4- OKEGOtf CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1905. HONORED DECEASED COMMANDER. Oregon City Grand Army Post Conducts Memorial Services. At Willamette Hall. Monday night, the members of Meade Post G. A. R. and the "Women's Relief Corps held Joint memorial , services in honor of the late Wilmon W. Blackmar, commander-in-, chief of the Grand Army of the Republic. Folowing the ritualistic work of the two orders, a memorial address was deliver ed by Rev. Henry B. Robblns, pastor of the First Baptist church of this city. Rev. Robbins" address follows: Comrades of the Grand Army. Ladies of the Relief Corps, and Friends: I am glad to be able to respond to your very courteous request, and to say a few words memorial of the deceased Commander-in-Chief. What I shall say will be with the hope that you will not expect from me an adequate portrayal or appreciation of the life of Wilmon W. Blackmar. His sudden death at Boise, ' Idaho, on the 16th of last month, while en route to the North-west in search of health, struck with sorrow the hearts of all loyal citizens of our country, and par- j ticularly sad was It to his fellow-comrades. ,Less than one short year he had filled the office of chief executive of the Grand Army; but, though comparatively un known outside his own state of Massa chusetts up to that time, he succeeded within that short time in capturing the respect and affection of the whole Grand Army. Says the National Tribune: "Wherever he went and men were ac quainted with him they became enthu siasts for him. He was a warm hearted, genial man, brimming over with love for his country, affection for his comrades, pride in what they had done for the Na tion, and full of a sanguine spirit for Ihe future of the country. Thus he had the fundamental elements of attractive ness. To these he added a fine intellect ual grasp of subjects, capacity for busi ness, and oratorical powers both for serious and light matters." The military record of Commander Blackmar is one of which any veteran might be proud. He enlisted in the 15th Pa. Cavalry, with which he served for more than two years, during its connec tion with the Army of the Cumberland. At the end of this period he received a ' commission as 1st lieutenant in the 1st W. Va. Cavalry, to which regiment he transferred his services. The 1st W. Va. Cavalry was in the Cavalry Corps of the Army of the Potomac. When mustered out with that regiment as a Captain at the end of the war, he had seen service in 22 battles, among them being Antie tam. Stone River, Chickamauga, Wauh atchie. Chattanooga, the Shenandoah Val ley, Dinwiddie Court House, and Appo mattox. Gen. Custer had him promoted for gallantry at Five Forks, besides which he received a Medal of Honor. After the war Captain Blackmar set tled in Massachusetts where he studied law and speedily took a leading position at the bar. For ten years he served as Jupdge Advocate General on the staff of the Governor of Massachusetts, and al ways occupied a prominent place in the Republican party of that state. He be came affiliated with the Grand Army early in its history, and had filled most of the offices of the organization. In 1902 he was Commander of the Depart ment of Massachusetts G. A. R. In 1904, at Boston, he was elected Commander in-Chief of the Order elected by ac clamation. Thus for this man. who was a comrade beloved of his order, a true soldier of the nation, a faithful and patriotic citi zen of our country, and at the hour of his death the tried and trusted Commander-Chief of the Grand Army of the Re public for this man the light of life up on earth has gone out; and over the thousands of Posts where meet the Com rades of - the Grand Army, and over our hearts as we assemble here, a shadow falls. . But perhaps we think less of our own loss than of the loss irreparable which the wife of Comrade Blackmar has suf fered. Our thought and sympathy go out to her in this sad time when the depth of her loss is perhaps just coming with full force upon her. Lettus hope that the sad blow may be the means of bringing to her the helpful effusion of human sympathy and of Divine aid. We are reminded by the sudden de parture of this comrade from the ranks of the Grand Army below that before a great many years the fast thinning ranks will disappear and the last veteran of the Civil War be mustered out. I do not speak of this to cast an unwonted solem nity over this assemblage; but merely to say that I believe it is high time that the younger generation awake to the fact that the veterans are passing, and pay them the respect that is their due. I do not glory in war, much less in civil war for war of any kind is as Sherman said, "hell." I do not believe that there is a man here before me who shouldered the) musket and went to the front in the 60's but would far rather the call had never been sounded. Our nation has ever loved peace, and its voice has ever been raised in the inter est of peace and comity among the na tions. But while we love peace, we real ize that there are times in the lives of individuals and of nations when the only thing to do is Fight; times when if a man does not fight he proves himself a coward and a weakling. Such a time came in the career of our country, the dogs of war had long been muttering and snarling; the country felt in its very heart that its hour had come, that it stood at the parting of the ways. Men shuddered and trembled, and grew red with rage and white with fear. Leg islative halls were made to thunder and shake with the echoing of passionate appeal and argument; while now and again in the lull of the oncoming storm there sounded forth the measured tones of some., pacificator. But pacification? No! there could not be, more than the fury of the bursting hurricane can be stayed. Still the Southern States were mildly called "our erring sisters' The North was sanguine. An appeal to arms? Never! When Abraham Lincoln took the reins of government seven states had already revolted, and others stood ready to join them upon the first attempt of the Gov ernment to use coercion; a large part of the munitions of war had been transfer red to Southern arsenals and had fallen into the hands of the insurgents. The Federal treasury was nearly bankrupt, through defalcation and theft. Pacifica tion was the thought and policy of the new administration. But suddenly,' on the 4th day of April, 1861, Sumpter sur rendered after 30 hours' bombardment. With one .cry of fury and .passion the Ayers Don't try cheap cough medi cines. Get the best, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. What a record it has, sixty years of Cherry Pectoral cures! Ask your doctor if he doesn't use it for coughs, colds, bronchitis, and all throat and lung troubles. " I hve found that Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Is the best medicine I can prescribe for bron chitis, influenza, crroehs. and hard colds. M. Lodkman, M.D., Ithaca. K. T. 25e.,S0c.. til .00. All druggists. for J. O. ATM CO., ' Lowell. Mas. ronchitis REAL. ESTATE TRANSFERS Furnished Every Week By the Clackamas Abstract Company. lot Correct a tion with my tendency to constipa small doses'of Ayer's Pills. North awoke to the situation. Then came the clamor lor arms, ior teaaers, for legal authorization of war. The at tempt to dismember the North American Republic and blot it from the map of nations was to be resisted to the last dollar and the last man. President Lincoln sounded the call to arms in an appeal for 75,000 troops. And thus began the Southward march of the volunteers. My own father, if I may be permitted to mention the fact, was one of the first 75,000; and I honor him for it. The war is on. The thick battle clouds hang low. But yet realization has not come. Surely three months will suf fice to punish the seceding South into submission. But three months pass; then comes Bull Run with its shameful disaster on the 21st of July. At last the nation is awake; Congress authorizes the call of 500.000 volunteers. How like the onward sweep of a mighty flood they come! "Tramp, tramp, tramp, the boys are marching" What a re sponse! I think our people never knew how deep was theh spirit of patriotism which lay latent in the American heart. They never knew how love of country gripped them until the disasters of civil war awoke them to national conscious ness. You have been through that baptism of blood and fire; and I speak to you as veterans, men of deep and tried experi ence. It is far from my purpose, if I could, to trace the bloody scenes of that awful struggle. Tou better know the tale than I how it took the young and strong through the gates of death, how it left hearthstones bare and desolate, how it left the vacant chair and the broken" heart. That story is written in human lives; you know it by heart. Comrades, as a member of the young er generation, I appreciate the example of obedience and fidelity which you have set. And I desire to give expression to the hope that our country will ever gratefully remember the service of the veterans of the Civil War. But I desire to express the feeling which comes iver me, that there are now bat tles to fight and new victories to win in the life of our country. May that dire occasion of Civil War never come again; I cannot believe it will. Yet we younger men whose it is to engage in the newer struggles of our national life will have occasions that will test our metal. We cannot rest upon the laurels our fathers have won. "New occasions teach new duties; Time makes ancient good uncouth; They must upward still, and onward, who would keep abreast of truth. Lo. before us gleam her camp-fires! we ourselves must Pilgrims be. Launch our Mayflower, and steer boldly through the desperate winter sea. Nor attempt the Future's portal with the Past's blood-rusted key." May I say that I have seen now and then a veteran who seemed inclined to rest the case of his present usefulness as a citizen and of his future happiness, both here and hereafter, upon his war record. I am glad to say that such is not usually the case. Most of our vet erans of the Civil War are ready for new duties as they were for that early duty of service . to their country. We have a right to expect more of you because you have seen service; we have as right to be lieve that you will do every duty better because you did that Yne duty well. Commander Blackmar. when he left the army, entered upon the career of a use ful citizen; found and tilled his place as a member of the commonwealth of Mas sachusetts; so that today we mourn him not merely as a soldier, but as a citizen. The Civil War is over, and we are liv ing in the midst of conditions which your victory made possible. The America of today could never have been but for the brave soldiers of the Union. The Ameri-", ca of today is full of possibilities, full of promise but, gentlemen, the America of today is not perfect. We have yet to learn to put the professional office seeker out and put the man of honor in; we have yet to learn that the purity of the individual life of a nation is her only guaranty of perpetuity; we have yet to learn how to adjust labor and capital; we have - yet to learn whether it is pro fitable to have our boys sawed up into sidewalks and milled into- pavements for the simple luxury of the high-license which the saloon pays; we have yet to learn tha,t the grim factory is no place for the rearing of a child. Comrades, there are lessons to learn and battles to fight yet. We of the rising .generation "need that you shall continue as in the days of old to be true, to set the wise example, to give the wise leadership. Commander Blackmar is a conspicu ous example of the Civil War veteran who when the war was over still fought I W. F. Hecker to A. & T. Wenzel, the battles of the nation, still did his 6, block 6, Canemah; $300. duty as a man and a citizen. It is a de- I H. Phister, to P. Skelly, lots 2 and S, light to me that real manhood is com- in block 6 and part block 3, Oak Grove, ing to be appreciated more and more In $3,500. our country. I trust that as the years , J. Currin, Guardian, to C. H. Barthle come and go the greet model of man- ! mew, 75 acres in Wade Claim, 3 E; hood which became familiar to you in $3,500. 1 the course of the Civil War in the person i C. H. Bartholmew, to M. E. Hciple, of Abraham Lincoln, America's "first 154 acres and 75 acre in Wade Claim, citizen," may get a grip on American 3 4 E; $5,600. manhood. I do not hesitate to say that J. Currin to M. E. Heiple 75 acres In Abraham Lincoln for that rare combina- i Wade Claim, 3 4, E; $1. tion of the qualities of mind and heart C E. Wase to J. L. Vosburg, lots 5 to which make an all-round man was the ! 16, In Block 91, Oak Grove; $3,800. greatest among our statesmen. It was 1 M. Gale to C. N. Daley, 14 acres In CI. the effort of Commander Blackmar to j 57, 2 3, E; $280.00. keep this thought before the American j J. H. & L. S. Holm to E. Llndell, 10 mind. In pursuance of the recent reso- (acre In CI. 58, 1 1, E; $1. ST lution of the Grand Army requesting the War Department to place in all the Na tional Cemeteries the Gettysburg Ad dress) of President Lincoln, Commander Blackmar was, at the time of his death In corrspondence with the War Depart ment, urging such a measure. I think Commander ' Blackmar, If he could now address us might say, in the language of that address viewing the past and its memories and glancing down the long cemetery aisles, among the dead "The world will little note nor long remember what we say here, but it can never for get what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have so nobly advanced. It is rath er for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us. That from those honored dead we may take in creased devotion to the cause for which they gave the last measure of devotion; that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain; that this nation under God shall have, a new birth of freedom; and that government of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish fro mthe earth. There is one further thought ,jl wish to urge. I do not know what the attitude of Commander Blackmar toward that emotion of the soul which we call rell gion. from his bearing as a man and a citizen, there is reason to believe that his attitude was right. I believe that the words of the President spoken just yesterday afternoon at Oyster Bay to the Christian Brotherhood of that place are true words: "Let each of us exercise the largest tolerance for the brother who is trying, though in a different way, to lead a decent life, who is trying to do good in his own fashion; let each try to show practical sympathy with that broth er, not be too quick to criticise." I have not one word in comment upon the re ligion of Commander Blackmar; what I have to say is to the living, not of the dead. And what I want to say is simply this, that every one of us owes it to him self to fight the good fight of faith under the Great Commander, the Captain of our salvation. I do not insist that you have Just the same religious experience that I have not at all; I could wish that you might have a more thorough going experience than I have had. All that I will ask of you is to take the Bible the New Testament history and teach ing of Jesus Christ and -make it your busi ness to follow it as faithfully as you fol lowed the flag when you were in the service of your country- Many an old gray-headed man, who ought to be an example in this, forgets his mother's God. We delight in earthly re-unions; I exhort you, comrades, so to live that you will be assured of the Heavenly re union. Let the pasing of comrades re mind us that we too shall ere long be called to pass through the gates of death and to give to our Captain and Judge an account of the deeds done in the body. As for the gallant soldier in whose memory we are met, "Close his eyes; his work is done! What to him is friend or foeman. Rise of Moon or set of sun. Hand of man or kiss of woman? Lay him low, lay him low, In the clover, or the snow! What cares he? he cannot know; Lay him low! "As man he fought his fight. Proved his truth by his endeavor; Let him sleep in solemn might. Sleep forever and forever. Lay him low, lay him low, In the clover or the snow! What cares he? he cannot know; Lay him low! "Fold him in his country's stars. Roll the drum and fire the volley! What to him are all our wars. What, but death be mocking folly? Lay him low, lay him low. In the clover or the snow! What cares he? he cannot know; Lay him low! "Leave him to God's watching eye; Trust him to the hand that made him. Mortal love weeps idly by; God alone has power to aid him. Lay him low. lay him low. In the clover or the snow! What cares he? he cannot know; Lay him low!" F. E. Olson to J. E. Wetzler, W half of BIk. 31, Milwaukie; $425. T. N. Hagenberger, to J. E. Wetzler, lots 1 and 2. block 30, Milwaukie; $400. M. Hondrlck to E. S. Yoder, 20 acres In Section 4, 5 1, E; $600. M. M. Charman to A. Pluard, E 100 feet of block 35, Clackamas Heights; $100. J. W. Kyler et al to Syndicate Inves ment Co., right of 100 feet wide across land in 14.2. 5. E. and Sec. 20 and 22 2 6; $100. A. Goldstein to C. N. Daley, 5 acres in CI. 57, 23; E; $10$. H. Gibson to W. F. Douglas, NW of NW of Sec. 23, E; $800. J. D. Hewitt to M. Bullut 28.15 acres in McNary CI. 22; E; $4,500. E. Austin to D. Harris 100 acres In CI. 37, 4 2; E; $1,300. D. T. Edmunds to A. L. Deatie, part of block 62, Oregon City; $1,775. The Clackamas Abstract & Trust Co. are owners of the only complete Abstract plant In Clackamas county. Prompt and reliable work on short notice, and all work guaranteed. Abstracts made, money loaned, mortgages foreclosed, trusts exe cuted, estates settled and titles perfect ed. J. F. Clark, Atty at Law, President and Manager. I Over Bank of Oregon City. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in. use tor over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive vou in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-gxod" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of" Tnfants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee." It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Sears the Signature of s7 The Kind Tou Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THC CCMTAU. COMMftV, TT MURRAY STOCET. HCW YORK CtTY. IF Tr IT ana oa?awa?e. UR FURNITURE FACTORY in Oregon City has been built up again and running day and night to make up for lost time. Only warranted goods are manufactured and sold, wholesale and retail. OUR SO-CALLED NO. tO BUREAU PROVED TO BE A PRIZE WINNER. We are taking orders now' for this celebrated piece of furniture which will be ready for delivery about June 15th. '22 Full size Bureau,- fine clear Mirror, made out of thoroughly seasoned lumber, finished in golden oak, dark cher ry and white maple. Sold for cash only. Special price in dozen lots. z t - r- During the Fair you will have to put up an extra bed to accom modate ..: your friends. Buy one of our $1.95 IRON BEDS Such a bed is always welcomed in the children's bed room, too. . We like best to call SCOTT'S EMULSION a food because it stands so em phatically for perfect nutrition. And yet in the matter of restor ing appetite, of giving new strength to the tissues, especially to the nerves, its action is that of a medicine. Send for free sample. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, 409(15 Pearl Street, New York. 50c and $1.00; all druggists. BOARD OF TRADE ACTS. i ?!., 4 jf I 'I ' Writmg Desk $5.50 Look at our $7.50 Ex. Table Hammocks We sell a good one for $2.50 In its efforts to insure an equitable as sessment of the properties of the several large corporations operating in Clacka mas county, the Oregon City Board of Trade is insistent. At a meeting last Friday night the matter of investigating and reporting on this subject, which had been referred to a committee consisting of five members. was recalled from that committee under instructions from the organization President Huntley has named a commit- j tee composed of J. TJ. Campbell. O. V. "j Eastham, and W. S. U'R.en to inestigate the county's assessment roll and ascer tain the actual assessments that have been made against the different corpor ations. The new committee is directed to re port its findings, if possible, to an ad journed meeting that is to be held this Friday night. Immediate action is de manded by the Board of Trade since the assessment roll will be delivered to the board of equalization on the last Monday of this month. . t The Board of Trade is indisposed to at- i tack the work of Assessor Nelson, which i is considered generally thorough, : but is ' proceeding with the investigation to de- termine if there exists any grounds for the impression that the larger cornora- i tions are not bearing their proportionate share of the burden of taxation. Warranted Steel Range 6 holes, 181 inch C O n tZft oven, high closet 4 ' t DOORS and i) ARE YOU GOING TO BUILD? We have some doors left that were -slightly damaged by our disastrous fire, which will go cheap. and i . ! ! Rubber Garden Hose ! $4.50 for fifty feet Paint your house with Phoenix Pure Paint the best o n earth. $1.75 per gallon. 1 i-mix1 Sis :v-?.vn; mil aw miy o j o Q 4 C j O. 81 k ran c xir Estimatesj,' ffljS! P f given on at I i Building j fMMo t ZTgMMMMn Purposes i; 13 - ""1' " CHjj 1 ! ! : ! Furniture & Hdware Cots. 2.25. I i.