Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, January 01, 1913, Image 2

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MORNING ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, JAN. 1, 1913.
.
OVAJUK REPORTER
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tVIUIVlVlilU L.11 1 l-UI lI
OREGON CITY, OREGON
E. E. BRODIE, Editor and Publisher.
j
"Entered as second-class matter Jan-
jary it. 1911. at the post office at Oregon
Cltv. Oregon, under the Act of March
i, i879." ;
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. J
One Tear, by mall $3.00 j
Six Months by mall 1-M ;
Four Months, by mall i-00
Per Week, by carrier 10 !
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
Jan. 1 In American History.
1776 American flag first used bj
Washington.
18(53 The edict of emancipation, of th
slaves held iu states adhering tt
the Confederacy went into effect.
187S) Resumption of specie payment
In the tlnited States.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
(From noon today to uoon tomorrow.)
Sun sets 4:43. rises 7:25. Eveninj
stars: Venus. Saturn. Morning stars
Mars. Mercury. Jupiter. January cou
stellations visible about p. m. as fol
lows: Overhead, south westward. Pel
seus;. westward. Andromeda; north
westward. Cassiopeia (resembling th
letter W) in Milky way; eastward, Au
riga; north. Ursa Minor (Little Dipper)
Draco. Hercules (low): northwest
Cepueus, Cygnus (cross) in Milky way
Lyra dowi: west. Pegasus (winged
horsei; southwest, Aries, -Cetus (low)
south. Eridanus (low); south-southeast
Taurus. Orion, Canis Major (rising)
east-southeast. Gemini. Canis Minor
east-northeast. Leo (forming sickle, ris
ing): northwest. Ursa Major (Grea
Dipper). Bootes (partly visible). Brigh.
stars of the month: Vega. Alpherat, Al
gol. Aldebarau (redi. Betelgeux, Cas
tor. Pollux. Capella. Regulus (in Leo)
Sirius. Rigel. Procyon. Planets in Jan
uary: Mercury. Venus, Mars, Jupiter
Saturn. Evening stars of the month
Venus. Saturn. Morning stars: Mars
Mercury. Jupiter.
May you accomplish what you at
tempt, enjoy what you have, and find
nothing to regret.
PURE
The almost universal cry of
WATER
Oregon City is pure water.
A large number .of her cit
izens have petitioned the Commercial
Q'ub and the Live Wires Association
to lend their aid to the end that the
city vote bonds and a proper supply
be located, purchased or appropriated
and connected with the city's water
mains.
Th'e Commercial Club, through the
Live Wires Ascociation and the Pub
licity Department have been carrying
on an advertising campaign both with
HERE should be NO
SUCH THING AS "A
STATE LINE IN THE
COMMERCIAL IN
TERESTS of the United States.
The federal body finally must
be given authority so to regulate
traffic as to protect the interests
of all. To that extent the federal
commission must be supreme.
While the railroad is a "public
. servant," the old theory that it
"can be kicked and cuffed at will is
innocuous. We are dealing today
with the GREATEST ECO
NOMIC PROBLEM OF. THE
COUNTRY.
UNITED STATES IS TRY
Wipe
UUt . y""J -
State jjr
L,nes kib
In f:St;;f xfl fcs !
Ill --V TAiPVtl
! - -A SUW HAND 555i-mTSfflS , Jl. "TO K WKS TBEBU--aH . -
!
Happy
New
Year
Dillman&Howland
WEINHARD BUILDING.
in and without our city 'and the results
of their labor are everywhere appar
ent, but there is still one great work
to be accomplished before Oregon
City can stand alone before the world
and make people' sit up and take no
tice. We must have an absolutely
purewater suprfy from every point ot
view, and with a new city administra
tion coming in with the new year,
good resolutions on the part of every
one with their shoulders to the wheel
will bring about the desired results.
Meanwhile, boil the water you drink.
PHILOSOPHY The state of Colo
OF GOOD ROADS rado spent con
siderable money im
proving the roads of the state in 1911,
and as a result 6,000 automobiles vis
ited the state last year, and accord
ing to statistics of the Denver Cham
ber of Commerce, no less than $2,
700,000 was left in the state by those
visitors.
Argue as one will, there is no de
ny ing. the fact that there is an educa
tional, and moral, as well as money
value vo good roads. Probably the
biggest reason why boys and girls
will not stay on the farm, is because
of the ghastly isolation which bad
roads impose. Improve the roads
and make it possible for the families
of the farmers to have the social in
tercourse which the normal human
demands, and you will settle for all
time the problem of how to keep the
young folks on the farm. The state
of Oregon has a great deal to learn
in this direction. Seffishness, and a
total disregard of the other fellow,
has led to road districts refusing to
pass any levy which might temporar
ily hurt them. On the other hand we
have districts that cheerfully tax them
selves to the limit, not merely that
they themselves might benefit, but
that the . state at large might be able
to attract the tourists, to whom good
roads are the big attraction.
PENSIONING At first thought it
MOTHERS does seem as though
paying mothers to look
after their own children was carry-
By
C. A. -PROUTY,
Chairman
of the
Interstate
Commerce
Commission
ING AN EXPERIMENT THAT
NEVER HAS BEEN WORKED OUT
SUCCESSFULLY BY ANY
COUN-
TRY OF THE WORLD. THAT EX
PERI MENT IS THE CONTROL OF j
RAILROADS BUILT AND OPER
ATED BY PRIVATE CAPITAL UN
DER REGULATIONS FIXED BY
THE PUBLIC.
The interstate commerce corn
mission and the state commissions
can make" reasonable rates 'and
regulate schedules for the opera
tion of trains, but can this be done
so as to induce the investment of
..,.,.......,. fr,- tl, An.
new monev
velopment and extension of te
old railways and the building of
new systems
... -.
Who Ever Heard Of
BetHeW BKSL B THE, f WDt 1 OLD RED M.LL SSL. ? iBIl
ing things to an extreme, but when
one stops to think of the many moth-.;
ers left with a brood to support and
educate, and no funds to do it with,
is assumes a totally different color. -Nor
is the subject wanting for differ
ences of opinion. Cook County of
Illinois pays $75,000 to institutions for
the care o$ dependent children. How
much better it would be if that mon
ey were paid out to indigent mothers
to look after their own flesh and blood.
It seems so absurd to take a child
from its natural nurse and protector,
build institutions, and employ nurses
to do the work that the mother would
only be too happy to do in the first
instance were it only made possible.
The expense would be infinitely less
to the taxpayers.
St. Louis has enacted an ordinance '
which atlows pensions for dependent
mothers, the idea will travel, and it i
is sincerely hoped that the 'great stata .
of Oregon will fall in line. We pen-:
sion soldiers who merely take long
chances on being wounded. Why not
do as much for the poor woman who
cheerfully goes down in the valley of
the shadow of death, to the end that
men might be born.
THE NEW Today we staild at the
YEAR portals of a new year. A
nw year with all its possi
bilities of good and evil, success and
failure. What are we going to do
with it? "God alone knows" some
will say, in the thoroughly human
effort to place the responsibility on
God, Providence, or Fate, according
to the point of view of the individual.
But we are largely masters of our own
destiny, and socialistc theories to the
contrary notwithstanding, we are also
responsible for our environment.
True, with many of us the material
environment is neither inspiring nor
elevatiing, and the sordid circum
stances of life compel us to move and
have our being amidst surroundings
that seem to exist only to afford sta
tistics to settlement workers, as fOi-
example the family which through
scanty means is compelled to rent a
home in the cheapest and possibly
the vilest part of the "city. But there
is something far better than mere
physical environment, there is the spir
itual environment of the soul. We
may each one of us provide our souls
with the purest thoughts of all the
ages, and if we strive to do that, noth
ing is more sure than that our mater
ial development will cease to affect
us. Nay, it will follow most inevitably
that even our physical environment j
will change for the better. But the
great majority of us (live midst com
fortable surroundings, and are getting
out of life all, if not more, than we
give.
Why not let us resolve to do more
for the other fellow this coming year?
The trouble with most of our resolu
tions is that they are too selfish. They
concern only ourselves, or at the most
those who are dependent upon us,
and in that sense part of ourselves.
Most of our personal weaknesses
arise from the fact that we are too
se,'f-centered, and consequently miss
the uplift that comes from the other
fellow's well meant good will. Wheth
er Christ be the Son of God, as all
real Christians believe, or merely a
1kd-like man of- divine attributes, a;
some others teach, the one great, sub
lime and indisputable fact remains,
that He taught us .that -we are mereCy
part of the whole, and that no man
can live to himself. If we will remem
ber that eternal fact, we shall be more
careful of our conduct and attitude
towards society, and realize that our
words, our actions, and even our ap
parel, are exerting an effect on so
ciety, and Influencing for better or
worse the citizens of the futue. There-
i fore let us each resolve to think of
I the other feVow this coming year. It
will pay us, individually, and will
i solve every economic question that
now taxes the body politic.
Lope de Vega
Lope de Veg.i. the famous Spanish
dramatist and poet, lived from 15(52 to
11)35. His literary work liegan when
he was about thirteen years old. and
from that time until his deati. a pe
riod of sixty years, he poured forth an
enormous quantity of plays, dramatic
conitwisitions of nil kinds, poems vi
: every character, breathing every spirit
! from the strictest asceticism to the
most unbridled license. Over 1,800
plays are credpud to him. and the pub
r.
lished colleetvoii. comprising about 300,
is conrainedintsteujty -eight volumes.
J. - in m m aw f V 1 - ' J.
A Newspaper Man Possessing $3,000?
War Wireless on
Turks Flee,
Flioms uy American Press Association
W:iir 111
R'TMRELESS played an important part In the Balkan war The Bul
J garians transported their apparatus in an ingenious manner, fitting
them on large saddles, which were placed on the backs of the
horses An arraugement or inis Kina is snown in tue lower picture.
In the uper view may be seen frightened Turks in a wild scramble on the
quays of Stamboul waiting to be taken by ferry, bag and baggage, back to
Asia Minor, whence they originally came
THE
Southern Pacific Railroad of Mexico
traversing the states of
v SONOROA - SINALOA - TEPIC - JALISCO. 1
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 r"-'
lished.
H. LAWTON, G. P. A.p Guaymas, Sonora, Mexico.
NEW HEAD OP LIVE WIRES
f 1 i
Hon. Harvey E. Cross, who has been
Leading Woman.
t. t inn no .von uiineisiana nv a leaa
in! wortiaiir" "Any woman who
iii;.i i ii 'uii ritrii Ksi miiiec.
Horseback;
Bag and Baggage
1 H " .- iii mm
elected Main Trunk of Live Wires.
At Times.
ris Mand a good listener?"
is VYes: when xhe lienr. herself talk-
InV " l-istoiaV:mwTiiit
- .
Bi-vd Ternpsrature of Athletes.
Tlic e (tit f i.et-ii' made at the Iyu
don t olh'Kt' hospital some curious oil
sei v.it ions tin the blood temperature
of iithleies. The normal blood tem
perance tif man is about !)S.ll degrees
K. A young mini after a ruu of 200
yards showed it temperature of 100.70
degives.'niuiUit-r a temperature of
100.SI4 degrees and n third a tempera
ture of degrees after a run ol
half a mile. A mile run produced an
internal temperature of 102.8 degrees
with one athlele and 103.(1 degrees
with another. After a three mile run
one young man had a temperature of
105 degrees, but tWIs runner's normal
blood rem pern tu re was 101 degrees in
perfect health.- Harper's.
fl-.e Pit In Garrick's Time.
In (Jiirrii-V's time when the weather
was warm the wen in the pit took off
coats and vests.
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, ( lines), $1 pr month.
Cash must accompany order unless one
has ar. open account with the paper. No
financial responsibility for errors; where
errors occur free corrected notica will b
printed foi patron. Minimum charge lac.
HELP WANTED MALE
WANTED Neat, intelligent and ac
commodating young man for office
position. No stenographic know
ledge necessary but must be able
to operate typewriter and be famil
liar with Y. & E. filing systems and
card index. Very good opportunity
for advancement for right man.
Must live in Oregon City. Salary
depends upon ability. Address Box
C, Oregon City. ;
WANTED
WANTED Persons who have oyster
cocktail bottles will confer a favor
upon the undersigned by returning
them to the Falls Restaurant.
ROBERT CAHILL.
PROPOSALS WANTED
WANTED Proposals for drilling
w.ills on the Willamette Pulp &
Paper Company's Townsite Spec
ifications may be obtained from the
undersigned. Don E. Meldrum,
Office of the Willamette Pulp &
Paper Company. r
LOST
LOST Small round
Telephone 53.
Satsuma pin.
FARM LOANS
Money in lots of $500, $800, $1,000,
$2,000 and $3,000 to loan at 7 per
cent. Only improved farm security
accepted. Dimick & Dimick, Ore
gon City.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT 8 room modern house op
posite Barclay School. Inquire F.
Koenig, Twelfth and Madison Sts.
Rakel's rann '. r
' Call Mail -J'.l.
ent in Canemah
FOR SALE
COAL COAL
The famous (King) coal from Utah,
free delivery. Telephone , your or-
der to Main 2124, Oregon City Ice
WTorks, 14th and Main Streets.
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
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 Sts.
, OUR 1913 CALENDARS
have been delayed in shipment and we will
not be able to distribute them as early as
usual.
THE BANK OF
OLDEST BANK IN
D. C. LATOURETTE, President
THE FIRST NATIONAL DANK
OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
CAPITAL
Transacts a General Banking fiusines
-c 1 1
By HOP
0 AHEAD AHD SHOOT-H
X D IDrATKNOW THAT I
"YWEQf WAS AS MilfH
MME ASXOU AStf.lN
rme WORLD FtWAD
inKEE. THOUSAND BEANS
"n-fe SHOCK. OF HAVNCr
vr would kill me.
HEROlC
ATT ITU DO
0f
NAPOLEOtS
AT THE.
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 i Trial-Treatment, all sent abso
lutely free by one wto was cured.
Fni'limp a Ivn rout ctrnvin 7 XT
o..j.. n f -. l i t . h
ouuuii, ;oux t-ircnara Ave., J-iOS An
geles, Calif.
It will pay you to trade with the Chi
cago Store, 505 Main Street, Ore
gon City, for Clothing and Gent's
Furnishings. We also do cleaning.
pressing and repairing, at reason- "
able prices.
MUSIC
Oregon City Branch Northwestern
School of Music. Opens Wednesday,
Jan. 8. 1913, in the Masonic Templa'-
Building, for new winter term stu
dents in. various branches of music
write to" 129 1-2 Grand Ave., Port
land for application, terms, etc.
;wOOD AND COAL.
ORBGON CITY WOOD A.ND FUEL
CO , F. M. Bluhm. Wood and coal
delivered to all parts of the city
SAWING A SPECIALTY. Phone
your i brders. Pacific 1371, Home
B lit!
NOTICES
' Notice to Creditors.
Notice is hereby given that the under
signed has been duly appointed by
the County Court of Clackamas
Countr, Oregon, as Executor of the I
estate of John Silver, deceased.- i
persons having claims against '"k
saia decedent or his estate are'
hereby required to present the same
in writing, with proper vouchers,
duly verified, to the undersigned at
torney at Oregon City, Oregon, with
in six months from the date of this,
notice.
Dated at Oregon City, Oregon,
January 1, 1913.
FRANK J. LONERGAN,
Executor.
CLARENCE L. EATON,
Attorney for Executor--"
Notice to Creditors
In the County Court of the State of
Oregon for Clackamas County.
In the matter of the estate of J.
E. Underwood, deceased.
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned Lizzie M. Underwood
as the widow of the late J. E. Un
derwood, deceased, has been duly
appointed by the County Court of
the Sate of Oregon, for Clackamas
County, Administratrix of the estate
of J. E. Underwood, deceased.
All persons having claims
against said estate are hereby re
quired to present the same to me
properly provided as by law requir
ed at the office of my attorney, J.
A. Strowbridge, No. 206-207 Com
mercial Block, Portland, Oregon,
within six (6) months from the date
hereof. I
Datedithis 25th dayjpf Nevember,
1912.
Date of first publication Dec. 4,
1912.
Date- of last publication Jan. 1,
1913.
LIZZIE M. UNDERWOOD,
Administratrix of the estate of
J. BJ. Underwood, deceased.
Notice of Application for Liquor i
License j
Notice is hereby given that I will at I
the next- regular meeting of the!
City Council apply for a license to
sell liquor at my place of Jpusiness
415 Main Street for a period of
three months.
JOSEPH WILSON.
Notice .of Application for Pool Hall
! License.
Notice is hereby given that I will at
the next regular meeting of the
City Council, apply for a license to
run and regulate a Pool. Roo.i
my place of business, - 503
Street, for a period ol three
B. L. crow:
OREGON CITY
CLACKAMAS COUNTY
' F. J. MEYER, Cashier,
$50,000.00
Opan from 9 A. M. to 3 P. M
i
VI
IS rj