2 MORNING ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1912. i s VTWJPT " rw! "' ' ?' v i THE FOURTH MORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON CITY, OREGON E. E. BRODIE, Editor and Publisher. J "Entered as second-class matter Jan uary , at tne post ornce at uregon City, Oregon, under the Act of March 3, 1879." TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One Tear, by mail $3.00 Six Months, by mail 1.50 Four Months, by mail 1.00 Per Week, by carrier 10 CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER 5 THE MORNING ENTERPRISE S $ Is on sale at the following stores $ every day: S S Huntley Bros. Drugs G S ' Main Street. $ J. W. McAnulty. Cigars S ' Seventh and Main. S B. B. Anderson 3 '4 Main, near Sixth. 3 $ M. E. Dunn Confectionery $ Next door to P. O. S City Drug Store S - Electric Hotel. $ Schoenborn Confectionery 3 $ Seventh and J. Q. Adams. ? - July 3 In American History. 1775 Washington took command of the colonials at Cambridge. 1803 Decisive day at Gettysburg; Pickett's charge repulsed. 1898 Cervera's Spanish squadron de stroyed by the American fleet after escaping from Santiago harbor. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. (From noon today to noon tomorrow.) Sun sets 7:34. rises 4:34. Evening stars: Mars, Jupiter, Mercury. Morn ing stars: Venus, Saturu. To Make Murder Unpopular Massachusetts has an excellent plan for cutting down the number of mur derers. It cuts the murderers off just as soon as it gets the requisite evi American W oman Has Driven the Servant From the Home Democ- f'f ZT rf Jg w " ' Lacking ; "tf By IDA M. TARBELL. NO other hon est work so BELITTLES a woman social ly as housework performed for money. It is the only field of labor which has scarcely felt the touch of the mod ern labor movement ; the only one where the hours, conditions and wages are not being attacked gen erally ; the only one . in which THERE IS NO ORGANIZA TION OR STANDARDIZA TION, NO TRAINING, NO REGULAR ROAD OF PROG RESS. ' : It is the only field of labor in which there seems to bo a general tendency to abandon the democrat ic notion and return frankly to the standards of the aristocratic re gime. The multiplication of livery, the tipping system, the terms of address, - all show "an increasing IMITATION OF THE OLD WORLD'S METHODS. " Unhappily enough, they " are used "rith little or none of the old tV fSb? OF JULY PARADE dence against them. Pleas of emo tional insanity will not save them if proof of their guilt is obtained. Brain storm, temporary or protracted, has shielded many men and women slayers in the forty-three years which have passed since the temporary men tal irresponsibiliity was successfully invoked in Macfarlane's favor in New York, but that excuse does not get acceptance in the Bay State. "Hanging for murder is played out in New York," exclaimed Jack Rey nolds, an obscure slayer in the big city a third of a century ago. That immunity did not work in his case, because he put up a challenge to jury and judge which they dared not dodge. He suffered the extreme pen alty, not so much for his crime as for his truth telling, for a score of mur derers in that state had escaped within Reynolds' recollection, al though brought to trial. Richeson's murder of the Linnell girl in Massachusetts was worse than a crime, it was a blunder. Had it been committed a few miles away, in New . York, he probably would have been acquitted before this time, on some sort of subterfuge, and be walk ing the streets a free man. A com parative stranger there, Richeson per haps was excusable for not knowing that it enforced honestly, rigorously every statute which was on its books, bad and good alike. Had he taken the precaution to consult any of the natives or old residents before he committed his crime his mistake would have been avoided. Gov. Foss does not believe in capital punish ment, but he enforces the law as he finds it. A person can hate the death penalty and still believe that no mur derer of recent times deserved it more than does the miscreant whose sentence Gov Foss refused to com mute. Old World Methods Employed Author and Suffragist world's ease. Be- imitations and not natural growths, they, of course,icannot be. More serious still is the relation which has been shown to exist be tween CRIMINALITY AND HOUSEHOLD OCCUPA TIONS. Nothing, indeed, which recent investigation has establish ed ought to startle the American woman more. Contrary to public opinion, it is not the factory and . shop which are making women offenders of all kinds. It is the HOUSE HOLD. ' - THE AMERICAN WOMAN IS A VERY POOR DEMOCRAT, AND BY HER UNWILLINGNESS TO DEMOC RATIZE HER HOUSEHOLD AND HER LACK OF INTEREST IN THE CONDUCT OF ITS AFFAIRS SHE HAS , DRIVEN THOSE WHO IN STINCTIVELY FEEL THAT HOUSE HOLD LABOR WOULD BE THE BETTER TASK WERE NOT THE COST OF PERFORMING IT TOO GREAT INTO THE SHOP AND FACTORY. y.5y fe $500,000 PLANT IV BE LOCATED HERE The Swiss American Products Company, which will invest $500,000 in a plant, is thinking of locating in Oregon City. George H. Webb, Pres ident of the company, through O. E. Freytag, secretary of the Publicity Committee, is endeavoring to find a suitable location. The Live Wires also are giving their assistance. The company must have 30,000 pounds of milk daily, which must be doubled in six months. It will take from 1,500 to 2,000 cows to produce the milk. Freytag will do his utmost to obtain all necessary information and data in order to have the company locate its plant in this city. He would like the farmers to let him know how much milk they could supply to the pro posed plant - . PAPER MILL TO BUILD ADDITION (Continued from page 1) per rewinders. The building and equipment will involve an expendi ture of about $80,000 and the contract has already been let to the Hurley Mason Co., which has constructed some of the sky-scrayers in Portland and 'is now engaged in finishing the new building of Lipman, Wolfe & Co. The structure will have a frontage on Fourth street of 40 feet and' a depth on Water street of 125 feet. It will be two stories in height with a full basement, 14 feet in the clear, and will be as near fire proof as steel and concrete can make it. No other building in Oregon City will be as near fire proof as this one. The floors and even the roof will be con structed of reinforced concrete. The sand and gravel required in the construction have already been order ed, and actual construction of the building will commence the latter part of July, just as soon as the sup ply of paper now in the wooden build ing now on the property is removed. It is expected that the work of con struction will be completed within four months, and the machinery will be installed immediately thereafter. The basement will be water proof, preventing the possibility of the con tents being injured by high water. The floors will carry a load of 350 pounds to the square inch, with a fac tor of safety of three to one. The machines will be placed on the top floor, which will be as strong and rigid as the other floors, and the first story and basement will.be used for storage purposes. The top floor will be well lighted by three large sky lights and the entire building will have windows on the South and West sides. The machines for the manufacture of paper towels is the first to be in stalled on the Pacific Coast, and the Hawley Pulp & Paper Co. is the sec ond concern on the coast to use print ing presses for printing fruit wrappers-, the only other establishment be ing located at Los Angeles. The Hawley Pulp & Paper Co. has been in operation a little more than three years, and has made wonderful strides in paper making along special lines. STARVED CALVES MAKE ROBBER COWS. Are beef breeds of cattle more pre potent than dairy breeds? This ques tion has come to me after examining many animals. On the range, at least 90 per cent of the beef type from good siles are good feeding stockers. In swine and sheep the percentage of good animals is equally large. Here the excepion is usually found in ani mals whose growth has been retard ed by some unfortunate . condition, generally lack of food. On the range the "dogie" or moth erless calf is ill-shaped and never makes a profitable feeder. The "pee wee" lamb may be simply a late lamb, but in most cases is one whose Doay was shrunken and "set" by lack of food. Many a pee wee derives its bird name from short feed and long drives around a forest reserve. My observation has been, says a writer in Farm and Home, that where a robber cow is found, it is safe to assume there has been a robbed calf. Many or the vicissitudes of the aver- THE Southern Pacific Railroad of-Mexico traversing the states of SONOROA - SINALOA - TEPIC - JALISCO. ; Gives Access to OPPORTUNITIES FOR WEALTH ;v " ' - . .- , : ' -. in .-. . " ' Cattle, farming, Mining; Timber - Let us list you for a copy of our new "booklet soon to be pub lished. .- - " ".';'. H. LAWTON,' G. P. A., Guaymas, Sonora, Mexico. - CHAUTAUQUA TO BE MECCA OF LABOR Gladstone Park will be a mecca for union labor of Oregon July 20 when John Mitchell, ex-president of the United Mine Workers and Vice-President of the American Federation of Labor will deliver an address. Secre tary Cross, of the Willamette Valley Chautauqua Assembly has received hundreds of letters from members of union labor inquiring about the lec ture. Mr. Mitchell's subject will be "The Philosophy .Purposes and Ideals of the Trades Union Movement." The lecture has been warmly . received throughout the United States, and the crowd the day it ia delivered probab ly will be the banner one of the Chau tauqua. Seth Low, ex-Mayor of New York City, has characterized the ad dress of Mr. Mitchell as being the best explanation of the union labor movement that has ever been written and that Mr. Mitchell is a pleasing and forceful speaker. It is expected that thousands of union laboring men ,in Portland will hear the lecture. age skim milk calf. Every case of scours is simply indigestion, or in other words, a training of the stom ach and digestive organs to fail to assimilate food. That pail of cold or soured germ-laden milk that was re fused for a time until hunger made it' de'sirable . is training the stomach still further along the same line that made pee . wees and dogies. Many little calves are prisoners, in dark pens, with fithy bedding, ,and with a ration unfitted to their growth and ability to property digest food. The calf, improperly raised, comes back at its owner as the robber cow, and we blame the cow rather than ourselves, which is much more human than humane,-and more of a solace than financial gain. FOR THE KIDNEYS A Guaranteed Treatment. Back If It Fails Money Kidney diseases are more preva lent than is generally supposed, and are not always recognized as such. What was. at first but a slight de rangement of the kidneys often re sults in indigestion, rheumatism, an aemia, chronic and very painful head ache, neuralgia, eye weakness, and other diesases of a most aggravating type. Therefore it is highly import ant and absolutely necessary that the kidneys and the urinary system be kept ia an active and healthy con dition. After a thorough experience with the most successful forms ofkidney treatments, we .are confident that the one remedy which embraces the most desirable, safe and efficacious cura tive qualities, so necessary to the successful treatment and positive er adication of kidney diseases in gen eral, is Rexall Kidney Pills. We are so positive that Rexall Kid ney Pills are unexcelled, and that they will do all we claim, that we sell them with our own personal guaran tee that they shall not cost the user a cent if they should fail to give en tire satisfaction. We particularly recommend Rexall Kidney Pills for kidney ailments that resist ordinary treatment. We be lieve, if taken according to directions with regularity and persistency for a reasonable length of time, they will positively remove all symptoms and effect permanent relief. Surely we could not more strongly demonstrate our faith in Rexall Kid ney Pills, and our generous guaran tee should convince the most sceptic al that we would not dare make such a statement except we know what we are talking about. .We urge you to try Rexall Kidney Pills at our risk. Price 50c. Sold in this community only at our store, The Rexall Store. Huntley Bros. Co. REV. SMITH TO PREACH Rev. E. A. Smith ,will' preach at Wilamette Wednesday evening, sub ject, "My Country." Good music and patriotic s.ongs. The Logan church now stands upon a new foundation. The next thing is the painting. An Extravagant Comparison. "There doesn't seem to be any hustle at ail about that boy of Dascomb's." "Hustle! Say. If there was any chance to fix up a race between Steve Dasromb and a glacier I'd back the glacier." Cleveland Plain Dealer. 5 E TRACK IS SHOCKED "Nellie," a horse belonging to Mrs. Ganong, of Stringtown near Cane mah while being driven by Beldon Ganong. Monday evening at 5:30 o'clock, suffered from an electric shock while crossing the car track near Canemah. The hose after fall ing attempted to rise, but suffered from a second shock. Mr. Ganong was accompanied by Mrs. Anna Howard, and as the horse fell they jumped from the buggy In falling the horse broke the shaft. The animal was fin ally drawn to its feet by the driver There have been many complaints about this crossing. At the time the horse belonging to Mrs. Ganong was shocked a car was passing the station in the southern part of Canemah. Hit Worry.' "" "My poor wife! Buried on a Friday too: 1 dope it woD't bring me bad luck!" Pele Mele. Wants, For Sale, Etc Notices under these classified headings will be inserted at one cent a word, first insertion, half a cent additional inser tions. One inch card, $2 per month; half inch card,- (4 lines), $1 per month. Cash must accompany order unless one has an open account with the paper. No financial responsibility for errors; where errors occur free corrected notice will he printed for patron. Minimum charge 15c. WANTED WANTED: A chance to show you how quick a For Rent ad will fill that vacant .house or room. WANTED: 2 or 3 high school boys or girls to work during vacation Address E. B. care Morning Enter prise. WANTED: Experienced applicants to fill place as teacher for District No. 61. Address Miss Arlie Gibson Oregon City Route No. 2. WANTED: 10 minutes of your time to look over the finest lines of curios in the valley. We buy or sell any thing of value. Most everything in the second hand line for sale. Geo. Jfoung. FOR SALE FOR SALE: Combination "Globe" grain and vetch separator. Price $40.00. Inquire of Daugherty Bros. Molalla, Oregon. FOR SALE: Heavy frame building, . 40 ft. by 60 ft. two story. Located 4th and Water streets. Inquire Haw ley Pulp & Paper Co. YOUNG 3000 'pound team with har ness 31 in., wagon with bed. For sale cheap. Write' O. E. Menke, Oregon City, Route No. 4. FOR SALE: Sawmill rough and dressed lumber of all kinds. Let me figure on your lumber bills. Also 500 loads of 16 inch slab-wood for - sale cheap or team wanted to haul wood on shares. George Lammers Oregon City Route No. 3, or tele phone Home Phone Beaver Creek. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. FOR SALE: At a bargain 9 room house, bath, hot and cold water, up stairs and downstairs. 5 lots and a barn. Address "R" care Enterprise. BARGAIN FOR SALE: 5 room bungalow, one half block from postoffice, J1250. Thos. E. Gault, Gladstone, Oregon. FOR SALE New Cottage. Inquire Schrader's Bakery, Seventh street. FOR SALE: 5 room bungalow, bath and modern conveniences. Inquire G. B. Dimick, Oregon City. PATENTS Peter Haberlin, Patent Attorney. Counselor in Patent and Trade Mark Causes. Inventors assisted and pat ents obtained in all countries. Man ufacturers advised and infringment litigation conducted. Expert re ports. Briefs for counsel, Validity searches. Trade marks designed and protected. Labels, designs and copyrights registered. Prelimin ary consultations without charge. 326 Worcester Bldg., Portland, Ore. Send for free booklets. WOOD AND COAL. ORKGON CITY WOOD AND FUEL CO.. F. M. Bluhm. Wood and coal delivered to all parts of the city. SAWING A SPECIALTY. Phone your ordrB Pacific 3B02, Home B UN WANTED Female Help. WANTED: Middle aged woman on , farm as housekeeper. Address "M" care Enterprise. . HELP WANTED MALE Classify under Help Wanted Male.vei Bright boy with wheel, steady work, good opportunity. "W" care Enter prise. BIDS WANTED Sealed bids will be received at the of fice of County Clerk, Clackamas County, Oregon, up to July 15th, 1912, at 5 o'clock P. M. for 60 cds. of 4 ft. wood, to be delivered at the Court House by September . 30th, 1912. Bid3 will be received for both old growth fir and No. 1, Second growth fir. The Court reserves' the right to reject any and all bids. Dated July 1st, 1912. W. L. MULVEY, County Clerk. Notice for Bids. Notice is hereby given that sealed pro posals for the furnishing of 3000 yards of Crushed Rock, will be re ceived by the City Recorder until the 6th day of July, 1912 at 4 o'clock p. m. This rock shall possess quanti ties of uniform texture free from dirt, dust, decomposed or porous for . mations and shall have a specific gravity of 2.85 to 2.88 and shall be practically uniform as to size and as near to a cube in form as pos sible. It shall be crushed to such sizes as shall be ordered by the Street Commissioner and shall be deliver ed in "such quantities and at such places within Oregon City as shall be required by the Street Commis sioner of Oregon City. Each proposal shall be accompan ied by a certified check equal to the sum of five per cent of the total amount of the bid, which shall be subject to forfeiture to Oregon City in case of the failure of the suc cessful bidder to enter into a writ ten contract for furnishing said ma terial, if called upon so to do, with in the time specified for the same. The right to reject any and all bids is hereby reserved to Oregon City. This notice is published pursuant to an order of the City Council of Oregon City made and entered at a special meeting thereof held on the 24th day of June, 1912. L. STIPP, Recorder. NOTICES Notice of Application- for Liquor Li cense Notice is hereby given that I will at the next regular meeting of the City Council apply for a license to sell liquor at my place of business 422 Main Street for a period of three months. A. KLEBE. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned as executrix o the es tate of James Wesley Douglass, de ceased, has filed her final account in the County Court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County, ana that Saturday the 27th day of July 1912, at 10 o'clock a. m. at the court room of said court has been set by the said court as the time and place for hearing objections thereto and the settlement thereof. Dated June 25th, 1912. VIOLA A. DOUGLASS. Executrix of the Estate of James . Wesley Douglass, deceased. Gordon E. Hayes, Attorney for Executrix. I The Pilot Wheel of business operated by a man careful of his finances will turn the helm so as to b-ing the commercial ship into the harbor of profit. Guide your finance with the Check Ac . count Plan of this bank. THE BANK OF OREGON CITY OLDEST BANK IN D. C. -LATOURETTE, President. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON CAPITAL $50,000.00 Transacts a General Banking Business. Open from? A. M. to 3 P. M. PORTLAND OFFICE PHONES Main 4314 A-2568 CLARENCE" Attorney SOELECTRIC BUILDING 3. H. Mattley NEW AND SECOND HAND FURNITURE Stoves, Ranges, Tinware, Granitware, Shelf Hard- ware and Notions : BUY AND SELL FOR CASH . 1010 Seventh Street Summons In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County. Catherine E. Moyer, Plaintiff, vs. ' Vincent Y; Moyer, Defendant, To Vincent Y. Moyer, the above named defendant: In the name of the State of Ore gon, you are hereby required to ap pear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit on or before the 20th day of July, 1912, and if you fail to appear and answer for want thereof the plaintifE will apply to the Court for the relief prayed for in her said complaint, to-wit: For a decree of this Court dissolv ing the marriage contract now exist ing between' plaintiff and defend ant upon the ground of desertion, and for such other and further re . lief as to the Court may seem equit-. . able. This Summons is served upon you by publication thereof for a period of six consecutive and successive weeks in the Morning Enterprise a newspaper of general circulation published at Oregon City, Clacka mas County, Oregon, in pursuance of an order of the Hon. J. U. Cam pbell, Judge of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the Fifth Judicial District, made on the 4tb day of June, 1912. The date of the first publication of this summons is June 5th, 1912, and the last publication is July 17th 1912. Dated June 4th, 1912. GORDON E. HAYES, Attorney for Plaintiff. Summons In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County. Esther McNamee, Plaintiff, vs. Leo McNamee, Defendant, To Leo McNamee, the above nam ed defendant: In the name of the State of Ore gon, you are hereby required to ap pear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit on or before the 20th day of July, 1912, and if you fail to appear and answer for want thereof ao plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief prayed for in her com plaint, to-wit: For a decree of this Court de solving the marriage contract now existing between plaintiff and - de fendant upon the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment and person al indignities, and for the care, cus tody and control of their minor child, Marie McNamee, and for euch other and further relief as to the Court may seem equitable. This Summons is published by order of the Hon. J. U. Campbell, Judge of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the Fifth Judic ial District made and entered on the 4th day of June, 1912, in and by which order it is prescribed that this summons be published for a period of six consecutive and suc cessive weeks in the Morning En terprise, a newspaper of general circulation published at Oregon City in Clackamas County Oregon. The date of the first publication of this Summons is June 5th, 1912, and the last publication is July 17th 1912. Dated June 4th, 1912. GORDON E. HAYES, Attorney for Plaintiff. Summons In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Clackamas County. Ethel Nelson, Plaintiff, vs. Arth ur Nelson, defendant. To Arthur -Nelson, defendant: In the name of the State of Ore gon, you are hereby required to ap pear and answer the complaint filed against -you in the above entitled suit within six weeks after the first publication hereof, the 26th day of June, 1912, and the last publication , August 7, 1912, and if you fail to so appear or answer for want there of the plaintiff herein will apply to the above entitled Court for the re lief prayed for in her complaint, to wit for a decree of this Court for ever dissolving the bonds of matri mony now and heretofore existing between herself and defendant and for a further decree giving unto -said defendant the care, custody and control of Pauline Nelson, minor child. This Summons is published pur suant to an order of the Hon R. B. Beatie Judge of the County Court, made and entered on the 25th day of June, 1912, directing that the summons in this suit be published for six consecutive weeks in the Morning Enterprise and that , the first publication thereof be made June 26th, 1912, and the last pub lication thereof the 7th day of Aug ust, 1912. WHEELOCK & WILLIAMS. Marquam Bldg., Portland, Oregon, Attorneys for Plaintiff. MISCELLANEOUS. HOW would you like' to talk with 1400 people about that bargain you have in Real Estate. Use the Enter prise. CLACKAMAS COUNTY F. J. MYER, Cashier. OREGON CITY RESIDENCE PHONE Main 3 L. EATON At Law PORTLAND, OREGON I