Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, September 10, 1912, Page 2, Image 2

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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 OP SUBSCRIPTION.
One Tear, by mail $3.00
Six Months, by mail 1.6
Four Months, by mail 1.00
Per 'Week, by carrier 10
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
S&S33S3$S8
?
THE MORNING ENTERPRISE S
8 is on sale at the following stores
$ every day:
3 Huntley Bros. Drugs S
$ Main Street
8 J. W. McAnulty. Cigars
i . Seventh and Main.
S E. B. Anderson 8
8 Main, near Sixth.
Q M. E. Dunn Confectionery
S Next door to P. O.
$ City Drug Store
Electric Hotel. 3
$ Schoenborn Confectionery
' Seventh and J. Q. Adams.
4
S$85SS33&8
Sept. 10 In American History.
1787 John Jordan Crittenden. Ken
tucky statesman, who supported
Lincoln's administration in the civ
il war. born: died 1803.
1813 Commodore Perry's victory over
the British on Lake Erie; epito
mized bis famous dispatch. "We
have met the enemy, and they are
ours."
1845 Joseph Story, eminent jurist and
Justice of the United States su
preme court, died: born 1779.
1911 James Russell Soley, naval au
thority and writer, died: born 1851.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
(From noon today to noon tomorrows
Sun sets 6:17. rises 5:37. Evening
stars: Mercury. Venus, Mars. Jupiter.
Morning star: Saturn.
A claim to have rejected campaign
money after it has' been spent is the
latest and one of the querest devel
opments in the "new nationalism."
Already the Panama Canal is at
work for mankind. It has induced a
reduction of the Suez ship tolls and
illusarated the value of competition.
A man must have strange sensa
tions when trying to be a presidential
elector for a party he has bolted and
is trying to defeat.
Three mountain girls in California
walked ninety miles to attend school.
If this is the result of woman suffrage
the boys will have to hustle in poli
tices. Dr. Wiley has put the colonel into
the Ananias Club, and quotes dates to
prove a deliberate misstatement. The
colonel has aroused a Tartar in the
pure food inspector.
Prof. Wilson labored like a wheel
horse prior to the Baltimore conven-
( BOSS, IP You WAMT tAE-Tb 1 I s,Nftecr.JrNlX HQW
M T&tCE. A FLASH LKxHT" 7 VOU VAVE EVESODY WUL PLEASE ' JJf? BQSS
PHOTO TO NIQHT- SHOW 1 CAMERA iVV VOuD STILL. ND LOOK! MORE I ' lll 1 I DDrHT
vVME WOW TO U5E.THS FLASH- f PROPERA-Y J ' 4 ZflSwA V.? V MifF KNOW IT
This Country Will Never
Find Cure For High Prices
By Dr. E. E. PRATT, Government Statistician
HE PRESENT SYSTEM OF SUPPLYING THE COMMUNITY
WITH FOOD IS UNSYSTEMATIC AND LARGELY WASTE
FUL. The fault which I have to find with our present system
of marketing is not due especially to the RAPACITY or DISHON
ESTY of any GROUP OF MEN. ' There is no one group of DIS
TRIBUTERS, even of food products, who are getting ESPECIAL
LY RICH at the expense of the CONSUMER. . The difficulty with
the PRESENT SYSTEM is simply that it is an OBSOLETE, UN
ECONOMICAL and WASTEFUL ARRANGEMENT of FA
CILITIES for marketing food products.
t
THE MIDDLEMAN HIMSELF IS AS MUCH A VICTIM OF THE
SYSTEM AS IS THE CONSUMER. A REMEDY FOR HIGH PRICES
WILL PROBABLY NEVER BE FOUND IN THIS COUNTRY.
K t
For any considerable period of time we may. look forward to a
PERIOD of CONTINUED HIGH PRICES. This fact should
make and is making us more careful about our METHODS of DO
ING BUSINESS and should lead us to ELIMINATE as much
WASTE and INEFFICIENCY in our METHODS OF PRO
DUCTION and MARKETING as is POSSIBLE.
i r
REPORTER What
tion, but now he is supposed to let
Clark, Underwood and Harmon do the
bulk of the work.
Mr. Hearst is about to desert Prof.
Wilson for the Bull Moose. All the
parties are now in the field and Mr.
Hearst has made up his mind as to
the most uproarously radical.
Musical Note.
A gentleman at a musical party
where the lady was very particular not
to have the concord of sweet sounds
Interrupted, seeing that the fire was
going out, asked a friend in a whisper.
"How could you stir the tire without in
terrupting the music?"
"Between the bars!" replied the
friend. Home Notes.
The voters have a considerable range
of choice this year with a professor,
a judge and a colonel asking to be
made president
Man named for office in Massachu
setts was found to be dead. What of
it? There are many "dead ones" hold
ing office.
Goldfish eat mosquitoes. Order your
goldfish early.
Oats and Beans.
The high price of beef has now be
come the higher price of beef. Ditto
mutton and pork. Ditto nearly every
thing else, at least if it is edible. All
of which occasions low spirits and high
talk. Folks must eat but folks must
now have a bank account If they are
to do any eating commensurate with
their appetites.
Mayor Fitzgerald of Boston, known
to fame as "Honey Fitz," proposes n
way out It leads through fish, vege
tables and beans chiefly beans. Beans
are nutritive: likewise they are easily
raised. It is proverbial that ground
which will not "raise beans" is good
for nothing else. Besides, beans are
good, brain food observe Boston.
Therefore the Hub's remedy for the
high price of beef: Boycott the beef
trust and eat beans. It Is perfectly
simple and should be satisfying. Beans
forever!
Yet the writer has a memory of one
year at school when he lived on beans
and prunes. We had bean soup, bak
ed beans, boiled beans and beans in
every other form devised by the brain
of man. Since that year we have not
had the heart to look a bean or a
prune in the face.
Oats furnish another escape from
beef. There is no more building food
than oats note the Scotch; note also
man's friend, the horse. He eats
no meat and yet he pulls the loads of
the world or did till the railroad and
the motor truck relieved him. The
horse eats oats and man feels his oats.
The answer is eschew meat and chew
oatmeal.
There is also rice. The wonderful
Jap lives on rice; likewise the patient
Chinaman when he can get it On a
diet of rice the Japs whipped Russia.
Possibly on a similar diet the Yankees
can whip the beef trust At least is
it cot worth trying?
MORNING ENTERPRISE TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1912
the Ed Don't Know about Flashlights Ain't Worth Knowing
Live Wirelets
(By Edgar Bates.
City politics will soon begin to
thaw out
Twenty-nine dollars a ton for oats
isn't at all bad for the farmer.
The. popularity of fireless cookers
doesn't reduce the price of a cord of
wood.
About time to "round up" a few
dollars to take in the Pendleton af
fair. Portland has had a week of opera
and Oregon City has had a week of
rain.
Did you notice how many prizes
were won by Clackamas County boys
and girls at the State Fair?
One county in Oregon last season
produced one . per cent of the entire
wheat crop of the United States
It's funny that when people get mar
ried they get a lot of newspaper space
free, but a funeral notice costs real
money. '
"Skidoo," suffered a violent death,
"23" has long been forgotten, and no
one ever thinks of saying "beat it"
these days what Is to be next? '
"Earn a little and spend a little
less" is of course good advice, but
the trouble with most of us is that
we earn a little and spend a little
more.
A long time ago it was ,'three
weeks" then "one day" and after
wards "one hour". The only "one
minute" affair we have heard of is
some kind of washing powder.
The newest excuse men have for
staying home from church Sunday
mornings is that they want to study
the pamphlet containing the measur
es to be voted on this fall.
Every Saturday night we all see a
large number of men carrying little
boxes somewhat smaller than the reg
ular suit size card board boxes. The
clotheriers (?) do a big business Sat
urday nights.
The first word spoken by a deaf
and dumb man upon regaining hearing
and speech was "Hell" Scientists
are trying to explain the reason scien
tifically but no explanation is neces
sary. A man generally says the most
natural thing for him.
CATTLE MARKET
HAS STRONG TONE
The Portland Union Stock Yards
Company report as follows:
Receipts for the week have been
1584 cattle; 8 calves; 1528 hogs;
1584 cattle; 8 calves; 1528 hogs.
In the face of an increase in re
ceipts, the cattle market ranged
strong &t the former week's prices.
Some claim was made that prices
ruled 10 to 15 per cent higher, but
this this was largely a question of
crudity and there is more safety in
saying that prices held firm with a
more active demand.
The supply of hogs from local ter
ritory showed a slight increase which
was also followed by a 10 per cent
raise in the market.
The sheep market was poorly- sup
ulied. There was an active demand
for at least double the sheep that ar
rived. The market on lambs was
from 15c to25c a hundred higher than
the week previous.
Prevailing Oregon City prices re as
follows:
DRIED FRUITS (Buying), Prunes
on basis 6 to 8 cents.
HIDES (Buying), Green hides 6c
to 7c; salters 7c; dry hides 12 c to
14c; sheep pelts 30c to 85c each.
EGGS Oregon ranch eggs 23c case
count; 24c candeled.
FEED (Selling).Shorts $25; bran
$27; process barley $38 per ton.
FLOUR $4.60 to 5.50.
POTATOES New, about 50c to 60c
per hundred.
POULTRY (Buying) Hens 11c;
spring 17c, and rooster 8c.
HAY (Buying) Clover at $8; oat
hay, best, $10; mixed $10 to $12; al
falfa $15 to $16.50; Idaho Timothy $20.
OATS (Buying), $30.00 to $36.50,
wheat 90c bu.; oil meal, selling about
$48.00; Shay Brook dairy feed $1.30
per hundred pounds.
Butter, Poultry, Egg.'
BUTTER (Buying), Ordinary conn
try butter 20c to 25c; fancy dairy
60c roll.
Livestock, Meats.
BEEF (Live Weight), Steers 5 l-2c
and 6 1-4 c; cows 4 l-2c; bolls 3 l-2c.
MUTTON Sheep 3c to 3 l-2c
VEAL Calves 10c to 12c dressed,
according to grade.
MOHAIR 33c to 35c.
Welcoming American Victors
Home From Olympic Games
t 1- :
l l Wok. l T V
Photo by American Press Association.
FRIENDS and admirers of the American victors in the Olympic games
recently had an opportunity of viewing and cheering their heroes as
sembled in procession in thestreets of New Xork. The athletes rode
in automobiles, two and three in a car, and each car bore in large
letters the names of its occupants, so that the crowd might cheer and know
whom it was cheering a piece of thoughtfulness on the part of the manage
ment which was probably not appreciated by thousands of young Americans
who knew the faces of the winners by heart Of course the mayor reviewed
the parade (the illustration shows him shaking hands with James Thorpe, the
Indian who carried off the prize for all round athletic prowess), and tens of
thousands of grownups watched its progress down the city's great show thor
oughfare, but the spectators to whom it meant most were tho schoolboys,
lined up by schools along the curb, who on that occasion saw more of their
Ideals in the Mesh than they ever had seen before or are likely to see again.
GAME FROM SPOKANE
PORTLAND, Sept 9. (Special)
Bloomfleld was an enigma to Spokane
today, the Colts winning 3 to 2. Toner
also pitched classy ball. Spokane is
credited with one error, while Port
land played faultlessly.
The results today follow.
Pacific Coast League
At Sacramento Portlandll-4, Sac
ramento 3-5.
At San JYancisco Oakland 5-2 Ver
non 4-1.
Los Angeles San " Francisco 7-3,
Los Angeles 3-5.
Northwestern League
At Portland Portland 3, Spokane
2.
At Vancouver Vancouver 3, Taco
ma 1.
At Victoria Seattle 3, Victoria 0.
National League
- New York,2-7, Brooklyn 1-2.
No other games in National or
American League scheduled.
A Man of Ability. '
Tomson Johusou has no ability or
any kind. Jackson No ability? Nou
sense. Why, he can ask you for a loan
In such a way that you thank your
lucky stars for the opportunity to ac
commodate him. London Tit-Bits. ;
The scientists now say that fleas
carry disease. Are we to have a flea
swatting campaign? And, if so, who
Is to make the flea stay there while
he is being swatted?
A Pennsylvania man started out to
do Europe on $75. It looks as if he
would have to do Europe if he gets
around on that amount of money.'
The order has been reversed. It is
not the wild and woolly west any
more. Nearly all the gunmen are in
New Tork.
A jackass bit a girl In Philadelphia
and fatal results followed but it was
the jackass that died.
Word Fashions.
The history of the word asparagus
shows how. even in the days of diction
aries, word fashions change. In the
eighteenth century, ' even in elegant
usage, the delicacy was regularly called
"sparrow grass." A dictionary of 1791
says that "sparrow grass" is now so
general that "asparagus" has an air of
stiffness and pedantry. "Sperage" had
been the usual English form in the six
teenth century, but in the seventeenth
herbalists brought back the original
Greek and Latin spelling "asparagus."
Pepys varies between "sparrow grass,"
"sparagus" and "sparague." No doubt
the eighteenth century relapse was the
last, and the "a" is back for good now.
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.
MISCELLANEOUS.
DRESSMAKING and all kinds of sew
ing, Mrs. C. A. Davenport 1311
Main Street, between 13th and 14th
streets.
HOW would you like to talk with
1400 people about that bargain you
have in Real Estate. Use the Enter
prise.
!-
WANTED
WANTED: Good fresh milch cow,
telephone Main 1292, Oregon City.
WANTED: A chance to show you
how quick a For Rent ad will fill
that vacant house or room.
. LOST
LOST: Small Skye Terrier, Female
dog, color, tan; hair on body been
clipped. Reward if returned to Mrs.
H. C. Jenkins, Oregon City, Oregon,
R. F. D. No. 5, Box 116 C.
MONEY TO LOAN
SCHOOL FUND MONEY TO LOAN
Only 6 per cent interest on long time
loan3. Nothing but good farm se
curity will be accepted. W. A. Dim
ick, agent for State Land Board,
Oregon City, Oregon.
WANTED AGENTS
CANVASS ERS : Corporation, manu
facturing patented, modern house
hold necessity, creating sensation
wherever demonstrated are organiz
ing selling force Sept 25. Every
capable canvasser not averaging $50
per week should file name and ad
dress with us. Box, The Enter
prise. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
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.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE: The cheapest lines of
shoes and harness in the county.
Shoe repairing while you wait at G.
A. Dreblow, Seventh street, opposite i
Wells Fargo.
PIANO FOR SALE: $350 La Fargue
Upright Grand, good as new, $125
cash. Address F. Howerton, Bx37,
Jennings Lodge.
i 15 Brown Leghorn hensf Inquire Will-
iam Paetz, Oregon City, R. F. D.
; No. 5, Box 28.
VIOLIN TAUGHT
H. B. WEEKS, Teacher of Violin.
Grand Theatre.
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 DO-
NOTICES
Ordinance No.
An ordinance declaring the. life of
Main Street, Oregon City, Oregon.
Oregon City 3oes ordain as fol
lows: Section 1. That whereas Main
street, Oregon City, Oregon, was im-
Opportunity
often knocks at a closed door. A bank account is the key
to most situations. Be prepared for the next knock. We
pay three per cent interest on savings accounts compound
ed semi-annually.
THE BANK OF
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 9 A. M. to 3 P. M.
By HO
proved from Moss street on the
north to the Basin on the south with
a complete, hard surface improve
ment in the' year 1892, and whereas
th City of Oregon City has ever
since kept said street in repair, and
whereas the time for which the city
would keep said street in repair has
never heretofore been declared, it
is therefore hereby ordained by the
Council of Oregon City, that the le
gal life of said street as an im
proved; street shall expire on the
31st day of December, 1912.
Read first time and ordered pub
lished at a special meeting of the
Council held on the 6th day of
Sept., 1912.
L. STIPP, Recorder.
' Ordinance No.
An ordinance declaring the life of
Fifth street Oregon City, Oregon.
Oregon City does ordain as fol
lows: Section 1. That, whereas Fifth
street Oregon City, Oregon, was du
ly improved from High street to
Jackson street, with a complete im
provement in the year 1893; and,
whereas the City of Oregon City has
ever since said date kept the said
street in repair; and, whereas the
the time for which the City would
keep said street in repair has never
heretofore been declared, it is
therefore ordained by the Council
of Oregon City, that the legal life
of said street as an improvement
shall expire on the 31st day of De
cember, 1912-
Read first time and ordered pub
lished at a special meeting of the
Council held on the 6th day of Sep
tember, 1912.
L. STIPP, Recorder.
Ordinance No.
An ordinance declaring the life of
Seventh street Oregon City, Ore
gon. Oregon City does ordain as fol
lows: Section 1. That, whereas Sev
enth street, Oregon City, Oregon,
was duly improved from High street
to the northerly end of Molalla ave
nue, with a complete improvement
in the year 1892, and whereas the
City of Oregon City has ever since
sajid date, kept the. said street in re
pair, and whereas the time for
which the City would keep said
street in repair has never hereto
fore been declared, it is therefore
hereby ordained by the Council of
Oergon City, that the legal life of
said street as an improvement shall
expire on the 31st day of December,
1912.
Read first time and ordered pub
lished at a special meeting of the
Council held on the 6th day of Sep
tember, 1912.
L. STIPP, Recorder.
Summons
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon, for the county of Clackamas.-
Frank P. Gilmore, Plaintiff, vs.
Barbara Gilmore, defendant.
To Barbara Gilmore, defendant,
above named:
In the name of the State of Ore
gon, you are hereby required to ap
pear and answer the complaint filed
herein against you, in the above en
titled court and cause, within six
weeks from the 10th day of Septem
ber, A. D., 1912, said date being the
first day of publication of this sum
mons. And if you fail so to appear or an
swer, for want thereof, the plaintiff
will apply to the court for the re
lief demanded and prayed for in the
complaint filed herein, to-wit:
That thfi bonds of matrimony now
existing between the plaintiff and
defendant be dissolved, and for such
further relief as may seem just and
equitable to the court.
This summons is served upon you
by virtue of an order made by Hon.
orable J. U. Campbell, Judge of the
Circuit Court of the State of Ore
gon, for the county of Clackamas,
dated on the 9th day of Septemberl
A. D., 1912, and which order pre
scribes that thei, summons in this
suit should be served upon you by
publication once a week for six suc
cessive and consecutive weeks in
the Morning Enterprise, a newspa
per of general circulation in the
County of Clackamas, State of Ore
gon. H. R. SALTMARSH,
Attorney for the Plaintiffs
-9
OREGON CITY
CLACKAMAS COUNTY
F. J. MYER, Cashier,