2 SCOOP THE CUB REPORTER iPSjIL POfcTOLCxEtfl-l " . j BASHBftL.L FOR.) 1 PARTtWT cs. VT-SUOVV MB 14 IT Resile ' gKfy WTWTOTl JO ' US SHEET- SfWS-PUNKCN WHATW TuL PaST UPESTDAYS j "ffiW AND DOPE: IS JsJE BE COUNTfcP . LfcMON EAE.R. - BOOXEL J ' MORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON CITY, OREGON E. E. BRODI E, Editor and Publisher. uary 9. 1911, at the post office at Oregon City, Oregon, under the Act of March 3, 1879." TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. One Tear, by mail $3.00 Six Months, by mail 1.60 Four Months, by mail 1.00 Per Week, by carrier .-. .10 CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER' sses3$84ss&3,s $ $ THE MORNING ENTERPRISE $ ? is on sale at the following stores S every day: 3 Huntley Bros. Drugs S $ Main Street. S J. W. McAnulty. Cigars Seventh and Main. E. B. Anderson $ Main, near Sixth. $ M. E. Dunn Confectionery S . Next door to P. O. City Drug Store S Electric Hotel. 3 Schoenborn Confectionery 4 Seventh and J. Q. Adams. Aug. H In American History. 1809 Park Benjamin, editor, at one time associated with Horace Gree ley, born: died 1S64. 3870 Admiral David Glasgow Faira gut Federal naval hero of the civil war, died: born 1801. 1896 Olin Warner, noted sculptor, died, born IS 14. 1908 Miss Annie S. Peck of Provi dence, R. I., ascended Mount Huas- ! caran. Peru, calculated at 25,000 feet ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. (From noon today to noon tomorrow.) Sun sets 6:59, rises 5:10. Evening stars: Mercury, Venus. Mars, Jupiter. Morning star: Saturn. THE STEAMSHIP SCARCITY EX PORTS IN DANGER After building up a business with the Orient for the products of Ore gon farms and providing freight for a number of tramp steamers, and oth er vessels out of Portland, finally re sulting in what was thought to be a permanent line of steamers for the large business offering, Portland wakes up at the beginning of a new grain season with a large and bount iful crop, but no one to accept the business of handling Portland to con sumer. No legitimate reason has been offered for the withdrawal of the vessels; business was. first class and the exisiting. rates sufficient; consid erable money was made but induce ments were offered by other North west cities and without warning the farmers of Oregon were left without an outlet for the reward of their year's labor. Portland must take care of its laurels;- she must take care of Oregon's one greatest industry farming the one we must all fall back upon sooner or later. MIDDLEMEN AND CITY MARKETS Closing old and long established public markets in cities is not a thiag easy to understand just now. None the less, while the demand is for the wiping out of the middleman, what we seem to be wiping out instead are the places where the producer and consumer can come face to face. The historical Fulton market of New York is soon to go if it is not already gone. The necessary action toward ending it has already been taken. It fol- Foreign Population a Big Aid In America's Success By Professor HENRI BERGSON. Famous French Philosopher 4 ; -v ! ; -V ! I IIAVE been much struck by the fact that, though different races have come to America, there is an original type here; though so many elements go to shape the population of your great centers, there is a DISTINCT AMERICAN TYPE. Since there is no tendency on the part of the immigrants to remain separate I feel that MUCH GOOD WELL COME FEOM THIS MIXTUEE OF THE EACES. You have more reading of news papers, current literature, and you have more schools. TO MY MIND THE RICHER A TEMPERAMENT THE BETTER. THE MORE ELEMENTS CONSTITUTE THE POPULATION OF AMER ICA THE MORE PRIVILEGED AMERICA WILL BE, THE RICHER AND THE STRONGER. I am greatly struck by the generosity and hospitality of the Amer ican people, who are receiving the immigrants generously. It is ce tainly a great moral lesson to Europe. lows into oblivion the old Catherine street market, and other great mar kets of New' York where New York ers, for several generations, dealt at first hand with the growers of fruits and vegetables and first-hand dealers in many commodities and staples of life. J j New Orleans is now to abandon its ! long ni.d far-famed French market. In that place city people were, for per haps something more than a century, enabled to get almost "back to the soil" in the readiness with which they could buy directly irom the raisers of crops, from fishermen, and a multi tude of hawkers hawking wares and products made by their own hands or produced by their "own labor. Mid dlemen cut small figure in any of the transaction int he French market of New Orleans or the Fulton market of New York. In fact, .the middleman was practically eliminated through the direct communication afforded by such places between buyer and seller. If the burden of responsibilty for the high cost of living, of which such bit ter complaint is now made, really be longs to the middleman, why are we everywhere throwing away opportun ities for dodging that adroit and ra pacious personage? The question is a very interesting one, and one not easily answered. St. Louis, within the last decade, has ac tually lost a great street market which once stretched practically all the way from Chouteau avenue south on Broadway down to Soulard street, and sometimes beyond. Soulard street itself still remains a shadow of its once flourishing little market, but its old habitues say it is only a shadow, and they complain that the farmers, for whom the little Soulard market' was originally established are being crowded out by dealers in gimcracks and knicknacks for whom there seems to be a louder call than for marketers bearing the staffs of life. And this revelation in Soulard street may serve at least as a partial explanation of the disappearance of great public markets everywhere. Tremendous ad vances in the price of city real estate may account for it is part, but in large part it is due to the abandon ment of these markets by a genera tion which holds it bad form to take the family market basket downtown empty and bring it back filled with j the good things of life, bought at first I hand, at prices which the fashionable j dealers who maintain telephones and costly delivery service, and who ex tend credit, can not fairly be expected to meet. We are willing to pay the higher prices for the easier and dain tier ways of marketing. If we are getting what we prefer, and what we pay for, let us not unjustly accuse the middlmen if we can not eat our cake and, keep it too. Loaded With Petticoats. According to Herr Otto Fischel, whose "Costume In the Nineteenth Century" is written with German thor oughness, "about 1856 a lady of fash Ion wore a flannel petticoat, an under petticoat three and a half yards wide, a petticoat' wadded to the knees and stiffened in the upper part with whale bones, a petticoat with three stiffly starched flounces, two muslin petti coats and then a skirt. Even if all these were made of "light stuff the weight and discomfort of such a quan tity of material were so great that the idea of a steel crinoline was greeted enthusiastically, and the inventor clear ed 30,000 out of it in a fortnight" v !.. It Is Hard to Recognize a Player REGCN HOP CROP TO BE NEAR RECORD The Oregon hop crop now is count ed practically safe, and that it will be one of the biggest and best ever har vested in the state is all but a cer tainty. .At a number of Valley points the growers are again spraying their , vines to some extent,- but this treat ment, it is said, is rather a prevent ive than a remedial measure. Pests have not yet appeared in a way of ser iously menace the crop, and the aim of the growers is to make sure that their vines are kept in their present healthy condition. Dealers have for two weeks been paying more attention to the progress of the coming crop than to the mar- Tket, for orders have not been coming in a way to permit of much business, and during the lull in trade many of them have been traveling about the "Valley, inspecting the fields and en deavoring to get a fairly accurate line on the 1912 output. As a result the estimates put out some time ago of a yield running from 100,000 to 110,000 bales have not been materially alter ed. Reports brought in by these traders indicate that in the Valley generally hop crop conditions at this time are the best seen in years, and while for the time as" much cannot be said for the market prospect, the outlook on the latter score is still far from unfa vorable. The high prices of last year are of course not to be expected, but at the figures that are now offering, the crop promises to be a much more profitable one for the producers than those of a few years back, when pric es ranged around the cost of produc tion. In a general way 18 cents now is counted about the limit on 1912 con tracts, though a litle business is said to have been put through at 17 cents 'within the past few days. For the present at going quotations there is no very great demand, and sellers'ap pear to be about as much inclined to hold off as buyers. Both sides seem to be waiting for a -clearer market outlook for the coming crop, which is expected to develop within the next week or two. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A . NYE. SMALL HINGES. A little runt of a boy came shyly forward to meet Mrs. Jones, who. tired with her shopping, sat down on a stool in the toweling department of the big store. . Mrs..Jones owned a large hotel and was buying supplies. . It was the boy's first day at the counter. He bad just been promoted from the stock room, where he had made good. "What is this beW of toweling worth hotel rates?" - The stripling's eyes bulged. 9t "I'll have to nsk the head of the de partment This is my first day selling goods. Please excuse me. madam, for just a moment" Rushing to his senior, he eagerly made the inquiry. "Are you sure she wants a whole bolt?" said the department head. "Tell her I'll be there in a moment and wait on her myself." ' The boy'a face fell And-T- What was it? . Something in the drooping face of the young salesman? Anyway, when, the head clerk came forward, briskly rubbinfr his hands. Mrs. Jones said: "Excuse me:, this boy is waiting on me. If you will give trim the prices we shall get along very well." They did get along And when the woman's bill was footed up it came to $90. Ninety dollars: Wouldn't they stare when he turned in his little sales book on his first" da"y's showing? And this is the seqael: - Mrs. Jones became a regular cus tomer of the boy. who was always at tentive and obliging, and brought her friends to the counter; - Very soon the-boy got a raise In salary and is now the head of the de partment And he will go higher. It was a little thing for a tired wo man to do. but JJt It was a big thing for the boy and gave him his first chance as a sales man. - ' " The fact is Little things are the hinges on which big things turn. - ; " - Why not emulate the woman's thoughtfulness? You and 1 probably never will do any big things In our lives, but we can do" little things in a big way. . Can we not? , A thoughtful hint a kind word, a little boost these are worth more than reams of paper read at the woman's club or banquet speeches on the "up lift" -. At the Top of the Wool worth Building, Tallest In the World tt&ftrf -WWWir0; (&ftit &jS-? Photo copyright, 1912, by American i HE- last piece of steel was recently riveted in place on the Woolworth building, in City Hall square. New York city, the tallest habitable building in the world. The photograph here reproduced shows the workmen at the top of the structure celebrating the event It also shows a number of downtown New" York office buildings, dwarfed by the gigantic proportions of the Woolworth. This building is fifty-five stories in height, and its tower light, 760 feet in the air, will te visible ninety-six miles at sea. Its total cost will be about $13,000,000. This includes the cost of the land on which it stands $4,500,000. The floor space will be about twenty three acres, with room for 2,000 offices, which will accomttodate about 10,000 people. The rent roll is expected to be somewhere in the neighbornood of $2,500,000 a year. Cass Gilbert is the architect i'he new building will be fifty feet higher than the Metropolitan tower, 138 feet higher than the Singer building and 245 feet higher than' the Washington monument The Eiffel tower, in Paris, is 985 feet high, but that is not a building. MEN 'HIGHER IIP' ARE! SOUGHT IN NEW YORK NEW YORK, Aug. 13. Blackmail extorted from gambling and disorder ly houses in New York City is said to find its way into the pockets of three men "higher up," "who are the real heads of the graft syndicate that pro vides police protection for a price to the underworld. Information has been given District Attorney Whitman by private detec tives working on the Rosenthal case that these men "higher up" are a lawyer, a hotel proprietor who claims strong political affiliations, and a po lice official. Two Police Inspectors are said to be implicated. - District Attorney Whitman now is convinced that "Bald Jack" Rose told the truth when he said at least $2, 400,000 was colleced from gambling houses in one section of New York City alone. - It appears that for more than a year a system has been in operation by which all gambling and Bisorder ly houses have been bled. The investigation already has shown there always has been police blackmail through intimidation by which police officials fattened their bank accounts; but when it was re cently "organized" better results were shown. Private detectives reported that - under the present system the grafters were protected from the complaints of the victims, it being one of the boasts that one of the men "higher up" was influenced enough to prevent trouble. District Attorney Whitman is said to have been furnished with a list of names of prominent persons who play ed in gambling-houses. It is said these persons may be subpenaed to give information. - "Bald Jack" Rose, "Bridgie" WeV ber and Harry Wallon are to be taken before the grand jury and if the work of that body can be completed, a blanket indictment charging seven njen with the murder of Herman Ros enthal will be found. Bernad H. Sandler, counsel -for Sam Schepps, alleged "paymaster" of the gunmen who killed Rosenthal, compli cated the situation today by hurried ly departing for Hot Springs and warn ing Scheps not to start for New York until his arrival. Schepps had said he would waive extradition and come home at once with Assistant District Attorney Ruhin and a detec tive. ; ' Before leaving for the . Southwest Sandler sent Schepps this telegram: "Don't talk to Rubin or any other person and don't leave for New York until I arrive. ' Sandler offered no explanation oi why he had taken this action. in His Glad Clothes HVVSS m M W 1 A Press Association POST AT VANCOUVER WILL COST MILLIONS WASHINGTON, Aug. 13. Tenta tive plans for making Vancouver Bar racks a brigade post, with detailed es timates of the necessary additional cost, have been submitted to Con gressman Hawley by General Leon ard Wood, chief-of-staff, in response to Hawley'a request in transmitting resolutions of the Portland Chamber of Commerce. According to Wood, plans now und er consideration contemplate the es tablishment of two or three tactical erouDs along the Pacific Coast, one ! of which is sure to be at Vancouver. Detailed estimates of the necessary expense of "making Vancouver a bri gade post aggregate $1,160,000 for in fantry and $1,518,00 for cavalry. Since troops must come from other posts it is proposed to abandon, no additional maintenance charge would result, while, according to Wood, the additional cost of necessary new buildings at Vancouver would be more than saved by the abandonment of isolated posts throughout the West When Women Smoked Hard. One of the compilers of the "Statis tical Account of Scotland," published in 1791. remarks that "the chief luxu ries in the rural districts are snuff, tobacco and whisky. Tea and sugar are little used, but the use of whis ky has become very great The use of tobacco may almost be said to be ex cessive, especially among the female sex. There is scarce a young woman by the time she has been taught to spin but has also learned to smoke. Smoking seems to have been introduced as an antidote" to rheumatism and ague. The favorable alteration with respect to these diseases has produced only a greater avidity for tobacco." London Chronicle. PERSEVERANCE, Perseverance is the key to suc cess. Robertson Nicofl's four qualifica tions for success in life are a definite object in view, a determination not to be defeated, the capacity for ex ercising continual self denial and a certain belief in one's own powers. George William Curtis expressed an evident truth when he sai "An engine of one cat power running all the time is more effective than one of forty horse power standing stilL" Let's Get Ready For . the Fair We "are going, are you? We ean't all go to the beach or the mountains, ' and besides we are interested " in j stock and agriculture and I am go-: ing to see what kind of swine will do j the best on a given ration or what j kind of a potato is the best suited to my soil, and which is the most pro- ductive, and how does the market ' like this or that kind. But Bess '. says, "I am going to keep my eye on that pure, breed of chickens, and I am t going to try and raise some as good . or better ones than what George rais-' ed and took to the Fair and got a blue ribbon on." Josiah said, "Child-, ren we will go and see how the pro- j fessor can make that there cow give j 48 pounds of milk a day with 6 per j ceni Duuer iau i am going to see j how he does it, and then we will have HOW would you like to talk with a ride on the merry-go-round, and I 1400 people about that bargain you then buy a balloon or airship and go have in Real Estate. Use the Enter home." . Then Samantha' will say, i prise. "Josiah why do you want to go home ! so early, we want to get some of those baked potatoes and barbecue meat. My, I've been hungry ever since I heard about it. And you know dear. Mr. Schnoerr is a good hand at fixin' them kind of potatoes roast and bak ed, well I know that I will get enough , for once. Will you stay?" "Yes, l' will stay " and after dinner we will watch the races and base ball and I heard them say there would be about i 400 automobiles in the parade. Then we can see what kind looks best to ! us, because' you know Joe is getting old and Frank is getting older. Well I believe we will go, and go again the next day, because you know I re ally forgot to look at those big vege tables last year, and see what kind they were. -And did you notice the apples and pears; you see we must put out some young trees, do you re member what kinds are the best? If you don't we will take a pencil and book and mark down the kinds that look best and taste that way. Yes we will have our vacation and go to the fair. Then why not take the tent and camp in that beautiful shady grove, where we can enjoy ourselves and at the same time learn a lesson that will, help us the whole year and make money for us. For in this way, views and ideas are exchanged, and methods improved and we feel as though the world is ours once more." The Plant In Hie Garden. "Is that plant I see in your garden a perennial or an annual?" "Neither. It's a failure." Exchange. 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: Furnished room by young man, employed. Must be neat and clean. D. D., care Enter prise. WANTED: Boarders, will take men work nights. Quiet part of city, Address 616, Eleventh street. WANTED: To rent house, furnished or unfurnished, must be modern and close in. Will take lease. Ad dress given, discription and location E. B. care Enterprise. FOR RENT FOR RENT: One Modern 6-room house on Taylor street also one 5 room house on Fifth street Close in. Apply Geo. Randall, 801, Fifth and Jef ferson streets, city. WANTED Female Help. Good girl wanted at Willamette "Ho tel, dining room. R. B. Moses, proprietor. This Bank is well prepared to furnish Its customers the facilities and service which assure accuracy and promptness in the hand ling of their banMng business. 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 Business. Open from 9 A. M. to 3 P. M. By "HOP" 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. CARD OF THANKS" I wish to thank my many friends and kind neighbors for the sympathy shown me in my recent bereavement, in the death and burial of my hus band, William Rambo, also for the beautiful floral offerings. MRS. ETTA RAMBO. MISCELLANEOUS. F. B. FINLEY, Taxidermist, Tanner and Furrier. Fur Rugs and Game Heads in stock. Glass Eyes, 249 Columbia St., Portland Ore. DRESSMAKING, Hairdressing and shampooing. Room 5, Willamette Building. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. 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, Weinhard Building, Telephone Main 3771. FOR SALE: Or will rent to right party, furnished house, Address C. W. Evans, 407 Center Street, city. HOMESEEKERS TAKE NOTICE Here is your Opportunity A red hot bargain, one acre square, all fenced, and every inch under culti vation. Small house, woodshed, several cords wood, light house keeping outfit, and only 15 minutes walk from Oregon City, -must sell or trade. Phone Farmers 19x1. 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 3B02, Home B HO- INSURANCE FOR THE BEST INSURANCE always get Oregon Fire Relief Association - of McMinnville GEO. W. H. MILLER; Local Agent. Tel. Pacific 1771. Home A64 FOR SALE CHEAP TWO lots 66x105 on improved street, in good location. Price $550 for both. Owner living away and must sell. . Terms, see S. O. Dillman, Room 1, Weinhard Building. Sawed slab-wood for sale $1.00 a load, . come quick while it lasts. Geo. Lam mers, Beaver Creek. FOR SALE: Good Medium farm team, well matched. Harness and wagon. Call 149 Ninth street . FOR SALE: Launch, first class con dition, 4 H. P. Fairbanks-Morse En gine. Address A. C. care Enter prise. 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 392i E. Burnside Portland. F. J. MYER, Cashier.