COOP THE CUB REPORTER t Nye. N 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 mail $3.00 Six Months, by mail 1.50 Four Months, by mail 1.00 Per Week, by carrier 10 CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER x March 5 In Amercan History. 1770 British soldiers stationed in Boston shot down ten citizens in retaliation for being pelted with snowballs: event commonly known as the "Boston massacre." ; 1832 Isaac Israel Haves, arctic ex ' plorer. born: died 1881. 1SG3-In m desperate action at Thomp . sou's Station. Tenn., General John Coburn's Federal brigade was de feated and captured entire by Con federate cavalry. 1005 Judge John FI Reagan, sole sur vivor of Jefferson Davis' Confed erate cabinet, died: born 1818. 1910 Louis James, the actor, died at Helena. Mont.: born ISfiO. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. . (From noon today to uoon tomorrow.) fcun sets :i:;i., rises evening stars: Mercury, Venus. Saturn. Morn ing stars: Jupiter. Mars. DPOMHC? ANn Tho conference THE PIECRUST committee has i o-vinrl c Sonnfnr Rftnmo'a amoTlil- .'ment to the omnibus bill providing for $1,000,000 for the Portland build ing. Other. Oregon and Washington ' amendments agreed to by the confer ence are: Albany, increase of $10,- 000; The Dalles, increase of $24,000; Everett, Wash., increase ot $30,000; - CllllU V CJ , ,p.L-iv,uvv Jl UU11UU, V" site now owned by government; We hatchee, $S5,000 for building; Pasco, $10,000 for site; Nampa and Cald well, Idaho, $10,000 each for sites. Oregon City was treated to a lot . of heated atmosphere, but got noth ing in the way of appropriation for a federal building. Our United States Senators and Congressmen are our ,uuu menus jusi ynur ail elec tion. If the Republican party had allow ed the navy to run down there woul 1 be European battleships headed for the Mexican ports at this time. If the South Pole explorers had es tablished more depots they wou'.d have returned in safety. It is a point to remember in future polar work. : In the event of a war between Mex ico and the United States it might be that Col. Bryan would want to re cruit his old regiment and go as far as the Rio Grande border. Admiral Dewey is a good man for a board of strategy. He struck a de cisive blow in his department within a week after the declaration of war. It was not by accident. He had been, getting ready for months. She Was a Countess. - Squnggs Say. Squiggs, is there any thing in the story that your nephew married a couutess? Squiggs Well, yes, I suppose there is. The young lady fan the adding machine in Bug house & Bingle's oflice. Courts Must Be--Purged By Justice WESLEY O. HOWARD of the Supreme Court of New York IHfiasaeii3i5i.'isJ EVOLUTION OF THE COURTS IMPENDS U 1 LESS THE COURTS 1 QUELL THE MERITED All men are supposed in lie eijiial lirfViv tmr laws, Imt that seems not to be so. Tbe road t justice !mn( he S'I'K A K ' II I', SHORT AND SIMPLE. There slmnM h,- n. toller.-, on the wav. no brigands, no false guide boards. The uit r i ravclinr in HiH"tni biles should have NO PRECEDKXCK over those on foot. Revolutionary measures are to be avoided. Tin- iiiownient should begin from within. It is well for the great jurists of the land, the judges of last resort, to take heed of the temper of the times, unbend from their conservatism and WORK OUT THE REFORM THKM S ELVES. hffXLA. HAVE.TO Boss W(f?ep To tO over Iga'THij. CHAP COMING WWERETHE Hoosc is INTERVIEW Who Wants A Bargain? Good 6-room house finished complete, city water. Nice large level corner lot on 16th St., 4 blocks from Clackamas South ern. Best location In Oregon City for a store. $1050.00, 2-3 cash, balance from 2 to 5 years. SEE . Dillman&Howland Weinhard Building. . TOOZE mis AT Continued from Page 1.) be an odor at times, but declared that there would be an odor from dis tilled water if run on top of the ground. He said there had been no complaint from any of his neighbors. "The 121 places in Oregon City that have been reported as violating the law, are as sweet as honey com pared with the proposition that this committee is trying to put over," said Mr. Tooze. "I am building another house and shall build another septic tank, and if there is any' way to stop me, I want to know it. The street superintendent has been direct ed to extend the outlet pipe to the lower canyon and he is only waiting for better weather to do this. This infamous misrepresentation will not bluff me for a minute. I have created no nuisance, hence their is no uni sance to abate. I will not put a straw in the way of prosecution and I chal lenge, the cqmmittee of the Live Wires to puulisn the 121 cases of the violation of the law, accompanied with the names of the violators, over the signatures of the committee." When the name of the former city engineer as the man to whom the committee had gone for its informa tion was mentioned, Mr. Tooze said it was very plain to him where the foundation for the report had come from. Dr. L. A. Morris, in defense of the committee, explained that a special sub-committee, consisting of himself, Dr. L. L. Pickens and Dr. H. S. Mount, had been named to investigate a complaint. "Dr. Pickens went with me," said Dr. Morris, "and we found a decided odor. The condition was such that it ought to be remedied. The former city engineer, Mir. Montgomery, told me that before the connection was made the stench was so bad that the workmen threantned to quit. We are not going to fight anyone on personal grounds, but we are going to publish facts. We are lookig for violations and we don't care whether the violat ors are the most prominent citizens or the poorest people in the city. We are not playing favorites and we stand pat on the report." ' After some discussion participated in by Mr. Cross, T. W. Sullivan, Dr. van Brakle, L-. Stipp and J. E. Hedges, it was stated by Mr. Tooze that he was satisfied that Dr. Morris was making a personal fight on him. This was emphatically denied by the Doctor. Finally, after a session lasting un til after 1:30 o'clock, the Live Wires adopted Mr. Sullivan's resolution au thorizing the publication of the names and locations of the reported viola tions that had not complied with the law after one week's notice had been given. The organization also indorsed the work of the civic improvement committee, upon an amendment sub mitted by Jesse Hazell. The committee also presented a supplementary report, declaring its intention to take steps to proute offenders. This report follows: "Friday, February 28, the commit tee made a reinspection of the ground covered in a detailed report sent in- BUCK -j CFUJFD PPTPQ OLWLIl imuiuu i Of Outworn Methods IMPATIENCE CF THE MASSES. MORNING ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1913. A ASkT WHITE - to the health and police committee February 18. We found a number of places that had already been clean ed up, but a majority of those men tioned in our first report have evident ly not been touched. We took from our first report a series of five cases which ' warranted special report to the health and police committee, which we made March 1. These cas es include Nos. 32, 34, 40, 84 and 86 in the original report. In our com munication to the council committee we suggested that unless the proper authorities secured the removal of these items which constitute viola tions of city ordinances, following Friday noon, March 7, 1913, the vpr ious members of the committee wouia consider it necessary to file com laints against the owners and see that they are prosecuted." ui earl to Heart Talks 3y -JAMES A. EDGERTON ; MOTHERS' PENSIONS. A short time ago the newspapers re ported the first mothers' pension or dered in Philadelphia. ' This is a new thing in America, al though there has been more or less agitation in its behalf for the past few years, ami some progress has been made in Illinois-and elsewhere. 1 Now comes the welcome news that mothers' pension legislation is before the legislatures of many states. While the idea is new in this coun try, however, it has been tried with great success, in Europe. As advocated in the United States the mothers' pension is supposed to cover only cases of actual need where , the mother has been left a wjdow or is in indigent circumstances for other reasons. The argument in its favor is not only sentimental, but economic. It is claim ed on expert authority that it is cheap er to give the mother a certain stated amount to look after her little ones than it would be to keep them in an institution. Sounds reasonable, doesn't it? Besides, it is better for the children. : Their mother Is their natural pro tector. It keeps the family together, i A child needs a mother's love and care as much as it needs food, cloth ing and shelter. j In after years it becomes a better man or womanbecause of the memory of a mother's love. Such a' recollection lends moral stat ure and spiritual background. Who ever heard of any one shedding tears or resolving to reform and lead a better life over the memory of an institution? " I Only the thought of a mother can ' work these spells. ! We give countless millions to the care of helpless adults, to the Insane, the very poor and the defective. Yet these have no future. Neither are they of any benefit to society. ; Why should we not give to the care ; of the children? They are the citizens of the future. There exists as great sentimental reasons to cherish them as to house the defective adults. In addition there .is the powerful economic reason that every dollar expended for them is more than repaid in their value to society Charity for them is not a gift, but an investment. I The most businesslike way to make this investment is to place it in the hands of their mothers. That plan in sures the largest return on the money. ! ,Each of ns can help in this worthy cause by seeing that the legislators of our respective states exact mothers' pension legislation. I If yon think well of it why not write to voir state senator and representa tive to th.-n effect? j Generosity. j Generosity will win favor with any j one, especially when it is accompanied I by humility. Goethe. PERSISTENT EFFORT. If you say to yourself, "I will be a traveler," or "I will be an engi "neer, or "I will be a statesman ;" if you never unsay it, if you bend all your powers in that direction, if you take advantage of all the helps that cone in your way and reject all that do not, you wi I some time surely reach your goal, for the world turns aside to let any man pass who knows whither he is go ing. David Starr Jordan. I Kitchen Floors. ! If kitchen floors are painted with ; boiled linseed oil they are cleaned very ! easily. Little Mistake In Tense Farrell, Held as Bomb Slayer, "And Alleged "Death Factory' sr M t w'i '' xv ,v z?"' (. t. 't&---tin Photua copyright, 1913. by American ONKESSING himself to be a bomb slayer and then repudiating his eon fesstou. Johu Paul Farrell, an ex-convicL was held without bail re cently in New York city, charged with blowing up Mrs Madeline Her rera, wife of the superintendent of an apartment house where he was assistant janitor He admitted, then denied, that be also Dlew up Mrs. Grace Walker tn New York a year ago and sent a bomb to Judge Otto Rosalsky The police found his workshop in the apartment douse a veritable death fac tory, as shown in the illustration It was a conglomeration of springs, boxes wheels, bottles, lead pip. dishes, boards, old iron, nails, screws and whatnot Suggestive in Questions Sunday School Lessons The Enterprise is receiving very kind words of appreciation of the Suggestive Questions publish ed each week. They interest all classes, Protestante and Catholics;, and those that belong to no church. All who read them are interested and helped by them. Why not join the goodly company and get the benefit? : Your Questions : Answered i If you would like to have answered ; any particular question each or any 1 week from "The Suggestive Questions on the Sunday School Lesson" by Rev. i Dr. Linscott, send in your request to this office giving the date of the lea- son and the number of the question you wish answered. You may select any question except the one indicated that it may be answered in writing by members of the club. Dr. Linscott will answer the questions either in these columns or by mail through this 1 office. Don't forget to state what ben efit these ."Suggestive Questions" are to you. Give your full name and ad dress. Send your letters to the Ques-: tion Editor of the Morning Enterprise. Questions for March 9 (Copyright, 1911, by Rev. T. S. Lin scott, D. D.) The Destruction of Sodom. (Temper ance Lesson.) Gen. xix: 1-3, 12-29. Golden Text Come ye out from among them and be ye separate, saitht he Lord, and touch no unclean thing. II Cor. vi:17. . (1) Verses 1-3 Were these two persons called angels actual spirits or human beings? Why? (2) What, if any, evidence " is there that spirits today sometimes actuary materialize and speak and look like human beings? (3) Is hospitality a virtue that re must exercise or one that is optional and why? (4) Why did these angels at first refuse Lot's hospitality? (5) If these men or angels said no and at the same time meant to ac cept on being pressed a little more, how would you characterize their ac tions ? (6) What is ynur opinion, and why as to whether Christian people are as hospitable to strangers today as WAmMCrTotH AHD KNOW THE. TOWN PHETP( Wtu. - CTovr WHERE- IS tlrtE- WHITE. HOUS, Press Association they were in the past? (7) Is it a commendable custom or otherwise, and why, to have an ex tra spread or other than our usual meal when we entertain strangers? (S) If a person will not accept of our hospitality from a courteous in vitation why should we or not press it upon him, as Lot did? (9) Verses 12-13 What should out warning be to those who are the as sociates of sinners? (10) What is the inevitable doom physical and spiritual, of all who commit sins against virtue? (11) Verse 14 Why did Lot's sons-in-law treat with such contempt Lot s warning to escape for their lives? (12) In view of the admitted and the awful penalty attached to sin why do simmers continue in their sins and refuse the offer of Christ's sal vation? (13) Verses 15-16 What would you say, and why, is the one thing which should have our immediate and urgent attention? (14) If God were to warn you that this place was to be destroyed in a few hours with earthquake, tornado or fire what would be the manner of your departure? (15) Verse 17 What sins entail the shortening or the loss of life as well as the other penalties attached to wrongdoing? (16) Why is intemperance a sin of such great magnitude and danger that we ought to urge men to fly for their lives from it? (17) How would you class the to bacco habit? Is it beneficial to the health? Is it a help or a hindrance to spiritual life? Should we or not urge men to fly from it? (18) What is a sure way to escape from wrong desires and impurity of thought, and what is the certain pen alty if we do not escape? (This one of the questions which may be an swered in writing by members of the club.) (19) Verses 18-20 When God either directly or indirectly tells us where to go or what to do for safety is it wise or otherwise ' to suggest some other place or plan, as Lot does in this story? . (20) Verse 21 When God answers a prayer that had better never have been made, is it ever in our best in terest? - (21) - Verses 22-23 What influence for good have the righteous upon an evil community in which they live? (22) Verses 24-25 What is- the inevtiabl doom of every unrighteous nation? (23) Verse 26 What was the real sin of Lot's wife? (24) .Verses 27-29 What is the proof that God never forgets his own? Lesson for Sunday, March 16, 1913 The Test of Abraham's Faith. Gen. xxii:l-19. g & gTslll HE. WHITE. HQUSEl-. Crojk fife' hFe. WHITE H0O5E Cisine's Memory. It is the fasiiiou to belittle the facul ty of memory, nowadays. James G. Blaine lived in an age of great memo-" ries. and he had one himself. Here is one of his feats as related by Brand Whitlock in the American Magazine. "When he learned I was from Ohio he asked me suddenly if I could name the counties that formed the several congressional districts of the state. 1 could not. of course, do that, and I sup posed no one in the world could do it or ever want to do it. but he could, and- with.a jiaive pride in the nccom: plislmient iie tid arid then "Tisfonndeil me by saving that he could almost match the feat with any state in the Union." There Are Pleiity Like Him. "! wonder what has kept Jones poor? He's always made a good salary." "I know he's well paid, but he's one of the fellows who spend all their mon ey trying to get something for noth-ing"-Detroit Free Press. Sausages. The sausage eaten in this country in the course of a year would encircle the earth more t n ix times. 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, (14 lines), $1 per month. Casii must accompany order unless one has an open account with the paper. No financial responsibility for errors; where errors occur free corrected notice will be printed for patron. Minimum charge 15c. LOST LOST Post card photo of cow and man. Date on back of card. Re turn to this office. RECEIVED C. W. FRIEDRICH has just received a fresh stock of garden and flower seeds of all kinds. We can furnish you with the gardening tools from garden trowels to wheelbarrows. 7th & Center. Phone Main 3381, A 244. Eggs for Hatching. White Leghorn, $1.50; Barred Rocks, $1.00 per 15; Indian Runner, $1.00 per eleven. The kind that .lay. Corespondence solicited. LAZELLE DAIRY CO., Oregon City, Oregon. FOR RENT. FOR RENT, Nice housekeeping rooms, furnished. Phones Pacific 1292, Home A 253. FOR RENT One five-room house, - furnished or unfurnished, all mod ern conveniences. Suitable for of fice. Phone 372. 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 Wilhoit- water pure and sparkling, its use prevents typhoid fever. Call Main 38 or A 218. Chas. Tobin, Agent. FOR SALE The New American En cyclopedic Dictionary, and Compre hensive Encyclopedia. 10 large vol umes, a bargain. OTIS RAY DAUGHERTY, Route No. 1, Molalla, Or. FOR SALE Two grey 4-year-old brood mares, well matched. Inquire James Petty, Oregon City, Oregon. FOR SALE 1500-gallon tank, 1-2 H. P. Engine and one pump. Address S. K. Blount. Gladstone, Oregon. FOR SALE 5-ye.ar-old mare, harness and two-seated hack. Address Post Office Box 124, City. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. Why pay rent when you can buy a lot in Gladstone for $1.00 down and A POCKETf BOOK filled with bank notes and loose change is bulky and incon venient; while a check book is very handy and just as ser viceable. , THE BANK OF OLDEST BANK IN D. C. LATOTJRETTE, President. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON CAPITAL $50,000.00 Transacts a General Banking Business. Open from? A. M. to 3 P. M HO V $1.00 a week. See C. A. Elliott, 5th Street near Main. THE SPIRELLA CORSET The best made to measure corset, un equaled for style and comfort, an official guarantee with each corset will be pleased to call and take your measure. Mrs. Adalyn Davis, Corsetiere. Phone 3552, Room 4 Willamette Bldg. WANTED LIVESTOCK WANTED Cows fresh or coming fresh soon, - W. C. Berreth, 14S0, -Macadam Street, Portland , Oregrn WOOD AND COAL. OREGON CITY WOOD AND FUEL CO., F. M. Blukro. Wood and coal delivered to all parts of the city SAWINO A SPECIALTY, Phone your orde-s. Pacific 1371, Home B 10- 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 cr 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 sura 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 isfy 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. ' Department of the Interior. Notice is hereby given that Annie M, Leeson, one of the heirs at law, of Alexander Leeson, deceased, of Colton, Ore., who, on August 30 1-907, made Homestead Entry No. 16322, Serial No. 01401, for Nl-2 of NW 1-4, SW 1-4 of NW 1-4, NW 1-4 of SW 1-4, Section 12, Town, ship 5 South, Range 3 East, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention ti make Fin al five year Proof, to establish claim of heirs at law to the land above described, before the Regis ter and Receiver of the U. S. Land Office, at Portland, Oregon, on the 11th da yof April, 1913. Claimant names as witnesses: William H. Schieffer, of Colton, Oregon, Charles P. Hunter, of Col ton, Oregon, Erik August Swanson, of Colton, Oregon, Frank Hendricks, of Colton, Oregon. H. F. HIGBY, Register, OREGON CITY CLACKAMAS COUNTY F. J. MEYER, Cashier.