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About Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1911)
MOIWINO' ENTERPRISE, TUEaiUY. NOVKMHKK 28. 1011. 5: V; fnt r-i v . r-i I Ml i Braen J, tn, who" tw a' nattongT reputst n a a iectuef wry recrura fa thla efty nert Monday fright oa Tha -Lomt (.of." The lecture 'w b tho (WJ eatertarnToent t tha lo tegm. utrtt:, which hs" "been n tedby twenty Tesldenta of. tho Cfty TheXIt m M on. of the moet aopw Ur lectue ever gtvea In tuts city toW h hour Aay tug for Mr' 81 ts.a loan .who says thtng Wherever he ha aVpearvd th aewapapara have been1 Kiuapartag la tbetr praise. Ur, . 8U St always wckfnaY reading and Study tag1' tie earrlee a aTnatt hbgnry witb.hlui Onthe train. He wa tor te fmrt touipr of the Weetera LjrceuBt Circuit of tho Redpath-Coa trei la the Wart. Ha la la iba lytoum jto help balM It. and anticipate every step of progress. Hla advertising mat- tor ehowa thla hla five-color lltho- zraph. press-sheet, aewapaper half' .toaoa, aad fe la personal lac tar la ad Taaee to every committeeman telltng htm how to beat MrtlM bla loc- iar. IftJOlE TELLS OF .tiiS HARDEST HIT .i QDHimforcB3!iIndSY!fl2 "jfCift Cowl tnrbx triLSTin folder ':'; ) v., '. ERNEST J. BIAS. " To faal that bar la a bum om tba aJavatof. Aad varr aooa. rem 41orr-er-ai tba'Arat poatoSIca Ibat tbwa la lad baovB aa Mr. SUa, aaothar atadoat aa4 Itcaub utbaaiaat, and t pover behlad tba tbroaa. Incidentally, tt la'bMsoaalag fcaowa tbat aoatarlal proaparlty baa amtlad very pro pertly on btr..aad Strs. Staa. .Tber bava )cat .aOTd nto tbalr saw taa-rooai brlet racblaaca ta liacota. Nebs, aad ibere la a X2acro , wheat farm la Soatb Dakota, aadar tba aaaa eoa troi "; Tbae Mwsa explain why W It b , eomla a big maa aad wby ba la goias back tba third aad fourth tliao to towaa. tboash they haT to pay for blai each Una, Larry TfcavgM K Waa d tare Hewer, but Waa UM&pectedty Tag'fted Out bjT teaead' acar "Wh rtad Re ealvedt iH eW Rebettita rredS WalL "t hi rd. af curae, made ijulte a few teat hit aad hard blta la my time." aid Larry Laurie the rater a lnflrkW t tba Oeretand AmetVaaa, the other day. "Some at thee went a gvod deal farther than otbera, aad aome of them vara amaabed with a food deal mora visor thaa. tba reat, all drieoding largely, of rearse, apoa tba way tba bat met ibe leather. - "I bare a keea and pa In fa 1 wollev Uoa, bewerer. of what fihlDb waa the hardest bit I ever made. The m-olleo- ttoa at ayacially hero aad extremelj mm I IS OFFERED , POOS TllAimG . ,r- , , Y- '' - '- ' ' Tba aaaaagement 4oft the Oregoat Commiaaloa Cora pan j ' - aaaouaced bloaday thai tho company would giro ;M largo chicken, a aack of potatooa and a aack of Door to all deaerytng famlUea la aaed for . thaakagtriag. Tba coaapkay baa bad a proaparoua .year, aad dealrea to a bow Ita apprecta Vtloa aad thaokfalaeaa by aiding ' worthy aad knrortnBato famlllea oa "ThaakaglTtng Day. -Namea of thoaa 'deserving th ThaakaglviBg offering '.may ba aeat to tho Commission Coaa. .aany or to the Horning Enterpriae: i Tba maaager of .tha compear, after 'making the annooaeemeat that poor vfemlllee woaM be aided, said: We bava bad tho past year aad we de- wo have bad the pat year and we de sire to abow onr appreciation by beip- rng thoae la need oa Thaaksgivlag llAII HURT AS STREET 5 CAR RUHS OFF TRACK : , James Elliott, waa caaght betweea a atreetcar aad .a pile of wood htoo . day morning aear the mil of the '. Hawley Pulp A Paper Compear and I severely injnred. He waa attended '. by Dr. tfelsener and later taken to 81 Vincent's Hoapital la Portland. lie waa Injured Internally and two of (-bls ribs were fractured Elliott waa . -In the act of boarding the car when , It ran off the track. Dr. Metaaner ' said he would recover. UNITED STATES HAS 4 CARDINALS (Continued from page 1.) "in pectore." or secret, not to be pub lished nntll a later con i story, waa made today when tbe college of car dinal! gathered in Roir.e obeying a . aummoni from Pope Pius X to eon flnn the nominations of eighteen new members. Of those tbna honored, three are citizen of the United States Moa algnor John M. Farley, archbishop of New Tork; Monaiirnor William O'Con aell. archblabop of Boston and Mon- ., algnor Diomede Pa Icon lo, apostolic delegate at WaRblngtoa. Thns with Cardinal GIbbona, Amer- -, lea will bava now, for tba drat time, ' a representation of four cardinal. which probably, ancb aa now con atituted, win elect a successor to tbe , reigning Poatlff. Aa ba entered the hall of th con- elatory where todays ceremony took place tho Pope' step wa lee anre and tba careworn face of bia holiness bora blgna of bl recent Illness. Nev- j, ertbeloaa he withstood the fatigue of the long and trying ordeal bravely. . la accordance with ecclesiastical ; law, a publie consistory must.be beld ' three days after tho private gathering when the new cardinals, with the exception of thoaa from Spala and Aaatrta, win receive their red hat. , Tho Spanfrh and Austrian prelates, a la provided la tba concordat with thoaa countries, mnaf receive tba bU retta Drat from the band of their temporal sovereign a. Tba pnbtlo con sistory win ba beld on Thursday . la the Hall of tbe Beatification Instead of In the Bala Reglm, aa at first plan ned. Tba former hall Is much tha larger aad waa decided oa today ba eanse of tba many application for admittance). '.. . , Photo ay Aaaertoaa ITS Aasoeiattea. Laaar tajon. cunuso'i aaaar sat . raa aso Dnaxoaa. palafnl beraaaa I wasted so mnch eo- ergy 00 tba bia mad thing and beraua the beat I got waa tbe haw haw. It waa way back la tbe day when I waa oa the old Philadelphia team, which, as yon wfU remember, wa aome aggregation of awatsmitba. Al though I waa rather new to tha big league fn those days, I seemed to lit la with that banch aU1gbt aad waa bitting along with tbe rest of tbe tribe. -la those day the right field fence to Philadelphia waa close, aad the fielders used to play to take them oa tbe bound aa they -saie, ba-k frwn the fence. In one came, if I remem ber rightly! three mea were threw oat at 11 rut oa what should bare been tho aafeat kind of alt. But that hi The afternoaf. 1 made my great alt waa one ef good, husky batting. Ufa waa miserable for all tbe pitchers and especially for oar et'furmer. Wbeo the last half of the aintb arrived e were to the bad something like 9 to 7. There were a bit. an out. a base on balls aad a pop By. I came ap. with men on first and second, two gone and the chance to tie or wtn before me. The ball cam 01 er bisalng boC grated It, and that was alL The next one most hare been Intended almply a teaser, for It drifted over so alow and easy that a baby could have hit It with a wire. I thought the burler never meant to get It near tbe pan. but wa playing wide to get a potwlhle fall oat of the runner, who was leading off aec and. Anyhow. It came over tbe alxe of a balloon. Oh. JoyT said I. and 1 leaned the bat against that ball with aU my weight and mnscle. "To the best of my recollection sever before or since bit a ball so bard aa that one. I eon Id almnerfeei the leather being driven Into tbe core of the yarn and rubber by tbe forre of that tremendous drive, and the atlng raa np the bat The ball went oat. hot whizzing, not sailing, but faster. more terrifically apeedy than anything I aver laid the wood against In all my Ufa. "There was a glad roar from tbe multitude, and I went down to first bent for a home ran. while two men flew along ahead of me. Round drat I went and steamed for tba middle cor ner. Hodden ly a man rose ap la my tracks and atark tba ball Into my dla phragm it was tbe third oat and the game waa over. "How and whyfore? Only this: bad hit the ball ao fearfully hard that It rebounded back from the right field wall like a anapped place of robber band. It shot straight back all the way to the diamond and leaped right Into the second baseman's bands for a aara trap and tha last one of tba after' Boon. And that la the atory of tha hardest ban I aver bit Do yon won der that the memory gives ma a palnT rraaa lada la teiaa. la Tsurh'CW onr wTipadeit eaa atraojce ladaarrlea On tbe keeping af Urge staa. aa big aa a fair red horse, reared for tba aake af tbalr horov which are rat off every sammer aad aoVt for aa much aa $33 gold for aa aa medicine, ) Tba bora la soft, aad tba aofter tt w wbea ra meved the b laser tba price re Used. Tba other waa tba raising af tho aaa cbi. a sort of large pheasant tba tall feather af which are vary valuable, aa they are needed tor tba dreaa hata af mandarins Timber ks vary plenti ful lo tbla district aad ta aent away by raft ta all parta-Nortk China Newa. - THE BRONZE TEAPOT A Wava Story af tb East , Bj CLARISSA MACIIE CsovTajht er Aewteaa Free Ass cla IMS. UU. Our First Irenwerfcer. Workmen skilled In making Iron ar rived la Virginia from England In 1621. An Anelent Work en Angling. Tba greatest work of antiquity on angling Is tba "Balfratica" of Opptan. a Greek poet who flourished In th time of Sevenia, A. D. 19, from wblcb wa learn that many artifices In fishing thought to ba modern were known to ancienra, Wa alao learn from Atheneo that several other writers bad written oa fishing some centuries before the Christ 1 a era. A week after the toartat ahlp Nap tana bad sailed aoatb from Constanti nople, stopping here and there along tba way to permit her passenger a day'e algbtaeetng among ancient ralaa or to revet a tba frtir and bright color af eastern porta, she touched la her leisurely meaner ar Beirat la Syria. Tba paaaenger apeat a day ashore, each 000 choosing bn own rout for sightseeing aad espferatsoa. They met at Dinner on board tha ateamer after aba bad resumed her veyago. and I bee waa much talk and laugbterever tha Incidents of the day. Tonight they were all keen to bear of any new adventure, and Aleiander Faltoa bad aaggeattvely spread tba "carpet of truth" on tba dock la tba sold st af tha chairs. "I am a modest maa." anaoaaced Professor Trajie amiably, "bat tonight I must rush la and tell my atory, for tha deooaemeat most come as aooa aa I have-eoncradedL, I cannot watt any longer: therefore I win alt down. AH apposed wm aay no. ; , "When hi adetlae related ber story of tba filigree bracelet: she referred to aa adventure of mine connected with a recta la bronae teapot , I waa going to tett yea this story some evening, bat tt waa aa unfinished atory. and. while Interesting from one point of view, there was a baffling mystery about It That mystery waa partly dis closed today while 1 wa ta Beirut aad may. perhaps, be revealed to aU ef aa wbea I have finished my atory." Ha paused for breath sod tot extract from aa Inner pocket of hiaVoat a square package, which ba proceeded to unfasten. "I feel aa tboagh I belonged la the Arabian Nlghtr Entertainments. "said acoetjrnno raa roM or aa acinar cms ass waaaioa. bfra. Haaford aa ber husband ad justed ber rug "That bronze teapot might have belonged to Radon ra. prin ces of China." ' It passed from band to band for as a ml nation until once more tho pro fessor beld It thoughtfully la his palm. The little bronze teapot waa perfectly round m abepe. with a tiny spout formed by tba mouth of a little raised dragon that wound lfself around so that Its tall was looped for a handle. Tbe cover waa amall and flat aad ap parently tight fitting. Tba whole thing was tight la weight t T it empty r Inquired Vila Gray, with Interest That remains to be seta." returned tbe professor. "I foond that teapot la the streets of Canton. China, three years ago. and aver since then I bare been trying to find oat that It ta need for. Today I discovered by the merest aeddenf "It's Just a carlo, I appose." ventur ed Mr. Haaford. Those things are merely made for orrsmente." "Foaefbty. bat tradition aaya other wise. I foond tbe teapot and my first Impulse waa to etore it awa among my other cartoa, bat later la the day I happened to ba talking to a Chinese friend, and 1 showed him the teapot and asked him if It waa a charm of any sort If you aver aaw a frightened Celestial yoo raa Imagine bow my friend appeared, nia banda trembled violently aa ba backed away from me. carefully avoiding all contact with tbe thin. - The only explanation I could get from aim aa that it waa accursed and that f could not get any maa In China to touch It or ten ma of the curse that bang over It , . "I felt aara that tba curse of tba little bronze teapot might not affect 11 men aa It did him. and I was posi tive that It could exercise no evil in fluence over a foreigner. 80 naTA kept It hoping from time to time to find somebody who knew Ita history. I asked every man I could coma aero Id Cblaa about It and sfoq wearied of tha repetltlo af my are! laterttew. Each one. prlaoa. maadarta. petty af& eUL Baercbaai or cootie, at hi Wt4 tba a ate, to ate, aareaeoalng fear af tha tittle toy. . Today ta IWlrwt I waa attracted to nttls bop' tacked away ta tba bazaar one af lh aole-la the-wail iff lnr where a big sleepy aid China maa nodded over a try fall af Ivory carvings. Among ao many ayrtaaa ba waa conspicuous, and I aauaiered ap to blm aad add rise J him ta a well known Chines djalect-tnat of Can ton. "tnataatty be waa alert and smiling at me. Wa talked, a little, and I par- chased oaa or two article, and all at aoce tt curred to mo that ba might Inform ma about my brvose lea pot So aoce mora I aawrapped II and die played It to blm. aad ala I aw a repetltloar of tba terror af tba asea who bad viewed tt ta China. - 'Tea know thlar I asked blm la the dialect ' "lie Bodded paecbleealy. bla flabby cbeeks white aad trembling aad bla Utile beady eyea tied npvn It Tbea I told him where I had found tt aad bow t could not di-over any thing a boat It That I had not tried o spaa tt for tba cover seemed secured by eOM) aromatic guia or wai aad that I felt certain aaxxiat ef defer aoce to tba mystery that 00c in passed th simple tittle toy-yoe know that I have beea muck ta the far east, and there ts mnch to revernce there. "After soma porsuaMou be told ma tba blatory of tba teapot after first receiving my assurer-- that I would open It only at aea wUo the ship waa aafeiy away from Beirut Ula wtebee 1 shall respect Ue told mo that ha himself bad eoce bad the teapot la hie poass Ion, and tba eriug of HI tuck aad carsea it brought apoa Mb la no root household bad tadVed blm la tees tt away ta tba tilth of Caatoa street to bo perked ap by roe other uu In formed person. He bad bea la IM rut for several years, aad b aad h family bad exiled themselves, ao fear Jul were they of . era la coming Into poasaaaloa ef this avli charm. "It at raa. good people, that once apoa a lime, long t-sfore tbe Ming dy nasty, there waa a very wicked prince of China yoo were 001 ao very far out of tha way. Mrs. Uanfurd-wbuee ob ject zoordertd bla 00 dark Bight burned bis body aad put part of hi aabea Into thia Uttle Irs put sealed II ap and tossed It late a swift flowing river. Tba remainder of la ashes were distributed to tho four winds of beaten. Tba atory goes that tbe four wlndr took pity aa tba vaixralsbed and deadprtaro aad ao gathered baa aabea together la aome spot where they await the com ing of tba remainder The bronae tea pot waa washed ashore and lime and agala down through the rrotnriea ba beea thrown lata tbe set: only to be caaght ap ta a fisherman s net er 10 bo tossed as here with the laromina tide. They any that tb soul of the prince, V Imprtsoued be rem with bis ashes." Tho profeaaor paued ugeat tvety. aad Mr. Haaford broke the st Wore thai bad fallen apoa tbe IntereM ad group t "Yoa art going to release tbe anal how ts that what w sre t. nnder stand, profesaorf Tb going to open the hmnte teapot aad aea what happen." amended I'm feasor Trayle. slowly rising 10 hi tall height "and aa many of you a are to ore Invited to It new the uVutou atratloo of aacienr oriental supenti tlon aod ran draw your own mann slona concerning Its basis of train They ail eagerly announced aa tateo 1 tlon to remain, and ao It waa wit a keen interest that they watched the feasor' preparation. , They followed klm to an untenanted port of the deck Bear tba rail, and without a word t'et- 1 toa apread tba "carpet of truth." Tt might root a In aa explosive r ' some aort Tou might rula tbe car pet," protested Miss Gray. Professor Trayle and Alexander KH ton exchanged a look, and tbe youncer man answered: "I'm not afraid I know my east and a royal ant h fitting pluce for tho reincarnation if a princely soul ." They stood sround the rng at s re 1 apectful distance, the ladies holding their bands 10 their ears, aa If expect lag the prince to emerge from bl close confinement with an explosive greeting. . iVofesMor Trayle knelt down and with bla penknife carefully removed a wax stopper from tba apout r me teapot Then be left tba toy 00 tbe rag and stood aloof wtth the others. Immediately there curled from the tiny apout which they could barely aea la tba moonlight a thin streamer of vapor or amok, ft grew in vol ume, shimmering with gold aod green and scarlet aod yellow. Then It cess ad to come and fir aa Instant held Itself: eoggeeting tbe form of aa an cient Chinese warrior, brave In his uniform, with a golden aword. before tt turned lo a flittering shower of gray ashes that drifted swsy aver tbe rail aod disappeared In tba moonlight. Tba seven psasenrers gaaped Incred ulooaly. -What did wa aeer demand ad Arthur Clayton excitedly, and the ethers crowded around tba professor, who amOH quietly. "Any one of you caa explain It aa readily aa I caa myself- ba as id with a sincerity they could not question Ha stooped down aod lifting the little teapot, pried ap the ?over and. light ing a match, looked Inside. Empty." bo said eonrloalvely, paaalng It aroand. When It' came to hi daughter aba poked aa Inquisitive white finger la side. "What la this, fatberr Aad tba object aba bold ap proved to bo an eiqnWtely cut ruby of targe lie and flawleae color. ' Tbla was the reward of tha maa who released tba aabea of the mur dered prince of China. . ... ' Paya for the MORNING ENTKKPM8E a whole year Uy Mnil-Hlurinrr jlargnln Period, now on, which clow Dumber 31, 1911. u. .. , rjA- advantage') thi offer by paying for a renewal of your tubscription at Bargain Period rate, and tell your neighbors about thii $nap. THE MORNING ENTERPRISE A WH0L12 YEAR . II Y MAIL , . ' T . I- . a a URGES U. S. W B UR ROADS (Continued from page I.) -J In folios no rem. Tbe fjmons Maelstrom whirlpool, off tbe coast of Norway, la four geograpb- its 1 nine id a la meter, nGUTING EVIL Tne mow truly rctou tiling that a man caa do i lo hjfil hi way through habits and dc&oences and back td pure, manitks element of hi nature, which are tha anenaco .11. m,M i ilw. .L a- s we-,--w eeea. OfRNJ WVI ship and alone reaBy worth aghung ior. w 1 Road ta Uorntag ntersra-e. a recent maaailna we rsA ik. ing: The clvlo hodlea throarV out Alaska are making aa united af Jrt to secure larger appropriation rrom the national government for road work." II In Alaska why not here la Ore gon? Oregon and other aUtea Ilka bar beed good roada. She is not able, without United Bute government aid. to build then a rapidly aa needed. Tb rmted States baa a conatlta tlonel right to aid tha building of them. " It la right aad fair, especially to tbe farmers, that It should glv euch aid, and It la practicable. A long argument could ba made to abow . and many Itluatratlona could be made, but sorely every maa muat see it We bare a fee good roada and tba highway tax will get mora, but not enough. More than nine-tenths of tba com merce of the state Is first carried over the roads that wa bava. at an Immense oa of time and money to uroicr. The ability to travel quickly and aeHy I due tba farmer aa much a It la the shipowner and tba mer chant that tha government deepen the rlvera, blaate out Immense rock and build breakwaters for. The tato caa not build tbeaa roada a u would bankrupt bar. Soma i me rounuea are trying It but they are piling up debta apoa which Inter, eat must ba paid yearly and tha prin cipal baa to ba met some day. Tha great majority of tho counties are oo poor 10 raise tha money. Little by little something may ba dona by taxation and tba uaa of tba eonvlcte, but scores of yeara mast peea before anything substantial caa ba accompllabed. If federal aid to tba extent of one half could be secured tba work could be done twice aa fast And why notf Jefferson, Clay, Calhoun and others advocated tha building of roada by tbe United State Government They knew and declared that tha government baa tba cootatitutlonal right lo do ao. Almost all wealth eomea originally from the aoll and tha farmer of all otbera digs It out and distributee It among mankind. - Bad roads taks from blm a large proportion of bla reward. The farmer produce billion of nro duceyet tha United States government la making ao direct appropriation for tha benefit of tbaaa mea la tha trans portation of tbelr prod nets. It has given milUona of acres of land to railroad, that aell tbeaa land at aay price they wlab. Appropriate other millions for tba eonatructloa la towns and cities of Coat Offices gad Custom Houses aad hundred of mlllloas of doUlar for river and harbor. Why. therefore. should there not ba a iargs aid giro a to tbe mea who are hot la tba town, tbe mea la tba woods,' who first traaa foemed natures gift Into wealth aad 00 first beaaa tba transportation of It to tba million of consumer whose very existence depends upon It. Tho obtaining of Government aid to begin may bo a - alow process, but wbea tbe government knows tba farm er, understand hit rights, and that the farmer will bare them, tba aid will coma W)th proper concerted efforta apoa tbe part of the farmer aad tboaa vitally Intereeied la good roada, tha urgeat representation to oar aena tor, and congressmen, wa aea as) rea son why tbla aid should not bo ao-compltabed. CV. HAYWORTH TO LEAVE FIRST ARTIST CHURCH. (Continued from page 1.) I love tha member, some of whom bava lost Interest la Christian work under my ministry tbst I resign, la tho bops that a new pastor caa lead tha Indifferent backslider back lo a renewal of hla Christian living." SCIIOOLEY SUED f0,1 STOCK SUBSCRIPTIO; The Clarkama Southern Railway Company Monday, through Attorney O. D. Eby and O. a Dlmlck, filed suit against W. I. Schooley for fllMO alleged to ba dua on atock subscrip tion in tha plaintiff company. It I charged that Mr. Schooley ubscrlbed for three aharea of atock at S0 each and that ba baa not paid any of tba money. Tba flrat payment, accord ing to offlcera of tba company, waa dua when f 10.000 of tha capital stock bad bean received, tha second when tha flrat mile of tha road bad been graded tha next wbea tbrea miles bad been graded and tha last one wbea lx mile bad been graded. rwvt , . Ta Give Grind Sail j A grard ball will ba gives at . Quack ball oa Tbaoksglvlag v. T yotftg men having chart of flw W , will engage borne muslclaaa. Ai latest select ton, el l ba gl" : If you are got reading th Enterprise, why not? Tewea h ggln J-orlod la aow on. lea al bock page. REAL ISTATf TRANS"" Parla I. and "Dixie P ? Job a Carlaoa lota 4. . . Robertson; $0. - W. A. aad Ida V. Alcorn J a aad Thomas Olader. Ht 1 block Bright wood; $19. -Henry Gaas to Rom aa Oaa. Und la Ctachama '" Paul C. and Jorea C. Soil la w Slyter. laud la Clackkmu O 10. . F. L. Oewald Candidate. . r. La Oawald, of Gladatona. has heeded the request of frlenda to enter tba race for councilman for a one year term at tba coming city election to ba beld December . , . TCACHIRS HOLD INSTITUTt. About aeventy-flve teachers attend ed tha Institute at MUwaukle Satur day. Ad dr eases wars made by prom inent educatora, and tha Institute waa pronounced one of tha moat urease- ful aver held la tbla county. Dinner waa served by tha Mothers' and Teachers' Club. Vccuum Clxr Th.mo.tr.mark.bl.l achieved In tha line of , 1 r It lo operate 1 with tha ama aaa , t J carpet awaapef. but with to aay electric eleaaar. , , PRICI e ' -For demonatratloa PBp"'ll- ' MILLER, H sa,S " r 1 '