I OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1907. PUSH CLUB FORMED UP AT WILLAMETTE CITIZENS WILL MAKE TOWN'S MANY ADVANTAGES KNOWN TO WORLD. Willamette has caught the spirit that (Glory bo!) lately has begun to pervade all of Oregon City's suburbs the spirit of improvement, push and co-operation. Nearly GO of Willam ette's citizens attended the meeting for the organization of the Willamette Improvement League, At this meeting officers were chos en as follows: President, D. K. Bill; vice president, E. Mass; secretary, F. R. SUer; treasurer, J. F. Sanders. A committee was also appointed to pub lish the advantages . of Willamette abroad and to make known its attrac tions to the investor. Willamette is one of the prettiest residence towns in thevalley and be sides has industrial advantages pecu liarly Its own. An aggressive and per sistent publicity campaign cannot help but put the town in the front rank. BIG SHIP COMING. Washington, D. C, July 2 Presi dent Roosevelt has determined upon an Important change of American naval policy. The new policy em bodies these features. Transfer of the Atlantic fleet of 16 battle ships and two armored cruisers to the Pacific. Withdrawal from Asiatic waters to the Pacific Coast of the armored cruiser division now in the Far East. Withdrawal to the Atlantic of the protected cruisers now comprising the bulk of the Pacific fleet The long voyage of the battleships to the Pacific cannot be begun within six months and probably the great armada will not get under way until late in the spring of 1908. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County. Maribel Bentley Reister, Plaintiff, vs. Edmond Relster, Defendant. j To Edmond Reister, the above '. named defendant: 1 In the name of the State of Oregon ! you are hereby required to appear and j answer a complaint filed against you In the above entitled court and cause on or before the 19th day of August, 1907, that being the last day pre scribed in the order of publication or dering this summons, and if you fail to appear and answer said complaint, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for in the com plaint filed In the above entitled court and cause, to-wit: for a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony" heretofore and now existing between you and the plaintiff, upon the ground of willful desertion. This summons is published in the Oregon City Enterprise for six suc cesive and consecutive weeks by or der of Honorable Thomas A. McBrlde, Judge of the above entitled court, made and entered on the 20th day of June, 1907, tbe first publication being on the 5th day of July, 1907, and the last publication being on tbe ICth day of August, 19u7. JOHN F. LOGAN", C0t7 Attorney for the Plaintiff. Miss Harriett Case arrived from Alaska Tuesday where she has been teaching. She will spend the sum vacation with her mother, Mrs. Mary Ca.se, and sister. Miss Minnie. ' Rev. and Mrs. J'. K. Hammond children Ward and Marguerite and will ODO Everything to Make Life Plesant During Months. Gasoline Stoves - Refrigerators ( 000000900000 leave Wednesday morning for their new home at Eugene. They will be missed by a large circle of friends and acquaintances, who regret to see them go. ORCHESTRA FOR NEW ERA CAMPNEETING Punton's complete orchestra has been engaged for the entire season at the New Era campmeetlng and will give three concerts on Sundays. The date of the camp is July 6 to 28. The New Era campmeetlng dances will be on Saturday evening, July 13, 20 and 27. Dunton's orchestra will furnish .the music. Fire crackers, six bunches for 25c. At Lent's Confectionery store. A DEAL IN BANANAS. No like ts skrrnny old man bol com- to dvfi iwuhiUi man' Today n' buy ilu wan tmmui'. II mak' me sccckl Ecf evra customer eos ma For niiika trwoka an' talk m Like hevm. you bat my life. I no Gut rwclia Quoeck. Wat, deesa man h com' an' ssrt '"How tnnocha for banan' today?" An' ao I tal heem rltttit away, "Ers two for n'." "O my. 1 mus' b Ratlin' dec-f Or you ees tnlka UUe da t'lef!" He say to m. an' look a eet He gona cry, "Ee (wo for fl'." I nay tftn. He ahak' hws head at me an' den He tal ni. Mak' eet (V for ten An' tak da mon'." "All rtcht." 1 ay, "I (t'loss weell do." Ien "Fl' for ton ees wan for two." He say. "More e two cent for you, I taka wan!" He tak' da beeKRes' wan of all! Ha. w'at you theenka dat for gallT He 'a meant num. so small, He "iak" me soves. Eef evrs S stonier vei so For maka ttvt-cks an' ta'ka so Like heem, you bat my life, 1 no Oat reecha queock. T. A. Daly In Catholic Standard and i Times. . There Were Limits. Nervous Old Ijidy Do people lorn? their lives bcA- very often? Old Salt No, mum; only about once! -Tatler. His Dire Threat. There was determination stamped on his bcow. "Refused, eh"' he hissed, snapping his words like the explosions of a mo torcycle. "Then I shall turn on the gas." i The beautiful girl swooned. When she recovered she found him sitting in an easy chair reading the sporting news, "Ah, you didn't turn on the gas after all, did you?" she asked In trembling tones. "Yes, I did." he replied coldly. "You you turned on the gas, Har old?" "Of course I did. How could I light it If I didn't turn it on?" And then she asked his forgiveness and accepted him on the spot. Detroit Tribune. Puzzled. The noted foreiguer was perplexed. "Zis was a btrange eountree," he re marked, with a frown. "The longer I stay 7A less I understand." "What la the trouble now. count?" asked hU American friend. "Mooch, monsieur. I get on ze train. Ze conductor carry me past my station. I get wild. I wave my cane, I stamp my foot, I shout! Zen za conductor grab me and hold me. When I nsl him w hy he hold me he say because ho think I nrn off. Ha, ha! He say I am off, and zat is ze very reason why I rah all ze noise- because I om not off, but on" tar, Main S OREGON CITY, OREGON 3ORGH : FURNITURE J OstoXCMeOOsSXSMe to BILL II1E OF THE BOOMERANG FAMOUS HUMORIST TO WHOSE GENIUS AND MEMORY. A MONUMENT IS TO BE ERECTED. Characteristic Glimpses of a Man Who Made Millions Happy Enough to Laugh Disliked Being Lionized and Carica tured as a Baldhead Popular Lecturer and Writer of Humor That Simply Made You Laugh or Burst. By robertuj LOVE. ONE, but not forgotten. Is' Bill Nye, most famous of newspa- per humorists. He died elevcu Q years ago. Now tpere is goiug to be a Kill Nye monument. The an Douncemcut comes from the A merlon u Press Huitutrists. nn organisation of "poets, paragraphed and philosophers' who do their poetising, paragraphing and philosophising in the dully and weekly papers. This association lr raising a fund to build a monument to the memory of Bill Nye Kill Nye of the Boomerang. The llootueranic whs twins. It wm a mule and a newspaper, both owned by Kill Nye. Both Inhabited Laramie, Wyo, Tbe Boomerang newspaper was named after the mule. The monu ment Is to be erected at Laramie, we are told, because it waa In that fur western town that Kill Nye first discovered that he was a humorist. Prior to that discovery he had made the mistake of Imagining that he was a lawyer. The mistake was well nigh J fatal, as he confessed himself. Three-year-old Project. Though the definite announcement of the Nye monument as a consummation to lie achieved this year Is a matter of news, the project Is three years old. The matter was discussed In a vague and Irrelevant manner during the sec ond annual convention of the American Press Humorists la St. Louis In 1004. But the members ' were seeing the World's fair, Including the Pike, and nothing definite was done. Tbe next year the humorists met In Cleveland, WAS AND but they visited John I. Rockefeller and in their awe of the living they forgot the dead. i Last year Philadelphia was the place of rendezvous, but the study of ancient history on the sit precluded the con- 1 slderatlon of the monument matter. So the project was passed along to Los Angeles, where the fifth annual convention Is to bo held during the week beginning Sept. 1". Secre- tary Frank T. Searlght of the associa tion, who lives there, proclaims that ' the Bill Nye monument fund will bo brought to a final focus and fulfillment at a monster entertainment to be held in the Auditorium during the week. I The Auditorium, by the way, is quiie an appropriate place for such an en tertainment, for on Sundays und pray er meeting nights It Is the edifice In which the Rev. Robert Jones Burdette. pastor of the Temple Baptist church of Los Angeles, preaches and prays. f2 SaKJ'.I o 00090QN 1 L Ay fa y tMJ ! At89 I BILL N1E AS HE Bhis may account tor tho ramuinr ease with which ho wrote of mules, turulp ami other farm products, The world has a w holly erroneous Impression or Hill Nye s personal ap j'euntnee. This U uue chiefly to w alt McDougall. the comic artist who Il lustrated Mr. Nye's weekly output for several years. It Is true that during the latter period of his life the humor ist was bald oti top of his head, but he had quite a fringe of hair at the sides and rear. There Is a photograph of blm taken In 1S7U, when he was editor of the Laramie Boomers n if, which shows lilm with a full set of whiskers, though a fur cap serves to leave the matter of his upper baldness at that period an open question. Those McDougall pictures, though they enhanced the humor o Nye's writings, were not pleasing to Nye him self, it Is related that Nye requested the managing editor of the Amerlcau Press Association, which syndicated his weekly letters during the last seven years of his life, to get another artist. McDougall. he said, made hltu look ridiculous. Accordingly the artist C. C. Kush was cast for the Nye perform nice, but the newspapers taking the service-forthwith emitted such a roar that It was deemed necessary to return to Mr. McDougall. Mr. Bush's pictures were good, but they had too much hair to suit the public, which bad len dieted on baldness until baldness and Nye had become brothers. "Let me Illustrate the stuff myself, then," requested Bill Nye. Now, Mr. Nye was a fiumorlst, but caiuoa rruisr haw him. not an artist. Nevertheless he waa permitted to execute some crude sketches, which were funny while they lasted, but eventually the McHougall pictures replaced all substitutes. Measurably Handsome Man. Nye was by no means n hairless liv ing skeleton, though In- was tall, nearly six feet, and slim. After he became famous ho always shaved eleun, per haps on thfl theory that it would look ridiculous to have his hair on the wrong end of his head. He wore clothes, he confessed, to cover his body, and ft must be admitted thnt he did not waste bis time lu studying the Parisian fashions. But he dressed pretty mn h as the average man dress es and therefore was In no sense a comic Sunday supplement at large. Nye was. In fact, a measurably hand some man. Walt McDougull's Idea seems to have been that he must tuftlct 0XakB4QrOOtD9Jt(3 S the Summer - Tents. O4SttsOC0S Opp. P.O. i Pi.' raator Burdette Is also Bob Bur dette. Now you know hltu. For near ly thirty years prior to his reforma tion ho was a famous press humorist tmd funny lecturer. He lives at l'nsa (leim.'nenr by, and will be one of the Nye monument fund entertainers, along with a doen other press humor Ma who art bold enough to speak their pieces on the stage. Mr. Burdette Is "perpetual parson and pastor emeri tus" of file American Press Humorists, The elective officers are Thomas A, Huly of Philadelphia, president; Itob ort D. Towne, editor of Judge, New York, vice president, and Mr. Hcarlght. who In addition to being secretary Is also treasurer nud In his latter capac ity Is witling to receive and account for Nye monument contributions from my source-and no questions asked. Edgar Wilson Nye was Uu'it nt Shir ley. Me,, la 1HW), He told with par donable pride how at the o of two years he took his parents to Wisconsin and Krew up on a farm. Thooith Mr. Nye from time to time furnished the world with iHuh uiohlugraphlcnl In formation, (here Is quite a wide gap tietweoii tho Maine village and the Wyoming struggles, but he once re marked that when he was fifteen years oh) his father died and he took charge of the IKK) acre Wisconsin farm. It Is not to be doubted that he grew np with more than a ciiklig acquaint sure with hard work or. tbe farm. Nye's personal appearance as exag geratedly funny as were his writings, which accounts for the fact that thoie who did not know Mr. Nye by sight continue to think of htm as a cadaver ous scarecrow with a benevolent grin on Its face. As a youth Nye put In six sorrowful months trying to rend Blnckitoue Coke, t'hltly and other favorite Ml tliors iu a Wisconsin law olllcn, lit always maintained that he cotil4 read those authors ovi-r and over again And Ond them just as fresh ami novel a t the first reading. Nevertheless he managed to be admitted to the bar a! Laramie, Wyo., In ls'il, where he set tied ilowu and made a feint at prac ticing law. Fur pastime and jome lie sent a weekly letter of correspond ence to the Cheyenne Sun, for which be received $1 per column. Ill one o' his numerous autobiographical confes sions he states that hU Income from this source v.ss nearly t n 3 ear This, he nuIJ, was so much more than be made at toe law that he determined to sink deeper Into Journalism. So be secured a regular Job vn the Lar amie Sentinel nt $12 a week. Tor short time he worked in I "cover as a reporter on the Tribune, the paper on which Eugene I'lelil somewhat later tiiade his l!rt reputJtlo.i us a ImniorM. Ufttnniitig to Lnratiilf', Nye eabllnlied he Boomerang, which boomed once 1 ve- k. He was nls. elected. aplolnl j d and otherwise erected Into the dtf nltles of Justice of the peace, police magistrate, I'nlted Hates commission er, t-ostma'der and siipcrlntendiint of schools. They citllisl him Judge Nre which nj doubt helped some, But being the otlb lal pooh Bah of I-flrnn.le was not particularly lucr.i tlve. Nye worked so hard to make .t living that his health broke down. The Boomerang wns not financially suc cessful. He resigned bin multitudinous offices. He wrote to the postmiistet general that he would find the key of the MstotIlceuuder the door mat. Then Mr. Nye let.irned to the vicinity of his former home In St. Croix county, Wis., to recuperate. That wss alsnit tin year lis.T Quoted In All Quarters, But the Boomerang, though dead, I had made Its mark. It wns a sheet I of modest appearance, making no par ticular specialty of news, but bubbling full of Bill Nye. fctrny copies floated Into eastern newspaper otllces. A gen tlemnn who was connected editorially wltli a Itochoster iiewspacr In the Iioomcrung tlays told me recently that ho picked up a copy of the Boomerang on his ibKk one day Jut out ef curios ity, bcenue It looked so lonesome nnd was so far away from home. The next thing he did was to put the Boomerang on his regular exchange list, after sending n large section of It, scissored out, to tho composing room. The Boomerang was quoted east and west, north und south, and It was evident that a new humorist had arisen. i Bill Nye wrote a book nlsiut his Boomerang experience while be rustl cuted in Wisconsin, offers from big I eastern papers le-gaii pouring In. but Nye was shy. l lnnl!y the New York World Induced hhn to go to the me tropolis and take a Job as a regular contributor. Incidentally he was lu great demand ns a lecturer. Ills plat form tours with James Whltconib Itlley are recalled ns events In the lyepimi world. Nye declined to live In New York city, but took a house In tho rural districts of Stiiteti Island, where his children could play with the gouts, for h! had married nnd multiplied. Nyo wrote for the World from ISM until lHMl, when his services were so cured by the American Press Associa tion, From that time until his death, more than seven years later, he fur nished n weekly Idler of about two columns, whether he was sick or well, at home or ou the road, missing otly ono week. IIu wrote his matter, wo are Informed, with a loud pencil ou nil sorts of paper, frequently on the homely stationery of some small ho tel at which he stopped while chasing a lyceuni engagement. Much of his work during the last three years of his life was done nt his farm Jjomo near Aslievllle, N. C, where he built n hand some residence . near tho George W. Vanderbllt estate. It was there, on Washington's birthday, 1X0(5, thut tho humorist died. Nye's weekly snltiry from the Amer ican Press Association was the largest ever paid to a syndicate writer up to that period. It figured up about I'ill cent a word. Thus the Boomers ng Came buck to him- after many days. It la an Id that from his writing and his platform work ho earned at oiw time about 40.kiu a year. Nye disliked being lionised. Alsiut . fifteeu years ago he wrote a piny, "Tli Cadi," which was to ls produced In. New York. He was In tho city on business connected with the piny. "Nye came Into tho olllco one day," says Hunter Marshall, who at that time was managing edllor for the American Press Association, "nud look ed M(oiind In a bashful, hesitating man ner. He said that tie hud to be to town for the day and lie didn't want to attract attention. Couldn't wo hide hltu somewhere--behind a screen, for Instance? I fixed up a corner In th wlHeo and screened It off. Nye sat dowu there, with books and papem, ml spent the day." Had to Laugh or Burst. The Nye brand of humor wits some thing new under the sun. Arteunm Ward, Petroleum V. Nnsby mid Jowh Billings had won wide recognition, but each of them relied to some extent upon distorted spelling to attract at tention. Nye always spelled correctly and used good grammar. His exag geration wits linguistic rather than or thographic. He could string lilfalutlti adjectives like ctmlii lightning, making tho humblest, commonest object In our everyday life take on a glamour so much out of proportion to Its real Importance; that the exaggeration waa ludicrous. The reader simply had to laugh or burst. "What was the funniest thing you ever wrote?" Bill Nye wus asked shortly before he crossed the great divide. "The funniest thing wns borrowed from tny platform manager," replied the humortnt, who whs inodent as wetl as shy. "Ha gave me the Idea, and I put It like this: (In being requested ono day to do the carving at dinner I replied that I wus not much of a suc cess as a carver Is-cause I couldn't make the gravy match the wall paper." BUI Nye published half a dozen books. Kut the Amerlinn press Hu morists are aware thnt (lien, are not a auMclout monument to bis genius. They know too well that hooks of avowed hiiLuor which pre made up uf fugitive pieces are subject to the stat ute uf limitations, I'suully they resem ble the houHfhold cookbook or t he campaign life of Unrrield In their gen eral inocliiuilcnl makeup. Their fate Is to cud up ou the bargain counter along the sidewalk, marked down to 30 rents. Wherefore, o lords and mas ters, h t the boys build a more endur ing mouuiiient to BiU Nye, and long let the prairie rephyrs of I.nratule en- ress the memorial or the man who niade millions of us happy evmgli to I laugh MOHLCI? LET OPP WITH A LECTURE On complaint of several of htit ni'lghlstrs, Hydncy Mulder of this city was arrested by Humane Officer Brad ley on charge uf cruelly to animals. Mulder Inn lhr contract to furnish horses for the Mnatnas on the occit hluii of their annual outing, and hu been breaking a number of wild horses for the trip. One cif these bo canie Injured In some iiummir and I was left lying m the ground without any care from the owner till the tlm o his nrrest. Mohler was hrotiKht before Ileputy District Attorney O. I). Kby, jind after receiving a severe lec turing, promised to kill tho hoi ho or tend to Its suffering. Tho animal was killed Monday evening. TIME CARD. :. w. p. Arrive RAILWAY i Leave Arrlvo Hi c 2. o a U a O a tin t O a It 0. M !4;0iii C::'.l 7:00 5:40, 5:IS: r:r.u (i:00j u:54 (1:251 C.'ilGi 7:20 7:1!0 7; B.-,' Siilo1 9: Of. !: to 7 : :ioi L . A ' 7:i(i 7: Hi! X;0 7 : :i r ( 7:-ir. 8:3! 8; 10! 8: lift 9:H 8:45 8 : f.r.f 11:19 9:2o I: :t(); 10: 2 1 U . 4 I'll ir.i !i:15 0:BO' 0: 20i 10I5i 10 : S fi:.1.r 10 ;. lu 11:00 !):r.r.il0:br,1l0:r,! 10:;io 11:25 . 1 1 : nr.; 10: :tol f t : 4011 1 :34 11:05 12: 0( 1 2 : 1 o 1 1 : 0.; 1 1 : 1 n 12:09 1 1 : H 12: 35 12:45 1 1 : to 1 1 : r0 12:44 1:19 1:54 2:29 12:15' 1:10' 12:501 1:45! 1:20 12: 15'12:2D 1:5M2:50 2:30! 1:25' 3:05! 2:00 3:40: 2:35 4:15! 3: 10 4:50! 3:45 5:25 4:20 1:00! 1:35 1:20 2:20j 2:00 2:35 3:10 3:45! 4 : 20! 4:55( 5:30! 6:05! 2:55 2:10 3:04 3:39 4:14 4:49 6:24 5:59 6:34 7:09 7:40 8:19 8:54 9:29 9:55 3:30 4:05 2:45 3:20 4:40 3:55 5M5 6:50 4:30 6:00! 4:50! 6:05 6:25 7:00 7:35 8:10 8:45 9:20 9:52 6:35, 5:30: 7:101 6:05' 5:40 6:15 6:40 7:15 7:50 8:25 7:45 6:40 6:50 7:25 8:00 8:35 8:20 7:15 7:50 8:25 8:55 9:30 9:00 9:00 10:00 10:62 9:35 11:00 11:52 10:00 10:55 11:0011:55 12:05113:52 12:00 1:00 To Mil wank lo n)y." !Vla Lent's Junction, dally except Sunday, leave on Sundays, 4:30 a. in. A. M. figures In lUmian; P, M, In-black.