QfAfin THE pAHAT WAS IT" fTUST -SUPPOSUSGr Ttfe tiMGWE ( JETS I : Jfe C Aa-! TAK-TWE M0TOR, jJtTV "WATUHCVJE- a ' - BROKE tXWN NOW-ANDX DRIFTED l0 HoMtLglgNx T 1 Motor - ' " "' ' ' ""' "' "' ' " " " 11 " ' "' ' - - - '' '' , - . , . , - 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 Year, by mall $2.00 Six Months by mall 1.60 Four Months, by mail 1.00 Per Week, by carrier .10 CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER ;-.$J$Sc$$3S$$ THE MORNING ENTERPRISE 3 is on sale at the following stores 3 every day: Huntley 'Bros. Drugs Main Street 3 .1. W. McAnulty. Cigars , Seventh and Main. $ E. B. Anderson t Main, near Sixth. $ M. E. Dunn Confectionery Next door to P. O. City Drug Store Electric Hotel. . 3 Schoenborn Confectionery Seventh and J. Q. Adams. & $ Q Q Q $ $ Q S $ Oct. 19 In American History. 1630 First general Venn of Mnssnchu . setts assembled at ti-'ton 1735 John Adams, secouj president of the United States, born: died 1826. 1781 Lord Cornwall! surrendered to George Washington at Yorktown, Va 1864 Battle of Cedar Creek, Va.. fa mous for "Sheridan's ride." 1909 The Portola festival, celebrating the discovery in 1769 of the bay of San Francisco, opened. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. (From noon today to noon tomorrow.) Sun sets 5:13. rises 6:17. Evening stars: Mercury. Venus. MarrJuplter. Morning star: Saturn. WHERE ARE YOU, PROFESSOR WILSON? Are you for free trade, as you were for years and years when professor In Priaceton College; or do you now actually believe in the hazy sort of gradual change to "tariff for revenue only" which you now advocate? Are you opposed to labor unions as you were when you were a college professor; or is your suddenly adver tised conversion to their benefits cf late a real one or only for purposes of being president? Are you still at heart as much op posed to the initiative and referen dum as when you lectured at Prince ton to your college students; or have you really changed your mind since the presidential bee began to buzz In your bonnet? Are you against exclusion of the Chinese from the Pacific Coast, or do you still believe in their "superior skill and intelligence," as you did when you wrote your History of the American People. WHERE DO YOU STAND, PRO FESSOR, on these vital questions? If you were president would you carry out your brand new opinions or your former lifelong opinions? CAMP IN FAVOR OF SHIFTS. Tells Yale to Keep Opponents In Guess ing Mood Throughout. Walter Camp, the noted football ex: pert, recently gave a brief outline of the new football rules as affecting Yale and expressed his opinion that the quick running game with many shifts to draw out Hie defense will enable a light, experienced team to overcome a heavy team which resorts to old fashioned football.. "The best uitut-k.'' he said, "will be the one that combines shift plays"; Which will necessarily put the defense In. motion with regular plays. In this way not only will plunges through the line be effective, but also greater effect will be given to the end run or the run outside tackle, if a team allows its opponent to realize that the attack Is concentrated and that the plays all must start from a comparatively small radius behind the line, those opponents will close up and render such a form of attack extremely onerous and ex hausting. Brazil Nut Seeds. All the seeds varying from fifteen to twenty-four of the Brazil nut germi nate at one time. The most vigorous one gets first through a small hole at the top to the open air and then feeds upon the rest. If you saw It in the Enterprise it's CUB BAPTISTS DISCUSS (Continued from page 1) The young peoples' session began deviltry together. As he was I am doomed to be, this I have learned from Jesus." My Lord, you were dead then, but alive now. If you had a beautiful Jesus, but a dead Jesus, would you preach him? I would not." The minister then quoted Arnold's pathetic quotation describing life, love, etc., as delusions, and showed that this was the best that could be done bv a world without Christ. He said he knew three things: ; "First, all the dead receive a wel come from the heart of God immedi ately, as they enter into glory. Sec ond: Until that day, Christ is get ting ready a place for me. Third: He's praying for me. Why then should I fear?" He ended by) saying tnat Christ, last of all, saves by his imparted life, wherein the people become partak ers of his nature. The early part of the afternoon was taken up by the reports of commit tees. Among the reports was that of tne committee on Resolutions, thank One Way to Solve the Trust Problem By LOUIS D. BRANDEIS CHE issue of the present day is between REGULATED MO NOPOLY AND REGULATED COMPETITION. Competition in business corresponds to liberty in political and civil life. No believer in true liberty will ask for unregulated liberty. We have found the regulation of liberty to be ESSENTIAL TO ITS PRESERVATION and to its develop ment. . - - To preserve the liberty of the many we find it necessary to restrict the lib erty of the few. for unliceused liberty leads to oligarchy and despotism. We curb the liberty of the strong man in order to PROTECT THE LIBERTY OF THE PHYSICALLY WEAKER MAN. Thiit is a regulation of the civir liberty of the individuals. We also curb industrial liberty in the individ ual business in order that the weak may be protected against the strong. We restricted the theoretical free dom of contract between employer and employee by enacting factory laws governing the conditions under which work may be performed and to some extent the hours of labor. We did this because we recognized the difference of position of the employees and the employers under ordinary circum stauces. - The liberty of the individual em ployee was in dhnger of being stamp ed out unless the inequality of his po sition was PROTECTED 'lnd the workingmau given consistent life and health and some opportunity for that leisure which the Greeks held to be the esserve of liberty. SIMILARLY THE RIGHT OF COMPETITION MUST OF A NE CESSITY BE LIMITED IN ORDER TO PRESERVE IT. EXCESSES OF COMPETITION LEAD TO MO NOPOLY, JUST AS EXCESSES OF LIBERTY LEAD TO ABSOLUTISM. The Standard Oil company.- practic ing its riitht to unrestricted competi tion, frequently destroyed a competJ tor through a LOCAL PRICE CUT TING CAMPAIGN. The trust was ab!e to conduct such a campaign be cause of Its infinitely greater resources. The tobacco trust resorted to exactly the same tactics. This so called competition really was BUSINESS MURDER. It was resort ed to with the deliberate purpose of KILLING THE COMPETITOR and us a step to monopoly in other words, INDUSTRIAL DESPOTISM. SUCH EXCESSES OF COMPE TITION IN BUSINESS MUST BE CURSED . IN ORDER TO PRE MORNING ENTERPRISE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1912. Esther Was Traveling Some When She Passed Goat Island ing the Morning Enterprise for the reports of its sessions, at 4 : 00 in the afternoon and in the evening a sermon preached by Dr. Hinson was followed by the adjourn ment of the convention. - The attendance registered was more than 200, with about 300 visi tors and delegates in all were pres. ent. Friday morning was devoted to the work of the Bible school. After a de votional meeting, led by Rev. J. D. Springston the district superintendent of the Baptist Sunday school work upon the Northwestern coast, TL K. Hall presented the report of the Sun' day schools, after which a number led in fifteen minute discussions on Sunday school work, Rev. A. C. Sax to speaking upou "Training a local Sunday school leadership;" Rev.' R. R. Perkins upon "Our obligation to the unreached;" Jeff. H. Irish, upon "A graded school curriculum," and Rev. M. L. Thomas upon "The evan" gelistic opportunity." This was fol lowed by an interesting Round Table upon general Bible school work, led by Rev, Springton. By the Pouna. Little Elsie Mamma, how much do people pay a pound for babies? . Mam maBabies are not sold by the pound, my dear. Little Elsie Then why do they always weigh them as soon as they are born? Exchange. - Regulate Unfair Price Cutting Methods Lawyer and Economist, of Boston SERVE TO OTHERS THEIR LIB ERTY TO DO BUSINESS, JUST AS WE RESTRAIN THE FREEDOM OF THE PHYSICALLY STRONG MAN TO DO AS HE PLEASES RE GARDLESS OF THE RIGHTS OF OTHERS. PRICE CUTTING MERE LY IS ONE OF THE MANY METH ODS OF UNFAIR COMPETITION WHICH THE LAW MUST REGU LATE IN ORDER TO PRESERVE COMPETITION. Another very common instance of unfair and oppressive competition is the REFUSAL TO SELL SOME ES SENTIAL ARTICLE unless the pur chaser agrees to deal exclusively with the seller in purchasing still other ar ticles in which the seller deals. That again, is taking advantage of the seller's unassailable rights in con trolling a single indispensable article to DESTROY COMPETITION in all other articles in that particular busi ness. . This is a form of unfair competition being resorted to by the shoe machin ery trust when by its leases of essen tial machines it compels the shoe man ufacturer to refrain from dealing with its competitors in their machines, sub stantially crushing competition in oth er lines. Our experience with trusts during the last twenty-two years, since the enactment of the Sherman law. has furnished us abundant material from which to DETERMINE IN WHAT RESPECT EXCESS OF COMPETI TION MUST BE CURBED IN OR DER TO MAINTAIN COMPETI TION. All that experience must be utilized in providing for that regulation of competition through which alone in dustrial liberty can be preserved. Regulation may mitigate the evil of monopoly. But if through a perfec tion of governmental machinery, a per fection greater than has ever existed in any country at any time, it were possible to prevent special wrongdo ing, the extortion and oppression Inci dent to monopoly, the great evils of industrial absolutism would be MERE LY REDUCED. NOT AVOIDED. - THE GREATEST OF ALL EVILS OF . MONOPOLY IS ITS DEADEN ING EFFECT. IT KILLS INCEN TIVE; IT KILLS. PROGRESS. THE TRUE SOLUTION OF THE TRUST PROBLEM LIES IN THE REGU LATION OF COMPETITION. 1 - - - l General Orozco's Writing Plea Photo by American Press Association 4 , v . r, Iff , '""is. gillie EAR MR. PRESIDENT TAFT My papa Is not a murderer He Is a brave soldier fighting for his country Please don't let the Americano soldiers give my grandpapa to Mr Madero, for Mr Madero would shoot him. and that would kill .poor grandma." So wrote little seven-year-old Elena Orozco, granddaughter of General Pascual Orozco, leader of the Mexican rebels And she meant every word of it straight from' sd anxious though childish heart She Is living with her mother, brother and sisters in Los Angeles &pd her "granddaddy," as she lovingly calls him. would fall into the bands of the United States through the fortunes of war and then be turned over to President Madero of Mexico, she sat down on the porch of her mother's home, with her brother beside her. as. you see them above, and penned the pathetic letter to President Taft She signed her naru just as reproduced in the cut Mrs Orozco left Mexico when the federals, threatened to put 'the Orozco family between the tiring lines during battle H ever they could lay -hands on" them Carus Man Operated Upon. Frank St. Clair, who lives near Ca rus, underwent a surgical operation at the Sellwood hospital a few days ago for appendicitis;""r. C. A. Stuaft of this city assisting Dr. Beeson, of Sellwood. Mr St Clair is improving from the effects of the operation. GIRL ENDSUFE" AFTER AUTO RIDE (Continued from page 1) stone. The stories of the girl and the men are virtually the same They said they left here in a car at 8 o'clock Thursday evening for Port- 4Jand.: The car was obtained from Elliott's garage. Peter Marrs, who has been employed at the garage for several months, was the driver. They said the machine broke down at Gray's Crossing on the way to Port, land, and after temporary repairs were made the car was taken to a garage in Portland. None of them could tell the location of the garage. They said it took several'; hours to make the - repairs, which accounted for their not returning home earlier. All deny that anything happened on the trip which would cause Miss Prof fitt to commit suicide. The party drove through Main street, Ore. gon City about 7 o'clock Friday morn ing and had" something to eat in a res taurant Witnesses say as the car went through Main street one of the girls was sitting in a man's lap. The prisoners admitted that they had a small bottle of port wine, but declar Bonds! Insurance! Fidelity Judicial, License, Public Official, Contract, Notary Public, Fire, Liability, Accident, Automobile, Flate Glass, Burglary. EARLEMC. latourette BONDS, INSURANCE, COLLECTION S First National Bank BOg. . Oregon City, Oregon Grandchildren to President Taft UK'. . . ed that this was all they had had to drink on the trip. None of them thowed effects of having been, drink" ing. Deputy District Attorney Stipp and Sheriff Mass, .after making an inves tigation, decided that it would be best to hold the girl and the two men un til after the inquest and the comple tion of the post mortem examination The girl was placed in the custody of Jail Matron Parker. Finucane was taken hom.e to change his clothing, and Timmons were locked up. Finu cane was later placed in jail. . Dr. Guy Mount, who is conducting the autopsy said late .Friday .night: "So for I have found notBing to in dicate that Miss Proffitt was attack ed. She had been a patient of mine, but I did not think she was seriously ill. It might have been that she brooded over her illness until she de. cided to end her life." ""I am still at a loss to find a motive for the suicide," said Sheriff Mass. "The other members of the'party say Miss Proffitt was! in good spirits when she left them, and that nothing happened on the trip that might have caused her to end her life. The moth er said .this was the first time her daughter had stayed away from home at night, and it is possible the girl feared to face her parents." Deputy District Attorney Stipp, af ter hearing the report of Dr. Mount, said' the only theory he could advance for the girl's act was that she feared facing her parents after having been out all night. Miss Johnson is an orphan, and has been employed at the home of Peter Hass, Fourteenth and Center streets. Sh,e was detained in the sheriff's of fice most of the day, but it was not until late in the afternoon that she was informed that her friend had committed suicide. The girl collap sed and was in an almosa hysterical condition when taken by Deputy Sher iff Miles to the home of the jail ma tron. She begged piteously to be al lowed to go to the Haas home, but Mrs. Haas sent word that she would not have her back. J. N. Elliott, who lives -near the Proffittj home, - which is on Molalla avenue at the city Imits, was attract" ed by the cries of the mother when he passed the house on the way to work. The girl was dead when he entered the house, the body being on a chair. Miss Proffitt was fully dress ed except her shoes, which had been removed shortly after she entered the house. '-. Marrs the chauffeur, virtually cor roborated the stories of Timmons, Finucane and Miss Johnson. He said that the machine was hired at , 8 o'clock Thursday night and the I party was supposed to return to. this I city before 1 o'clock Friday morning. I "We had a serious breakdown," ', said Marrs, "and went to two garages, ! staying at one about two hours 'and j the other about three. While we were ; at one of the garages the young men and "women said they would go to a restaurant nearby and eat. They were gone only a few minutes. They did not go into any saloons or leave I the car except when they went to j the restaurant. When the machine 'was engaged I was informed that the party simply wished-to take a pleas ure trip to Portland. Marrs is one of the best known young men in the city and his story is implicitly believed by the authorities. He was simply employed to drive the machine; as he is, by other persons daily. He said the party returned to this city at 7 o'clock Friday morning and left him at the restaurant. Wants, For Sale, rEtc Notices under these classified headings will be inserted at one cent a word, first insertion, half a cent additional inser tions. One inch card, f2 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. ANNOUNCEMENT FIRST CLASS Tailoring, Cleaning, Pressing, Dying and Remodeling to The Latest Style. WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF LADIES' SUITS and SKIRTS. The best of work Is Ready Made. Here is your oppor guaranteed. Prices less than the tunity for thirty days only. Hats Cleaned and Blocked- S. - LAVIN, 612, Main St., Oregon City, Oregon. WANTED WANTED Fresh- ' Milch cows. L. Hartke, Mount Pleasant dairy man. Lesson in needlework, apply Miss Clara Miller, 901 "Sixth street, City. STRAYED, LOST, strayed or stolen, from Kilmer and Kingel's sawmill at Redland, buck skin horse branded "S" on right side, had halter on. Liberal reward, Oscar May, R. F. D. No. 3. 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 RENT FOR SALE OR RENT Eleven acres in the city on the Fifth street road, three-room house, small barn, chick . en house, for term of years, reas onable rent, or will rent on partial - oron basis. Georze H. Cook, care Enterprise. Open A Check Account at this Bank and pay all your bill with-checks. You will find at the end of the month that yon will have saved much- of the loose change that you now carry around in your pocket ' and spend for trifles that you really don't need. THE BANK OF OREGON CITY OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY D. C. LATOURETTE, President. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON CAPITAL Transacts a General Banking Business. By HOP FOR SALE Household goods, all new, fumed oak and reed furniture, German rugs, etc. Call 311, 17th st. Tel. Main 2481. HAVE FOR SALE any where from 40 to 600 acres , separate tracts, will sell in not less than 40 acre tracts or all of it. Will trade for town property. Address Ferris Mayf ield, . Spring water, Route No. 1, or Phone Beaver Creek. FOR RENT FOR TRADE Light hack, canopy top, for light single driving horse, about 950 pounds. Inquire C. A. Andrus, Oregon City; R. F. D. No. 5. FOR RENT Furnished 5.room house. Address "S" Care of Enterprise. MUSICAL Mrs. Marie S. Schwartz TEACHER OF PIANO AND VOICE CULTURE Oregon City " Telephone Main 3482 VIOLIN LESSONS Mr. Gustave Fletchner, from Liepzig, Germany, is prepared to accept a limited num ber of pupils. Mr. Fletchner may also) be engaged for solo work . or - ensemble work. Address for terms, etc., Gustave Fletchner, Oregon City Oregon. VIOLIN TAUGHT H. B. WEEKS, Teacher of Violin. Grand Theatre. ATTORNEYS JOHN N. SED7ERS, Attorney at law. Rooms 1 and 2 Weinhard Building, opposite courthouse. Collections given prompt attention. 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. 8502, Hnm B 1J NOTICES Summons In the Circuit Court of the state of Oregon, for Clackamas County. Margaret Moor, Plaintiff, vs. Frank Moor. Defendant. To Frank Moor, above named Defendant: . 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 entit led court and cause, on or before the 11th day of November, 1912, being more than six vfeeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, and if you fail so to ap- ' pear or answer the Plaintiff for want thereof will apply to the Court for the relief prayed for in the complaint, which is as follows: - that the marriage contract now ex isting between you and the Plain tiff be forever dissolved and the Plaintiff be granted a decree of di- vorce, a-nd for such other and fur ther relief as to the court may seem just and equitable. This summons is " served upon you by publication by order of the Hon. J. U. Campbell, judge of the above entitled court which order is dated the 27th day of September 1912, and the date of the first publication of this summons . is the 28th day of September, 1912, and the last day of publication ia the 9th day of November, 1912. FRANK SCHLEGEL, Attorney for Plaintiff. F. J. MYER, Cashier. $50,000.00 Open from? A. M. to 3 p. M. I I