Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, February 12, 1913, Page 2, Image 2

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    MOKN1NU ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1913.
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What's A Birthday If It Ain't A Holiday?
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MORNING ENTERPRISE
OREGON CITY, OREGON
E. E. BRODIE, Editor and Publisher.
"Enterea as second-class matter Jan
uary 9, 1911. at the post office at Oregon
City, Oregon, under the Act of March
S, 1879."
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One Year, by mail ...i ti.00
Six Months by mail 1.60
Four Months, by mail i.00
Per Week, by carrier 10
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
Feb. 12 In American History.
1S(HI Alinilniii) Lincoln, sixteenth pres
ident of the t inted Smtes. born:
died April l". lSli'i. from the ef
fects of ;i pistol shut wound at the
h:i mis of. John WilUes I'ooth
1871 -Alice Citi.v. poet anil penernl
writer, died: horn 1S"J0
1911-Cenenil Alexander S Wehh. U
S. A., retired, whose brigade de
fended the Bloody Ansle" at Get
tysburg during Pickett's charge.
July 3. ISIS, died at Iiiverdale, N.
V'.: horn 1S:;.V
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
(Frotu noon today to noon tomorrow.)
Sun sets 5:21. rises G:57. Evening
stars: Venus. Saturn. Morning stars:
Saturn, Jupiter, Mars. '
ON RETIRING When Woodrow Wil
FROM BUSINESS son .decided some
time ago to apply
for a Carnegie pension he must have
had in mind a program of continued
work of some sort, for a life of com
plete inaction, unless compulsory, is
unendurable. When fully engaged as
an educator Mr. Wilson found leisure
to do some writing on questions of
sociaj and political philosophy, and it
is probable that he thought to add
to his list of books after the Car
negie fund should relieve him from
further effort to support himself and
family by his own efforts. What
really happened in the case is a strik
ing proof of the fallacy of retiring
from ' business as long as there is
Kill Disease Before It
Reaches Its Victim
Remove
Causes
of Human
Misery
By
Dr. CHARLES W. ELIOT.
President Emeritus of Harvard
University
rHE medical practitioner of
vented disease rather than
physicians of the country
PREVENTIVE RATHER THAN CURATIVE MEDI
CINE. PREVENTIVE MEDICINE IS CAPABLE OF REMOVING THOSE
CAUSES OF HUMAN MISERY, POVERTY AND SORROW, WHICH LEAD
TO INTERNAL REBELLION AND DISORDER AND, AMONG NATIONS.
TO WAR AND STRIFE.
The Chinese people have been through every form of misery
which a despotic tyranny, ravaging diseases, destructive' floods, can
bring to mankind. As a result there have been strife and rebellion.
They have taken the sword as the only remedy for misery and death.
Out of such conditions PREVENTIVE MEDICINE IS CAPA
BLE OF LIFTING THEM.
One of the most irritating things in international relations is the
Jtrife that arises out of the distribution of population. Preventive
medicine is MAKING SAFER THE IMMIGRATION OF PEO
PLES. V
Our achievements in the Panama canal zone have made'safer fu
ture migrations to tropical countries.
I purchased Lot SA
Block D and HOregon
City for $500 through
Dillman&Howland
Welnhardt Building
strength and capacity to go on. There
may be modifications of routine ac
cording to circumstances, but the
idea of quitting work altogether is a
delusion. Nirvana is not for this
world, if any any. A man who thought
to retire and was then elected pres
ident of the United States is a re
markable refutation of the idea that re
tirement is rationally the goal of ex
istence. The law of life is motion
and achievement. Men who think to
quit the game find themselves in cur
rents they cannot control.
A man should have some congenial
fad apart from a regular vocation,
and, with reasonable periods of recre
ation, will dismiss the dream that,
while strength remains, there is a
time to cut action short and take to
mere contemplation. As long as there
is health, a day's work is stored up
each morning, and to allow it to run
to waste is no more enjoyable than
profitable. The loss is absolute as
well as needless. Men who abondon
work soon perceive that the reality
is not what they supposed. They see
that the ranks of the bored are al
ready too full. There is no rest cure
for those who are still able to go on.
They discover in idleness that they
have physical organs that has been
efficient when unnoticed, but somehow
grow rebellious when introspectively
watched. Perhaps the new condition
is endured for six months or a year,
and the error is then comprehended.
4 7 t vfe ;
the future will be one who pre
cured it. More than half the
eventually will be ensrasred in
ft:;: t.. V.-'mttXv.-v.1
fl :- -a
If Mr. Wilson should be an energetic
president, always alert in mind and
physically competent, the point will
be strongly emphasized that his pen
sion move, at the, age of 55, was a
mistake in more senses than one. He
will illustrate a fact in the philosophy
of life without the aid of his pen.
FORUM OF THE PEOPLE
BURDON IS RETAINED.
GLADSTONE, Feb. 11, (Editor,
uregon City Enterprise.) Since tnu
passage, of a resolution by the Council
of the Oregon City Federation of
Churches, on Feb. 3, favoring the pas
sage of the Schuebel 10-hour bill now
before the state legislature, some
trouble has arisen which calls for a
public explanation. F. A. Burdon, an
officer of the Gladstone Christian
Church, whose letter stating his atti
tude toward said bill, and the Oregon
City Federation of Churches appeared
in your paper of Feb. 5, has been put
to a vast amount of trouble and annoy
ance because it appeared to some,
from published reports, as though Mr.
Burdon was acting on both sides of
the above proposition. Mr. Burdon
has been so troubled over these things
that he felt compelled to resign his
position on said church board, and his
resignation was before this board on
Sunday. Mr. Burdon has been a faith
ful member of the church, and also
an efficient officer and rather than
lose him from his official position in
the church, a resolution was unani
mously passed by the church board
favoring the secession of the Glad
stone Christian Church from the Ore
gon City Federation of Churches, and
the retention of F. A. Burdon in his
official position in the church. I know
that Mr. Burdon hs acted on but one
side of this 10-hour bill proposition
the side stated in his letter of Feb.
o. I .voted Sor the passage of the res
olution by the Church Federation
meeting, believing at the time it was
for the best. I realize now it was a
mistake for the representatives of the
churches to take ' such action, and
hereby express my regret for the
same. It was the desire of the church
board that this public statement
should be made.
Most respectfully,
ROY L. DUNN,
Pastor, Gladstone Christian Church.
AIDES OF SCOn
WIN LIFE FIGHT
(Continued from page 1)
And there they found them hud
dled together, frozen and starved and
sickened to death. But their deaths i
are more triumphant than most of
our lives. For they left records
Scott left a record for honesty, sin
cerity and bravery everything that
makes a man.
And this, to me, is greater than hav
ing discovered the pole.
?$? , $e$$$sss
S e
s Hero Explorer, Dying,
4 Tells Thrilling Story
$ s
S$SS3SSSSS3SsSj
LONDON, Feb. 11. With death
staring him in the face, with no pos
sible succor at hand, Captain Robert
F. Scott, British polar explorer, who
perished after reaching his goal Jan
uary 18, 1912, wrote with his dying
hands the story of his quest into the
Antartic that all the world might
know. Found beside his stiffened
corpse, when rescue came too late,
Scott's story was cabled here today
from New Zealand and given to the
world' under his loconic title, "Mes
sage to the Public." The full text of
the message reads:
"The causes of this disaster are
not due to faulty organization, but to
misfortune in all the risks that had
to be undertaken.
"First The loss of pony transport
in March, 1911, obliged me to start
later than I had intended and obliged
limits of. stuff transported to be nar
rowed. "Second The weather throughout
the outward journey, especially a
long gale in 83 degrees south stopped
us, and the soft snow encountered in
the lower reaches of Beardmore gla
cier again reduced our pace.
"We fought these untoward events
with a will and conquered, but it ate
up our provision reserve. Every de
tail of our food supplies, clothing and
depots made on the interior ice
sheets and on that long stretch .of
If you drink because of a craving for stimulants if you've
reached the stage where nothing will satisfy excepting rough
high-proof, strong whiskey bur story is not for you. :
But if it's mellowness, age and flavor you're looking foi
you'll like Cyrus Noble.
Because it's pure because it's palatable
- because you don't have to dilute it with
- water to be able to swallow it.
It costs no more than any oilier good whiskey.-1
VV. J. Van Schuyver & Co.; Genera lAgenfi,, Portland. Oregon
Smashed Bow ot
Which
iiiliMiliiii
f - V A
5. -
aiiilii;
Photo by American Press Association.
THIS has oe'en an unusual winter ot marine accidents and escapes. One
of the most tragic ot the fatalities occurred in Chesapeake bay wheD
the British steamer Indrakuala rammed the American steamship Julia
Luckenbacb and sent tier to tbe bottom, costing . fifteeD lives. The
illustration shows tbe damage to tbe unwitting Juggernaut Her bow is smash
ed in botb above and below the water line, and sbe was beached to save berselt
a similar fare. Her safety bulkheads saved ber blight sailors on the Julia
Luc ken bach lung to the rigging of that 111 fated ship for many hours, nearly
perishing, and then were rescued
800 miles to the pole and back worked
out to perfection. The auvance party
would have returned to the glacier
in fine form and with a surplus of
food but 'for the astonishing failure
of a man least expected to fail.
"Seaman Evans was thought to be
the strong man of the party and
Beardmore glacier is not uifficult in
fine weather, but on the return trip
we did not get a sii gle completely
fine day, and this, with a sick com
panion, -enormously increased our dif
ficulties. "We got into frightfully rough ice
and Evans received a concussion of
the brain. He died a natural death,
out it left a shaken party with the
season unduly cavanced.
"But all the facts above enumer
ated were as nothing to the surprise
awaityig us on the barrier. I main
tain gur arrangements for returning
were quite a.dequate ana that no one
would have expected the temperatures
and surface which we encountered at
this time of the year. On the sum
mit, in latitude 85 degrees to latitude
86 degrees, we tad minus 23 to min
us 30.
Wants, For Sale, Etc
CARD OF THANKS.
Mrs. Caroline Bremer and family wish
to thank their many kind friends
and relatives for the tender sympa
thies and condolences extended to
them during their recent bereave
ment. They also wish to give their
appreciation and thanks for the
many beautiful floral tributes.
HELP WANTED MALE
WANTED Boy with bicycle, $20 per
month. Apply Western Union Office.
WANTED Female Help.
GIRL WANTED Phone. Main 1501
WANTED Work by Middle aged
woman with little girl, any kind Of
the Indrakuala,
Cost fifteen Lives
i -
4
work.
prise.
Address "E" care of Enter-
WANTED
Anyone wanting trees pruned call
Roy Woodwortr at either Main
2274 or 1982. Have had 9 years'
experience at Hood River.
WANTED Light housework. Address
Annie Bowers, Colton, Ore.
.FOR SALE
COAL COAL
The famous (King) coal from Utah,
free delivery. Telephone your or
der to A 56 or Main 14, Oregon City
Ice Works, 12th and Main Streets.
FOR SALE A small house and lot
in Gladstone, snap. Terms if de
sired. Address x-2 care of Enter
prise. FOR SALEFresh cows at good bar
gains by Hugh Jones, Route No. 1.
FOR SALE Wilhoit water pure and
sparkling, its use prevents typhoid
fever. Call Main 38 or A 218. Chas.
Tobin, Agent.
FOR SALE Milch- cows. W. H.
. Timmons, Gladstone, regon.
FOR 3ALE Two and . one-half lots
and 6room house in Bolton, near
car line, good school. Inquire John
ston & Isindquist, Millinery store.
SMALL FARM WANTED
Client wants to spend $3005.00 on
small farm in Willamette Vailey
not too faf from Portland; must
have 10 acres in cultivation ; pre
fers small stream or spring on
place. If you have something along
this line and wish to sell, see or
write to H. E. Cross, Beaver Bldg.,
Oreron City.
WANTED LIVESTOCK
WANTED Cows fresh or coming
fresh soon, W. C. Berreth, 1480,
Macadam Street, Portland, Oregon.
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., Gustav Flechtffer, Tel. M. 3471,
Oregon City.
WOOD AND COAL.
OREGON CITY WOOD AND FUEL
CO . F. M. Blukm. Wood and coal
delivered to all parts of the ei.y
mx -
SAWING A SPECIALTY. Phone
your orders. Pacific 1371, Home
B MO-
NOTJCES
Summons. .
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon for the County of Clacka
amas. C. E. Gorbett, Plaintiff,
vs.
J. G. Sullivan, Defendant.
To J. G. Sullivan, the above nam
ed defendant, 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 action, on or before
Saturday, the 8th day of March,
1913, and if you fail so to appear
and answer, for want thereof, plain
tiff will, apply to the Court for a
judgment against you for the sum
of Five Hundred and Fifty Dollars
($550.00) with interest thereon at
the rate of 7 per cent per annum
from the 27th day of October, 1909,
and for the further sum of One
Hundred Dollars ($100.00) attor
neys fees, and for Plaintiffs costs
and disbursements herein and for
an order for foreclosing the mort
gage as set out in the complaint on
file herein, and for an order of sale
of the following described real
property, the North-East Quarter of
the North-East Quarter of Section
36, Township 4 South, Range 3
East, of the Willamette Meridian,
Clackamas County, Oregon, to sat
ify the said mortgage, according
to the provisions of this Court, and
the laws governing the sale of real
estate upon excusal, that the de
fendant and each and all persons
claiming any title through him be
forever barred of any right, claim
or interest in said property.
Service of this summons is made
upon you by publication thereof, by
order of the Honorable J. U. Camp
bell, judge of the said Court, which
said order was duly made, dated
and entered on the 21st day of Jan
uary, 1913, and directed that publi
cation of summons be made in the
Morning Enterprise, a newspaper
of general circulation, published in
Oregon City, Oregon, and that said
publication be made once a week
for six successive weeks.
-1st publication dated Jan. 22
1913.
Last publication dated March 5,
1913.
DAVID E. LOFGREN,
Atty. for Plaintiff.
Notice to Creditors.
Notice i& hereby given that the un
dersigned has been duly appointed
Administrator of the estate of Fer
dinand Gross, deceased, and any
j all persons having claims against
! the said estate must present them
i. to the undersingned, duly verified,
j at his place of residence at Willam-
j ette, Clackamas County, Oregon,
j within six months from the' date of
this notice.
i Dated this 28th day of January,
! A. D. 1913. -
GOTTLIEB GROSS,
Administrator of the Estate of
Ferdinand Gross, deceased.
Guardian's Sale of Real Property.
In the County Court, State of Oregon,
for the County of Clackamas.
In the Matter of the Guardianship of
Edith' Deardorff, Mabel Deardorff,
Arthur Deardorff and Roy Deardorff,
minors.
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned, Guardian of the per
sons and estate of Arthur Deardorff
and Roy Deardorff, minors, will sell
at private Guardian's sale on Sat
urday, the 28th day of February, A.
D. 1913, at the County Court House ;
in Oregon City, Oregon,
All the right, title and interest i
which Arthur Deardorff and Roy I
Deardorff, minors, have in the fol- j
lowing described real property, to- j
wit: . j
Beginning at the one-fourth Sec-1
tion corner between Sections 25 1
. and 26, Township 1 South, of Range !
2 east of the Willamette Meridian; j
thence Eeasterly along the subdi-l
divisional line of Section 25 to the j
center of County Road ; thence Nor-:
ii i -- i iv. . n : .1 .J !
tiieny aiung lu ueuiei ui aaiu ruau
to the Southeast corner of the Adam
Jeopferd land; thence Westerly 726
feet to the Southeast corner of the
said Adam Jeopferd land; thence
Southerly 693 feet to the place of I
beginning, containing 12 acres. ,
. GIVING CHECKS
is the simplest and most convenient way of paying bills.
Likewise the safest. It's a receipt for the debt it pays.
THE BANK OF OREGON CITY
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY -
D. C. LATOURETTE, President.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
. OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
CAPITAL $50,000.00
Transacts a General Banking Business. Open from U A. M. to ? P. M -
Said sale to be made for cash in
hand or approved security to be
approved by the County Court of
Clackamas County, Oregon.
Dated this 28th day of January,.
A. D. 1913.
THOMAS E. CAIN,
Guardian.
DIMICK & DIMICK,
. Attorneys for Guardian.
Notice to Creditors.
In the County Court of the State of
Oregon for the County of Clacka
mas. In the matter of the estate of Eliza
beth Harger, (formerly Elizabeth
DeLashmutt) deceased.
Notice is heeby given that the
undersigned has been duly appoint
ed Administrator of the above en
titled estate and any and all persons-having
claims against -the
said estate are hereby notified to
present them to the undersigned Ad
ministrator, duly verified within
six months from the date of this
notice.
Dated this 14th day of January, A.
D., 1913.
WILLIAM DYER,
Administrator.
DIMICK & DIMICK,
Attorneys for Administrator.
Resolution and Notice for the Im
provement of Thirteenth Street,
Oregon City, Oregon.
Whereas, pursuant' to an order of the
City Council of Oregon City, Clack
amas County, Oregon, heretofore,
made the City Engineer of said
city, has submitted his report and
filed in the office of the Recorder,
plans and specifications for an ap
propriate improvement of Thir
teenth Street from the East line of
Monroe Street easterly to the West
line of Jackson Street and esti
mates of the work to be done there
on and of the cost thereof, and
Whereas, such plans, specifica
tions and estimates are satisfactory
to the City Council of said Oregon
City, therefore,
The said plans, specifications and
estimates are hereby approved and
be it
Resolved, that it is the purpose
and intention of the City Council
of Oregon City to make the said
improvement,- being described as
follows, to-wit:
The street shall be brought to
the subgrade the full width thereof
between the Easterly side of Mon
roe Street and the Westerly side of
Jackson Street. On the road-bed,
Macadam shall be placed not less
than" six inches thick at the curb
and not less than nine inches thick
at the center of the street, and
when completed the said street
shall be brought to the following
grade: Beginning at Jackson Street
at the completed grade thence
westwardly on direct lines to the
intersection of J. Q. Adams Street
at the completed grade and from J.
' Q. Adams Street to Monroe Street
by direct lines at the completed
grade of said street.
Said street shall be properly pro
vided with all drains, catch-basins
and gutters necessary to preserve
the grades, embankments and sur
face of the street, and to provide
all proper drainage.
Sidewalks shall be made of con
crete except where on applica
tion to the City Council own
ers are permitted to have wooden
walks .laid, or on account of fills
it is impnactical in which case
wood walks will be laid. All side
walks shall be six feet wide and
laid to the property line. Curbs
shall be placed on each side of the
macadamized portion of the street
20 feet from the center line thereof.
All curbing shall be of concrete
except where on account of fills
concrete would not be' advisable in
which case the curbing will be
made of wood and all said improve
ment shall be made according to the
plans and specifications filed Jan
uary 21st, 1913 and approved
hereby.
This improvement shall be class
ed as "Macadam" and shall be main
tained by Oregon City for the full
period of ten years after the accep
tance thereof by the City Council.
The City Recorder is hereby au
thorized and directed to have this
resolution and notice published as
required by the charter provided.
L. STIPP, Record
F. J. MEYER, Cashier.