Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, February 15, 1912, Image 2

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    M0BN1SG THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1912.
MORNING ENTERPRISE
OREGON CITY, OREGON
E. E. BRODIE, Editor and Publisher.
"Batered as second-class matter Jaa
sary 9, 1H1, at the pout office at Oregon
City Oregon. unrter the Aot of Marco
t. Uft."
TaiMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Tear, by mail (. ...MM
Six Months, by mall 1H
four Monthi, by mall l.M
week, by carrier -. Is
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER.
THE MORNING ENTERPRISE
Is on sale at the following stores
every day:
Huntley Bros. Drug
Main Street.
"J. W. McAnuIty Cigars
Seventb and Main.
E. B. Auderson,
Main near Sixth.
M. E. Dunn Confectionery
Next door to P. O.
City Drug Store
' Electric Hotel.
Scaoenborn Confectionery
Seventh aDd .1. Q. Adams.
Cleveland's Birthplace May x
Become a Memorial Museum
Feb. 15 In American History.
1888 D. It. Locke, writer of humor
over the name of Petroleum V.
Nusby. died: born 1S34.
18f)8 The United States battleship
Maine wrecked by a mysterious ex
plosion in the harbor of Havana;
2 officers and 264 of the crew lost
their lives.
1809 Original models and patterns of
the United States battleship Maine
"destroyed by fire at the Brooklyn
navy yard.
1904 Mark A. Hanna, United States
senator front Ohio, died; born 1827.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
(From noon today to noon tomorrow.)
Sun sets 5:34. rises 0:51; moon rises
C:30 a. m.; moon lowest and farthest
south; 4:13 p. m., moon in conjunction
will) Uranus, passing from west to
east of the planet.
i -!- '
J-y y vNl lrWH? 4flilt
p U- P if
BUSINESS TEST FOR 1912.
By figures fresh from a govern
ment bureau it is seen that the ex
ports of manufactured articles from
the United States in the year 1911
passed the billion-dollar line for the
first time. The increased demand for
te things produced by American
manufacturers, artisans and inventors
extends to all continents. In the last
ten years the gain in this respect has
been 36 per cent in Asia 64 in Africa,
70 in Europe, 158 in North America
-Copyright by Underwood & Underwood.
Parsonage photo copyright. by Progrens Publishing company.
THE movement looking to the preservation of the "Old Manse" at Cald
well, N. J., the birthplace of Grover Cleveland, as a memorial museum
and repository of relics of the ex-president is making progress. The
plan involves the raising of $50,000, one-tenth to be subscribed by the
citizens of Caldwell, the remainder by the people of the country at large. Title
to the parsonage property has been taken by the Caldwell memorial committee,
the members of which are hopeful of securing the necessary subscriptions in
the near future. The plan contemplates the acquisition of an adjoining plot
of ground and the erection of a memorial library. The house is the one In
which the future president lived with his parents until he was four years old,
his father, -a- Presbyterian minister, then removing his family to Fayettevilla,
N. Y.. a village near Syracuse.
and 248 in South America. The old
Democratic claim that a protective
tariff breaks down our foreign trade
has been knocked out so hard that it
is offered no more in intelligent de
bate. This subject is of great import
ance in the United States, whose pop
ulation in the last decade increased at
the average rate of 1,600,000 a year,'
Opportunities for employment must
keep pace if good industrial condi
tions are to he preserved. An enlarg-
Profit
Sharing
Spirit
a
Cure
For
Strikes
HARTLEY
In Labor's
Interest
Lawful Eat Rice;
Regulation Lower
of All Cost of
Combines Living
HAYES BARRETT
Plenty
of Work
For
All
Who
Are
Willing
VAUGHAN
By Rev. BERNARD VAUGHAN,
English Jesuit
CHERE is plenty to do in the
United States for every
newcomer provided that
newcomer is WILLING TO
TAKE OFF HIS COAT AND
TACKLE THE JOB WITH A
MAN'S WILL.
WHAT THE WORLD NEEDS TO
DAY IS NOT AN ARISTOCRACY OF
IDLERS, BUT AN ARISTOCRACY
OF WORKERS,
Before Christ came the three
things most dreaded by men were
WORK, SORROW AND SIN.
But Christ, the liberator, revolu
tionized society. He lifted the
yoke that was crushing the . hu
man heart. He met labor on the
threshold of Nazareth. Folding
labor in his arms, with the sweat
on his brow, he BAPTIZED LA
BOR AND CONVERTED IT
FROM A CURSE INTO A
BLESSING.
By F. N. BARRETT. Publisheof
the American Grocer
CHE American workingman
need not feel alarmed over
- the high prices and seem
ingly short supply, of potatoes, bev
cause the SUPPLY OF RICE
IS AMPLE FOR ALL DE
MANDS, and rice is a much
cheaper and at the same time
more nutritious article of diet than
potatoes.
- ONE POUND OF RICE COSTS
VERY LITTLE AT RETAIL. IT
CONTAINS AS MUCH NOURISH
MENT AS SEVERAL PECKS OF
POTATOES.
American grown rice from
South Carolina, Louisiana and
Texas is the best in the world, and
the supply is immense.
By JOHN W HAYES. General
Master Workman of the
Knights of Labor
CHE Standard Oil and tobac
co decisions convinced the
American people that large
industrial combinations are now
here to stay and that it is not the
size of the corporation, but the
control and regulation of it, that
will in the future occupy the at
tention of the courts of the coun
try. ' .
, OUR DUTY. -THEREFORE, IS TO
INSIST UPON A LAWFUL REGU
LATION OF ALL COMBINATIONS
WHETHER THEY EE OF LABOR
OR BUSINESS.
By Sir W. P. HARTLEY. English
Manufacturer
1DO NOT SAY THAT PROFIT
SHARING IS THE CURE
FOR ALL LABOR TROU
BLES. BUT THE SPIRIT OF IT IS
AN ABSOLUTE CURE.
There has been a succession of
strikes during the past year and
general labor unrest What is
needed on both sides is a REA
SONABLE ATTITUDE. Labor
is often highly organized, and or
ganized labor unless it is carefully
guided can be as despotic as the
most selfish capitsliat
ing foreign market for what our work
men make is one of the best assur
ances of prosperity.
This year Republican policies are
upon trial with the judgment in the
hands of 16,000,000 votes. Any form
of protection in a tariff is condemned
by the Democratic party. Tariff is
likely to be the paramount issue.
During the last fifteen years a Re
publican protective tariff has been in
force, first the Dingley law, and now
the Payne law. What has been the
result in the foreign demand for our
manufactured productions? In 1896,
the last year of a Democratic tariff,
our exports of manufactures amounted
to $228,000,000. They have more
than quadrupled in the last fifteen
years. The t increase began with the
return of the Republican "party to
power and has been steadily augment
ed. The total is twice as large now
as in 1902. It is a showing that ap
peals to every American workman who
wants to use the ballot in behalf o
good times and good wages.
THE
Heart to Heart
Talks.
By EDWIN A. NYE
LAUGH EARLY AND OFTEN.
Mirth is God's medicine. Everybody
ought to bathe In it. O. W. Holmes.
Mirth a medicine?
Certainly, and a good one better
than most of the prescriptions of ma
teria medica. It is one of nature's real
tonics, a balm for life's bruises, a
salve for sorrows, a liniment for
grouches, a panacea for worry.
Dr. Sanderson says:
"Mirth, cheerfulness, is a better stim
ulant for the tissues of the body than
drugs, which react.' Laughter is an
actual life giving influence.'" Another
physician says, "Fun is a food and as
necessary to wholesoineness as bread."
Therefore-laugh.
We take life too seriously. We do
not laugh enough. Or we indulge in
a stingy sort of mirth. Some of us
laugh so seldom we lose the habit of it
. A laugh is a massage.
Figures of speech aside, a good laugh
is a real massage treatment. When you
laugh heartily your diaphragm gets
busy. In moving rapidly up and' down
it massages the liver, stirring that or
gan up to its duty. It affects other or
gans also.
"Laugh and grow fat" is the shrewd
observation of mauy generations.
The old kings were wise. They hlr
ed jesters to make them laugh. And
Lycurgns. i.ble lawmaker, set up the
god of laughter in the public diniua
rooms of Sparta.
Laughter is a good buffer.
It is like the shock absorbers folks
put in the. springs of their automo
biles. It helps to carry one easih
over the knobs and "thank-you-ma'ms"
of life's rugged road. And it reduces
friction everywhere.
Laughter is normal. '
Good health and physical and mental
harmony require that the funmaking
propensities should be released. Laugh
ter does that. If these natural pro
pensities are kept back one has "an
attack of "the blues;" If totally re
pressed insanity.
Laugh and succeed.
If you bottle up your visible spirits
you paralyze your personality. A
cheerful spirit and a hearty laugh
smooth out many wrinkles of business.
Men and women go every year to
premature graves because, they have
forgotten how to laugh.
Laugh and stay alove ground.
Hallway
vOF THE
Electric Hotel
Annex
looks like the receiving ward of a
hospital filled with
SICK and
AFFLICTED
TO SEE
DR. MADISON
THE GREAT MEDICAL EXPERT
AND BLOODLESS
SURGEON.
Many are now on the high road to
health and happiness.
Dr. Madison cures permanently the
cases he undertakes and sends the in
curable away without taking a fee
from them. '
That he is an eminently successful
specialist in all chronic diseases is
proven by the many cures affected,
which have baffled the skill of all
other physicians. His vast and ex
tensive practice has madj him so
proficient that he locates and names
a disease in a few minutes. No ex
periments or failures. He undertakes
no incurable diseases.
No matter what ails you or what
others may have said, call and get
his diagnosis, as he often succeeds
where cases have been called incura
ble by those of less experience.
All long standing diseases treated
at prices within the reach of all.
OFFICE AT
Electric Hotel
Annex
9 A. M. TO 9 P.' M.
INCLUDING SUNDAY
CONSULTATION FREE.
WILL REMAIN IN OREGON CITY
UNTIL TUESDAY, FEB. 20.
CLOSING AT 5 P. M.
The Secretary.
This is a gU pencil game. The
players sit at a table with square
pieces of paper anil pencils, and each
one writes his own name at the top of
the paper ud folding it over so that
the name does not show, hands it to
the secretary, who redistributes the
papers, saying, "1'ha racier." Then
each one writes some imairinary char
acter description, folds the paper siL'aiii
and hands it to the secretary, who
says. "Future." and shuttles and dis
tributes the papers as before.
Some forecast for the future is I hen
written. The secretary may surest
as many other subjects as lie ch-Mises
or can think of and when ready may
call iu the papers and read them aloud.
They are often curious ' and rerv
amusing. This is on the order of the
old game of "coiiseiUeii'-es. ' hut with
more chance for originality and va
riety.
Washington's Etiquette.
Every action In conipan.x ought to he
some sign of respect to those present.
In the presence ot others sinir not to
yourself with n humming noise nor
drum with your fingers or feet.
SpeakTiot .when others speak, sit not
whph others stand and walk not when
others stop.
Turn not your back to-others. ese
ilally in sfieaking.
Be no flatterer: neither trifle with
ny one that does not delight in- such
familiarities.
Read no letters, hooks or paiers in
company except when necessary: then
ask to be excused.
Come not near the hooks or writing
of any one so as to read them unasked.
Let your countenance lie pleasant,
bnt in serious matters some whin grave.
Baby O'Grundy.
Wa? born on a Mnnrtav.
Walked on a Tuesday.
Wore troupers on Wednesday.
Played football on Thursday,
Was mended on Friday,
Grew whiskers on Saturday,
Fell In love Sunday,
And that was the and
Of Baby O'Grundy.
They Didn't Like Games.
Shelley's view of games was approxi
mately Swift's view-that games are
the recreations of people who do not
think."-' The world he felt was so "full
of a number of things" that It was ab
surd to waste time on such triviali
ties as pegtops aud marbles. Elderly
gentlemen might appropriately play
with marbles or pegtops ijust as elder
ly gentlemen noa-aiays play golfi in
order to divert their minds from anxi
ety as to ihe price ot stocks and
shares, out why should a hoy do so
when lite layike a fain-hind, iietrin
Hint al his door hmI l-nitum nim m
explore': "The Koiimu-l-' I. lie ol Mie
Wants, For Sale, Etc
Nvtteca wwitr tbiss shuntfte iiiiOni
will be Uuartad t erne ecat a ward, ttrm
lBsartiuo. bait a caat additional isser
tiona. Ode Inch cud. IX w moetL. tuu!
iBeta earC (4 nneej 11 uer meatk.
Ctah must imainar rdr unleae
bss am open aooouia with tbe iur. N
(iMBoiaJ responsibility tar en-era; vh'(
errors occur dee corrected iniH will, fc
printed for patron. Minimum etaarae lie
WANTED.
WANTED Everybody to know thai
I carry the largest stock of second-
v. hand furniture in town. Tourists or
local people looking for curios In
dian arrow heads, old stamps or
Indian trinkets should see me. Will
buy anything of value. Georgw
Young, Main street, near Fifth.
Prestige An Asset
The successful business man always counts prestige as
a tangible asset A banking affiliation with the strongest bank
is a prestige asset that costs you nothing.
THE BANK OF OREGON CITY
THE OLDEST BANK IN THE COUNTY.
D. O. LA TO URKTTB President
F J. METER. Cabl'
WANTED Woman for general
housework 902 Jefferson street.
FOR SALE.
FOR SALE A lot of shafting, hang
ers, pulleys and belting- at about
your own price. Inquire of Mr.
Cartledge, Enterprise office.
FOR SALE A-l seasoned wood by
rick or cord, delivered in Sandy.
Howard Bros., Sandy, Or.
FOR SALE Bay horse, weighs 1100
pounds, 8 years old. Address B. L.
L., care Enterprise.
FOR SALE Ten-room house, 110
Seventh street, one block from de-
: pot, half block from Main street;
can be bought at your own price if
taken in a few days. Parties have
other business; can also keep lots
of boarders. Inquire on premises.
FOR RENT.
FOR RENT OR SALE Immediately,
' 7-room house; modern. Inquire
"C," Enterprise.
PERSONAL.
FELL and broke his leg, he was in
such a hurry to get some of E. A.
Hackett's hard wood before it is
all gone. Phone 2476, at 317 Seven
teenth street.
WOOD AND COAL.
OREGON CITY WOOD AND FUEL
CO., F. M. Bluhm. Wood and coal
delivered to all parts of the city.
SAWING A SPECIALTY. Phone
. your orders Pacific 3502, Home
B 110.
FARM LOANS.
FARM LOANS Dimick &
Lawyers, Oregon City, Or.
Dimick,
ATTORNEYS.
U'REN & SCHTJEBEL, Attorneys-at-Law,
Deutscher Advokat, will prac
tice in all courts, make collections
and settlements. Office in Enter
prise Bldg., Oregon City, Oregon.
INSURANCE.
E. H. COOPER, For Fire Insurance
and Real Estate. Let us handle
your properties we buy, sell and
exchange. Office in Enterprise
Bldg., Oregon City, Oregon.
PIANO TUNING.
PIANO TUNING If you want your
piano thoroughly and accurately
tuned, at moderate cost, notify
Piano-Tuner it Electric Hotel.
Strongly endorsed by the director
of the Philharmonic, who will per
sonally vouch for his work.
SPRAYING.
TREE SPRAYING We are prepared
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of OREGON CITY , OREGON
CAPITAL, S60.0O0.Ou.
Transacts a neral Banking Business- Otjen from S A. M. ttt ! t
MARKETING y TELEPHONE
VOUR FAITHFUL Bell Telephone, al
ways at your elbow, steadily increases in
llCAT"iilnice .
It does a score of errands while a messenger is doing one. You come
to accept telephone service as a matter of course, like the air you breathe
or the water you drink. -
Your Bell .Telephone performs these daily services of neighborhood
communication, and it does more it is a unit in the universal system and
enables you to reach any one any time within the range of the Long Dis
tance Service.
Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co.
Every Bell Telephone is the Center of the System
to spray fruit trees witn best of
spray. Guaranteed satisfaction .
John Gleason. Phone 1611.
DYEING AND STEAM CLEANING.
OREGON CITY DYE WORKS 319
Main street, French dry and steam
cleaning. Repairing, alterations
and relining. Ladies' and gent s
clothing of all kind cleaned, pressed
and dyed. Curtains carpets, blan
kets, furs and ;iuto covers. All work
called for and delivered, phone
Main 389. Mrs. J. Tamblyn and
Mrs. Frank Silvey.
PROPOSALS INVITED.
Bids wili be received for the erection
t of an addition to Willamette school
' building until 5 p. m., Saturday,
February 24. The board reserves
the right to reject any or all bids.
A certified check for J100 must ac
company all bids as a guarantee of
good faith. Plans and specifications
can be had of G. S. Rogers at Run
yon's jewelry store, Masonic Build
ing, Oregon City, Or.
Hotel Arrivals.
The following are registered at the
Electric Hotel:
. G. Lawson, Oakland; H. Kirbyson,
city; Mr. and Mrs. F. Barber, Sheri
don; W. H. Mattoon, Fred Schafer,
Molalla; Edward Morgan, Oregon
City; L. Kabet Portland; R. Hardy,
Molalla; D. E. Leatherman, Portland;
F. A. Woodstrom, Portland; T. Ed
wards, F. J. Morris, Portland; C. L.
Pinkstrom, Portland.
Subscribe for th DftSlr Buterprla
MAZDA LAMPS MAKE
LIGHT WORK
'I find that kitchen work is a pleasure rath
er than a drudgery," says the housekeeper,
"now that this wonderful MAZDA LAMP
brightens the room like sunshine. This new
lamp certainly is a blessing to the housekeeper.
It COSTS NO MORE to born than the ord
inary incandescent lamp and radiates nearly
THREE TIMES as much light. And the
quality of the light is ever so much better it
is so restful to the eyes."
PORTLAND RAILWAY, LIGHT
& POWER CO.
f
MAIN OFFICE 7th and Alder Streets