt. Robert Gray, of Lewis
and Clark and of John Jacob Astor but not that
of Dr. John McLoughlin. The monument at
Wishram, Wash., lists his name along with 40
other “dauntless pathfinders and pioneers’: of
varying importance.- On a grassy plot within
the city limits of Vancouver, Wash., stands a
hexagonal marker, on one face of which is this
simple inscription: “Under the influence of Dr.
John McLaughlin (sic) !, manager of the Hudson
Bay Co., civilization of Washington started at
Vancouver, A. D. 1825.” Meager as is this .trib-
ernment. McLoughlin had be ome involved in
DOCTORS KNOW
Mothers read this:
THREE STEPS
I
TO RELIEVING
.1---CONSTIPATION
ML
i. Jesus in the Synagogue (v. 16).
On the Sabbath he went into the
Synagogue according to his custom.
He no doubt went that day with
a new and definite purpose, but
how refreshing to know that it was
according to his habit. Many young
people have been safeguarded from
the pitfalls of the world because of
the habit of reading the Bible, pray-
ing and going to church.
II. Jesus Reading the Scriptures
(vv. 17-19).
1. The book handed to him (vv.
17). It was not only his custom to
attend the place of worship, but to
take part in it. This privilege was
not confined to the rabbis (Acts 13:
15). Jesus, therefore, used the lib-
erty accorded him.
2. The passage read (Isa. 61:1,
2). It is not entirely clear as to
whether thiswas, providentially,
the Scripture reading for the day,
or whether it was specifically
chosen by him for that occasion.’
1 3. The content of the passage
(vv. 18, 19).
a. The mission of the Messiah
(v. 18).
(1) To preach the gospel to the
poor. The good tidings which Jesus
proclaimed are peculiarly wel-
come to the common people. By
“poor” in this case is primarily
meant those who were poor in spirit
(Matt. 5:3).
(2) To heal the broken-hearted.
The gospel of Christ meets the
needs of those whose hearts are
crushed by the weight of their own
sins or by a burden of sorrow and
disappointment.
(3) To preach deliverance to the
captives. This meant deliverance
from the bondage of sin and the
Devil (John 8:36).
(4) Recovering of sight to the
blind. Christ did actually make
those who were physically blind to
see (John 9:6, 7) and also opened
the eyes of those who were spirit-
ually blind (I John 5:20).
(5) To set at liberty them that
are bruised. The power of Christ
A cleansing dose today; a smaller
quantity tomorrow; less each time,
until bowels need no help at all.
Why do people come home from a
hospital with bowels working like a
well-regulated watch?
The answer is simple, and it’s the
answer to all your bowel worries if
you will only realize it: many doctors
and hospitals use liquid laxatives.
If you knew what a doctor knows,
you would use only the liquid form.
A liquid can always be taken in
gradually reduced doses. Reduced
dosage is the secret of any real relief
from constipation.
Ask a doctor about this. Ask your
druggist how very popular liquid
laxatives have become. They give the
right kind of help, and right amount
of help. The liquid laxative generally
used is Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin.
It contains senna and cascara — both
natural laxatives that can form no
habit, even in children. So, try Syrup
Pepsin. You just take regulated
doses till Nature restores regularity.
Lady Took Cardui
When Weak, Nervous
"I can’t say enough for Cardui if
I talked all day,” enthusiastically
writes Mrs. L. H. Caldwell, of States-
ville, N. C. “I have used Cardui at
intervals for twenty-five years,” she
adds. “My trouble in the beginning
was weakness, and nervousness. I
read of Cardui in a newspaper and
decided right then to try it. It seemed
before I had taken half a bottle of
Cardui I was stronger and was soon
up and around.”
Thousands of women testify Cardui bene-
fited them. If it does not benefit YOU,
consult a physician. 2CE 47
Break up that
RAW
WOLE
Perhaps the surest way to prevent a cold
from"catching hold" and getting worse is,
at once, to Cleanse Inter-
for FREE nally. Do it the pleasant tea-
CAMPI F cup way. Flush the system
raRFiFin rra with a hot cup of Garfield
coDERL Tea—the mild, easy-to-take
Brooklyn, N. Y. liquid laxative. At drug-stores
GARFIELD TEA/
MES
FINN
HUH ?
Ol KI
MILL -
T’TALF
CAN’T-
A M
“REG
can free the most utterly hopeless
ones.
6. To preach the acceptable year
of the Lord. The primary allusion
is to the year of jubilee (Lev. 25:
8-10) in which all those in bondage
were released.
b. The special enduement of the
HUSBAND QUITS LIQUOR
Guaranteed Home Treatment
Brings Joy to Wife and Family
A doctor’s prescription that overcomes
the craving for alcohol and can be given
ADAM
o , secretly in coffee, tea or food is now
Messiah (V. 18). - He. was the a.n’ offered on a guaranteed plan to all who
T * .. wish to defeat the disease of drunkenness.
ointed one predicted by Isaiah, the
very Messiah.
III. Jesus Expounding the Scrip-
This simple, easy home treatment has
been successfully used for Twenty years
tures (vv. 20, 21). ' and contains no harmful drugs or dope
1. He closed the book and sat and any lady can give it with full con-
down. It seems to have been the fidence she is helping her loved one to
custom or the Jewish teachers to | be the man she wants him to be.r „
sit while teaching' I Write for FREE BOOKLET and full
o hile. a ns. _information about this guaranteed
2. "This day is this scripture ful home treatment to Health Remedy
filled. This statement is no doubt products. Dept. 4603, Manufacturers
but the gist of what he said. He : Exchange Bldg., Kansas City, Mo.
thus declared that he was the Mes- _
siah.
IV. Jesus Reception by the People
(vv. 22-30).
The critical hour had come. The
people were amazed. They admit-
ted his gracious words but were un-
able to admit his claims. His re-
ception was characterized by
1. Ignorant prejudice (v. 22).
They said, “Is not this Joseph’s
son?” as if to say, “This is our.fel-
low townsman with whom we have
been acquainted for years. Surely,
he cannot be the Messiah.”
2. Unbelief as to his supernat-
ural power (v. 23). They challenged
him to exhibit examples of divine
power.
3. Personal jealousy (v. 24). Jeal-
ously often prevents us from see-
ing the essential worth of men in
our midst. A prophet is not accept-
ed at home.
Jesus adduced two outstanding
examples of the willingness of for-
eigners to believe God.
a. Elijah was sent to a widow
at Serepta (vv. 25, 25). Many wid-
ows of Israel were passed by, doubt-
less because they would not have
received the prophet.
b. Naaman, the foregner, of the
many lepers, was the one cleansed
(v. 27).
4. Violent hatred (vv. 28-30). This
comparison of the Jews with for-
WNU—L
4—36
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Milnesia Wafers come in bottles of 20 and
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BRON
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WR.
eigners so offended their pride that
ute, they might at least have spelled correctly I they tried to kill him. He showed
the name of the man of whom this latest biogra- j them that just as Elijah had
pher says: ‘Of all the heroic figures of the early brought blessing to one who lived
West, Dr. John McLoughlin was the most re-
markable, is a leader, a benefactor and a Chris-
tian, he was unrivaled, and, though his life ended
in tragedy, the passage of time has not only en-
hanced his greatness but placed him with the
charmed circle of our national heroes.”
© Western Newspaper Union.
in Sidon, and Elisha to one in Syria,
while the people of Israel went on
suffering, even so the Gentiles would
receive the blessing of his saving
power, while they, the chosen na-
tion, would suffer in unbelief.
E
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The Meridian Tribune (Meridian, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, January 24, 1936, newspaper, January 24, 1936; Meridian, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1631581/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Meridian Public Library.