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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 25, 1899)
egon City Enterprise. a Dm V s J. VV NO. 41. VOL. 3 1. OKK(JON CITY, ORKGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1800. ESTABLISHED 1868 l.TOimmi. h, - '( - .! , , q A I' ' t:()lINHi:U)KH AT LAW gill rNIr ONKIION I ItlT, ONkdOK. , i,i, At.iti.rn. u( Till. Ian Mnr. For rli.w M..ii.. Wau.art (t.n.r.l law Kul... M. ,-. hTKK'KI.ANH, m. i. ,nilll in. I 1'rlvala Klrliiir ) ffr f It I 'f"(r"l""l rvlra III III ),,. iliffiUoii l.l'i lu Calarrli ami ( i.f.mli' illw n( frlr. .in, (itrii. mill In Wlllanirtla li.iii ln k "'' i i'm.i in., i ui p ,,i:i:ii'N el I Y Minimis Havo You Decided -haYouWould Like For Your Now Suit. No mutter wit J"l run f t tlio MTII, flyl"', rolor, hhadu or pattern you fancy, LinlifH tailoring m atly done. m, h. , , M' C,LDERT. Tho Portland Tailor. M.l.tHlroet. 0,,,..iu Kl .rlr 1) II. I. U I K KI'S.S, 1 1 K Nil ST. J'lur. n...al. All (lumlilrm. Oiwf slloll .relay I'.nl luikt lrem (My, (If, to'. ii. i nr. s. we" At ri:NKY AT LAW. ,. Huntley's Iru( Hiur. I)r. - Oregon. ITSA,SA;ttKI))IJTY ( IihiIuIii (;illcrl, of (he Second Ore Koii, Product A Strong Argu mint In Fator f 0r HOLIUNU THK PHILIPPINES. "IfEvrrDuijr Was Mu.Ip Known lu People, Diit Made Known Tu la." II In Senium. flat Efgflflf Says 1st Be So! lUrf all ay tliat HARRIS' GROCERY IU.I I'U'I.t. lor Hay, U...t,I.M..r. Seed. K,.. Carrie the mot complete at a i'l First CU Groceries to b iounil In the City, pin com nr. hi IU It A Ml (pf DUtuiiN CM If t:ul, .... I loo ax iii'n "i o.il a.ei inmiti H ml. Mill. .n..i'iut 1. UllNnil .i.fi ijr.ri.tMl!..lhii( mi i itii. ,. ut... aul Mtf Viii ' r.ri-c iiI,Jih( lu thk taut it a iu i r ui"t tr. r-.'.Uhi r i, wrrru c.a r. it. 1 1 'i INSURANCE !i:ntist.. an t'i.1 u..r-. wiirk M-laUy. .'k a.rraulvl aii'l li.i.cllun Ku.'anm. (m In Ca.iP.l l it:. All T.T.T.T.TTT.T.' Y I J 1 1 1 : AND ACCiDKNT !l Itailm.1'1 Tickets to all points East at low rates. F. E. DONALDSON r. ii a vi ATT"HNKY AT I.AW. fill .d'hil"'! if Urn l.i County Court ami I'lul-aia biialu.. Una. Ituiiitr'a lliaik i SCIIt'KItKI.. TcutMjcr Ttrcfat. attoi:m:y at law. ' ixrr Mi Killrli Mi Hlora, naar ii. lUiik of Oiti;iii l ily. '' Citv ... Oatuoa, e.iit. i. v. c.araau. (Hum .ir 1.1. k CAMruKU, ATTOKSKYS AT LAW, fciaoa cut, OaiaoM. ELKCTHIC HOTEL..... t'tiilirnfw tnanacnifnt Tho Electric Hotel ha j--n tlioroiiphly rtfittrd anl 1n futuro will m coinImtiHl on a utrictly firht cliifis lan. Fir.it-cl.iHn tnl)l service at as reaHon-nl-le rnU'H nn can h Iwnl in tho city. Prompt ntxl cjM-ciiil attention given to LamUet8. My tunny fricti'li ami tho Ri-neral puhlioaro cordially invited to Htop and see me. JACOO CASSELL. Manacor, Orouon City, Oregon. wn: rari!r tn .11 ih. rourt. at lb. lile. 01- u i .uii. ii km iiina. L.FOHTKK, AlTokNKY AT LAW rrt(-ri raoi-iKTT rramiMio. ft ! to Ornn CUT Rnurir.. II. Mil I.Kit. PKNTIHT it Mi nr Irriit, K'"lil rrnarna, all kliuli of i lillliiK ami lulilK.xufk. 'Bid H. urar ilnl. OrrK'l City, Or k h. i'itr..si;u, AT riltNKY-AT-LAW. 'u-r M-Kiltrl, k'l HImm. Htort, lliv Hank ul drrunClty. (, lirar " ClT, Oniooii. P. FUANds FKKKMAN, DKNTIST FKluatn ot the Niirtliwoatorn Univer- t i'lv In.ntnl Hcliool, CIiIcuko. Aim,ricttn HoIIobooI iKintal Hurirory, Wllliinmite r.lcx k, Orcicon City. 8. FAU. W. SWOl'K, AITOUNKY'S AT LAW. Hfftloin, Forpclomirn of MortK(H, ml a Kmiirul law IuihIdohs at tmiilml to protiiptly. m Kt. ( iiiircli . NIC OK 0KKU.CN CITY, Banking Hons. U tie Cltr. I'alil np Capital, IM.0O0, Uurului. Iju.hthi. ""NT, ' 1 f.KHIhMM- f''k. aao. a. manma. a. a. CAUFIILD, ,0"V,rJ "ilnt bualnpu tranaanted, Xmo.!?';?.10 "'I'li'ui to olieck. Jchaa i on ll aaourlty. ton. ma'la promnt . Ir. vl'''l lu any part of the world fcneliXn '? ""'""Kea did on Portlaud, Ban 4rut n2l Vh,0lf n1 New York, f 0,1 PU oa ifma i1nnn.il. Imperial Wheels. """"iiinrymffwifw 1899 MODEL FOR $25.00. Wohavoafow 1S00 Model High Grade Imperial Wheels wo will closo out at $2"i.00 rather than carry them over. Oome and Examine Them. OBIOOSf 'OQ CITY, OH. Cor. 4th and Main Sts. If For Perfection In Baking Use Patent Flour Manu factured by the Portland Flouring Mills Company, Oregon City. Oregon. IT IS WARRANTED THE BEST I'omtmm. A 10. 19 Chaplain Gilhwt o( th 8ri;onl Oregon In a aormon prai:h e l In I'ortlan l laM riiimlay aadl in part Krti'lxr unto Cat-ar the IhiriKi that are Cai-aar'i, ami unto the Ihlnifa that are (iixl'i," waa th txt i hwn by the chaplrtln. "The worlil waa (M-( UpiK 2'W yeart k"i with the aauie thin" that occupy the thought ol the world May. Kirat, the honnlariia of the kiiiK'lom; .coml, ana wera V the one thouniiiil and one 'm--tiona aiiifxfle'l by philosophical in'iniait ivrneai; thlr.l, Who la the Chriat? anI, fourth, the relation of the Cbriatian to the prwtical airira of the worM. " It waa Tui-mlay of IWion w.-ck. Chriat ha I ax-nt Murnlay in I'.i-thMiem r'tini. II11 i-ame that Tu-alay morn ing to Jrruaalxui, ami went to the trinple, and thT waa arroaj alwut him. There were four i-Iamiea of men demanding an- -ra to ijin-.lioiiH, and If he ahonld an awcryea. or no, theae four claaaua of in-n would crucify hiiu. lie iimihI anwer. biyal Nthi-I had lx-4-n atonihfd at the lilx-Ml conatrui-tion the nun of Nazareth bad put Uxm the Ixiuuilurici of the king dom, and they came and demanded of him now, once and forever, w hat should be the boundariea of the kingdom, and Ujn that answer hang life ami death." The aker repeated Chriit'i fe.irlees 1.1 1 1 . .. . ami me arame given 10 llie nt tening multitude, of the nmrriaife feaat, here the invited gueata did not come, and the matter bade hit people go into the highways and bid all teen to come to the marriage. Continuing, he aid : "Weataard, the atar of empire take ill way. The flrot four acta are already paamsl, and the fifth shall cloe the day. j Tune's noblest product is its last. The shimmering star that came out of the ! Kaxt, that star of empire, that star of kingdom, that star of power in the world, hovering ovrr the cradle of Christ In Bethlehem, by it gleaming light now leads tu the wetward, and, although the Christ is imileJ to the tree, his kingdom has moved on westward through all the years. It eroded the Atlantic to the rockbound coast of New Kngland, and our fore fathers said it should never go beyond the Alleghanies. But the shim mering star lead on further until the boundaries of the kingdom were the murky w aters of the Mississippi, and our forefathers said the boundaries should never pass its floods. But the shimmer ing star led on, and Daniel Webster, whom we can almost remember, said the empire should never cross the IWk ies. Yet it came westward, and then the futhers siid it should never leave the golden strand of the IVitk. But theshimmeilngBUr led on, and we have followed ai'i-rosa the sea, und it hovers now over the Orient. Would we stand in its why? The word of tho eternal is against such. Be he man or be he nation who, having in its power or bis keeping the kingdom of (iod, and sees a bound to to it and says it shall never go beyond, that man or that nation begins to decay. It is the law-of history related oft times. We are the chosen eopla of the day; chosen, blessed, anointed, and it is a tree kingdom of the Christ, the kingdom ol God, the empire, the kingdom of power , in the world, and the star leads on, and ! we must follow or decay. And already J the Orient sees the dawn. A nation j learns truth and liberty today, an island ! awakens in tho morn that lights the i world. "What are the boundaries of the kingdom? The Question is asked today, and we demand an answer, and on the answer hangs life and death." Fjllowing the thought, the speaker en larged upon tho comparison, and passed to the third question asked, as to who is the Christ, which was answered, "The man of Nazuret b." The tourth, as to paying duty to Caesar, w here Christ was supposod to be forced to take sides, either ot which would be fatal, was answered in the words ot the text. "There is a class of people who any we ought not to embark in this war. But the war is at hand. Now, Christians, take sides, it la yours to say. But thev ay, 'Let us have peace, peace, peace,' but there is no peace. We find people today who want peace when war is on, and we moat answor them like Tatrick Henry. Render, therefore, unto Caesar tho tilings that are Caesar's, and unto God the things that are God's. "Our forefathers dared to doclare to all the world that all people were created equal and in equal rights. Tho world wondered, but the world has learned. Our forefathers dared to declare to the world that all men were equal, and that no man had the right to oppress his fob lowmon, and the world has learned a loeson, and slaves are no more. We have dared to declare to the world that no nation ha a right to oppress another nation, and we ought to thrill with joy that (Jrxl has permitted u to rise in pro tection against cruelty and wrong, and every citizen of our splendid country ought to fel proud of Li favored land when he considers that we have dared to establish this policy of brotherhood among nation. But, oh, our Father, what a price thou hast ankod. When we have under taken this in the world, wc have found ourselves led on to limits we wonder. Civilization never meant so much a it means today, and I wish that I might have the tongue of an angel to thrill every heart with the thought that citi zermhip May mean thai everything e have must be given to the state. The state needs it, the state asks for it, the woild wanU it. Nowhere in all the world has the citizen so great a respon sibility and so great an opportunity as the citizen of this country, snd to no citizen of the world elsewhere conies questions so difficult to answer a cornea to the citizen of the United fctate May. Shall we halt? Khali we make a limit to the kingdom? Khali we withdraw from the re.ponsibility and let nations oppress each other, and let ople, through avarice and ambition, de.trov liberty? Shall we disregard God's law where he has written 'decay' upop. a people who thus shirk their duty? If ever duty were made known to a people, duty waa made known to u. "But, true, the price we pay is great. In money, yes. But can we count gold when live are being paid? Seven hun dred of our boys and mors lie nnder the sod of Luzon today, as part ol the sacri fice a nation make Never did a nation respond to a call of God more nobly than has our nation. The treasure of the na tion has bn poured out without re serve; the hearts of the nation have given what was dearest to them without reserve. The homes of the nation have given what waa their all, without reserve, until we today thrill with pride at the splendid response of our people to a na tion's cause. Wherever the armies have gone, there lie those whom we love. At Cabiao a soldier was wounded so that he died that night. The regiment moved on in the early morning, but two of us were left behind to bury hiiu, and we laid his body there by the old church tower, and covered it over with stones so that it could not be found by the foe. and we turned away with prayers to God for comforting grace to the home beyond theses. And wherever we have gone there are the sacred places to which our hearts snail ever turn. And there lie in the hospitals today in the foreign land, over 3000 of our brave boys, parched with fever, homesick nearly to death, paying the price. "The Individual sacrifice when a man gives his life to his nation is something touching. Lieutenant French, I think, of the Montana regiment, led a charge one day, anil he had counted the cost, as every son of tho army h -s counted the cost. A bullet pierced his heart, as many a good heart has been pierced, and he fell upon his face with these words: 'Oh, my wife and babe.' And he died there. One of our boys (Bert Chandler) was shot in the body with a brats-covered Remington bullet. He had been four days in the hospital, when he became delirious. I came up one day, and the nurse said to him: 'Here is the chaplain.' He turned a wild look upon me, and said: 'How are you.chaplain?' I said: 'Bert, I am going to write to your father today j w hat shall I say for you?' And he thought for awhile, and seemed to hold his reasoning power just long enough to say: 'Tell father that I died like a soldier through and through.' I thought he died a soldier of the king dom, And how tender were the thoughts of another boy named Wagner when wounded as we thought to the death. I said : 'What shall I tell your mothei ?' 'I know this will kill mother, be said. Not for himself, but for the loving heart across the sea. There is a man somewhere here tonight who can not talk much, but there is something about his eyes that says he remembers the sacrifice the nation asked of him. "As we always knew, the hardest struggle was not at that end of the line. What must have been the anxiety in oponing the morning paper to look with eager haste to see if any familiar names were found among the wounded or dead and what must have been the anguish when the mother found her own boy among the dead, of which she then learned the first news. It has cost the mothers of the nation a sacrifice that is simply heroic. They gave to the nation that for which the nation asked today. There is a side to the sacrifices of homes that is seldom put into print, and that is seldom put into words." YOLl'MTEKK KLXLTTI01 Fl'NI). List nf Subm-rlber Who Contributed Toward Making the Affair a SurrpM. "Our baby was sick tor a month with severe cough and catarrhal fever. Al though we tried many remedies she kept getting worse until we used One Minute Cough Cure, it relieved at once and cured her in a few days." B. L, Nauce, Trin. High School, Bluffdalo, Texas. Gko, A. IIa.bdi.no. Okkoox City, Ore , Aug. 21. W.M. Following are the names of subscrib ers, with amounts subscribed to the vol unteer reception fund, as delivered to me by Mr. Tom P. Randall, chairman of the soliciting committee and ordered published by the general committee. City and county official B Bteam )19 41 Baseball gate receipts 73 06 Employes of O 0 Mfg Co 27 70 0 0 Mfg Co 15 Of) Rudolph Ko-rner 5 CO Crown I'aper Co 15 (X) E J iMulton , 1 00 F McGinnis 50 II llenuigsen f0 P Younger 2.1 Peter spawns " 25 Earl E Mosier 25 Reno E Pollock 25 A W Pchunke 23 W Dickleman 25 ' A McCoy 25 L W Ingram 25 FC Kolieson 50 K Tscharnig 25 L Tucker 25 Eli II Deck 25 T Nelson 25 G S Freeman 25 (i W Clark 5 C Manmeer 25 G Stark 25 Chris Bittner 2-5 M Clancey 1 00 G Kobel 50 M Smith 25 A McKinnett 50 E Califf 60 E Williams ' ?5 II Kellogg 50 E Beach 25 V Bohn 25 S Hastings 60 A Moeier 25 Treston Reed 25 A Lenon 25 George Haskin 25 H C Carmack '. 25 WTustin 25 ' C S Fuge 2 C Priester 25 J Scherzinger 25 Jeff Shaw 25 J A Moehnke 25 0 Moehnke 25 Jde la Fontaine 25 F Smith 25 G Moehnke 50 FGurther 25 LJ Scott 50 M Roeenbaum 6 00 Max Beck '. 50 I Cordoza 25 0 Duke 25 George Pusey 1 00 Bert Blair. 50 G C Etchison 60 F Mosier 25 B Simmons 25 F Bernier 25 William Curtis 25 Th Dahl 60 Martin Olson 60 T Gagan ' 1 00 ASprague 50 CDF Wilson 1 00 Mrs T Nelson 60 JH Smith 2-5 James Nelson 25 Charles Tool 25 N Blair , 25 "Commercial Bank 10 00 Bank of Oregon City 10 00 George A Harding 10 00 Charman Bros 10 00 Oregon City Enterprise 10 00 Charles Babcock 3 00 II 11 Johnbon l 00 FCGadke 60 Ch irles Holman 2 50 Cataract Hose Co 500 John Dennison 1 00 Father Hillebrand 3 00 Charles B Moores 2 50 Mina Kelly 2 50 Bellomy & Busch 2 60 Linn E Jonej v 2 50 Huntley Bros 5 00 Geo F Horton 5 00 T A Tope 2 60 Wilson k Cooke 2 50 I Selling 5 00 V Harris 2 00 EJMcKitrick 2 60 WECarll 8 00 FT Barlow 2 50 Burmeister & Andersen 3 00 Heina A Co 2 00 Charles Albright 6 00 W II Young 2 00 Cash 50 GNJoe - 60 Kruusse Bros 3 00 G II Young 1 00 Cash 60 WYakeda 2 00 A S Dresser 2 00 A Hechtman 1 00 Red Front Store 2 50 II W Jackson 60 0 N Greenman 1 on MaryEConyers 1 60 II L Kelly 2 00 (concluded on page eight.)