Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, December 15, 1912, Page 2, Image 2

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    SCOOP
THE CUB
REPORTER
.... I : 1
MORNING ENTERPRISE
OREGON CITY, OREGON
E. E. BRODIE, Editor and Publisher.
1
"Entered as second-class matter Jan-
lary 9, 1911, at the post office at Oregon I
City. Oregon, under the Act of March '
, 1879." ,
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One Tear, by mall 3.00
Six Months by mall l.M
Four Months, by mall 'i-
Per feek. by carrier .10
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
Dec. 15 In American History.
18(54-Beginning of the buttle of Nash
ville. Tenn., between the Confed
erates under General .1. B. Hood
and tile l-Vderal ann.v led by Gen
eral (ieorjje H. Thomas.
1873 Louis Agassi., celebrated nat-
uralist. director of Hie museum ol
zoology at Cambridge, died: boru
1807.
1900 - Oswald Ottendorfer. German
Journalist, editor of the New York
Staats-Zeitung. died; born 1820.
1911 The fur seal treaty, binding the
Dnited States, Russia, Japan and
Great Britain, went into effect
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
(From noon today to noon tomorrow.!
Snn sets 4:34. rises 7:18. Evening
stars: Venus. Jupiter, Saturn. Morn
Ing stars: Mars. Mercury.
Friday the Thirteenth
with its horrible
happening at Salem
CAPITAL
PUNISHMENT
has gone into the limbo of the past,
but still the question of the right of
society to execute its murderers is
hotly debated. Whether one agrees
or disagrees with Governor West po
litically, it is not possible to deny him
full sympathy for the predicament he
was in. Men of Robert's stamp will
never be borji, and hanging will be
a thing of the past, once we begin to
treat our criminals sci0ntifically.
OGLE MOUNTAIN Clackamas
MAKING GOOD County's gold
mine is mak
ing big strides. There does riot sem
to be any doubt but that the propesad
Cyaniding plant will soon put the
mine among the producers. If is
doubtful if any other single thing in
the county will mean so much to our
communities as will the Ogl3 Moun
tain property once it is successfully
under way. And, not only for the
county, but for the state at large, for
it will call the attention of capital to
our unquestioned mineral resources.
Goldmining in the Cascades lakes
gold to get gold. A mine with, ample
capital back of it, can operate at half
the cost of the less fortunate ones,
so that the moment Ogle Mountain
makes good the entire industry in this
part of the Cascades will receive a
boom.
PENSIONS TO No one but An-EX-PRESIDENT8
drew Carnegie
would have the
gall to offer to pension ex-presidents
of the United States out of his private
pocket. However, he has succeeded
in calling the attention of the coun
, try to the question of pension, and
Our Greatest Period
of Prosperity Is
With Us
By Judge ELBERT
E ARE IN THE MIDST OF AN ERA OF PROSPERITY NEVER
BEFORE SURPASSED SO FAR AS IT AFFECTS OUR PAR
TICULAR LINES.
. These conditions have not resulted from the applica
tion of political policies or efforts, but exist in spite of them. They
are here because NOTHING COULD PREVENT THEM.
In the first place, for the last few years, following the bankers'
panic of 1907, there have existed a feeling of uncertainty and a lack
of confidence which have deterred the great purchasing public, from
entering the market, even to the extent of supplying their necessities.
When, therefore, the railroad companies and others similarly sit
uated commenced to buy the general influence and effect were imme
diately felt, and buying on a large scale has developed.
Moreover, the bountiful crops and sound basic conditions of the
country have made every one realize more clearly than ever before that
PROSPERITY IN THIS SPLENDID COUNTRY OF OURS IS
TO BE THE RULE AND NOT THE EXCEPTION.
You know a good investmenL
Purchase a tract of land in
West Oregon City, near South
ern Pacific, $140.00 per acre
and up. 10 per cent down
balance on time. See
Dillman&Howland
' Weinhard Bldg.
presumably otyr new congress will
settle it one way or the other. Mr.
De Forrest, of the New York delega
tion, wants to give former presidents
$2000 a month; a former president's
widow, a thousand dollars a month
j while unmarried, and to the orphans
I of former presidents under twenty-
one years of age $200 a month. Public
j opinion, however, is a long way from
j being unanimous as to the need of a
pension. As matters now stand,
j Uncle Sam is pretty generous. Over
! and above his salary, the president
has $25,000 a year to spend in travel;
a beautiful home, servants galore,
automobiles, horses, a warship for a
i yacht, all paid for by the people.
He can live in the greatest luxury
j for four years, spending $25,000 each
year, and then go ou,t of office with
$200,000 cash in the bank. . Ordinar
illy invested, that should bring him
about $10,000 a year for the rest of
his life.
From all over the
country . come re
ports of ministerial
THE SCIENCE
OF EUGENICS
associations that have resolved to
refuse to marry people, unless equip
ped with a health certificate showing
that such persons are fit people to
marry. It is not likely that these
clergymen unaided by the ciyil law
will accomplish much, nevertheless
they have the satisfaction of knowing
that they are pioneers in a magnifi
cent work. Dan Cupid will have to
put in four years at a medical school,
before he can be fully trusted.
To be born physically is the right of
every unborn child, and society is at
last waking up to the fact that the
next generation is very much what
this generation makes it. Unfortu
nately, we are still in bondage to
that false idea of modesty which com
pels some people to say 'limbs' when
they mean 'legs' ; . and which keeps
the rising generation in more or less
ignorance regarding the big facts ot
life. Whether the sChool teacher, or
the parents should impart this most
necessary knowledge, is an open ques
tion, but there can be no doubt about
the duty. How many unhappy mar
riages could have been avoided; how
many divorces; how many crippled
and deficient children, had public
opinion permitted young folks to be
taught sex truths. We have so far
advanced however, that how several
states steTilize confirmed criminals,
habitual drunkards, and known degen
erates, to the extent that at least so
ciety is doing its duty to the people
of tomorrow.
H. GARY, Financier
MORN IN U ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1912.
Leave it To Cyclone To Fight His
FORUM OF THE PEOPLE
NEW WATER SUPPLY SUGGESTED
OREGON CITY, Dec. fl. (Editor
of the Enterprise). There seems to
be a strong and growing sentiment in
favor of a change in our source of
water supply which I heartily indorse.
Near my boyhood home city of James
town, N. Y., is the little village of
Levant, where there bubbled and
gushed a pure cold stream of water
that came 'from a driven well more
than 100 feet deep and which was
used for a public watering trough and
supply for one or two dwellings. The
city at that time was struggling with
the water supply question, trying to
pipe it from a crib in Chautauqua
lake aboui three miles away. It prov
ed to be an expensive and very unsat
isfactory undertaking. Someone no
ticed . the little flowing well down at
Levant. A twelve inch test well was
put down and- the water came up,
gushing over the edges of the pipe.
Others were driven until now there
are at least a dozen and that city of
Jamestown, N. Y., with a population
of about 25,000, has a water supply
that is not surpassed by the Bull Run
system because the water comes from
a bed of gravel 112 feet under the sur
face, and, unlike the Clackamas or
Bull Run supply,' is safe from con
tamination for all time.
Does anyone know of a flowing
well of good water near Oregon City?
If so, I would suggest the driving of
a test well ,as Jamestown did. We
could turn our water power into elec
tricity and send it to any place where
such a supply could be found and per
haps have some cuj-rent to sell after
using what would be necessary for
pumping.
C. I. STAFFORD.
BOY SCOUTS MAKE
BIG HIT WITH PLAY
Many were the words of commenda
tion for the Boy Scouts who so ably
presented the comedy, "Pyramus and
Thisbe," from Shakespeare's "Mid
summerNight's Dream," at Shiveley's
Opera House Friday evening. Under
the skilled coaching of Mrs. Theodore
Clark the boys surprised their best
friends, especially those who took the
ladies' parts. The little boy fairies
could not be told from girls ,and Tad
Miller, as Titania, their beautiful
queen, would have passed muster as
a belle anywhere. Shelby Shaver
made a very charming Thisbe, and
died quite naturally upon discovering
the death of her Pyramus, - George
Tucker. Everett Dye carried his part
handsomely, as also did Will Bagby,
as Puck, the Mischief-Maker. In fact
pveryone deserves praise. The Athen
ian costumes were made by the Ladies
Aid Society of the Congregational
Church. ' Musical numbers by the
High School Orchestra, assisted by
Verne Roake, and violin solos by Pro
fessor Flechtner, accompanied by
Miss Louise Huntley, were highly ap
preciated. Rev. George Nelson Ed
wards has presented this play several
times before.
The cast of characters was as fol
lows: :
"Hard-handed men that work" Bot
torn, the Weaver, George Tucker;
Quince, the Carpenter, Everett Dye;
Flute, the Bellows Mender, Shelby
Shaver; Snout, the Tinker, Wendell
Smith; Snug, the Joiner, Wilbur Rob
erts; Starveling, the Tailor, Burt Lag
eson; Theseus, the Duke, Albert
Roake; Hippolyta, the Duchess, Oliver
Eriffin.
Fairies Oberon, the King, Graydon
Pace; Titania, the Queen, Ted Miller;
Puck, the Mischief-maker, Will Bag
by; Peaceblossom, Samuel McLarty;
Cobweb, Roderick Porter; Moth, Gra
eme Strickland; Mustardseed, Teddy
Hendry.
JAD VEJRTISING
J TALKS NO. 6 J
.
f
(By Ralph Kaye.)
Every merchant and manufacturer,
retailer and jobber desires to- increase
his volume of profitable- trade. He
(1st) wishes to increase his number
of Profitable Customer1 and (2) to
make Them Profitable.
Here is how I would suggest:
(1st) He should advertise in the
mediums he knows will reaeh the
class of purchasers who ueed and can
afford his goods. He must talk to
them in a way they will Quickly Un
derstand, then Appreciate aud finally
Act upon.
2) In order to make his Customers
Permanent he m'tfjst live "up to his
Published Promises in other words,
Make Good.
Let us put it this way: He must
lay a Rock Foundation of Public Con
fidence for the Building of P-jrmanent
Success, Rather than Speculating in
, the Shifting Sands of Broken Prom
ises.
Good Policy.
Teacher Johnny, do yon love rour
enemi&i' Johnny Vs'm - when i
meet 'em all at once. '
CV CLONE.-X COMMAND
"YOD TO STAY TOE,,
OFFICE AND,
The Four Gun Men Guilty
Of Slaying Herman Rosenthal
f J pi
V '' i
Photos by American Press Association.
GUILTY In the first degree of murder, the four gun men. "Gyp the
Blood" (top left), "Dago Frank" (top right). "Lefty Louie"' '(bottom
left) and "Whitey Lewis" (bottom right), face the electric chair fot
slaying Herman Rosenthal, the gambler, in New York, July 16 last, al
the Instigation of Police Lieutenant Charles Becker. It was one of the few
times In the history of crime in this country that four men were found guilty
of the samu murder at the same trial
SPECIAL EDITION
TO SET NEW RECORD
(.Continued from Page 1.)
One of the most gratifying features
of thework so far was the action of
the Publicity Committee of the Ore
gon City Commercial Club Wed
nesday night when, upon their own
initiative and without any application
for support having been made by the
paper, the Committee unanimously
passed a resolution authorizing the
Secretary to contract for two pages
in the magazine and to ' purchase
1000 copies for their eastern mailing
list. Last year the Publicity Commit
tee purchased a large number of copies
of the annual and the results were so
satisfactory that they are willing to
duplicate the order this year of their
own volition and an endorsement of
this kind coming from the city's live
booster organization presages the
highest order of success for the issue.
Oldest Candy In World Is Licorice.
Must of the black licorice comesi
from Spain, where it is made from
the juice of the plant and mixed with
starch to prevent it from melting in
hoj weather. The licorice plant is a
shrub about three feet high and grows
wild where its roots can reach the
water. It grows largely on the banks
of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers.
As the valley of the Euphrates con
tained one of the earliest civilizations
in the world, it is probable that lico
rice is about the oldest confection in
the world aud that the. taste which
boys and girls lifc so well today was
enjoyed by the boys and girls of Baby
lon and Nineveh 3,000 years ago. New
York Mail. " .
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 ar. open- account with the paper. No
financial responsibility for errors: where
errors occur free corrected notice will be
printed foi patron. Minimum charge 16c.
HELP WANTED MALE
Boy wanted 16 years or over. In
quire this office.
WANTED: A chance to show you
how quick a For Rent ad will fill
that vacant house or room. "
Weight In Bull Dogs
Too
V V -
HOW would you like to talk with
1400 people about tfcat bargain you
have in Real Estate. Cse the Enter
prise. HELP WANTED, Female.
WANTED Dressmaking. Prices reas
onable. Work guaranteed. Mrs.
Frank Hill, Room 19 Beaver Bid.
LOST
LOST At W. E. Mumpower's at Clear
Creeks 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.
VETERINARIAN
A. McDonald, Veterinary Surgeon and
Dentist, Phones Main 116, and B 9.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT 5 room modern house,
enquire of Geo. Randall at corner
5th and Jefferson Sts
FOR RENT 5 room house, Gladstone
city 'water furnished, $10.00 per
month: also 3 room houjse for $5.00.
Both properties are in Gladstone.
Percy A. Cross, Phone 1982, Glad
stone Real Est. Asso. .
FOR RENT Strictly modern house
keeping rooms, 505 Division St.,
back of Eastman school. Mrs.
' Henry Shannon.
For rent, furnished house, 6 rooms,
after January 1. Apply 219 Four
teenth Street.
FOR SALE
FOR . SALE Registered Jersey BuAl
coming two. W. Kuppenbender.
Oregon City, Farmers Phone 144 or ;
Home Phone ',M 125. -
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 Thirteen head of heifer
calvds, ranging from six months to
two years. Enquire Maple Spring
Dairy, L. Hartke, Mount Pleasant
EXCURSION RATES
EXCURSION RATES Monogram,
Guckenheimer. and Penn. Rye
Whiskey, $1.00 per Full Quart. Port
Wine 25c per QL Buy your wines
5
Milk '
AV. ) N"WULy
i :vjf
CYCLONE.-ITS
BAO- lLL SEE.
THAT THE PAfJEH-
G-WES WlM A NICE.
. i
UlMt - VitM - .
vi
and liquors from us and Save Mon
ey. Kentucky Liquor Co. Cor. 5th
and Main St.
VIOLIN TAUGHT
H. B. WEEKS, Teacher of Violin.
Grand Theatre.
MUSICAL
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
POWDER
Are you using powder? If you are,
you want the best. Use Trojan
Powder. No headache, no thawing.
For sale by C. R. Livesay, Pacific
Phone Farmers 217, Oregon City R.
F. D. No. 6.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Rheumatism cured. I will gladly send
any sufferer a Simple Herbal Re
cipe that cures Rheumatism, also
a Trial Treatment, all ,sent abso
lutely free by one who was cured.
Enclose a two cent stamp. W H.
Sutton, 2601 Orchard Ave., Los An
geles, Calif.
If taken in time Wilhoit water will
prevent typhoid fever. It is of
great benefit to the convalesent.
For sale by Walt Little, 514, 7th
Street, Sole Agent.
WOOD AND COAL.
OREGON CITY WOOD AND FUEL
CO , F. M. Bluhm. Wood and coai
delivered to all parts of the city
SAWING A SPECIALTY. Phone
your orders. Pacific 1371, Home
110
NOTICES
Notice for Bids.
Notice is . hereby given that
the Committee on Streets and Pub
lic Property of the City Council- of
Oregon City, Oregon, will receive
at the office of the City Recorder
of said Oregon City, until the 18th
day of December, at 4 o'clock, P.
M. sealed proposals for doing the
work to complete the lowering and
laying of a sewer on J. Q. Adams
Street between Eighth and Ninth
Streets and on Eighth Sereet be
tween J. Q. Adams and Monroe
. Streets. .
The said material to be furnish
ed and the labor to be done in ac
cordance with the plans and speci
fications now on file in the office
-of the City Recorder of Oregon
City.
Each bid must - be accompanied
by a certified check equal to the
sum of five per cent of the total
amount of the bid, which sum is
subject to. forfeiture to Oregon City
in case of the failure of the success
, ful bidder to enter into a written
contract for, said work, if called
upon to do so, within the time spec
ified for the same. '
Proposal must1 be made upon
blanks furnished by Oregon CitjB
The right to reject any and all
bids is hereby reserved to said Ore
gon City.
And the contract entered into
shall contain a condition that the
contractor shall promptly as due
make payment to all persons sup
plying to such contractor, labor
and material for the prosecution of
the work provided for in said con
tract and said contractor shall not
permit any liens or claims to be
filed or prosecuted againt the mun
icipal corporation for account of
any material or labor furnished and
the contract shall also contain a
condition that no person shall be
employed for more than eight hours
for any one day or forty-eight
hours for any one week, unless of
cases of emergency -when no other
competetit" labor is available, and
in-such cases such laborer shall be
paid double wages for all overtime.
The contract shall contain a con
dition that the contract may be can
celled at the election of the muni
cipal corporation for any wilful
failure or refusal on .the part
of the contractor to faithfully
faithfully perform the contract
IF at any time there is anything atottne banking
business you do not understand, come to us. We
are here to give the closest attention to our friends,
for upon such treatment of customers we base our hope
for continued growth.
THE SANK OF OREGON CITY
OLDiST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
D. C. LATOURETTE, President.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
V , CAPITAL $50,000.00
Tnsacts a General Banking Businesa. Open from '9 A. M. to 3 . -M,
By HOP
xs'poseme.1
si
vmll.want
TOT?U A
of "nfe dog-
to roh
JltWTHE
.... -.i..v.
according to its terms as herein,
provided.
And a penal bond to the amount
of the contract of good and suffi
cient securities, shall be required
of jthe contractor, to secure their
faithful performance of all the us
ual obligations of such contract, es
pecially the conditions herin men
tioned. -f S3
The notice is published pursuant
an order of the City Council of
Oregon City, made and enter at
a regular meeting thereof held oa
the 4th day of December, 1912.
L. STIPP, Recorder.
Summons
In the Cireiit Court or the Stat of
Oregon, for the County of Clacka
sma. Mildred Larson, Plaintiff,
vs.
Eli Larson, Defendant.
To Eli Larson, Defendant above
named. In the name of the State of Ore
gon, you are are hereby required
to appear and answer the complaint
filed herein against you in the
above entitled Court and cause,
'- - - - ... UH
of November, 1912, said date being
the first day of publicatiou of thia
summons.
If you fail to appear or answer,,
for want thereof, the plaintitf will .
apply to the Court for' ihe relief
prayed lor in the complaint fi!ed
herein, to wit:
For a decree dissolving the bonds
of matrimony now and heretofore
existing between the above named
plaintiff anf defendants and grant
ing unto the plaintiff an absolute
divorce from the defendant, and for
, such other and further relief aa
may seem just and equitable in the
premises. This summons is served upon
you by virtue of an order made and
entered i by Honorable J. U. Camp
bell, Judge of the Circuit Court of
the State of Oregon, for the County
of Clackamas, dated on the. 16th
day of November, 1912, and which,
orcter prescribes that summons in
this suit should be served upon you
by publication once a week,, for six
successive weeks in the Morning.
Enterprise, a newspaper of general
circulation in the1 County of Clacka
mas, State of Oregon.
G. G. SCHMITT,
Attorney for Plaintiff..
Executor's Notice
Notice is hereby give that the un
ersigned has been duly appointed as.
Executor of the last will and testa
ment of Amelia Miller deceased,,
and any and persons haying claims
against the said estate must present
them to the unersigned-' at Aurora.
Oregon, or to my attorneys at Ore
gon City, duly verified within six
months from the date of this notice,.
Dated November 15th, 1912.
GEORGE MILLER,
Executor.
DIMICK & DIMICK,
Attorneys for Executor
Teacher's Examinations.
Notice is hereby given that the Coun--ty
School Superintendent of Clack-
amas County will hold the regular-
examination for applicants for
State papers at the banquet room in.
the Masonic Building, Oregon City,.
as follows:
Commencing, Wednesday, Decem--ber
18th at 9 o'clock A. M. and con
tinuing . until Saturday, December
21st, at 4' P. M. s .
Program
Wednesday Forenoon Writing,.
U. S. 'History, Physiology.
Wednesday Afternoon r-Physical.
Geography, 'Reading, Composition,
Methods in Reading, Methods in
Arithmetic.
Thursday Forenoon Arithmetic.
riistory or luaucation, rnycnoiogy,.
Methods in Geography.
Thursday Afternoon Jrammari.
Geography, American Literature,.
Physics, Methods in Language, The--sis
for Primary Certificate.
Friday Forenoon Theory and'.
Practice, Orthography, English Lit--erature.
Friday Afternoon School Law,.
Botany, Algebra, Civil GoVernment,.
Saturday Forenoon Geometry,- Ge--'
ology.
Saturday Afternoon General His--tory,
Bookeeping.
T. J. GARY,
Co. SchooJ Supt.
F. J. MEYER, Cashier.