Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, September 14, 1912, Page 2, Image 2

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MORNING ENTERPRISE
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1912
scoo
THE CUB
REPORTER
MORNING ENTERPRISE
OREGON CITY, OREGON
E. E. BRODIE, Editor and Publisher.
"Entered els second-class matter Jan
uary 9, 1911, at the post office at Oregon
City, Oregon, under the Act of March
S, 1879."
TERMS OF 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
THE MORNING ENTERPRISE $
S is on sale at the following stores
& every day:
8 Huntley Bros. Drugs 3
$ Main Street.
$ J. W. McAnulty. Cigars
. Seventh and Main. S
? E. B. Anderson 3
S Main, near Sixth. 3
$ M. E. Dunn Confectionery
S Next door to P. O. '
City Drug Store '
. Electric Hotel.
? Schoenborn Confectionery
S Seventh and J Q. Adams.
$
3. &3SJS8$&3&3
Sept. 14 In American History.
1742 James Wilson, signer for Penn
sylvania of i he Declaration of In
dependence, horn in Scotland; died
1798. .
1847 The United States army under
General Witih'eld Scott entered the
City of Mexico as conquerors.
1851 James Fetiimore Cooper, the nov
elist, died; born ITS!).
1862 Federal columns under General
W. B. Frankliu and General A. E.
Burnside drove the ("on federates
from South Mountain. -Maryland.
1901 President William McKinley
died in Buffalo of the wound re
ceived on the 6tb at the bands of
Leon F. Czolgosz; born Niles. O..
Jan. 29. 1843.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
(From noon today to noon tomorrow.)
Sun sets 6:10, rises 5:41. Evening
stars: Mercury, Venus. Mars, Jupiter
Morning star: Saturn
Turkey and Italy propose, and the
big powers when ready will dispose.
. One of the established facts of poli
tics is that is. better to stick to the
G. O. P. than to be sorry.
The way Col. Roosevelt hammered
the trusts when he was president
amounted almost to savage butchery.
A careful search will probably lo
cate Gen. Orozco where the bullets
are thickest under the ammunition
wagon.
Great Britain has not yet discover
ed anything connected with the Suez
Canal that calls for arbitration. Some
REMEMBER: THE SINGLE TAX SERPENT MUST BE FED
lipSf - f BOSS-OU KNOW THAT "X PHOTOCtRPHE&THEBACK auN (VA&T X 'wSStN s XM WAVTlKGrToN ,
g OVA-OO-O-GOSH POO HAMMEBED DOWN 0F Weta0& PUNKS HEAD -mAT t ( AfT ) HOLY PEAVToWE,
IXVE.Uue4EO CHEESEWOU AND WHEN US. ASkEl- j ' Z V IT V f6H0KE- I gBVTo afiOirr
1 UNTIUT SlOC- HVVOMAVE - MEL WfcW-t SAID OH poj , JH VVI
of the Europeans look upon TheHague
as a device especially intended to reg
ulate Uncle Sam.
Yet Dr. Zamenhoff must feel that
his expectations of great conquests
for his language are far from reali
zation. For a few years it was culti
vated as a fad by thousands of per
sons who dropped it as soon as the
novelty wore off.
Since we have failed to adopt the
treaty which would leave questions
pertaining to our national honor open
to arbitration by outsiders, the ques
tion whether the Panama Canal reg
ulations is a point of honor with us
or not is one we can settle for our
selves. FORUM OF THE PEOPLE
ARGUES AGAINST LAND TAX
ESTACADA, Sept. 13 (Editor of
; the Enterprise) So far in the disr
sion of the single tax neither its. ad
vocates nor its opponents have called
attention clearly to what the single
tax is intended to do. 'Both sides
have dealt with the figures showing
what the taxes would be if present
single tax measures sould be adopted.
The figures are ' necessarily approxi
mations. But I wish to speak of the ultimate
end of single tax. In chapter VIII, of
Henry George's. "The Land in Ques
tion," he gives the clearest state
ment of the purpose of single tax that
I know of. He says: "The onry true
and just solution of the problem, the
only END worth aiming at, is to
make ALL the land the common prop
erty of ALL the people "This then is
the en,d of single tax. The graduated
single tax amendment and the county
single tax bill we must vote upon
November 15th would not of them
selves bring this end about; but they
would be a big step in that direction
and I think the people could rest as
sured that they would be asked to go
on and and on until the ultimate end
of single tax is reached. It is like
wise true that the people have the
sovereign power in their own hands
to go as far as they wish, or to back
up if the results do not suit them.
But they will do nothing blindly. We
should see clearly, if we can see,
whither we are embarking ere we
cast off our anchor.
Henry George says: "How shall
this, be done? It merely necessary to
divert the rent which now flows into
the pockets of tire- landlords into the
common treasury of the whole peo
ple." Further he says: "It is a very
easy thing thus to sweep away all
private ownership of land, and cot
vert all -occupiers into tenants of the
state by appropriating rent." He says
the titles still would remain with the
people but that they would be empty
titles, such as the pretender to the
throne of France who calls himself
the "King of France."
Now, gentlemen, do you not wish
such a condition of affairs to be
brought about? If you do, vote for
single tax; if you do not, vote against
it. In the Jamestown colony of Mass
achusetts the land was first held in
common, or was the property of all
the people there residing. Conditions
Dawgone Funny, Ain't It, ScoopYes? No!
werel particularly favorable in the
Plymouth Colony for the success of
such an experiment, but neither
colony prospered until pvivate own
ership of land was adopted. Where
ever else in the world communal
ownershop ' of alnd has been tried it
has proven S. failure. There are
semi-civilized tribes who hold land in
common. Civilization never comes
to them till they accept private own
ership of land. The American Indian
is an example. When he becomes the
owner of a farm he becomes a useful
citizen of our country, but is a burden
while sustaining tribal relations and
holding a common interest in his res
ervation. Communal holdings of land give the
idle the same benefits as the indus
trious, the spendthrift the same as the
frugal. There would be no incentive
to make good improvements upon a
farm that was not a man's own. He
would, expect the state, the benefi
ciary of the rent, to make the im
provements. He would expect the
state to clear the wild land, build the
fences, dig the wells, and make all
permanent improvements. There
would be no incentive to excel. Com
munities would go backward instead
of forward.
The right of private ownership has
been abused by many, but there are
remedies for these abuses without
: destroying private ownership. We
should give earnest study to the solu
tion qf these problems as their solu
tion would remove causes which lead
many to accept single tax.
I think I have made clear the END
which single tax aims to bring about
by giving Henry George's own words.
As he is the father of -the single ax
idea it must be accepted as autb'- iy.
Keep this end clearly in view v'"ien
you go to the polls November 6th and
do not listen to the pocket book ap
peal of the single taxer. uoYrtax may
be less for awhile but do you wish
ultimately to surrender your title to
your land to the state? Tbis is the
i real question proposed by the single
tax.
F. M. GILL.
August Is a beautiful month for
every one except the hay fever victim.'
Artificial Rubber.
According to a report from Ameri
can Consul General Griffiths of Lon
don, a method of making artificial rub
ber has now been perfected, and the
new product will cost less than half
that charged for rubber nowadays. If
true this will give the grand bounce
to the rubber trust. It will also glad
den the heart of the autotnobilist. give
a new springiness to the step of the
man who wears overshoes, gum boots
or rubber heels and put joy in the
soul of the small boy with a bean
shooter.
A description of the new process is
Interesting. It Is thns described by
Mr. Griffiths:
In order to produce rubber commercially
it was necessary. It was stated, to discov
er a cheap source of isoprene. Coal, pe
troleum, wood, sugar and starch were
considered. Finally starch from grain or
tubers was chosen at a price of less than
a penny (2 cents) per pound, and It was
found that isoprene could be readily ob
tained from fusel oil, which is a byprod
uct of ordinary alcoholic fermentation ot
starch. It was Indispensable also to dis
cover a cheap way of making fusel oil.
and after a year and a half, it is claimed,
a process has been disclosed which will
enable fusel oil to be produced at $170 to
$218 per ton as against a normal market
price of about $681 per ton.
Long live "Isoprene," also long live
Professor W. H. Perkin of Manches
ter, the discoverer of the new method
Let us hope that when we buy a pair
of artificial rubber overshoes hereafter
they will not spring aleak the next day,
as has happened occasionally with real
rubber ones. Also let us hope that ar
tificial rubber tires will not blow op
when we are in the middle of desola
tion, fourteen miles from a garage.
Of late years rubber prices have
been so elastic that they have stretched
many a poor motorist. almost to the
breaking point With this new discov
ery we can maybe buy new tires
without mortgaging the farm.
"Red as a Sapphire."
To say that young girl's eyes are
as blue as sjipphires is ns absurd as
it would le to say that her mouth is
as red as velvet." Sapphires, no more
than velvet, are exclusively one color.
The sapphire of Ceylon run from n
soft blue to u peacock blue, which last
Is practically H green. 'There is also a
j red sapphire, sometimes called a Cey-
lonese ruby, n stone as precious as s
Burma ruhv Besides blue, green and
red sapphires, many tine ones are yet
low and wiite
8he Didn't Chatter.
"That very quiet girl had a lot of at
tention paid her t the dub ball. How
is It she is so popular with that Hvely
athletic bunch?" - - ',
"I . suppose, it Is "because she Is 8
dumb belle." - Baltimore American.
Late Founder of
Army
tit
' fv 1
v
1 H .
JAW'
Pnoto by American Press Association.
' ' v . ,7!- ' .
NE of the most picturesque figures In modern English history has
passed away In the death of General William Booth, the founder of
the Salvation Army. Although he was eighty -three years old, he had
been active in the direction of the army until he was stricken with
blindness last June. He was an untiring worker and never suffered a serious
Illness until' his last- He was well known in this country, which he visited
for the last time four years ago. Every one acknowledged the spiritual force
of this remarkable man, but he was no less remarkable as a practical or
ganizer. Field Marshal Lord Wolseley once said that the British army had
taken lessons from the Salvationists In methods of organization, distribution
and control. His son Bramwell (photograph shown at left of illustration),
who succeeds him In command of the army, Is said to have Inherited his
father's genms as an executive.
Placed.
"Is your new uui.se Irish, French or
German. Freddie?" "Well. 1 fink she's
bwokeh Euglish." Satire.
Habits.
Habits are so hard to breuk you
should specialize on the good ones.
Atchison Globe.
Serious Oversight.
Knicker Did your father give you
an auto? Bocker Yes. but he didn't
endow it Lippincott's. .
Sarcasm.
"Pa. what's sarcasm?" "Pasting a
'Shake well before taking' slip on a
bottle ot ague cure."-Satire.
Up and Coming.
Father You only .come to see me
when you ueed money. Son Shall I
come o ft ener? Satire.
. The Carp.
Every time the carp breathes it
moves 4.,'!86 bones and muscles; its
veins number 4.329.
Wanted to Know.
First Actor Yes, sir; 1 was called at
the end of every act. Second Actor
What? Boston Transcript,
A Monopoly.
She I've had that parrot a year, and
St has never said jj word! 'He Why
not give it a chance?
Pressed Tea.
Pressed tea. manufactured by an
English firm fof the use of travelers,
resembles plug tobacco.
Ebb nd Flow.
He How clean the surf keeps the
seashells! She Yes. you know the sea
Is very tidy! .
Cabbage.
Cabbage, like all vegetables that
have been cultivated for ages, is be
lieved to be of eastern origin. , -
' "'.Tho Suez Canal. -
Ninety-nine miles Is the total length
of the Suez canal, and the width is just
over 12,1 feet. - .
The English Language.
Out of the 1.623,000,000 inhabitants
of the world 160.000.000 speak the
English tongue.
The Ruling' Passion. '
He (reading) She wore an air of
mystery. She (absently) How was it
trimmed? -
Salvation
and His Successor
' -. Si
iiT '
Jit
r -
t rV
"
TWO WIVES GET
DECREE OP DIVORCE
Circuit Judge Campbell Friday
granted Myrtle M. Elliott a decree of
divorce from Jesse A. Elliott. The
plaintiff was awarded the custody of
their child. Minnie M. Smith was
granted a decree from Jerome P.
Smith, the plaintiff being awarded
the custody of their two children. Sar
ah E. Marks, through Dimick & Dim
ickj filed soiit for divorce against John
R. Marks. They were married in Mis
souri, July 1, 1898 and have four
children. Cruelty) was alleged. Sad
ie Terry asks a divorce from Cleve
Terry. They were married September
28, 1905, in Spokane. The plaintiff
alleges that her husband deserted her
April 15, 1910. She asks that her
maiden name, Sadie Ryan, be restor
ed. Ambiguous.
He Some one started a story that I
have a' big head.. What do you think
of it? She There's nothing in it
The Secret.
-Wife I found out something today
that I promised never to tell. Husband
Well, go ahead: I'm listening.
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: A girl for general house
work. Apply 1010 Water Street. "
" " . 'si
3
V
i. v ft X
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
Wells Fargo.
FOR SALE OR TRADE: 38-55 Rifle
Address George Himler, Parkplace,
Oregon. ,
FOR RENT
FOR RENT: Newly furnished rooms
call 605, 5th Street.
MISCELLANEOUS.
DRESSMAKING and all kinds of sew
ing, Mrs. C. A. Davenport, 1311
Main Street, between 13th and 14th
i streets.
HOW would you like to talk with
1400 people about tfeat bargain you
have in Real Estate. Use the Enter
prise. MONEY TO LOAN
SCHOOL FUND MONEY TO LOAN
Only 6 per cent interest on long time
i loan?. Nothing but good farm se
curity will be accepted. XV. A. Dim
ick, agent for State Land Board,
Oregon City, Oregon.
FOR LOAN: $3,000, $2,500, $1,500,
$1,000 and $500 at 7 per cent on im
proved real estate. C. H. DYE
VIOLIN TAUGHT
H. B. WEEKS, Teacher of Violin.
Grand Theatre.
MUSIC TEACHER
VIOLIN LESSONS: Mr. Gustav
Flechtner from Liepzig, Germany
is prepared to accept a limited num
ber of pupils. Mr. Flechtner may
also be engaged for solo or ensem
ble work. Address for terms, etc,
Gustav Flechtner, Oregon City, Ore,
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
NOTICES
Administrators Notice to Creditors
Notice is hereby given that the under
signed has been appointed by the
County Court of Clackamas Coun
ty, Oregon, administrator of the es
tate of Mary E. Guttridge, deceased.
All persons holding claims against
said estate are hereby notified to
present "same duly verified and with
proper voucher to the undersigned
at his place of residence in Spring
water, Clackamas County, Oregon,
on or before six months, from date
of the first publication of this, not
ice. , JAMES GUTTRIDGE,
Administrator of the estate of Mary
E. Guttridge, deceased.
L. STIPP, Attorney for Administra
tor. Summons
In the Circuit Court of the State" of
Oregon, for the County of Clacka
mas. Sadie Etter Libby, Plaintiff, va
A. L. Libby, Defendant
To A.L. Libby, the above named
deefndant:
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
cause on or before the 23rd day of
September, 1912, and if you fail to
so appear and answer, for want
thereof the plaintiff will apply to
the- Court for the relief prayed for
in her said complaint, to-wit:
For a decree of divorce setting
aside the marriage contract existing
between herself and the defendant,
and that she be restored to her for
mer name, namely, which is Sadie
Etter and that she have such other
and further relief as may be meet
with equity.
This summons is published by the
order of the Honorable J. U. Camp
Did It Ever Occur to You
that someone is drawing interest on the money you needless
ly spend each day? Why not open a bank account here and
have the advantages of it yourself ?
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
HO
bell, Judge of the Circuit Court of
the State of Oregon for Clackamas
County for the Fifth Judicial Dist
rict, made and entered on the 9th
day of August, 1912, and the time
prescribed for the publication of
this summons is six weeks begin
ning Saturday, August 10, 1912, and
ending with the issue of September
. 21, 1912.
W. B. GLEASON,
. - Attorney for Plaintiff.
2-3 Mulkey Building, Portland, O're-
gon.
Summons
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon, for Clackamas County.
Neva Greig, Plaintiff, vs. George
Oliver Greig, Defendant
To George Oliver Greig, Defend
ant: '"
In the name of the State of Ore
gon, you are hereby commanded to
appear in the above entitled court
and cause on or before the 30th day
of September, 1912, and answer the
complaint filed against you in said
Court and cause, and for want of an
answer the plaintiff will apply to
the Court for the relief demanded in
her complaint, to-wit: For a de
cree dissolving tne bonas of matri
mony now exisiting between your
self and the plaintiff and for such
dther and further relief as to the
Court may seem just in the-premises.
This summons is publishe by. an
order of the Honorable J. U. Camp
bell, Judge of the above entitled
Court, made and entered on the 23rd
day of August, 1912.
Date of first publication, August
24th, 1912.
Date of last publication, Septem
ber 28th, 1912.
MAC MAHON,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Summons
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon for the County of Clacka
mas. Winifred B. James, Plaintiff, vs.
Richard- T. James, Defendant.
To Richard T. James, the above
named defendant: "
In the name of the State of Ore
gon you are hereby notified and re
quired to appear and answer the
complaint filed against you in the
above entitled Court and suit on or
before Saturday, the 5th day of Oct
ober, 1912, that date being six full
weeks after the first publication of
this summons and if you fail to so
appear and answer .he complaint
herein on or before said date the
plaintiff will apply to the court for
the relief prayed for in her com
plaint in said suit, to-wit:
For a decree of said court forever
divorcing plaintiff from the defend
ant herein and dissolving the mar
riage contract now and heretofore
existing between plaintiff and de
fendant and holding the same for
naught and for a further decree of
court awarding to plaintiff the sole
care, custody and control of the
minor child of plaintiff and defend
ant, to-wit: Ethel M. James, aged
8 years; and for such other and
further relief as to the court may
seem meet withj equity and good
conscience.
This summons is published for
six weeks in the Morning Enter
prise, a newspaper .published in
Oregon City, County of Clackamas,
and State of Oregon, and having a
general circulation, by order of Hon.
R. B. Beatie, Judge of the County
Court of the State of Oregon, for
the county of Clackamas. This
summons is first published on Aug
ust 24, 1912, and will be last pub
lished October 5th, 1912.
T. B. McDEVITT,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
21 Ainsworth Building, Portland,
Oregon.
HOTEL ARRIVALS
The following are registered at the
Electric Hotel: L. Christensen, Mil
waukee, Wis.; John Arenz,' Milwau
kee, Wis.; W. Murray, Portland; V.
T. Levitt, Wilhoit; F. A. Davis,
Scotts Mills: L. P. Hennes New York:
Laura McMaster, Porter, Wash.; Fred
Haynes, Portland; J. W. Shea, John
Hurt, J. R. Marks, R. H. Stewart, Bat
tle Creek, Mich.; E. W. Bark, A. A.
Bush, Pittsfield, Mass.
HI,
"-9
F. J. MYER, Cashier;