Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, May 28, 1912, Page 2, Image 2

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    MORNING ENTERPRISE, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1912.
MORNING ENTERPRISE
OREGON CITY, OREGON
K. E. BRODIE, Editor and Publisher.
"Sh tared as aeoond-elara matter lum
ury 9, 1H, at tha post offlo at Oreana
Cite, Orasnn. under the At of Ibrafa
I. 1MI."
TERMS Of SU6SCS1PTI0N,
Cm Tr. by mail MM
Bix Mentha, by mail l.M
Fur Months, by mall... l.M
. Par week, by earner .10
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER.,
THE -MORNING ENTERPRISE
Is on sale at the following stores
every day:
Huntley Bros. Drug
Main Street.
J. W. McAnult Cigars .
Seventh and Main. 4
. JB. B. Audsrson, .
4 Main near Sixth.
M. E. Dunn Confectionery
Next door to P. O.
City Drug Store
Electrie Hotel.
Schoenborn Confectionery
Seventh and .T. Q. Adama.
'
May 23 In American Ki:ta:y.
1807 Louis John Rnds'ph Ap:r.-iz
naturalist and geologist. I;.;m:
diedlS73.
1843 Noah Webster, lexicographer
died: born 1758.
1908 Lieutenant Oeneral Stephen D.
Lee. distinguished soldier of the
Confederate States army, died;
- born 1S33.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
(From noon today to noon tomorrow.)
Sun sets 7:21, rises 4:33. Evening
Star: Mars. Morning Stars: Venus,
Jupiter. Mercury. Saturn.
BEAUTY AND COMMERCE
Much has been said' about the
stream which passes our doors. Poets
have seen in it inspiration for beaut
iful verse. Artists have put on can
vas what their eye and talent showed
to them but for years, yes, genera
tions and centuries this great water
way has been in existence, winding
its way to the ocean, serving no pur
pose other than what nature itself
asked of it.
Not many years ago a little over
a generation, our townspeople saw its
commercial value. Our city was then
very small, still the great river, Will
amette, was a tower of strength suf
ficient to build up not alone the city
we have today, but one of the great
est industries of the age, a process
for manufacture of paper from logs,
one of Oregon's greatest products,
still the industry called upon the for
ests for logs of no value ror other
purposes, giving to the timber busi
ness a new outlet for what had hith
erto been thought valueless timber.
This industry therefor had a great
part to play in the upbuilding of Ors
gon City, and Clackamas County and
through its steady increase in produc
tion; the timber business of the State
of Oregon. From a plant employing
50 to 75 men 20 years 'ago, over 1000
men of Oregon City and vicinity find
employment in the mills of the three
companies now doing business here
by virtue of the great everlasting pow
er at the Falls of the Willamette.
40,000 horse power are now harness
ed and with legislation equally fav
orable to employe and employer, there
is no real good reason why the mills
here should not add to their plantt
from time to time each of which calls
for at least 100 additional hands.
We have 40,000 winter month horse
power . still for this purpose. We
know what the industry has done
for us in the past. We know what
Patrick Henry said in his speech,
111 Hv. s
jj I
ij JANE ADD AM S
THE PART OF THOSE HITHERTO WITHOUT THE FRAN
CHISE. In spite of the number of American women who will vote for the
next president America ha9 not led in this as it did in two previous
movements for the advance of democratic government. It certainly
led in the worldwide effort at the end of the eighteenth century on the
part of the middle class to represent their own interests directly in na
tional parliaments. It was characterized by two dramatic revolutions,
one in, America and one in France, neither of them without great
bloodshed.
The next movement was the entrance of the working classes into
government in the middle of the nineteenth wntury, the revolutions of
1848 in Germany and the Chartists in England.
THE LATEST MOVEMENT MANIFESTING ITSELF IN VARIOUS
PARTS OF THE -WORLD SIMULTANEOUSLY IS THE ATTEMPT OF
WOMEN AT THE BEGINNING OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY TO
ENTER INTO GOVERNMENT. . '",- "V
This third worldwide revolution is happily a bloodless one. It is
imposing from the very fact that it is worldwide and sporadic. .
The
xaaa MMTvuLaZlprnm turn m omHv&t
wiMirvMiWMiwiitwmaatr x .
Noua.pmj and a PKwr'TOflU.'MEeomsd
mrr usk.im sompeu mo mkthcm ta
"There is no way to judge of the fu
ture,, but by the past." .Why not get
together citizens of Oregon City of
Clackamas County and of the state of
Oregon and foster he industry which
has done so much for us all.
Wood paper on this coast was first
manufactured at Oregon City. Ore
gon City still produces the majority
of the paper consumed on the coast.
Oregon City can continue to have this
distinction if it will but aid itself. No
one who will not help himself can
expect to be helped. Still the old Will
amette, the beatuiful Willamette of
verse and art, the Willamette which
has made Oregon City famous and
known to the entire world, continues
on its way to the sea unlnindtul of
the good it has done and is doing for
humanity.
Live Wirelets
(By Edgar Bates?
. The special election called to vote
on the proposed new city charter will
be held in July. Copies of this char
ter should be printed in pamphlet
form and one mailed to each ' voter
now, in order to give him a chance
to study the proposed changes.
Cuba needs an old fashioned knee
spanking but Uncle Sam can't say,
"This really hurts me more as it does
you."
e
The weather man says the Willam
ette will rise. Leave to old peaceful
Willamete to keep right in style with
the cost of living.
The real big circus of the summer
is scheduled at Chicago soon. There
will be a great many more than "three
rings" all going on at the same time
and 88,000 people are already scramb
ling for seats. Who will ride the ele
phant during the grand march?
Most benefits are disappointing as
far as teal entertainment is concern
ed but the affair planned for next Sun
day at the Heilig for the benefit of
our own St. Agnes Baby Home prom
ises to be an enjoyable treat.
It won't be long before an agent
for the Titanic Disaster book will be
around.
It's about time to pick out "those
graduation presents.
How many will get killed this year
at the Decoration day automobile
races at Indianapolis?
Ruef's book on political conditions
in San Francisco a few years ago on
ly conclusively proves what was gen
erally known.
Of course Miss Crocker's husband-to-be
don't care if she keeps her $10,
000 bunch of dogs. She is worth a
million, you know.
a a - a
It would be a jolly good stunt for
each member of the newly organized
Clackamas County Automobile Club
to turn over his car to the old sold
iers next Thursday to save, them the
long walk up the hill to the cemetery.
A single four for a quarter cigar
each day pays for a $1,000 insurance
policy icr your wife or mother.
Women's Suffrage
Is an
Epoch Making
Movement
By JANE ADDAMS. Hull
House. Chicago
I
T does not require a social
philosopher to draw at
tention to the fact that
out age is characterized
by an almost UNIVERSAL
ATTEMPT TO ENTER
INTO GOVERNMENT ON
L
Sporting Editor
OH STCWlfc-
A SHOT AT I
MY MP! J
Not a few people think that the
shipping of freight to Pacific Coast
points via'Panama will only start when
the big ditch is finished. For a num
ber of years every merchant in town
has been having some of his freight
shipments come that way. They are
transported on steamers from New
York to Panama, then taken overland
across the isthmus and re-loaded on
ships and taken to their destination.
Even with all this handling the freight
rates are about one-fourth to a halLof
1 what the railroad companies charge
tinent
The busiest man in town these days
is the photographer. Graduation pic
tures, youknow.
They tell us it's all off with the four
legged duck. Very few people can
stand "too much of a good thing."
PASTOR PLEADS
FOR PATRIOTISM
(Continued from page 1)
trust, established forever.
So can we come to memorial day
in these times as a day that shall not
keep alive the memories of a conflict
but shell rather commemorate the he
roes of a new era of peace. A war
that daes not establish a more perm
anent peace by bringing in a new
righteousness or a new freedom is
worse than a failure! It is an unmiti
gated evil.
War is only a last resort to force
the "wronger to render right." Un
dertaken for any other reason it is
an outrage on civilization, a blot on
the human race. No man and no na
tion is justified in any fight for ag
gression or for vengeance.
We Americans need not make the
mistake of thinking that patriotism is
a bar to a true internationalism, that
love of country means hatred of any
other county, that honor to battle
scarred veterans means love of war
and the exaltation of the military
spirit. A love of man that has no
home or country is strange and un
natural. If a man cannot love his fel
low citizens whom he has seen how
can he love the nation whom he has
not seen? If a man has no love for
the people of which he is a part how
can he love the other peoples of which
he is only a distant observer? We owe
our first duty to the land that has
borne us, nourished us, given us free
dom and a glorious heritage. It is
our privilege to be citizens of a land
which stands on such a broad plat
form of justice and. humanity that It
can apply the Golden Rule to the na
tions and fear not, a land that will
stand for the integrity of a naffon
about to be dismembered as well as
for its own; a people "whose citizens
are already of one blood with nearly
all nations of the earth" and whose
spirit is permeating the world with a
love of freedom. v
We are glad then to honor today
those who have helped through a
great conflict to extend our liberties
and broaden our humanity. Every
great national struggle has witnessed
a new birth of freedom and a new con
sciousness of the meaning of our na
tional life. Every such struggle has
cost us heavily but it has been worth
the cost.
We honor the veterans of our wars
not because we are dazzled with mil
itary glory or infatuated with daring
deeds, but because these men dared
to sacrifice themselves for their coun
try's need, because in that emergency
they were the men who made away
for liberty and dared to die when the
need of the hour,demanded lives.
aieart to Heart
Talks:
By EDWLN A. NYE.
, LOOKING FORWARD.
'I:enn'!;:i;t -r i.ofs wife."
Thai uii!i::j(.v wouiiiu. fleeing from
the di'sti-ii: f visiu-d upou the cities
of (he ;ih:i'j. Hankered for the fleshpots
she was it'.ivuig.
Looking backward, she was trans
fixed and hiiiiital into a pillar of salt.
Harsh penalty? - '
Maybe. But the story carries a val
uable lesson.
And that leson is that the golden !
age is not behind you. in the past, but
in frout of yon. in the future.
Let the dead past bury the past. You
may have reprers ooncerninsf your fail
ures or your sins, hut do not let those
regrets gel in front of you and impede
jour going.
Remember Lot's wife.
The old idea that man has fallouJ
from some great eminence to a lower
plane of life is giving way to the' new
idea that he is slowly struggling up
ward out of imperfection Into strength
of character and purity of living.
Keep your face to the front.
You are not what,yon want, to be or
what you ought to be. but you never
will be what you should be or long to
be If you go about forever mourning
on account of your mistakes and lapses.
You will le like the prisoner . who
drags behiud him his ball and chain.
Forget the things that are.lehlnd.
If you have truly, repented of your
sins the Omnipotence that has forgiven
them bas in his mercy forgotten them.
Though your sins may have been as
scarlet, they shall be white as snow.
God is through with them. Why should
you tie them on your back, and go
stumbling?
It takes time to grow'a man. '
JThe bud that Js .slowly ' unfolding
Iff
in Denver Has the Right Dope
1
t EVCftFoeUfcEfi
JVIS BOX CM
Trie "Tichborne Dole." a
I . I-1 .1 a S 1 . I
I guamt cngiisn Lnarity
Msr jf; fir fg, hrA
ir'JlM, u. iw.. Jzr f p
rV , fpkfi :fif rvfF iTh
E asrai -! ft- Ii jri 4JL,J-
t&- J'r
Photos by American Press Association.
NE of the largest landowners in the south of England, Sir Henry Alfred
Joseph Doughty-Tichborne, dispenses every year a charity whose foun
dation is said to date almost to the Norman conquest The "Tichborne
dole" consists of a gift of flour to the poor of the village of Tichborne,
Hampshire. The upper of the two photographs shows the villagers taking
home the bags of flour; the lower shows in the foreground two of the older
recipients of this quaint boimty. About 750 people participated in the last dis
tribution. - The baronetcy of Tichborne is chiefly known in this country by
reason of the famous English lawsuit tried in the middle of the last century to
test the claims of an Australian butcher, who asserted that he was the rightful
neir to the title and the vast estates which went with it The suit, which in
Mime of its aspects much resembled the Kimmel case, was decided against the
claimant, who was found to he an impostor and was condemned to a long term
of Hnprisonitiwul at hard iHtxir
cahiiot "be fxperteii toshov forth llie
sweetness of the full trrown flower.
Flowers are not made.
They grow.
And so. of humans. You are in proc
ess of fashioning. The lily is not the
less beautiful because its roots are in
the mud. " .
Do not weaken yourself by sorrow
for "your misdoings. Look not back
ward to the cities of the plain where
sordid sin abounds, but forward to
ward the better country toward which
you are traveling.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS y
Anna A. and Lucious J. French to
R. R. Hannaford, land in section 16,
towship 3 south, range 5 east; $10. -
Theodore and Francis Huefert to
Perry A. Twitchell, 25 acres of sec
tion 1, township 2 south, range 3 east;
$4500.
Nellie M. Shipley to V. L. Taylor,
.82 acre of section 33, township 2 j
south, range 7 west; $100.
Ellen M. Rockwood to Harvey I
O'Bryan Inestment Company, lot's 29, j
30, block. 5, Ardenwald; $1000.
Anna and Edd tSoller to David Ma
thews et al, 4.10 acres of setion 28,
township 3 south, range 4 east; $1
C. E. Nash and Carrie Nash to
William Schunk, 10 acres of Couftty
Addition, also land in Falls View Ad
dition to Oregon-City; also land in
section 1 3, township 3 south, range 1
east; $10.
William Schunk to August and Min
nie Schvtnk, 10 acres of section 13,
township 3 south, range 1 east; $10.
J. TJ. and Anna Campbell to Aug
ust and Minnie Schunk, 15 acres of
section S. S. White D. L. C. No. 21,
42, section 12, township 3 south, range
1 east; $1.
William H. and Pearl W. Reed to
Nicholas and John C Sleret, 80 ac
res of section 30, township 1 south,
range 4 east; $2000.
Homer and Rosa A. Kruse to Ruth
eana Knuckey, 5.4 acres of sections
7 and 18, township 3 south, range 1
east; $10.
A. E. Holcomb and Tillie J. Hol
comb to J. L. Jones, 5 acres of sec
tions 8, 9, 16, 17, township 2 south,
range 2 east; also 2.95 acres of Cran
fied D. L. C; $900.
Hotel Arrivals
The following are registered at the
Electric Hotel: William H. Blanche
Mayers, August, Dhorghe, Molalla;ee
and wife, Willamette; Mr. and Mrs.
Mayers, August, Dhorghe, Molalla;
Joseph Dhorgh, Frank Dhorghe, Mol
lalla; Grant Mumpower, Gus Bugren,
W. E. Mumpower, M. J .Ludwig, Sa
quit, Cal.; W. S. Bagley, C. E. Spence
Oregon City; Ens Comington, Aber
deen, Wash. ; Elga Sowers, John Brok
er, Ernest Jones, M. Barton, Portland;
A. outhit, E. E. Pearson, North Yaki
ma; Fred Schafer, Molalla; E. "Mas
sic and wife, Portland; Miss Anna
Hubbard, Woodburn; Mae Dickerson,
Cheney, Wash.; W. E. Mumpower, W.
H. Miller. Woodburn, Mrs. G. Gebhart,
Frank Stebbing, Seattle; J. A. Grant,
Seattle.
I "" . L 'I t 1 1
N I A now- x 1 x-j-n
TO BE l
The Rose Society, at a meeting in
the Commercial Club Monday evening
completed arrangements for the big
festival to be given June 8. It was
decided to hold the Children's"parade
in the morning at 11 o'lclock instead
of the sfternoon as had been, announ
ced. Handsome prizes will be offer
ed for the best floats and it is expect
ed that the parade will be superior to
that of iast year. The automobile pa
rade will start at 2 o'clock in the aft
ernoon. Almost all the owners of ma
chines in the city have announced
that they will enter their machines,
and the pageant for the number of
cars in line, will not be inferior to
the one that will be held in Portland
during the Rose Carnival there. There
will be prizes for the best decorated
automobiles.
Wife Seeks Divorce
Hazel L. Shumacher Monday filed
suit for divorce against Frank J. Shu
macher. They were married in De
troit, August 29, 1909. Desertion is
alleged. The plaintiff asks for the
custody of their child. Latourette &
Latourette represent the plaintiff.
A small classified ad will rent that
vacant room. - '
Wants, For Sale, Etc
wU be iaMrtad 4 t Mat s worn, tiwti
htwrtto. half a cant additional faner
tlerea. one taefa eaia, U par moctth. baa
iawh oara, (4 uaasj si yar ntoata.
Cash savat aaovmpamr araar untasa ane
baa an apes aaaonat with aha popar. Ma
(Humeial lujiiuualMMtr far arrara; vharv
errors aeaw tree ourreetea netiae wtsl at
STtetea far aatraa. MBiaviai eharce 6c
LOST.
LOST: Friday fleur-de-lis watch fob
between Main street and Jackson.
Return to First National Bank. Re
ward. LOST: Saturday by elderly woman
small gray purse containing gold
and silver. Finder leave at Enter
prise. Reward.
FOR RENT.
FOR RENT: Paint or carriage shop
suitable place for storing furniture
on Main street Telephone Main
2601.
FOR RENT: Good 7 room house
Modern. Inquire 304 Fourth street
corner High. . ,
WANTKa
WANTED: People that are loyers of
curios to call at my store. I have
one of the best lines in the valley.
I will buy or sell anything of value
Have a fine line of second hand
furniture. Geo. Young.
WANTED: Steady, experienced girl
for housework. No cooking. Must
give refernces. Good wages.- Ad
dress care Enterprise office.
GIRL WANTED at the Falls Confec
tionary. "
MISCELLANEOUS.
DRESSMAKING and all kinds of sew
ing, Mrs. C. A. Davenport, 1311 Main
Street, between 13th and 14th
streets.
WOOD AND COAL.
OREGON CITY WOOD AND FUELf
CO., F. M. Bluhm. Wood and coal
delivered to all parts of the city.
SAWING A SPECIALTY. Phone
your ordw Pacific SK02, Home
FOR BALE.
FOR SALE: Furniture of 6 rooms
used only 6 months, in one lot or
by piece. House for rent Best of
furniture. Phone Main 3032.
FOR SALE: 3-year-old colt, standard
bred, sound, well broken and per
fectly safe; also new buggy, and
two sets of harness. A bargain for
quick buyer. William Gardiner,
Oregon City.
FOR SALE OR TRADE: Ford run
about in good condition.Price $300,
Elliott's Garage, Fourth and Main
streets.
FOR SALE: Fresh milk cow. In
quire Mrs. R. H. Owens, Beaver
Creek, Phone Beavfer Creek.
FOR SALS REAL ESTATE.
FOR SALE: 5 room bungalow, bath
and modern conveniences. Inquire
G. B. Dimick, Oregon City.
Bland Acres
"IDEAL ORCHARD, GARDEN AND
POULTRY TRACTS
Bland Acres is situated just west
from Oregon City, near the Will
amette River and on . Electric Car
line. -
The soil is of the Red Shot Free
nature, loose enough to work easy;
yet contains enough percentage of
clay to give, it a good moisture re
taining capacity.
The property has a good eleva
tion, overlooking the Tualatin and
Willamette Valleys and slopes well
making tiling unnecessary. ,
We have had this soil examined
by an expert and he reports it
IDEAL for apples. Prunes, Cherries,
Grape, Berries andVegetables.
We are offereing this land at $140
per acre and up, in tracts of 5 or
more acres and practically' your
own terms. .. .
- Here is your opportunity to get
a Beautiful, Sightly Country home
and land that will raise anything..
Write or come in andee us about
it.
The OREGON IRON & STEEL CO.
Phone Main 1410, 338 Sherlock Bldg.,
- . ' Portland, Or.
NOTICES.
Summons
In the Circuit Court of the state of
Oregon for the County of Clack
amas. Hazel E. Shumacher, Plaintiff, vs.
Frank J. Shumacher, Defendant.
To Frank J. Shumacher, Defend
ant: In the name' of the State of Ore
gon, you are hereby required to ap-
Your Opportunity
"Is In
L0TS
Sightly located, level and clear,
right in the center of town, can
be had for
y $ 1 25.00 and Up
This is the one good buy of the
season.
Phone or Write
GEORGE H, GREGORY
Molalla
pear and answer the complaint filed s
against you in the above entitled
suit, on or before the 10th day of
July, 1912, and if you fail to move,
demur or answer, plaintiff will take
a decree against you, forever dis
solving the bonds of matrimony
heretofore and now existing be
- tween the plaintiff and yourself and
for such and further relief in the.
premises as to the Court may seem
just and and equitable.
Service of this summons is made
upon you by publication in" pursu-
ance to an order of the Honorable
J. U. Campbell, Circuit Judge of
Clackamas County, Oregon, made
on the 27th day of May, 1912, or
dering such publication in the Morn
Enterprise, once a week, for six
consecutive weeks, the first publi
cation being May 28th, 1912, and
the last publication being July 9th
1912.
LATOURETTE & LATOURETTE
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
Summons
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon, for the County of Cacka
mas. E. F. Widup, Plaintiff, versus
Helen Widup, Defendant
"To Helen Widup, Defendant:
' In the name of the State of Ore
gon, you are hereby required to
appear and answer to the complaint
filed against you in the above en-,
tited suit on or before the 11th day '
of June, 112, and if you fail to an
swer. Dlaintiff will take a decree
against you, forever dissolving the
bonds of matrimony heretofore and
now existing between the plaintiff
and you and for such other ana
further relief in the premises as
the Court may deem just and equifc
able as prayed for in the complaint
filed herein.
Service of this summons is made
upon you by publication in pursu
ance to an order of the Honorable
J. U. Campbell, Judge of the Cir
cuit Court for Clackamas County,
State of Oregon, made April 29th,
1912, directing such publication in
the Morning Enterprise, once a
week for six successive weeks, the
first publicatin being April 30th,
1912, and the last the 11th day of
June 1912.
J. T. ELLIS, Attorney for Plaintiff.
oummons
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon for the County of Clacka
mas. Grace P. Hubbell, Plaintiff, ver
sus Calvin R. Hubbell, Defendant
To Calvin R. Hubbel, Defendant:
In the name of the State of Ore
gon, you are hereby required to
appear and answer to the complaint
filed against you in the above en
titled suit on or before the 11th
day of June, 1912, and if you fail
to answer, plaintiff will take a de
cree against you, forever dissolv
ing the bonds of matrimony here
tofore and now existing between
the plaintiff and you and for such
other and further relief in the pre
mises as the Court may deem just
and equitabe as prayed for in the
complaint filed herein.
Service of this summons is made
upon you by publication in pursu-
ance to an order of the Honorable
J. U. Campbell, Judge of the Cir
cuit Court, for Clackamas County,
State of Oregon, made April 29th,
1912, directing such publication in
the Morning Enterprise, once a
week for six successive weeks, the
. first publication being April 30th,
1912, and the last the 11th day of
June, 1912.
J. T. ELLIS, Attorney for Plaintiff.
Summons
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon for Clackamas County.
Floa Holman, Plaintiff vs. J. Hardy
Holman, Defendant.
To, J. Hardy Holman, the defend
ant above named:
In the name of the State of Ore
gon, your are hereby required to ap-
nfnr and answer the comDlalnt filed
j against you in the above entitled
court and cause, on or Deiore, six
week3 from the date of the first pub
lication of this Summons, and if you
fail to so appear and answer, the
plaintiff will apply to the Court for
the relief prayed for in her complaint
towit: For a DECREE dissolving
the bonds of matrimony now exist
ing between the above named plaint
iff and defendant, and giving and
granting the plaintiff the care and
custody of the minor children, the
issue of said marriage, viz. Laveta
Holman and Lavern Holman, and for
such other and further relief as to
the Court may seem proper.
This Summons is published in pur
suance of an order of the Hon J.
U. Campbell, judge of the above en
titled Court, made and entered on
the lt.h day of April, 1912, specify
ing that the same be published for
six consecutive weeks.
D. P. PRICE, Attorney for Plaintiff.
Date of first publication, April 16,
1912. o .
Data of last publication, May 2S.
1912.
Molalla"