2 COOP THE CUB REPORTER ; . ' Aia - ml- ssna MORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON CITY, OREGON E. E. BRODIE, Editor and PuMUhar. "Entered as seoaad-claes matter Jan uary ft, 1911, at the put office at Orasoa City, Oregon, under the Act of March t. 1879." TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. One Tear, by mail tl Six Months by nail I.M Pour Months, by mail i.M Per 'Week, by carrier 1 CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER Dec. 19 In American History. 1864 General W. T. Sherman forced the Confederate defenders of Sa vannah. Ga.. to contract their lines. ' 1879 Bayard Taylor, poet, author and traveler, died in Berlin: born 1825. 1901 Mrs. l. (f. Croly (Jennie June!, noted Journalist and founder ol Sorosis. died: born 1831- 1911 John Bijrelow. author and diplo mat, died: born 1817. The United States senate ratified, the termina tion of the treaty with Russia. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. (From noon today to noon tomorrow.l Sun sets 4:36. rises 7:10. Evening stars: Venus. Saturn. ' Morning stars. Mars. Memiry. Jupiter. GOOD FOR The Oak Grove Road OAK GROVE District is to be com mended for its far seeing policy in securing good roads. More money is wasted by temporarily patching up year by year, than would build a road if properly expended. Oak Grove intends to forge ahead, and is taking the right way to do it, by its recent approval of ten mill tax, which is expected to yield at least ten thofisand dollars to be spent on improved roads. THE SAME An Italian newspaper. OLD TURK picked up on a local -. shoeblack stand yes terday, reprinted an interesting Well Nigh Impossible to Reform Vagrant Rich By ROSE PASTOR. STOKES. Wife of J. G. Phelps Stokes, Millionaire Socialist T seems WELL NIGH IMPOSSIBLE TO REFORM THE JL VAGRANT RICH1" The church may find i, reform. His unearned profits are not thereby affected. Onefaith may look as good to him as another. He may FOLLOW ANt PROrilKT WHO WON'T INTERFERE WITH HIS PROFIT. . Were it to become a question of choice between prophets and profits' you may trust -the rirh man To choose the latter every time. Yes; the fhurc-h may find the rich man an easy subject for re form, so far as religion in its narrow, average, ordinary meaning is concerned. Whv, the whole world could reform the rich man if the process DIDN'T INVOLVE HIS UNEARNED INCOME. Just let any one try to reform the rich in ways that would involve the necessity of even so little as turning his evergreen dividend into deciduous dollars and he'll learn that they'd rather die than yield to reform. Why is it sot Ask why it has been so in all the ages; why those not toiling, but living on the toil of others, have refused to reform in this one particular; why in the past the toilers. DRIVEN TO SEEK REFORM by hunger and want and overwork, were impelled to revolution through the UNREFORM ABILITY OF THE RICH. THE RICH ARE VAGRANTS. STATISTICAL DATA ON THE TERRI TORY BOTH BY SEA AND LAND THAT THE RICH COVER IN A YEAR WOULD BE ILLUMINATING READING. THEY ARE EVER ON THE WING. WHY SHOW-DNT THEY BE7 THERE IS NOTHING TO TIE THEM DOWN TO ANY ONE SPOT OF THE EARTH'S SURFACE. . Industry gets along altogether without them, and since the indus trious pay their enormous tolls to the unproductive rich and the far thest corners of the earth are open to them that have the price WHY SHOULDN'T THEY BE VAGRANT? Why, they couldn't be ex pected to be anything else. . LOOK AT THIS! 15 acres. 2 1-2 miles out 6 acres in orchard that nets $1000.00 per year. Balance of land can be set to fruit. Good 5 room house. New barn 24 z 40. Horse, buggy, light wagon, 30 chickens. Owner also has agency good for $1000.00 com mission which goes with the place.' See v Dillman&Howland WEINHARD BUDDING. . scrap of history from an old country Italian perio'dical, usefully reminding us that the Balkan war began centur ies ago. - In the state archives at Vienna is the declaration of war sent by Sultan Mohamet IV of Turkey to Emperor Leopold of Austria in 1682. "Be it known to you, the heir of the Caesars, to the King of Poland, and to your allies, that Mohamet, the glor ious and omnipotent Emperor of the East and the West, is on the point of invading your paltry - territories. We shall bring 1,3000,000 soldiers, on horse and foot, to crush you utterly and' lay waste your domains. We command you to await our coming in your residence in Vienna, where It is our intention to have you beheaded." This politely modest letter, the gentle Turk promptly proceeded to make good, as some of the bloodiest pages of Austrian and Hungarian history amply testify. LIMESTONE Recent notable scientif WOOL ic discoveries are the manufacture of artifi cial coal and artificial wool. Dr. F. R. Bergius has, by employing a. high temperature and a high pressure, changed cellulose to peat in a few hours. Nature, he states would have required 7,000,000 years. The new wool is called "Limestone Wool", and y - ' the rich man an easy subject for 0 uafo MORNING ENTERPRISE THURSDAY. DECEMBER 19, 1912. is made in 'an electric furnace. Pow j dered limestone, mixed 'with certain j chemicals, is thrown into the furnace, and after passing through a furious air-blast it is tossed .out as fluffy white wool. Later, it is dyed and made in to lengths, like cloth, A pair of trou sers or a coat made of this material can not, It is claimed, be burned or damaged by grease. A RANK INJUSTICE A pedagogue originally was a slave who .'walk ed' with the children, to school. Naturally, he did not get much for the job. Poor scholarship has tacked the word 'Pedagogue' on to the teacher himself, which perhaps is the reason why teaching, is the poorest rewarded profession In Amer ica. Salaries of teachers are every where lower than the tremendous im portance of their work demands, but it is left to Clackamas County to dis cover the irreducible minimum, at least as far as the County Superin tendent is concerned. Imagine a man whose school, college, and. uni versity training to fit bim for his work has taken some of .the most valuable years of early manhood, and thous ands of dollars,- being paid the miser able pittance of vone thousand dollars for twelve months work! Had he been a plumber or brick mason, he could have earned twice as much, with little or no initial outlay in time or' money. Yet we have the gall to expect him to be full of enthusiasm, energy, and knowledge, keeping abreast of the times, and giving us the best of modern methods. Let it be put to the credit of the Teachers' Institute lately in session here, that the teachers at least realize the shabbyness of the situation, for they unanimously recommended that ! the salary of the County Superinten- ! dent be made at least $1600 per an-. ! num. In our opinion it should be at least $1800. Clackamas is one of the j biggest counties in the state, and ranks third in population, yet ours is i one of the lowest salaried superinten- dents of all. Scarcely a city super I intendent of schools anywhere that does not fare better. The last legis lature had a glimmering that some thing was wrong, and appointed three school supervisors, giving them $1000 for ten months' work. The County Superintendent under whom they work, and who is responsible for them, receives a we have already pointed out, the princely revenue of $1000 for twelve months' work, so that even his own assistants are better paid. Isn't it time .something was done about it? i . A CABINET A -Democrat com- FACE READER temporary feels certain that Mr. Wilson will select his own cabinet It reosans that "The man who can look at the facial contours of Wood row Wilson and then try to make-his cabinet for him has a mighty poor ap preciation of the value of his own time." Physiognomy is an interesting science- but the Democratic party may not be one of its expert inter preters. In fifty years it has had but one president, and his facial con tours failed to keep him jn satisfac tory relations with his party or with the prosperity of . the country. Mr Cleveland had a firm set jaw and gen eral squareness of visage. He was altogether too obstinate for the party on the honest value of a dollar. The partly dropped him, facial contours and ' all, on the silver question and tariff pledges, the main issues at the time. Yet there are many who have some inkling of Labater, as well as native powers of observation, who would call the Cleveland profile and front face more promising than those of the president-elect. .v - Mr. Wilson has an ample chinVith jaws to correspond, a nose sufficiently pronounced if not Wellingtonian, and small eyes that twinkle with a cryptic smile when he shakes hands with en thusiastic callers. His teeth are on a condense curve, but full in number, and no doubt of average power when they . snap. Col. Watterson looked him over last spring and said he would never do. But the colonel is not infallible. He declared that Mr. Bryan would, never do in 1896 and Shouted for him in 1900. But Demo cratic politics Is queer. ' ,Mr. Bryan was defeated every time, although ev ery time his vote was much larger than Wilson's. Where is the line of luck in the facial map? Mr. Bryan has the widest smile and endowment of cheek. His tenacity of purpose is beyond dispute, . If he fails three Has A Ding Dong Ox Teams For Army Wagons ; And Army Peddlers In Turkey iM If Jl . V. ,i - i FCV. f- . "-4. r I kt I 1 f a ti hf - i 'II' . - ii f?-m : ':.:.H--:'ftv " w,- .w-t. .. .............. ......... ..... Photos by American Press Association - ' rN Turkey they do things differently They're about a million years owun.i the times there as viewed by our impatient eyes Take their array trans exportation, for Instance' The Turks employ ox teams to cart their army supplier oil the slow but sa,fe basis. No autos for them Then. too. their . comnletft' tlieir outfits by'' buying from peddlers iu the streets Such . interesting' sceues as these are common times of election as president and 'th&n try again on his own account. There is a missing link in Mr. Wilson's fa cial contours. " They have not yet been tried In Washington in nany capacity. WHO'S WHO IN Sir Edward Grey's PANAMA? " ' official . commun ; . ' .J ication of . the British protest of . proposed Panama Canal regulatlno and V control has reached .Washington' and been taken u!p in '"council caDinet.. ; No decision was reached in , the cabinet meeting, the paper being referred to Secretary of the State Knox, who is to prepare a formal answer which will be made the subject' of cabinet consideration Washington dispatches say, that the tone of Secretary Knox's reply will be as. pacific as is that of the British protest. Tne fact is hardly worth stating,' since it can go without the saying that a belligerent exchange of opinions is not warranted in the dis cussion of a question which, however diverging may. be the points of view from which It is seen by the partici pants, can never result, in beligerent action. ' The point of view in this case jper tainly diverge widely. The protest is against the action of the United States Government which will admit the pas sage, through the canal, freedf tolls, of vessels engaged in our, f Atlantic; and Pacific coastwide trade,' The British minister makes an excellent use J of poor material. Predicating his entire case upon the assumption that discrimination in the laying of tolls Is expressly provided against in the Hay-Pauncefote treaty of a ' few' years prior to our acquirement of sovereignity in the canal zone, he proceeds to reason that to levy tolls upon commerce passing through the canal In all foreien shins, while leav ing vessels plying in the coastwide j trade of the United States to pass free, would be to place the cost of building the canal, and of its main tance, upon foreigners. What we gather from Sir Edward's contention! on this point that he thiriks the ac cumulating tolla levied upon foreign commerce using the canal would, in time, equal the entire Interest and sinking funds of the debt. Since the Good Idea debt and the interest must be paid and our government has not only made itself responsible for the payment but has done all of the work, that conten tion is tantamount to one :that, in financial enterprises, for theis shares, are entitled to no guarantees not en joyed by the holders of common stock coming in at a much lower price. It would first put mort gage bondholders on a par with the holders of debenture bonds. Acknowledging the ' , debt and the necessity 'of payment, , the pith of the British position is that those who have created the tangible pro perty from the proceeds of the debt, and are charged with its administra tion, shall have no compensating ad vantages for their greater burdens and responsibilities. r This new and rather strange idea Is worth a closer analysis. The pro test of the foreigners against building the canal, and carrying its Interest charges, made by Sir Edward Grey, estops them equitably, from protest ing against the management of the property by others who have assum ed all the risks and brought success out of the failurea of such- foreigners as had once undertaken the task. It can1 be said, further, that since there was no obligation upon foreigners to build the canai, neither is there any obligation upon. them to use it.- That they will not use it unless they find its profitable to them is as plain as the various tricks and devices through which, Sir Edward Grey says, the discriminatory tolls regulations could be- avoided." There is no question for wbmission to The Hague Tribun al, which Sir Edward names as a last resort, unless it might be the inter pretation of the 'Hay-Pauncefote treaty, which we. have a right to In terpret for ourselves according" to the dictates of equity and sense, and in pursuance of many - precedents , in English history. . .. , The Morning Enterprise is of the opinion - that policemen who are worthy of being kept on "the force" should be accorded the provileges of Oregon City policemen. One of these is an annual vacation. . I One man, a blacksmith, was serious ly injured in a ' runaway on Main Street Wednesday afternoon. George McGregor, the blacksmith, was driving past the Masonic Temple building when his . horse became frightened, and swerving, the buggy crashed into the vehicle of Mrs. James McGUlican. Mrs. McMillican and her son were thrown out of the vehicle, but luckily neither of them was hurt. The Mc Gregor horse kept on his mad way until he reached the Barlow Grocery store when It was stopped by Ralph Murphy, engineer of the Steamej Ruth. Mr. Mujrphy risked his life in stopping the runaway. Soon after his brilliant achievement the horse broke away and ran to a livery stable - on Water Street. McGregor sustained a fracture of the nose which was given attention by Dr. M. C .Strickland; He was. taken to the physician's office by Policeman Green. Wants, For Sale, Etc Notices under these classified heading will be Inserted at one cent a word, first insertion, half a cent additional inser tions. One Inch card, $2 per month; halt 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. WANTED Painting and papering. Cut prices until Feb. 1st. F. E. Hill, Room 19, Beaver Block. , HOW would you like to talk with i , 1400 people about tbat bargain you have in Real Estate. Use the Enter- prise. LOST ; LOST At W. E. Mum power'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. i LOST A ' white brood sow, the last ; , . seen of her, she was headed for Milwaukie. Finder please telephone Portland Main 8324. WANTED LIVESTOCK WANTED Cows fresh or coming fresh soon, W. C. Berreth, 1480, Ma cadam Street, Portland, Oregon. v 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 SALE Fresh Milch Cows, with calves. W. H. Timmons, Gladstone, Oregon. FOR SALE FOR SALE Registered .Tersey Bull coming two. W. Kuppenbender. Oregon City, Farmers Pione 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. VIOLIN TAUGHT H. B. WEEKS, Teacher of Violin. Grand Theatre. . F at any time there business you do not are here to give the for upon such treatment of customers we base our hope for continued growth. - THE BANK OF'OREGON CITY LDiT MNK IN CLACKAMAS- COUNTY D. C. LATOURETTE, President. THE FIRST NATIONAL rANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON - ' CAPITAL $50,000.00 Transacts Genera Banking Business. Open from 9 A. M. to 3 . M. - By HOP 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 yon using powder? If you are, you . want the best. Use Trojan Powder. No headache, no thawing. For sale by C. Ri 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. 'WOOD AND COAL. ORBGON CITY WOOD AND FUEL CO., F. M. Bhihm. Wood and coal delivered to all parts of the city SAWING A SPECIALTY. Phone your orders. Pacific 1371, Home B 1)0 NOTICE8 Notice of Application for Liquor Li cense Notice is hereby given, that I will, at the next reular meeting of the City t Council, apply for a license to sell i liquor at my place of business 520 i Main Street for a period of three j months. FRANK UDDERMAN. ' Summons In the Circuit Court of the state of . Oregon for the County of Clacka mas. Stella Lee, Plaintiff, versus Vincent Lee, Defendant. To Vincent Lee, Defendant. In the name of the State of Ore gon; you are hereby required to ap pear and answer to the complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit on or before the 20th day of December, 1912, and if you fail to answer, the plaintiff will take a decree against you, forever dis solving the bonds of matrimony heretofore and now existing be tween the plaintiff and you and for such other, and further relief in the , premises as the Court may deem just and equitable as prayed for In the complaint filed herein. Service of the summons is made upon you by publication in pursu ance of an order of the Honorable J. U. Campbell, Judge of the Cir cuit Court, for Clackamas County, State of Oregon, made November 6, 1912, directing such publication in the Morning Enterprise, once a week for six successive weeks, the first publication being November the 7th, 1912, and the last the 19th day of December, 1912. X T. ELLIS, Attorney for Plaintiff. Notice of Application- for Liquor Li- i cense. Notice Is hereby given, that I will at .. the next regular meeting of the Citv Council, apply for a license to sell liquor at my place of business, 714 Main Street, for a period of six months. L. A. NOBEL. Notice of Application for Liquor Li cense. Notice is hereby given, that I will, at the next regular meeting of the City Council, apply for a license to. sell liquor at our place of business, 501 Mam street, for a period of three months. ' ' HUNSAKER & TAYLOR. City" Treasurer's Notice. Notice Is hereby given that there are i sufficient funds on hand to pall all . outstanding General Fund Warrants -endorsed prior to July 7th, 1911. In terest ceases on the date of this . notice. . . t Dated at Oregon City, Oregon, De- cember 19th, 1912. . . M. D. LATOURETTE, -" : '.!'' City Treasurer. is anything about the banking understand, come to us. We closest attention to our friends, F. J. MEYER, Cashier.