Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, November 27, 1912, Image 2

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    MORNING ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1912.
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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
8, 1879."
TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. !
One Year, by mall JS.00 I
Six Months by mail 160 j
Four Months, by mall i.00 ;
Per Week, by carrier 10
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
THE MORNING ENTERPRISE S
is on sale at the following stores
every day:
Huntley Bros. Drugs
Main Street.
J. W. McAnulty. Cigars
$ Seventh and Main.
t E. B. Anderson 3
Main, near Sixth.
M. E. Dunn Confectionery
Next door to P. O.
$ City Drug Store
$ Electric Hotel.
8 Schoenborn Confectionery
Seventh and J. Q. Adams.
$3$$$.3.$3$S3$3
LOOK!
15 acres. 2 1-2 miles from
Court House on good road,
1-2 mile from school. 8
acres cleared, balance in fir
and cedar. 3 room house,
woodshed and barn. 36 bear
ing fruit trees and some
small fruit. Fine well of
water. Owner must sell.
For price and terms see
Dillman&Howland
Room 1 Weinhard Building
Phone Main 3771
Nov. 27 In American History.
1746 Robert It. Livingston. statesman
born; died 1813. . .
1793 Leslie Coomb; pioneer, sokliei
and lawyer, born in Kentucky: died
1881.
1873 Richard Yates, "war governor"
of Illinois, died: born ISIS.
1S84 Fanny Elssier. a Euroan dan
cer who created a fuir.r in. Amer
ica, died: born 1S10.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
(From noou to(ly to noon tomorrow.)
Sun sets 4:35, rtnos 7:02. Evening
stars: Mercury. Vonus. Jupiter, Saturn.
Morning star: Mars.
be shorter and narrower. The present
measurements are 3.04 by 7.28 inches.
The new size is to be 2.5 by 6 inches.
The average man will scratch his head
a bit dubiously about his change. It
will decrease the size of his roll when
it is for too small already. The roll
big enough to choke a cow has largely
become a thing of tne imagination any
how, and with the amount of the pap
er in a bill cut down it will become
so altogether.
FORUM OFTHE PEOPLE
HARVEY REPLIES TO HACKETT
OREGON CITY, Nov. 26 (Editor of
! upon Peter. Therefore, like the laws
of the Medes and Persians, the Roman
communion has never changed j
: throughout the centuries. (Dollinger, j
! Schaff, Neander, Catholic Encyclo-!
j paedia, etc., to the contrary. Bother
; all authorities anyway. Mr. Johnston
i never uses them.) Therefore Protest
! antism is a spineless invertebrate,
i Therefore Socialism is anti-Christian.
' Thorofnra lot hq nrnfCpH tn alam the
Baptists in conclusion, for they are
used to it. Moreover it is one of the
fine points of logic to hit your oppon
ent in the solar plexus of his private
record, or of his treatment of his
mother-in-law, or of his religius faith
especially if you can present no ar
gument of any account. Maybe you
can make him forget the point at is
sue, and sidetrack him from an un
pleasant subject. Thus the logic is
as limpid as an autumn Oregon mud
hole, and the Socialists are all evil
atheists and anarchists- whether
they know it or not. Selah!
Dr. Hadley in the 1911 edition oi
Webster's Unabridged International
says: "Socialism is a political and eco-j
nomic theory of social reorganization, i
the essential feature of which is gov- j
eminent control of economic activities i
to the end that competition shall give
way to co-operation, and that the op-
portunities of life and the rewards of i
labor shall be equally apportioned."
"Political and economic," mark you, !
not religious! I quoted Dr. Cross ot
Stanford in my last. The great Eco
nomists, Ely of Wisconsin and Wicker i
of Dartmouth m their Economic, say: i
"There are four characteristic ele-;
ments in pure Socialism: first, the
common ownership of the means'' of
production; second, the common man
CLEAN .iIONEY
By installing a system of washing
machines in the subtreasuries the
United States government designs
giving us clean money. A dirty bill
is to be washed like a dirty shirt. This
will remove germs, but what is to
be done for tainted money on which
the' filth is moral rather than physi
cal? It will require something strong
er than soap and water to make this
clean.
Even so, the step is welcome. If we
cannot make tainted money clean we
can at least remove the dirt from bills
that have been circulated so long that
they have the appearance of the an
cient printers' towel. It is hardly
possible to have indlvidua' money as
we have indiv;dual drinking cups, but
we can remove the grease, sweat,
dust, microbes .and similar foreign
matter once in a while. This will give
us a chance to see the pictures on our
bills and to feel the crispness that
puts starch in a man's consciousness.
As money is today we cannot even
kiss it goodbye without danger of in
fection. As for wetting the fingers
to count it, that is more dangerous
than osculation.
We are also informed that our bills
are to be similar in size. This does
not mean that fractional currency in
the form of shinplasters in coming
back, but only that paper money "s to
the Enterprise.) I see from your col
umns that Mr. E. C. Hackett is very
dissatisfied with the way our city has . agement of the means of production;
been run and he thinks the elevator j tuird, the distribution of the product
should not be built. I wonder if Mr. i of industry by common authority;
Hackett knows that Oreon City is as i fourth, private property in the greater
old as the City of Chicago and four j part of income." All these anti-social-years
ago we only had one improved ', istic economists, together with Gil
street and today the most of the man, Flint, Gide, Laughlan, etc., whom
streets are inproved. Most of the in- j we have no time to quote, say Social
debtedness is bonded on property j ism is purely economic and political,
abutting our improved streets, which j The ten million Socialists in the
the property will pay itself. i world, in every creed, platform, and
The people are beginning to wake ,t manifesto they issue, hold the same,
up and they want the city to go ahead. either actively or by inference. Rev.
There has been no remonstrance to Charles Kingsley, F. D. Maurice,
any street except one old lady that Thomas Hughes, Ruskin, and the mul-
Mr. Hackett puts me in mind of. She titude m every land, even m the Ger
said she did not want the street im- j many of Marx and Engalls and Bebel
proved, that she had lived forty years i who claim to be Christians and yet So
without it and she could live forty
more.
Now, Mr. Editor, if we all thought
I'V" that what good would we be on
this earth.
It seems to me that Mr. Hackett has
been knocking Oregon City since his
last defeat in most every issue of your
paper and sending it broadcast over
the country, which is wrongful, if not
willful misrepresentation.
Mr. Hackett said that friend Harris
said the taxpayers had better watch
the council. Some of them would
give the city away. Now I was at the
cialists declare the same. All thir
testimony Mr. Johnston sets aside. In
cidentally, he forgets in his letter to
quote any authorities. Possibly he
does not .need them, yet we would like
to remind him that no man's unsup
ported statement counts for any more
in a public discussion than it does in
a court of law.
Two men once came to the Man of
Galilee, and one said: "See that my
brother divides the inheritance with
me." The thud of his turndown has
not yet ceased echoing through the
ages.' Christianity will do well as an
council meeting on November 18 and : organized force to follow His august
it did not look to me like they gave ! example. If it leaves its proper field
anything away:. I believe that the
street car company should pay a reas
onable sum and then let them come
that is what helps the town.
Oregon City drove the best line in
the state out, so did Woodburn.
Now they are building up around it
and they call it New Woodburn and
that road would have been a credit to
any man's town.
GEORGE HARVEY.
and steps into someone else's business
j it need not squeal if it gets its toes
j trampled upon. It fits a man morally
: and mentally and spiritually to be a
I better citizen, but it does not dictate
i his views upon the tariff, or upon eco
- nomic reform.
; A word more. Greek lexicons (vide
i Liddell and Scott, Sophocles, Tregel
i les, etc.,) say that Petros (Peter) is
! a diminutive. "Rocklet," "pebble. '
j Christ said to Peter, "Thou art a peb-
ble, but upon tnis rock (an entirely
MILLIKEN ANSWERS JOHNSTON, different word to Petros) will I build
OREGON CITY Nov. 26. (Editor of ' my church." Of himself Christ said,
the Enterprise.) In his letter publish-! "Tne stone which th builders reject
ed in Sunday Morning's issue of vour , ed the same nas become the head
excellent naner Mr. Johnston nflvisns i stoRe of the corner." In I Cor. 3:11
me to go more deeply into Socialism
(and I will change my mind regarding
its menace to faith. His letter is a
delightful excursion into the pleasant
realm of logic. It is a real delight to
analyse it.
ri'jrumiaifm
. -. fc.
Must Have OrM
rrom an
L4
1 Like Form
: 'UCKA. Anthropologist, of the National Museum
"j ; CANNOT HAVE ARISEN EXCEPT FROM SOME MORE
i . A nu.t AL- LIKE FORM.
On the liasit: of what is positively known today in
M-jranl to arly man and with the prercnt scientific views
recnnlina manV evolution the anthropologist lias a right to expect
human hones, particularly crania, exceeding a few thousand years in
age and more especially those of geologic antiquity, shall present
AIARKKD STRUCTURAL DIFFERENCES and that these dif
ferences shall pint in the direction of more primitive forms.
No conclusion can be more firmly founded than that man is a
product of an extraordinary progressive differentiation from some
humanlike stock which developed somewhere" in the later tertiary
among the primates.
HE BEGAN THEN AS AN ORGANISM THAT IN BRAIN AND
BODY WAS LESS THAN MAN, THAT WAS AN ANTHROPOID. FROM
THIS STAGE HE COULD NOT BECOME AT ONCE AS HE IS TO
DAY, THOUGH IN SOME STAGES OF HIS EVOLUTION HE MAY
HAVE ADVANCED BY LEAPS. OR AT LEASTV MORE RAPIDLY THAN
IN OTHERS. '' : ' -:- ' r-'
Paul says, "Other foundation can no
man lay tiian that which is laid, which
is Jesus Christ." Before the Master
and Peter finished their talk that aft
ernoon the Master called him "Satan, '
Christ founded the Church and told him to Sst. behind him. There
may oe room ior ainerence oi opinion
as to whether the "rocklef Peter or
the "Reck of Ages" himself was to be
be the church's "One foundation."
From Christs claim in Rev. 1:18 that
He Himself holds the "Keys of death
and ci Hades," and that he has not
surrendered them to any other hand,
we begin to realize that there is also
room for dispute as to the identity of
the keys in Peter's possession. Again,
;ne Greek and Roman communion
have not yet settled their age-long con
troverssy as to priority So until we
can be absolutely sure as to the truth
we Protestants will manage to wage
along somehow in tur invertebrate
way, and to wonder if after all Mr.
Johnston really does know any more
about Socialism than he seems to
know about comparative Christianity.
W. T. MILLIKEN.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Arthur Needham and wife to Den
nis O'Connell, lot 87 in Ross and
Walker Addition to Sellwood; $10.00.
Francesca Roth to Jerry""Baty, lots
1 and" 2, Blk. 21, Canby; $285.00.
Jerry and May Baty to Edgar Smith
lots 1 and 2, Blk 21, Canby; $10.00.
Beatrice Phin and W. B. Phin to
Joseph Horton, all of tract "A" in
Clackamas Riverside, Township 2,
Range 2 East; $4200.00.
Henry Sesel and wife to Effie L.
Cooke, Tract in Donation Land Claim
of George Crowe and wife, Township
2 So., Range 1 East; $100.00.
A. O'deen and Ida O'deen to Marie
E. Reed, Tract in Donation Land
Claim of Thomas P. Jackson, being
parts of Section 33 and 34, Township
4 South, Range 2 East; . -
Launching of the New York ;
Notables, SponsorFlower Girl
I
DARKENS THE HAIR
t - -
1 f ; A ,TJf If Mtti
h ; A "-v - yvA j
A SIMPL
STR
E REMEDY GIVES COLOR,
ENGTH AND BEAUTY
TO THE HAIR
EXCURSION RATES
EXCURSION RATES Monogram,
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
You don't have to have gray hair or
faded hair if you don't want to. Wny
look old or unattractive? If your hair
is gray or faded, you can change it
easily, quickly and effectively by using
Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Reme
dy. Apply a little tonight, and in the
morning you will be agreeably surpris
ed at the results from a single applica
tion. The gray hairs will be less con
spicious, and after a few more applica
tions will berestored to natural color.
Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur also quick
ly removes dandruff, leaves the scalp
clean and healthy, and promotes the
growth of the hair It is a clean
wholesome dressingwhich may be us
ed at any time with perfect safety.
Get a fifty cent bottle from your
druggist today, and see how quickly it
will restore the youthful color .and
beauty of your hair and forever end
the nasty dandruff, hot, itchy scalp
and falling hair. All druggist's sell it
under guarantee that the money will
be refunded if you are not satisfied af
ter fair trial.
H. B. WEEKS, Teacher
. Grand Theatre.
of Violin.
MUSICAL
DANCING LESSONS
Prof. V. L. Heathman
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
ensemble work. Address for terms,
etc., Gustave Flechtner, Oregon City
Oregon.
MISCELLANEOUS.
2 COUPLES GET LICENSES.
Marriage licenses were issued to the
following couples Tuesday by County
Clerk Mulvey: Anna J. Kennedy and '
Delbert Nelson of Albany; Edna Ir- i
win Miller and Neal H. McGarey.
Wants, For Sale, Etc
Notices under these clusslned 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 ar open account with the paper. No
financial responsibility for errors; where
errors occur free corrected notice will be
printed foi patron. Minimum charge 15c.
VIOLINS
Regraduated and Adjusted.
Fine repairingf old violins a
specialty.
Bows refilled.
FRANK H. BUSCH
llth and Main Streets
WOOD AND COAL.
'HEN the great hull of the super-Dreadnought ew York hit the wa
ter at the Brooklyn navy yard it made a splash that figuratively was
f heard around the world. The new warship, which cost over $6,000,-
uuu as sne now stamiw ami win cusl .p-.vuv.-,v u.oi, ,
next year ami a half, is the greatest sea fighter in the universe She is shown
Just as she struck the water President Taft. Secretary of the Navy Meyer.
Miss Elsie Cfllder. sponsor for the ship, and her flower girl, little KathUvn
Fitzgerald. arelso shown, snapped at the launching, which was atvended uj
uiany notables The launching was most successful.
THE
Southern Pacific Railroad of Mexico
traversing the states of
f-NOROA SINALOA - TEPIC - JALISCO.
Gives Access to
OPPORTUNITIES FOR WEALTH
in
Cattle, Farming, Mining, Timber
Let us list you for a copy of our new booklet soon to be puj
lished.
H. LAWTON, G. P. A., Gua ymas, . Sonora, Mexico.
it takes five different aged vhi sides to make Uyru:.
Noble each one good in itself. But it takes
blending and re-ageing to bring out. the best in
each to "round out" the flavor.
Why punish yourself with rough, high-proof, strong
whiskey when you can get Cyrus Noble everywhere'
W. J. Van Schuyver & Co., General Agents, Portland, Oregon
CLUB ORGANIZED BY
MALE
It you saw it in the Enterprise lt'i
A "School Master's" Club was or
ganized by the male teachers of Clack
amas County at the Oregon City High
School building Tuesday afternoon.
City Superintendent F. J. Tooze act
ed as temporary chairman. Principal
A. A, Baldwin, of Macksburg, acted as
secretary. A large number or men
were in attendance and all showed
keen interest in the new movement.
A commitee was appointed to work
on a permanent organization and will
report at a meeting Wednesday. Only
three officers will be elected, that of
president, vice president, and secretary-treasurer.
A standing committee
will be appointed, composed of three
members. The purpose of the organ
ization is to discuss educational prob
lems of the county and also to hold
debates. . . ... ,
TEACHERS GIVEN
FINE INSTRUCTION
(Continued from page 1)
of Efficiency". Real efficiency is to
be tested by the results that it can
show. In the school work efficiency
on the part of teacher must make pu-
pils more intelligent, .more healthy,
I happier, freer, more able to really
j live and enjoy living.
Dr. E. O. Sisson, of the Department
j of Pedagogy, Reed College, lectured
Tuesday night upon "The Influence of
i Body upon Mind and Mind upon
Body''.
Time to Go Home.
"Well, dear, 1 guess the honeymoon
j is over."
I "Why do yon say that?" pouted the
; bride. . '
; "I've been taking stock and find I'm
j down to $2.G5."-Exchange.
HELP WANTED, Female.
WANTED Girl for general house
work in small family, address box
32 Willamette, Ore.
LOST
LOST At W. E. Mumpower's at Clear
Creek, large black Cocker Spaniel
dog, long curly hair and ears, an
swers to the name of "Sport", has
barb cut across front shoulder. Re
turn to Dr. C. A. Stuart and receive
reward.
WANTED LIVESTOCK
WANTED Cows fresh or coming
fresh soon, W. C. Berreth, 1480, Ma
cadam Street, Portland, Oregon.
RECEIVED
Just received shipment Trojan Pow
der, for sale by C. R. Li vesay, 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 Fresh cow, stock hogs,
. Rhode Isli.nd Red chickens, two
good wide tire wagons. Address
Mayfield Bros., Springvvater, R. F.
D., 1, Phone Beaver Creek.
FOR SALE or will trade for a cow,
a White sewing machine.' Enquire
King's store, Mount Pleasant.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT A 7-room house, all mod
ern conveniences onj.lOth and Rail
road Avenue. Inquire at 10th and
Main Streets.
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 1371, Home
B V
NOTICES
Notice of General City Election, Ore
gon City, Oregon.
Notice is hereby given that there will
be held in Oregon City, Oregon, on
the 2nd day of December, 1912, a
general City Election at which shall
be elected one mayor, to serve for
a term of one year, one Treasurer,
to serve for a term of one year, and
one Councilman from each of Wards
No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3. to serve for
a term of three years each, and one
councilman from Ward No. 2 to
serve for a period of one year to
fill out the unexpired term of F. C.
Burke, and each of said terms to
begin on January 1st, 1913.
Also for the purpose of submitting
to the legal voters of Oregon City
for their approval or rejection: A
Bill for An Act to amend paragraph
39 of Section 34 of the Charter of
Oregon City, Oregon.
A Bill for an Act to Amend the
Charter of Oregon City, by the addi
tion of Chapter XIV entitled "Ele
vator" and consisting of Sections
154, 155, 15G, 157 and 158".
A Bill for An Act to amend Sec
tion 14 of Chapter III of the Charter,
of Oregon City, Oregon.
Tie polling places, judges and
clerks at election are as follows:
Ward No.'i'at Cataract Hose Com
pany House, judges: John Bradeey,
H. W. Trembath and W. W. Myers.
Clerks: Alex Schram and Gene
Woodward.
Ward No. 2 at Fountain House
Company House, Judges: Sol Walk
er, Matt Justin and C. S. Noble.
Clerks: Fred Greeman and Roy Cox.
Ward No. 3. Hose Company No. 3
House, judges: Sam Francis, tEd
Scott and C. Gottberg. Clerks: El
mer Dixon and Marion Darling.
And said election shall commence
at 9 o'clock A. M. tf sad day and con
tinue until 7 o'clock, P. M. of said
day.
This notice is published by order
of the Council of Oregon City.
L. STIPP, Recorder.
SPECIAL SERVICE
The officers of this bank consider it part of their duty to give deposi
tors the benefit of their experience in financial affairs. We are especially
glad to be of service to women and others inexperienced in money mat
ters. THE BANK OF OREGON CITY
OL3EST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
LATOURETTE, President.
F. J. MYER, Cashier.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
:. -'' CAPITAL $50,000.00
Transacts a General Banking Business. Open from 9 A. M. to ? p. M,
so.