crnnn the REPORTER rOtM(r AlSE. THE PrVCE. OP-TICKET- TO THE WORLD SERES IF r HAVE TO 5TKK. SOMEBODY UP AMD TAKE IT AWAY 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." j TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One Tear, by mall WOO Six Months by mail 1.S0 Four Months, by mall 1.00 Per W eek, by carrier .10 , CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER THE MORNING ENTERPRISE $ la on sale at the following stores $ every day. $ Huntley Bros. Drugs $ Main Street S T. W. McAnulty. Cigars 3 Seventh and Main. $ E. B. Anderson $ Main, near Sixth. 3 St E. Dunn Confectionery $ Next door to P. O. 3 City Drug Store Electric Hotel. 3 Schoenborn Confectionery Seventh and J. Q. Adams. at Nov. 19 In American History. 1752 General George Rogers Clarke, soldier and explorer, born; died 1818. 1831 James Abram Garfield, twentieth president of the United States, born; died 1881 of wounds inflicted by C. J. Guiteau. 18C1 The U. S. warship San Jacinto reached New York with the Con federate foreign commissioners, J. M. Mason and John Slidell. on board as prisoners, having seized them on the high seas while under the British flag. 1867 Pitz-Greene Halleek. author and poet, died: born 1790. 190!) William M. Laffan. editor the New York Sun. died; born 1848. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. (From noon today to noon tomorrow.) Sun sets 4:39. rises G:53. Evening stars: Mercury. Venus. Jupiter. Morn ing stars: Saturn, Mars. ONCE "MORE THE ASSASSIN. The assassination of the Spanish premier brings to the front again the virtual responsibility " of protecting , public men against attacks by mur derous agitators or cranks. Unlike Shrank, however, the man who as- i saulted Col. Roosevelt, Martin, who assassinated Senor Canalejas, seems 1 to have been an avowed anarchist, ;. who belongs to a recognized band of these enemies of society. These male- j factors are found in all countries, an? their hands are against all prominent j representatives of the social order, j While the Milwaukee criminal was ap- j parentis an ill-balanced person, the Madrid murderer had all the intelli- j gence and the knowledge of conse quences which belong to men of his order. Anarchism has a long memory. Be- j cause Alfonso's government executed Ferrer, a leader of the Red Republi cans of Barcelona, for complicity, or alleged complicity, in a Republican demonstration in that Republican cen ter back in 1909, 'Alfonso and his prin cipal ministers were marked for slaughter. Several attempts have been My Guarantee REDUCED PRICES and extra high quality work in ABSTRACTS, LOANS, AND LAW. Also High Grade Insurance and Bonds EC Dva 8th & Main VJ. I-'jC, s. W. Corner What Has Any Man to Fear if Women Vote ? By Professor B. H. MEYER of the 'YKK since I have lieon old mutter I have thought that women should have all the rights 1 hat men have. 1 have neTer heard a single objection which. in my judgment, had SUBSTANTIAL MERIT. I have long felt and now feel that to deny women anything what-" soever which men enjoy is to IMPEACH THEIR CAPACITY. ABILITY AND CHARACTER. No man can really believe in democracy and deny women a single right granted to men. I should consider it a OREAT TN.TFSTICE to my mother,, my sister, my wife and my daughter to even question their right to per form any fundamental function in political life. WHAT CAN I OH ANY OTHER MAN HAVE TO FEAR FROM THEIR PARTICIPA-.O. IN ALL THE RIGHTS OF CITIZENSHIP? cub 'i'll. make POCKET" ANO'lP TWAT TVntvamqw XLL. POINT FROM EM ! v fcrUN AND S5.00 to the first person guessing cor rectly before 6 P. M. Nov. 19th the firm who is to advertise in this space. made to kill the king since then, and also to take the lives of some of his cabinet, but all failed until the ablest and most powerful of them was taken off. No public man, under any form of government is immune from assault by these foes of the established order. Spain and Italy seem to have more of them than any other country, in proportion to population, but all have them. They hase been less prevalent in England than in other European nations, because England offers them an asylum unless they commit some overt act against the law, but they are in that county too, as some attacks all of them harmless, made upon the late King Edward VII. show. , FORUM OF THE PEOPLE SOCIALISM DEFENDED. OREGON CITY, Or., Nov. 18. (Ed itor of the Enterprise) I hold no brief for the Socialists. I am not myself a Socialist. Neither am I writing this merely to uphold the contention of my friend, the Rev. Mr. Robinson, as I be lieve lie is quite capable of taking care of his own cause. But I am sure that the Enterprise has been uncon sciously unfair to the Socialists, and 1 am sure it is desirous of giving all classes in the community fair play. In your editorial reply to Mr. Rob inson you quoted quite a list of Social ists as opposed to Christianity. A num ber of the quotations were given in their true sense, but some were not. For instance, you implied from the words of Rev. Mr. Brown and Prof. Herron that these men were opposeu to Christianity. Your quotations merely show the fact that they are opposed to a certain type of Chris tianity, that which they believe, right ly or wrongly,, to be dominated by what they call "The Capitalistic Class spirit". Yet both of these men pro fess to be Christians. True I cannot agree with them in their interpreta tion of Christianity, but that is apart from the matter under discussion. As well quote Luther's strictures upon the Church of Rome as atheistic at tacks upon the foundations of the Christian faith, as call these men's at tacks upon what they believe to be a money-owned church, renunciation of Jesus Christ. True, Engale, Marx, Blatchford and many others of the Socialist leaders are atheistic. That is their privelege. Using the same argument, Tom Payne, Jefferson, and probably twenty other founders of Democracy are atheistic. Consequently a man must be an ath eist if he votes the Democratic tick et. Or Bob Ingersoll, Joe Cannon, and quite a respectable number of Repub lican nabobs are infidels, hence all Republicans are outcasts and sin ners. In America probably one third of the Socialist brotherhood belongs to the Christian Socialist fel lowship. Two are honored professors in leading Theological seminaries, and their Christianity has never been call ed in question. The head of the For eign Missionary Board in one of the largest evangelical denominations in the United States is a Socialist, yet as a denominational leader he has the unanimous endorsement of the entire denomination. The Austrian Social ists are largely "Christian Socialists". These men hold 80 seats in the Reich srath. The Christian Socialist fellow ship is strong in Sweden and in Great Interstate Commerce Commission enough to have an opinion in the r i MORNING ENTERPRISE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1912. You're A Real Rough Guy, Ain't You, Scoop a pass for. hip MY PIPE AtHHAPOr SfAOP UlM lNT-rt H COMlNGr ACROSS! Britain. . Yet these men are as truly Socialists as are their unbelieving fel lows. " Socialism is purely an economic philosophy. In brief, Socialism means the taking out of the hands of individ uals and placing in common public ownership all the means of producing wealth. Wealth may still be private, but the means of its production must be equally accessible to all. This is a question as far outside the realm of religion as the tariff, or single tax, or Canadian reciprocity. To those who understand Socialism, either friend or foe, any attempt to make a religious issue is simply ludicrous. Socialism is an issue that must be faced, not in the spirit of ridicule, nor in that of unfairness. Mr. Taft says it is the next great issue before the American people. Its arguments must be met fairly and squarely. I am not a Socialist, yet I must confess that I have no more Tear of Socialism under mining the Rock of Ages than I have of Republicanism or Democracy. It is an economic theory, revolutionary in its nature, yet purely an economic theory for all that. W'. S. MILLIKEN. PROTESTS AGAINST CITY DEBT. OREGON CITY, Nov. 18.(Editor of the Enterprise.) In the Morning Enterprise a few days since I notice, under your account of council meeting that Councilman Meyers and Mayor Dimick are agreed that Oregon City is in a serious condition. Never were words spoken truer! Mr. Taxpayer had better heed this warning. When a little town like Oregon City is carry ing a burden of $250,000 and better, isn't it about time we inquire into the merits of the men who placed us in this position and of the new men who seek to do further business for us? A city election is at hand and be fore you vote for any man offering his services wouldn't it be wise to find out where he stands, as to placing our city fureher in debt? As a proper ty owner and taxpayer of Oregon City I wish to protest against any further indebtedness being created for any purpose whatever. No man should be elected to the council who is not "wil ling to go on record as against any further indebtedness, and tax-players will be serving themselves and Ore gon City if they heed this warning. It isn't safe to jump into the river with such a millstone tied about our necks. E. C. HACKETT. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. TO OBEY ? A New York man ou the evening be fore he was to be married broke his engagement with the bride because she refused to promise to obey Itttfi. Fortunate she! ' The word obey" still remains in some of the marriage rituals, although it signifies little, the promise being un derstood to be given In a Tick wickian sense. Certainly there are not many intelli gent women who will give such a promise without mental reservation. It has been suggested that the serv ice be amended to read "love, eherisb and help." which would be much bet ter. No bride would object to such a pledge. And the husband? Should he desire to make a slave of his wife or a nonentity? Is man superior to woman? Fifty or a hundred years ago it might have been so contended. Woman to day is considered the equal of man If so. should the wife be expected to look up to the husband as lord and master and the husband look down upon his wife ns his inferior depend ent? Woman is not inferior. As a matter of fact, many a woman is a better manager than her husband. And he should be glad to avail himself of her superior ability In the manage ment of their affairs. Does he want t be a tyrant? Does the husband want to humiliate his wife by posing as her superior, or. what is more to the point, does he wish to make a hypocrite of her? Cer tain it is that, while she may. under stress, pay outward tribute to his as serted mastership or soothe his vanity by asking his permission to do or not to do, she will do as she pleases. "When a woman will she will, you may depend on't. And when she won't she won't, and there's an end on't" Really this New York man was born too late in the world's history Or in the wrong country. In Abyssinia lie might be able to find a woman who would marry hfm on her promise to obey. Kven then he might discover later on that his slave wife had tricked him It is high time the marriage service were edited to date. "Obey" should be eliminated. Marriage is a full partnership. Before, x make. fOUR Heart rrw v iic a swss cheese'. Cripple Who Sacrificed Life, Girl He Saved and His Funeral Photos by American Press Association. THOUSANDS of persons all over the country silently expressed sympa thy when poor Willie Rugh died. If there was ever a man who laid down his life for another that man was Kugh. Crippled, but with apparently years of life ahead of him, Willie Rugh permitted his lame limb to be amputated to save the life of Miss Ethel Smith at Gary, Ind., by the transplanting of skin The lame newsboy he was a man In years had never seen the young girl, but he was willing to sacrifice his crippled leg so that she might live. When death came to him shortly afterward In the hos pital he breathed his last 'ith these simple words. "Well, I guess I haven't lived In vain, after all." All Gary turned out to the hero's funeral. Miss Siv.it! Is convalescing She was not told that the lame newsboy had perished lu her behalf uutil after his funeral. The "Giant" Bell. Russia is famed for the manufacture of great hells The "Giant." cast in Moscow in the sixteenth centurv. weighed nearlv 3'J0.(HM) pounds and re quired twenty four men to tins; it In 1731' it fell, hut its fragments were re cast along with other metal into a bell which weighed 443.000 pounds, the i metal of which alone is valued at $3IM). (XX) "On Satan's Knees." A little gin nl five or so was much puzzled 011 nearum Hie lines ot the old hymn: Ann S-imn ! r-mtki when he sees Tile Ket s:tu:l UJion ltt Knees Vli:it(. ei . she iski-d. "did they want mi mi Sit tail s knees, for? I'm sure I should no! ii!;e to sit on Satan s knees al no and win sliouid lie trem hie If till) ttere so little?" Saved the Commission. "Let well enough alone." remarked I lie man who leased bis house without Hie help of an agent. -T'ucU. Write Ideas For Moving Picture Plays! YOU We Will Show You How! It you have ideas if you can THINK we will show you the secrets of this fascinating n ew profession. Positively no experience or literary excellence neces sary. No "flowery language" is want ed. The demand for photoplays is practically unlimited. The big film manufacturers are "moving heaven and earth" in. their at tempts to get enough good plots to supply the ever increasing demand They are offering $100 and more for single scenarios, or written - ideas We have received many letters from the film manufacturers, such as VITAGRAPH, EDISON, ESSANAY, LUBIN, SOLAX. IMP, REX, RELIANCE, CHAMPION, GOMET, MELIES, ETC., urging us to send photoplays to them. We want more writers and we'll gladly teach you the secrets of success. We are selling photoplays written by people who "never be fore wrote a line for publication." Perhaps we can do the same fdT you. If you can think of only ony good idea every week, and will write it as directed by us, and it sells for only $25, a low figure, YOU WILL EARN $100 MONTHLY FOR SPARE TIME WORK, ri SEND YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS AT ONCE UfPtPT FOR FREE COPY OF OUR ILLUSTRATED BOOK, J. I "MOVING PICTURE PLAYWRITING." Don't hesitate. Don't argue. Write now and learn just what this new profession may mean for you and your future. NATIONAL AUTHORS' INSTITUTE . 1543 Broadway NEW YORK CITY gpMEjj best Mold-up Measuring Cooking Fats. To measure butter, lard and othet solid fats pack into cup or spoou and level with a knife. 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). Jl 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 notica will be printed for patron. Minimum charee 16c. HELP WANTED, Female. WANTED Girl for general hous ework, inquire Enterprise office. WANTED HOW would you like to talk with 1400 people about that bargain you have in Real Estate. Ose the Enterprise. CAN WRITE PHOTO PLAYS AND EARN $25.00 OR MORE WEEKLY RECEIVED Just received shipment Trojan Pow der, for sale by C. R. Livesay, Ore gon City, Route No. 6. FOR SALE WHY PAY RENT When you can buy land on these terms? 1 1-2. acres good land, 20 minutes walk of Oregon City Post Office, $50 down, $10 monthly. Many of these tracts are owned by Prominent Oregon City business men. Inquire of E. P. Elliott & Son. FOR SALE OR TRADE 10 acres of timber land, 3 miles of Oregon City, also Gladstone property. Will con sider horses or cattle. F. R. Board man, Aurora, R. F. D. No. 3. FOR SALE Fresh cow, stock hogs, Rhode Island Red chickens, two good wide tire wagons. Address Mayfield Bros., Springwater, R. F. D., 1, Phone Beaver Creek. FOR SALE OR RENT Cheap, 80 acres near Canby, Or. Write or call at once. S. B. Reese, Canby, Ore gon. FOR SALE OR TRADE An Esta Or gan, inquire of E. P. Elliott. FOR RENT FOR RENT 3 unfurnished rooms j with water. 114-18th, Green Point, i Phone 2843, $5.00 a month. Call and j see these. A large nicely furnished room for light housekeeping. Electric lights, 1 hot and cold water and bath. 50 Division Street EXCURSION RATES EXCURSION RATES Monogram, i Guckenheimer, and Penn. Rye Whiskey, $1.00 per Full Quart. Port Wine 25c per Qt. Buy your wines and liquors from us and Save Mon ey. Kentucky Liquor Co. Cor. 5th and Main St. VIOLIN TAUGHT H. B. WE1KS, Teacher of VIolim. ' Grand Theatre. MUSICAL Mrs. Marie S. Schultze TEACHER OF PIANO AND VOICE CULTURE Oregon City Telephone Main 3482 DANCING LESSONS Prof. V. L. Heath man Instructor Call Main 2324 at six o'clock for ar rangements to become members of the class. 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 work or 1 ensemble work. Address for terms, etc., Gustave Flechtner, Oregon City Oregon. MISCELLANEOUS. VIOLINS Regraduated and Adjusted. Fine repairing of old violins a specialty. Bows refilled. FRANK H. BUSCH llth and Main Streets WOOD AND COAL. OREGON CITY WOOD AND FUEL CO . F. M . Bluhm. Wood and coal delivered to all parts of the city SAVVTNG A SPECIALTY. Phone Idle money, like and idle man, earns nothing, but put it to work in the Savings Department of this bank and it earn 3 per cent. A Savings Account is often the key that opens when op portunity knocks at the door. THE BANK OF OREGON CITY OL EST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY LATOURETTE, President. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON CAPITAL $50,00.00 Transacts a General Banking Business. Open from 9 A. M. to ? P. m By HOP your ortAr Pacific 3R02, Home B 1)0 NOTICE8 Bids wanter for grubbing and clearing streets in Willamette Pulp & Paper Company's townsite. For specifica tions call at company's office prior to November 25th. Summons. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Multno mah. Jeremiah Butler, Plaintiff, vs. Ada Butler, Defendant. To the Defendant, Ada Butler, in the name of the State of Oregon: You are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled cause and court on or before the 31st day of December, 1912, that being the time fixed by the court for , you to appear and answer herein, and more than six weeks from the first publication of this summons, and if you fail to appear and answer, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the com plaint, towit: That the court de cree that the bonds of matrimony now existing-between you and the plaintiff be forever disolved. This summons is published once a week for six successive weeks by order of the Honorable R. B. Beatie, County Judge, in the absence of the Honorable J. U. Campbell, judge of the said court, dated 18th day of November, 1912, directing the first' publication to be made on the 19th day of November, 1912, and the last on the 31st day of December, 1912. First publication 19th day of Nov ember, A'. D. 1912. J. F. SEDGWICK, Atty. for Plaintiff, 212-14 Fenton Bldg., Portland, Oregon. Notice of Assessment of Monroe Street Improvement. Notice is hereby given that an assess ment for the improvement of Mon roe Street, Oregon, City, Oregon, from the South side of Third Street to the South side of Fourteenth has been levied and declared accord ing by ordinance No. 603, of Oregon City. The whole cost of the improve ment is $25,842.45 and the assess ments are now due and payable and will bear interest from and after the 29th day of November, 1912, at the legal rate, after which time the property agauist which this tssess ment is leviea may be sold for said assessment and a further penalty of fifteen per centum added. The property assessed for the said improvement lies on both sides of Monroe Street proposed to be im proved and the line of lots abutting upon said part of Monroe Street fartherest from said part of said Monroe Street and said part of Mon roe Street. L. STIPP, Recorder. Summons. In the circuit court of the state of Oregon for Clackamas County. Effa M. Shields, plaintiff, vs. T. Edward Shields, defendant. T. Edward To the above named To the above named defendant, T. Edward Shields: In the name 'of the state of Ore gon you are hereby summoned to appear in the above entitled cause in the above entitled Court on or before the 3rd day of December, 1912. the last day of the publication of this summons, there to answer the complaint filed in the said cause against you, in default whereof tie plaintiff will take a decree against you dissolving the bonds of matri mony now existing between you and the plaintiff, and for the relief demanded and on the grounds stat ed in the said complaint. This summons published by order of the Honorable R. B. Beatie, County Judge of Clackamas County, Oregon, Hon. J. U. Campbell andJ. A. Eakin, Judges of the above en titled court being absent from Clack amas County, Oregon, made, signed and filed on the 22nd day of October 1912, which order fixed the said 3rd dayjf December, 1912, as the day within which you are to answer the said complaint. MARTIN L. PIPES, Attorney for Plaintiff. F. J. MYER, Cashier