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About Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1912)
2 SCOOP THE CUB REPORTER Vo vas coop-vour- sow voue theJ -zM ' - 'Boss -You play first BASEBALU LESSON WIU FlRSr BASEMAN I ffh V 9 ) AWHtl,-AND ILL.' BE" N 'W& posmoH AMD xVl CrOINCr "To V""" SEE HOW FST I WZK OF RST BASEMAN- SUPOU A WUD , ' ) I CAN A S Mf 0rr 'F )S ME RUN S MORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON CITY, OREGON E. E. BRODIE, Editor and Publisher. "Entered as second-class matter Jan uary 9, 1911, at the post office at Oregon City, Oregon, under the Act of March 3, 1879." TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One Year, by mail $3.00 Six Months, by mail 1.60 Four Months, by mail 1.00 Per Week, by carrier 10 CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER S THE MORNING ENTERPRISE S S is on sale at the following storea every day: S Huntley Bros. Drugs 3 Main Street. ' S J. W. McAnulty. Cigars $ $ ' Seventh and Main. $ E. B. Anderson S Main, near Sixth. $ M. E. Dunn Confectionery 3 $ Next door to P. O. S S City Drug Store 3 $ Electric Hotel. $ Schoenborn Confectionery 8 S Seventh and J. Q. Adams. ? July 23 In American History. 1793 Roger Sherman, "signer." died; born 1721. 1816 Charlotte Saunders Cushman, celebrated actress, born in Boston; died 1870. 1885 General U. S. Grant died in the Drexel cottage at Mount McGreg or, N. Y.; bom 1S22. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. (From noon today to noou tomorrow.) Sun sets 7:24. rises 4:47. Evening stars: Mars, Jupiter, Mercury, Venus. Morning star: Saturn. TEN MILE AUTO LAW It is urged by autoists that the may or veto the ten mile an hour auto or dinance which is now in his hands and that he return with his recomenda tion that "fifteen miles" be inserted in place of "ten miles." If a ten mile bill is passed, and enforced, all our autoists it is declared, and everyone coming through from Portland by auto, will be in the "jug." On our streets an auto cannot go 10 miles an hour on high gear, the autoists allege and surely it is not the intent of the Mannish Manners of Modern College Girls Destroy ing Ideal Type of W omanhood N By the Rev. Dr. FRANCIS E. CLARK. T"IIE lack of spiritual training received by the girl grad uate of modern times has a tendency to ward the DE STRUCTION OF THE BEST TRADITIONS WOMAN HOOD. ' I believe that women should be physically perfect and that sound bodies should be developed with sound minds. No one can minimize the im portance of CAREFUL TRAIN ING along these lines, but in finitely more important is the growth of the same spiritual strength that our grandmothers and mothers gave to the upbuild ing of civilization. MANNISH MANNERS. UNCOUTH AND OFTEN ALMOST VULGAR SPEECH SEEM TO HAVE BECOME A CHARACTERISTIC OF THE MOD ERN COLLEGE GIRL. OF city "dads" to have all machines run through the city like snails. Fifteen miles an hour is a decent safe and sane speed, the automobilists assert, and if such a law should be passed and enforced anyone having know ledge thereof or not should be arrest ed for greater speed is not needed within a city's limits. OF MUTUAL INTEREST The meeting of the Commercial Club tonight will bring out some very interesting facts. The Southern Pa cific Company will be represented with an explanation of its intentions : East and West Side, and when the people get together they will no doubt know all before the meeting is over. It is to be hoped that some one from the Government or Portland Railway, Light & Power Company of fices will explain what Commercial Club members can do to hurry mat ters along on the locks question. County Division Antis will also have their say, and a line of defense will no doubt be figured out along systematic lines to the end that old Clackamas County will remain as it is the best, if not the largest coun ty in the state of Oregon. The weather man needs a vacation. He seems to have lost track of time and seasons. We had a . fine winter and spring but after a touch of sum mer he suddenly delivered a lost pack age intended for April or May as far as we city people are concerned all right, but our country brothers have trouble enough without having to re handle all their hay. , Wake up it is summer. Old Time Remedies. Strange as it may seem to some, the ingredients of the witches' caldron in "Mao!eth." at least a part of them, were once standard remedies among Europeans. In the tenth and eleventh centuries a sovereign cure for ague was the swallowing of a small toad th:it had been choked to death on St. John's eve. and a splendid remedy for rheumatism was to fasten the bands of clothing with pins that bad been stuck into the flesh of either a toad or a frog. Physiciaus frequently recom mended the water from a toad's brain for mental affections and that a live toad be rubbed over the diseased parts as a cure for the quinsy. Founder of the United Society of Christian Endeavor The modern education of wo men is rapidly working toward the ELIMINA TION OF THE GENTLE, SPIRITUAL AND ALTO GETHER LOV ABLE TYPE OF WOMAN HOOD that ha3 ennobled man hood and been the greatest of all civilizing factors in the history of the world. Physical and intellectual devel opment are necessary, but when both become so important in the education of women that all other womanly attainments are forgot ten we may well be ALARMED FOR THE FUTURE OF OUR HOMES AND INSTITUTIONS, The slang of the college girl of to day and her AFFECTATION OF MANNISH MANNERS OF SPEECH AND DRESS are abominable. MORNING ENTERPRISE TUESDAY, JULY Lesson No. FORUM OF THE PEOPLE RAILROAD ROUTE Morning Enterprise, Oregon City, To the Editor: Mr. Editor, I notic ed in Friday's paper that the com mercial Club of Oregon City thinks that the Southern Pacific line going on the West Side, would be a detri ment to Oregon City. Now I can't see how. Does the Commercial Club expect to always confine Oregon City's growing railroad traffic to those few crowded feet next to the bluff. Does it seem possible that they never ex pect to be only Oregon City from the river to Elyville? Now why are we on this side of the river. A part of that city we all live and call our home town? Your interest are our inter ests ; we buy your goods in your stores. We take our produce there to market. And some of your best men are loved and respected neighbors of this side. So why, should the club think he cause the track is on this side that it has got to object. Vfe have more room, a better grade, and tourists pas sing, get a much more favorable im pression of our town than on that side. Every foot of the line from Rocky Reef to Bolton is beautiful scen ery. The east slope is a picure from this side as the train would be just the right distance to give effect. Now why not all pull together to see Oregon City grow. Take us with you. It wil only De a shoif. time until Oregon City will take in Bolton, West Oregon City and Willamette anyhow. So don't lose the opportunity to make Oregcta City one of the biggest and prettiest towns in Oregon outside of Portland. G. S. ROGERS. How Tommy Was Found by His Old Mummy By F. A. MITCHEL My Tommy was the loveliest and most loving little boy in the world. He couldn't get on without his mother, and his mother couldn't get on without him. I was always afraid of losing him, for when a man with a grind organ and a monkey came along Tom would follow him. and many times 1 thought I had lost my boy for good. Once he was brought home by a po liceman and once I had to go to the station for him. Tommy's father died when he was seven, and my boy said, "Mummy, you'll have me with you always, won't you?" And I said: "1 wish 1 might. Tommy, but you'll grow up to be a man and have a wife and children of your own. Oh, dearie me. 1 wish you could always remain a little boy!" But Tom said he hated girls and would never have anything to do with any of them; he would always stick to his 'lear old mum. But nature requires that boys and girls should break away from their parents and become parents them selves. Tom stuck to me as long as he could, but he was a manly boy and grew into a manly man. He could never content himself in the little town where we lived, and when he came to be eighteen years old I saw that he was chafing to get away. He wouldn't leave me for a long while, but finally consented to do so for a few months. I bid him go and nofcicome back so long as it was to his interest to stay away. Tom went, but he didn't come back. He wrote to me from different places, though, telling me what he was doing He made one voyage on a liner as deck steward, but he didn't like the sea aud gave it up Then be served one enlist ment term in the army and was sent to the Philippines. While he was there I was obliged to move to another town 1 left my uew address with the post master, but a uew man took his place soon after that, and the address must have beeu lost. At any rate, 1 didn't get any more letters from my Tommy. Two years passed, and I was get ting older every day. I lived by my self and had' no one to comfort me I didn't know whether my boy was alive or dead If I could know that he lived and 1 could get a letter from him even but once a -year it would make a very different womau of me. I went back once to where Tommy and I had lived together and where I had brought him up I wanted to learn if he had beeu there looking for me. I found that he had. A number of the neighbors told me that he had asked them where I was. I had told only one or two where i was going, but it was so long ago that they had forgot ten. Besides,.! had moved again two or three times. They told me that Tom was awfully disappointed not to tiuri me. After asking everybody and get ting no information that would enable him to find me he went away, but did not say where he was going. That was the great disappointment of my life. To think-that he'd been trying to find his old mummy and couldn't! And now that he'd gone again into the great world there was far less hope of his ever finding me or 1 finding him than there was before. I found a place to take care of a rich 6. Scoop Resigns GRADUATES OF U. OF 0. EMPLOYED TO TEACH EUGENE, July 22. Twenty mem bers of the graduating class of the University of Oregon, have already ac cepted positions as teachers in the high schools of the state at salaries varying from $75 to $120 a month. All of the embryo teachers, besides their, theoretical work in the Department of Education have had several months of practice teaching in the Eugene and the Springfield high school. . The students who have accepted po sitions as teachers with the names of the schools in which they are em1 ployod follow: Rachel E. Applegateof Klamath Falls, Coquille; Annie Berg man of Astoria, Elgin; William E. St. John of Springfield, Ashland; T. Ra phael Geisler of Portland, Baker; Lex ie Strachem of Portland, Joseph High school ; Ailce Larsen Oregon City, Ore gan City High School; Celie V. Hager of Eugene, H8bd River; Mildred Bag ley of Salem, Eugene; Forest E. Dun ton of Molalla, Lakeview; Charles A. Guerne of Turner, Athena; R. Imo gene McKown, Eugene; Beulah Brid ges of Portland, Nehalem; Birdie Wine of Astoria, Astoria; Roy Fitch of Sherwood, Portland Y. M. C. A.; Em ma Lenore Belate of The Dalles, Ban don; Grace M. Adams of Eugene, Clat skanie; Melissa M. Marin, school near Albany; Mrs. Edna Presoott Dotson Eugene; J. M. Howard of Portland, Enterprise, and Francis Young,- Eu gene. lady's children. One afternoon I was told to take them to a moving picture show. Among the pieces they exhibi ted was one a re:il scene of a building burning, it was iu New York and was very large and costly I wondered how they happened to have the photograph ic apparatus in position at the time, but there are a great many of these machines now. and after the alarm they would have a good deal of time to get one of them on the ground. Of course they gave the most realis tic and exciting parts One was a- wo man standing at an upper window wild with terror She had been cut off and was likely to perish Then a ladder was raised against the wail, smoke pouring out of most of the windows and flame out of sonic anil a young fireman rati nimbly up the rounds. I was scared to death for him making such a perilous ascent. When he got to the top il:e ladder was a" bit too short lie wound h s let's aronnd the rungs anil one arm around the side"ot the Ittddet !I motioned "the woman to let herself tat: toward tii:n It was either obey or death She fill against his loose arm. hut as she struck him I couldn't stand it to ioou any longer and shut my eyts When I o!im!!c(1 them the young res cuer stood fa. -big t! e crowd which was cheering him I c omd see Dim in the glare as plain its at tiomiday. Heaven he praised, le was my Tom my. As soon as I could get the children home I wrote a letter to the chief ot the fire department of New York ask ing if the young man who had saved the woman' at the tire wasn't my Tom my, and if he was to give him his old mummy's address A couple of days after that I was leaving the house with the children when a pair of strong arms were thrown about me and look ing up into a man's face, there was my Tommy. 4'0h, mummy." he cried, "ain't I glad to find you!" "Oh. Tommy." I said, "this is the happiest moment of my life." 1 went to New York with Tommy and am living with him now. He says he wouldn't marry the prettiest girl in the land so long as he's get his mum with him. Oregon Agricultural College This great institution opens its doors for the fall semester on September 20th. Courses of instruction include: General Agriculture, Agronomy, Ani mal Husbandry, Dairy Husbandry, Bacteriology, Botany and Plant Path ology, Poultry Husbandry, Horticul ture, Entomology, Veterinary Science, Civil Engineering Electrical Engineer ing, Mechanical Engineering, Mining Engineering, Domestic Science, Do mestic Art, Commerce, Forestry, Phar macy, Zoology, Chemistry, Physics, Mathematics, English Language, and Literature, Public Speaking, Modern Language, History, Art, Architecture, J Industrial Pedagogy, Phyiscal Educa ! tion, Military Science and Tactics, I and Music. , Catalogue and illustrated literature mailed free on application. Address: Registrar, Oregon Agricultural Col lege, Corvallis, Oregon. School Year Opens September 20th. Boost your city by boosting your daily paper. The Enterprise should be in every home. 23, 1912 as First Baseman Chautauqua Pianos for Sale - From $30.00 to $40.00 actually sav ed. Put your thinking cap on. Figure it out. If you intend to buy within a year, buy now, or at least come and investigate. These pianos are all brand new and were especially selected for the Chautauqua. The list included such well known makes as the Lud wig, the Hobart, M. Cable, the Milton, and the Price & Teeple. 10 per cent off the Portland cash price, a small payment down and easy monthly, or quarterly payments as best suits your convenience. These pianos have been used only by teachers, and have had the best of care and are truthfully a safer buy than a piano that has never been tried out. They have stood the test, and proven their worth. Who will be the first take advantage of this op portunity to save some cold cash, and settle this piano question. If you never intend to get one, this will not inter est you, but if you do intend to get one some time, why live without it, when you could just as well have it. Can you think of any kind of pleasure that does not cost money? A good piano will last for 30 years, less than 3 cents a day. The cheapest pleas ure in the world. Pianos pay for themselves in various ways. Some make fortunes for their pupils. Some support families. Some are peace makers, by bringing eunshine and joy to the home, and least of all appar ently, it provides pleasurable pastime, recreation and rest for the young and old, awakening new and good thoughts like an inspiration. These are all really good pianos and grace many an Oregon City home, but no one ever got them NEW, for so little money. Why, because there never was a reason before, it is easy to give big discounts off an inflated price, but not off the right price. We feel that we have received 10 percent on these pianos through the adver tising we--got out of the Chautauqua. They can be seen anytime while they last at the piano store, 709, Seventh street, Oregon City. The Wiley B. Allen Co., Estah. 1873. 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 be 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: 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. Young. FARM LOANS FOR THE FOLLOWING SUMS: $5000.00, $5000.00, $3000.00, $2800.-1 00, $2500.00, $1500.00, 1000.00, $500, $300. One and two years. Dimick & Dimick, Lawyers, Oregon City, ! Oregon. , I TO TRADE: 2 lots in Greenhoe Heights for team horses. Mrs. J. ; Neely, Oregon City. j MISCELLANEOUS. HOW would you like to talk with 1400 people about that bargain you have in Real Estate. Use the Enter prise. WANTED Female Help. WANTED: Girl for general house work, Apply 106, Eighteenth street. LOST LEFT: On car arriving in Oregon City at 7 p. m., July 19, a package containing a corset. Return to En- I erprise and receive reward. WOOD AND COAL. OREGON CITY WOOD AND FUEL CO., F. M. Blukm. Wood and coal delivered to all parts of the city. SAWING A SPECIALTY. Phone your ordwrs Pacific 3B02, Home 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. FOR RENT FOR -RENT: Clean, cool beds, cheap on West Side of river. One block north of suspension bridge. FOR RENT: Furnished mountain house, $20.00 for this season, good fishing and hunting, fine water, pip ed from far off spring to new house. Four miles from Wilhoit Springs. Frank Busch, Oregon City, Oregon. FOR SALE FOR SALE: Good medium farm team well matched. Harness and wagon. Call 719 Ninth street. FOR SALE: One $600, 26 horse-power, 4 cylinder, Grey Marine gas en- . gine for $400. Call Elliott's Garage, Main street near Fourth. 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 3J in., wagon with bed. For sale cheap. Write O. E. Menke, Oregon City, Route No. 4. Sawed slab-wood for sale $1.00 a load, come quick while it lasts. Geo. Lam mers, Beaver Creek. FOR SALE OR TRADE: Will trade for improved place near Portland, 48 room house, sleeping and house keeping, furnished, money-maker, splendid location. Call or write 392J E. Burnside Portland. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. BARGAIN FOR SALE: 5 room bungalow, one half block from postoffice, $1250. Thos. E. Gault, Gladstone, Oregon. FOR SALE: 5 room bungalow, bath and modern conveniences. Inquire G. B. Dimick, Oregon City. FRUIT AND FARM LAND FOR SALE in all parts of Clackamas County. One acre tracts up. ' I carry some city property that you can buy at a good figure and on terms. S. O. Dillman, Room 1, Welnhard Building, Telephone Main 3771. NOTICES Summons. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clack amas. Mary E. Case, Plaintiff vs. E. V. Moore and wife Anna Hous ton Moore and all known and un- Special Sale Tli P P 99 fr Corner 10th and Main Sale to begin Monday and last all week. As our buyer is In the east ordering our Fall Stock of goods; we are obliged to make -room for the new goods when they arrive. We are offering the following articles at a greatly reduced price. Men's light weight underwear, regular 50c garment For Saturday only Ladies' waists; white and colored regular $1.13, Ladies' lace hose, white, tan and black, regular 25c hose, Regular 10c lawns, Light Percales Why Pay More I Educate Your Children in banking and money matters as well as books. The best way to teach them is to let them have a savings account in this bank. THE BANK OF OREGON CITY OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY D. C. LATOURETTE, President. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON CAPITAL $50,000.00 Transacts a General Banking Busines s. Open from 9 A. M. to 3 P. M. By "HOP" known heirs of the said E. V. Moore and Ann Houston Moore and W. W. Kimball Company, a corporation, de fendants. To E. V. Moore and wife, Anna Houston Moore and all known and unknown heirs of the said E. V. Moore and Anna Houston Moore and W. W. Kimball Company, a cor poration, defendants. In the Name of the State of Ore gon, you are hereby required to ap pear and answer the complaint fil ed against you in the above entitled suit on or before August 14th, 1912, and if you fail so to answer, plant iff will take decree adjudging that the plaintiff is the rightful owner in fee simple of Lots 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11 in block 9 of Falls View Ad dition to Oregon City. That the de fendants nor either of them have any right, title or claim in and to said property or any part thereof. For such other relief as to the Court may seem just and equitable here in. Service of this summons is made upon you by publication in pursu ance of an order of the Honorable J. U. Campbell, Circuit Judge of Clackamas County, made July 1st, 1912, directing such publication in the Morning Enterprise once a week for six successive weeks ,the first publication being July 2nd, 1912, and the last August 13th, 1912. B. N. HICKS, Attorney for Plaintiff. Summons for Publication In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County. Clara E. Conover, Plaintiff, vs. Roy W. Conover, Defendant To Roy W. Conover, 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 court and cause, on or before the ?4th day of July, 1912, and if you fail so to appear or answer the plaintiff for want thereof will apply to the court for the relief prayed for in the complaint, which is, that the marriage now existing between you and the plaintiff he forever dis solved, and that the plaintiff he per mitted to resume her maiden name of Clara E. Yeager. This summons . is served upon you by publication order of the Hon. J. U. Campbell, Judge of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County, which order is dated June 10, 1912. The date of first publica tion, of this summons is June 11, 1912. Last publication July 23, 1912. FRANK SCHLEGEL, Attorney for Plaintiff. 39c 69c 1 9c 5c 6 I -2c Than We Ask? F. J. MYER, Cashier.