Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, October 16, 1912, Page 2, Image 2

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    SCOOP
THE CUB
REPORTER
fecooX WAKTYOUToA
'YOURE. COUSIN ULLA
OU L.L. tAVCS. ABI(r
HIT WITH HER VP
How "miK sue,
MORNING ENTERPRISE
OREGON CITY, OREGON
E. E. BRODIE, Editor and Publisher.
"Entered as second-class matter Jan
jary S, 1911. at the post office at Oregon
Citv. Oregon, under the Act of March
3. i879."
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One Year, by mail $3.00
Six Month9 by mail 1-50
Four Months, by mail 1.00
Per Week, by carrier 10
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
4'SS?3S?S$SSSS$es
THE MORNINd ENTERPRISE
Is on sale at the following stores
every day:
Huntley Bros. Drugs
Main Street
J. W. McAnulty. Cigars
Seventh and Main.
E. B. Anderson
Main, near Sixth.
M. E. Dunn Confectionery
Next door to P. O.
City Drug Store
Electric Hotel.
Schoenborn Confectionery
Seventh and J. Q. Adams.
Oct. 16 In American History.
1806 William Pitt Fessenden. states
man, secretary of treasury In 1864
65, born in New Hampshire: died
1809.
1S59 John Brown astonished the
world by seizins the United States
arsenal at Harpers Ferry. Va.. as
a base for a slave insurrection.
1909 Meeting of President 'W. H.
Taft and President Porfirio Diaz of
Mexico at EI Paso, Tex.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
(From noon today to noon tomorrow.)
Sun sets 5:18, rises 6:14. Evening
stars: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter.
Morning star: Saturn.
The United States as it stands is
the evidence of the progressiveness
of the Republican party, during the
last fifty years, for the party has been
in power for nearly the entire period.
Democratic managers claim every
thing, -but are careful to say nothing
about a cabinet. They are wise not
to tackle that mountain of trouble on
the strength of wild straws flying in
the wind.
ASSISTANT DEMOCRATS.
Nothing is harder to find in the presj
ent campaign than converts to the
Democratic party. Practically there
are no such persons. That party has
long been decadent: It attracts no
hew blood and is unable to vitalize any
principle. Its latest national record is
one of business calamity and general
"Keeping Up Appearances"
Saps the Vitality of Fam
ilies of Small Incomes. '
By Dr. JOHN L. ELLIOTT ot
of New
gfllAT does this triad strain
m on one's social acquaintances do to the familv ( .lust this:
livery idea that anv ot
dinated to and crushed bv the main train of thought' that
is always in the mind HOW TO MAKE BOTH F.XDS MKKT,
HOW TO MAKE THE HEST" APPEARANCES ON THE
LEAST MONEY, HOW TO FOOL' YOUR XKH'.IIKOK into be
lieving your income much larger than it is and how to fight off the
bills that are a certain result of such living. These things rob the
man. woman and child of their useful ideas and cheat them of th best
things in life. When a man comes home from the dailv grind at his
office if his amtitious wife is not readv to drag him out some place
where more mrney must be spent to keep the appearance of family
affluence up to the standard he is TOO TIRED AM) HEARTSICK
TO REST HIS M1XD bv reading. or study or even by turnine to
fad.
IF THESE FAMILIES WOULD FOR TWO OR THREE YEARS LEAD
RATIONAL. MOCERATE LIVES THERE WOULD EE A TREMENDOUS
GAIN IN THE MENTAL POISE OF THE PARENTS AND CHILDREN; A
RECUPERATION OF PHYSICAL POWERS, A SAVING OF MONEY AND,
THE GREATEST OF ALL, A GLIMMERING IDEA OF WHAT THINGS ARE
REAllLY,WORTH WHILE.
Curtail the desire for "appearance." cut down rent or do without
elevators, hall boys, palms and a maid. i
.'-' .
m y r. V2 ,w ia i : ii--- i sssa?; m, ft , v'rass wwuvau
incompetency. Young voters can not
be headed that way, and the majority
of the older voters are warned by ex
perience. The only chance for Demo
cratic success this year, or any future
year, is in Republican division or '
j apathy. It was the Republican failure
I to vote in 1910 that gave the Demo-1
cratic party a lead in one branch of
I Congress and several states in which
the Democrats have long been a mi- j
j r.ority. Next montn "a full vote will ,
i come out and the party that reached
jits highest mark in numbers sixteen
! years ago will inevitably be beaten
unless the Republican party is divided
against itself.
It is to Republican bolters that the
old relic known as the regular Demo
cratic party looks Tor success this
year. Featen heavily in the last four
presidential campaigns that party, im
! potent as well as repudiated, lacks
! at least two million votes of half the
j electorate. Its only hope is in insur
I gent Republicans, and it knows that
these will not directly vote the Dem
ocratic ticket. But their votes for a
third party might serve the purpose.
The third party may call itself by an
other name, but its proper title is As
sistant Democrats. It cannot electiits
owp ticket. It can only help th" out
worn, decaying, ill-omened regular
Democratic party that has had full
control of the government but two
years in the last fifty, and made that
period a horror in business depres-
j sion and national loses. The AsS
ant Democrats are also Second-Class
Democrats. They would get nothing
in case of Wilson's election except the
old Bourbon haha.
"Home, Sweet Home."
"Home. Sweet Home," Payne's song,
was originally a number in the opera
"Clari. the Maid of Milan." a produc
tion brought out in 1823. The opera
was a failure, and nothing Is now
known of it save the one song, which
became instantly popular.' Over 100.
000 copies were sold in the b'rst year
of its publication, and the sale in one
form or another has been constant
ever since the first appearance of this
beautiful theme. The melody is a
Sicilian folk song and was adapted to
the words by Payne himself.
Fooish.
By six causes a fool may be known:
Anger without cause: speech without
profit: change without motive: inquiry
without an object: putting trust in a
stranger, and wanting capacity to dis
tinguish between friend and foe.
Persevering.
Jenkins Is a man of remarkable
perseverance."
"Is he?"
"Yes, indeed. He has tried six dif
ferent kinds of hair restorer, and he
hasn't given up the fight yet."
the Ethical Culture Society
York
to make a favorable inmression
tliein reallv ever possessed is subor
-9
MORNING ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY,
Use a Little More Tact With Your
fBUssfovA COUSIN ULLA 1 , fX OSCj-TcT h YAHOHDRefcAUDi 1 '- 7 I
leart to Heart
Talks.
By EDWIN A. NYE
SORAL USURY
' If yon lend iuone, and coliect more
jthait the legal rate f interest yon
I are guilty of prarti . -iiiir usury: If dis
i covered, you must su:':'er the penalty
! Well
' Do you know iiioiv is such a rhiua
i as moral usim '
I When you collect from tliose nlMiiit
! you more of servire. or afTeiilion. or
: sympathy, or :issWi.-in-i Mian you are
, properly entitled to vou are guilty of
pr;ti-ti-!ii-' moral usury
To illustrate
' You an- a tiusi-ami ami you require
I of yocr witV luniv than the marriage
I i-onipa- t provides Yon(!enmm1 of her
more of si-lf i'o"ial or patience, or for
. giveness o'l . auc tion than vou are
! williiu: to exteuil ) Ifr r you arc
a wife and von a--1; of vour husband
'more of labor.-' ot nnvittv. of eronomv
than von H'- '""illing to give. ' '
Yon are a usurer'
Or you an- a son. or daughter, nnc
you exact "mure from your parents
than you should ot
money or assistance,
care or Iniulness.
You are usurious
Or you ask. of your
ipiaint.-u s more time
than vou are willing
yovr fallio'
vour mother's
friends or fie
and sympathy''
to extend to
them. You. ."expect move than is your
due and complain if they do not freel
give. , , .
That is moral usury
Your friend, for' instance, without
intending to do so. offends you He
shows by his manner that he is sorry
he hurt you You refuse to meet him
half way. requiring a formal apology
and cherish your grievance.
Rank usury!
Or you refuse to exercise charity to
your friend who has his shortcomings
Or yon require of him more of self
denial than you would suffer for him
He will do all that may become a man
.You want him to go farther.
Usurer!
Now the law provides severe penal
ties for him who is guilty of legal
usury. Should there not also he penal
i ties for the practice of moral ueuryV
j There are!
j They are not written in law hooks
i but in vour moral constitution. An-'
unlike the written laws of men. boniv'
In sheep or buckram, these laws ari
alwavs enforced'
Whatsoever a man so wet h whet hei
it be of selfishness or irreed. or in
gratitude, or. stubborn lack of kind
ness that aiso shall he reap
DEBATES PLANNED
(Continued from page 1)
Single lax forces in Oregon, will tilt
lances in Portland, Salem, and Hood
River. Governor West will be chair
man of the Salem meeting it is be
lieved. W. S. U'Ren will endeavor to ex
plain the logic of the graduated single
tax and he plans to show why in flis
opinion tnat this measure should pass,
ivir. Snields will show that the funds
that are being used to exploit single
tax in Uregon are being put up by the
Fels' lund commission, that the grad
uated measure and the three county
siugie tax measures in Clackamas,
Coo, and Multnomah contemplate
the establishment of the Henry
George single tax that the Henry
George single tax is not a system of
taxation at al" and waa not so intend
ed and that it has for its ultimate
end the nationalization land by ab
sorbing the enti: e rental value of land,
and thai such a system is single tax
and would not be for the betterment
of society.
Although M. U'Ren declined to ac
cept Mr. Shield's proposal to discuss
the single tax, on the ground that it
was not the question before the house
Mr. Shield's willingness to discuss the
subject and permit Mr. U'Ren to cen
ter nis fire on reasons why the vot
ers should pass, the graduated meas
ure while the league secretary is per
mitted to aiscuss the measure in full
scope drew the men together. Most
of the debates will be in Portland and
Mr. TJ'Rtn will De in the city tomor
row to discuss tentative arrangements
for these meetings to take effect as
soon as Mr. Shields shall conclude
his speaking tour next Saturday.
Mr. U'Ren is anxous to have these
debates scattered out over the state,
but Mr. Shields is unwilling for this.
"I want to give U'Ren and his
friends fair warning," remarked Mr.
Shields, "that I shall thoroughly ex
pose his schemes for Oregon which
began when he Induced the ' voters
of this state to pass a bill which pur
ported to repeal all the tax, but which
in reality was a measure to give coun
ties home rule in taxation. Mr. U'Ren
Thousands- fierr "Moo" of the
: Two Bull Moose Leaders
' fC ITT T T ' n 1- v
, ' f.rS T f I its X 1 i
,4 wV.-.tMi:V t
V " 1 ' 'I- Ml tft'-rUi
r . tA r U ,k ' A
V-? ' T --fT-- sVV ' J if
r: VvT; 1 '
Pnotos Dy American Press Association. &
EEPIXG up his reputation
completed a lO.OOt) swing around the. country during September, uiik
ing his appeal for Progressive
spoke to thousands of persons
more from the rear of his special train.
when it was over. "As fresh as a daisy! was his characteristic exclamation
During October he speaks in the middle west including Illinois. Michigan, In
diana and Ohio, with a dash into Pennsylvania and Xeyv England. The last
five days of his campaign will be in New York While the head of the Pro
gressive ticket has been battling for votes with his customary vigor, his side
partner. Governor Iliram W Johnson of California, has been running, him a
close second in activity. The executive of the Golden State has toured th
middle west and the east in true Rooseveltian style. The Erogressives fee
in the governor a first rate vote getter, and that's what counts. The views in
our uliutogrni-hs show the Jyvo bull moosers in action ,
has .my perfect willingness to take- up j
nis time telling our audiences just j
wny single tax will prove a panacea
for Oregon. However, when my turn
comes, IJ11 show how in Alberta
where tiiere is a partial application
of single tax, that public finances are
paralyzed, that public servants are
unable to rai.e their salaries, that
tne taxes on land are eight to ten per
cent, not mills, butj cents. I shall
prove that in British Columbia, to
whir-h TVTr TT'T?pn nrH hie friends nnint
with arimirinp- finsrArs plthoneh thev
prefer to spend their own time under
the tax laws of Oregon, there is no
single tax; that instead there is a poll
tax of $3 a head, that there are taxes
on banks, salmon enneries; and manu
facturies of various descriptions, that
personal prope'ty is not exempt in
other words, I shall prove to him by
hi!s own words which he now would
like to deny, that the graduated single
tax and the county measures are
natfooted single tax measures."
The debate will probably be made
on a basis that Mr. Shields will open
one debate and Mr. U'Ren the next. It
is planned to debate for two hours,
the time to be divided as follows:
opening forty minutes, reply fifty
minutes, rebuttal ten minutes, coun
ter rebuttal ten, minutes, closing ten
minutes.
T
HE country is at the
The last four years under Republican laws and Re
publican policies mzrk a triumphant climax in the
nation's history.
From the day that VTI iam McKinley, in the name of the
Republican party, assumed control of the government, down to
the present time, when " .'illiam Howard Taft is provinr the
worthy and patriotic sue essor of the martyred president, there
has been uninterrupted progress, unexampled prosperity, mar
velous growth, t
Business everywhere is booming. Labor is in great de
mand, and wages were never better. Banks' deposits are in
creasing. Railroads are carrying enormous quantities of
freight. Shipbuilding has taken on a new lease of life. Farm
ers are making money and miners and all other classes of
workers are busy. Never was such universal activity known
before.
The details presented in these columns tell their own con
vincing story. They are gathered from all sections of the
country a broadside of interesting, instructvie facts that dem
onstrate the widespread blessing of prosperity all over the
land. ..."
OCTOBER 16, 1912.
Relations, Scoop
strenuously. Colonel Theodore Roosevelt
support in twenty-seven states He
at scheduled meetings and to thousands
"How do you feel?" he was - uuked
The First Skates.
As late as the (ixteeuth century
ukates in England were very primitive,
for we learn that the London appren
tices used to tie bones to their feet anil
under their heels. Writing in ltilil.
Evelyn speaks of "the strange and
wonderful dexterity of the sliders" in
St James' park, "performed before
their majesties by divers gentlemen
and others with scheets. after the
! manner of the Hollanders,
with what
swiftnesse they pass, how suddainly
they stop in full carriage upon ' the
Ice."
How She Knew.
Mr. McSosh Vh;:t was it that marV
you think I'd been drinking last night:
Mrs. McSosh Oh, 1 don't know. 1 sup
pose the fact that you were fearfully
drunk had as much to do with it as
anything. Cleveland Leader.
Value Received.
Griggs Who'd ever suppose that
Brown would lend himself to such a
contemptible scheme?
Briggs He didn't lend himself; he
sold himself for cash down. Boston
Transcript
flood tide of prosperity.
.
j PLUNGING GAME WILL NOT DO
j Coach Yost Says Quarterback Who Can
j Mix Plays Is Best.
! "A good quarterback who knows
; how to mix his plays and can open
j up the game when he needs to will do
i. a lot for the team under the new
I rules." said Fielding H. Yost, head
i coach of the University of Michigan
j football team. "A straight, plunging
! game will not do. and w heavy team ;
j will not have the advantage that so '
; many seem to think. Of course the
j unrestricted forward pass will help a
lot. but a proper mixture of the old !
style plunging tactics and the newer j
I open game will produce the results. j
' "Four downs will help a lot. but :
j you still- have two and a half yards to !
I gain "on a down, and under the old !
rules there were many times that a
team couldn't make the yard and two- J
. thirds it needed to make its distance."
I -
! Wants, For Sale, Etc
Notices under these classified headings
i will be inserted at one cent a word, first
i 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
' ei i oi-s occur free corrected notice will be
i prinic-d for patron. Minimum charge 15c.
ANNOUNCEMENT
FIRST CLASS Tailoring, Cleaning,
Pressing, Dying and Remodeling to
The Latest Style. WE MAKE A
SPECIALTY OP LADIES' SUITS
and SKIRTS. The best of work is
guaranteed. Prices .less than the
Ready Made. Here is your oppor
tunity for thirty days only- Hats
Cleaned and Blocked-
S. LAVIN.
612, Main St., Oregon City, Oregon.
WANTED Female Help.
WANTED Experienced girl for gen
eral housework. Mrs. L. A. Morris,
Phone 2301."
WANTED
vVANTED Freh Milch cows. L.
Hartke, Mount Pleasant dairy man.
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 Household goods, all new
primed oak and reed furniture, Ger- L
man rugs, etc.
uaii on, iitu si.
Tel Main 2481.
FOR SALE At once, cheap, house
hold furniture, also chickens. In
quire Mrs. L. Guedon, 16th and
Jackson streets.
FOR SALE Four spring Cotswold
bucks, fine looking as some of .the
registered stock, from $6.00 up. Al
s"o thirteen ewes at a reasonable
price. D. C. Fouts, Springwater,
Oregon, Route No. 1
FOR RENT
FOR TRADE Light nack, canopy
top, for light single driving horse,
about 950 pounds. Inquire C. A
Andrus, Oregon City, R. F. D. No. 5.
FOR RENT To gentleman, furnished
room Bath, furnace heat, and
electric lights. 620 12th street.
Phone 2134.
VIOLIN TAUGHT
H. B. WEEKS, Teacher of Violin.
Grand Theatre.
ATTORNEYS
JOHN N. SETVERS, Attorney at law, i
nuuuis X duu i rciuuaiu uutiuiu&,
opposite courthouse. Collections
given prompt attention.
WOOD AND COAL.
ORKGON CITY WOOD AND FUEL !
CO., F. M. Bluhm. Wood and com!
delivered to all parts of the ci'y
DOLLARS
Every man must havethat If he wishes to do business in
a businesslike way. We claim the confidence and patronage
of all who seek good financial connections on the ground
of sound, conservative . banking.
THE BANK OF OREGON CITY
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
D. C. LATOURETTE, President
JlTHE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
, OF OREGON
CAPITAL
Transacts a General Banking Business.
Dy HUM
SAWING A
your orders
B lid
SPECIALTY.
Pacific S502,
Phone
Home
NOTICES
Summons
In the Circuit Court of the state of
Oregon, for Clackamas County.
Hazel Pettis, Plaintiff, vs
Elmer C. Pettis, Defendant.
To Elmer C. Pettis, Defendant.
In the name of the state of Ore
- gon, you are hereby required toap
pear and answer the Complaint
filed against you in the above en
titled court and cause on or before
Saturday, the 9th day of November,
1912, -and if you fail to answer, for
want thereof, the Plaintiff will take
a decree against you divorcing her
from ycu, and freeing her from all
obligations of the marriage con
tract, and giving her the custody
of her child, Harold Elmer Pettis.
Notice of this summons is made
upon you by publication in the Morn
ing Enterprise for six cons"eceutive
weeks, by virtue of an order date0
September 25, 1912, signed by the
Honorable J. U. Campbell, Judge
of the Circuit Court of the state of
Oregon, for the county of Clacka
mas. t 1
Date of first publication, Septem
ber 26, 1912.
Date of last publication, Novem
ber 7, 1912. '
HUGHES & M 'DONALD
Attorneys-at-law,
301-3, Failing Building, Portland,
Oregon.
, Summons
In the Circuit Court of "the State of
Oregon ,for Clackamas County.
Ellen Waufle, plaintiff, vs', Ralph
J Waufle, defendant.
To Ralph J. Waufle, 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 named suit
on or before the 16th day of Octo
ber, 1912, said date being after the
expiration of si3tf weeks from the
first publication of this summons,
' and if you fail to appear or answer
said complaint, for want thereof,
the plaintiff will apply to the court
for the relief prayed for in her
complaint, to-wit:
For a decree dissolving the bonds
of matrimony- now existing between
the plaintiff and defendant. This
summons is published by order of
Hon. J. U. Campbell, Judge of the
Circuit Court, which order was
. made and entered on the 3rd day
of September, 1912, and the time
prescribed for publication thereof
Is six weeks, beginning with the is
sue dated September 4th, 1912, and
continuing each week thereafter to
and including the issue of October
16th, 1912.
DAN POWERS
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Summons
In the Circuit Court of the state of
Oregon, for Clackamas County.
Blanche A, Thorpe, Plaintiff
vs.
William A. Thorpe,' Defendant.
To William A. Thorpe, Defend
ant. 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 intit
led court and cause on or before
Saturday the 9th day of Nevember,
,1912, and if you fail to answer, for
want thereof Plaintiff will take a
decree against you divorcing her
from you and freeing her of all ob
ligations of the marritge contract.
Notice of this summons is made
upon you by publication in the
Morning Enterprise for fix consec
utive weeks, by virtue of an order
dated September 25, 1912, signed
by the Honorable J. U. Camp Dell,
Judge of the Circuit Court of the
state of Oregon, for the county of
Clackamas.
Date of first publication Septem
ber 26, 1912.
Date of last publication Novem
ber 7, 1912.
HUGHES & M 'DONALD,
Attorneys-at-law,
301-303 Failing Building,- Port
land, Oregon.
AND SENSE
F. J. MYER, Cashier.
CITY, OREGON ,
$50,000.00
Open from 9 A. M. to ? p.- M.
8