Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, March 13, 1913, Page 2, Image 2

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HORNING 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
Citv, Oregon, under the Act of March
3. 1879."
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One Year, by mail $3.00
Six Months, by mail 1.50
Four Months, by mail 100
Per Week, by carrier 10
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
March 13 In American History.
18C7-KiiKsfti ceded to the Cnited States
tin? territory of Alaska for 7 .-!!. -000
1901 - Benjamin Hiirrison. twenty-third
president of Hie I'hiled States,
died: horn s:::s.
i'Jll- I lie I inled StiUes supreme court i
allii-im-d Hie i-imstitiil imiii lity of the
income t.i s.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
(From noun today to noon tomorrow.)
Sun sets r,:o4, rises 0:15. Evening j
stars: .Mercury. Venus. Saturn. Morn- !
iug stars: Jupiter, Mars. '
WHALiNG THE STAND- Some Dem-1
ING STRAW ARMY ocratic papers:
have set up a standing army man of I
straw and beaten "the "everlasting!
stuffing'' out of it. The standing ar-1
my, as a matter of fact, is visible on- i
ly in imagination. Slaughter of it by j
these valiant papers would be imma- i
terial, if the editorial coup de grace !
did not have running through it the j
characteristic Democratic tone of '
contempt for and disparagement of
the men who serve the United States
in the army and navy. No man, not ',
even the niost ardent militarist, who j
retains his senses, advocates main-!
taining an army of 1,000,000 men in ;
this country. The most extravagant
military system devised by theoret
ical experts never contained such a j
provision. 1
Europe, to which we are accustom
ed to point as a horrible example of j
the crushing burden of an army, and ;
to characterize as a great armed ;
camp, has but one power which main- i
tains under arms so many men as
that. Russia, with troops covering a '
territory three times as great as our
own, including our island possessions, j
and a population also three times as j
large, and far more heterogeneous,
has a standing army of 1,200,000.
Germany, the ackowledged leading
military power of the world, keeps i
under arms 620,000 men. France 600,-;
000, Austria-Hungary 390,000. Little !
Japan, with but half our population,
and less than one-twentieth our area,
keeps under arms 450,000 men. More :
than Germany, she is the terrible ex- i
ample of militarism. She is carrying
the most crushing burden of war i
preparation in proportion to her i
Rising Prices
Blessing
timan
By Professor IRVING FISHER, Political Economist
FTER FIFTEEN YEARS OF
NOTIZED OURSELVES INTO THINKING THEY ARE AN UN
MIXED EVIL. BUT RISING PRICES ARE, IN FACT, THE
GREATEST BLESSING TO THE HUMAN RACE.
How fervently tlie men of the nineties prayed for them! Each
generation is MORTGAGED TO THE ACCUMULATED CAP
ITAL OF THE PAST and has got to meet the interest and princi
pal of its debt. It is twice as easy to meet these payments with prices
rising as it is with prices falling.
Rising prices strike' off the shackles of our debt to the past and
open the doors of opportunity of the future. CAPITAL LOSES,
BUT HUMANITY GAINS. The rise in prices in the sixteenth
century helped the people of Europe to shake off the inherited bur
dens of the feudal system and to clear the stage for the entry of mod
era commerce. FALLING PRICES, ON THE OTHER HAND,
MAKE COWARDS OF US ALL. They slam the door of oppor
tunity in our face.
s n n
IT ISN'T THE RISE IN PRICES, BUT OUR FAILURE TO ADAPT
OUR ECONOMIC MACHINERY TO IT, THAT CAUSES ALL THE
TROUBLE.
K
Wages don't respond like prices. They lag behind prices. They
are the last to rise and the last to fall. They never rise as high or
fall as low. There is the same lag in the interest rate. This lag in
wages and interest gives to the adventurous and bold the chance of
profit and CAUSES TRADE EXPANSION. " :
P REPORTER Next Time, Scoop, Flash Your Union Card " B'V HOP
FOR SALE
Two 4-room plastered and
. hard-finished houses on 1 lot,
each renting for $6.00 per
month.
$800.00
Dillman&Howland
Weinhard Building.
strength of all the nations of the
earth. These figures show the ab
surdity of stuffing the standing army
man with enough straw to make 1,
000,000 men and then beating him to
see the chaff fly.
Thoughtful military men and most
military men are thoughtful as to
practical ways for the national de
fense, do not want or ever expect j
this country to maintain a large army j
constantly under arms. What they
want is a practical military swstem
which would give us a reserve army I
upon which we could call in an emer
gency, with enough troops under arms
ready for instant use to give us a
first line of defense. They want to
be able to create an army when one
is needed in the shortest possible
time, and this can not be done with
out some sort of organization and
training. It is quite possible military
men who want thus to make some
provision for future possibilities of
need are quite as wise and quite as
patriotic as those who habitually de
cry the army and navy and speak
sneeringly of them. The army and
navy ;n the past have done a few
things of which some Americans are
proud.
SALOONIST FINED FOR
SELLING TO INEBRIATE
Chief of Police Shaw announced
Wednesday that saloonkeepers must
be more careful in future as to whom
they sell liquor. The chief said that
the law regarding selling liquor to
an intoxicated man would he most
rigidly inforced. He declared that
there had been more drunken men
in the cJty the past week than for
months before. Leo Cameron, son of
J. L. Cameron, who conducts a saloon
was fined $25 for selling liquor to an
intoxicated man Wednesday by Re
corder Stipp. The man he sold the
liquor to was S. Smith, who was ar
rested by Policeman Griffith, and
was sentenced to serve five days in
the city jail. The complaint against
Cameron was sworn out by the chief
of police, the defendant pleading
guilty.
the Greatest
of the
Kace
RISING PRICES WE HAVE HYP
MORNINil ENTERPRISE THURSDAY MARCH
HOP CONTRACTS ARE
!H BIG on
The market for, hop contracts is
rather active and firm at 15c a pound. ,
Considerable business has passed at
Willamette Valley points during the,
last few days, the aggregate being
the greatest of the season to date.
Most buyers have been operators
and some of them have purchased
extensively.
The market for spot goods is very
quiet and somewhat inclined to show
weakness. The future of the trade de
pends entirely upon the crop advices.
Present prospects are for a good out
put but the season is still too early
to say much regarding this. Many
things may haopen between now and
picking time.
The best hops available are now be
ing quoted at 15c a pound. This is
fractionally lower than previous fig
ures although quality considered the
market is substantially the same as
during recent days. Most of the hops
left in growers' hands are of medium
grade.
Prevailing Oregon City prlees are as
follows:
HIDES (Buying) Green salted, 7c
to Sc; sheep pelts 75c to $1.50 each.
FEED (Selling) Shorts $25; bran
$24; process barley $27 to $29 per ton.
FLOUR $4.50 to So.
HAY (Buying) Clover at $8 and
$9; oat hay best $11 and $12; mix
ed $10 to $11; selling alfalfa $13.50
to $17.00; Idaho and Eastern Oregon
timothy selling $19.50 to $23.00..
OATS $24.00 to $26.50; wheat 90;
oil meal selling $40.00; Shay Brook
dairy feed $1.30 per hundred pounds.
Whole corn $28.
Livestock, Meats.
BEEF (Live weight) steers 7 and
8c; cows 6 and 7 c, bulls 4 to 6c.
MUTTON Sheep 5 to 6 1-2; lambs
6 to & l-2c.
PORK 9 1-2 and 10c.
VEAL Calves 12c to 13c dressed,
according to grade.
WEINIES 15c lb: sausage, 15c In.
POULTRY (buying) Hens 11 to
13c; stags slow at 10c; old roos
7c; broilers 17c.
Fruits
APPLES 50c and $1.
DRIED FRUITS (Buying), Prunes
on basis 6 to 8 cents.
VEGETABLES
ONIONS $1.00 sack. -
POTATOES About 35c to 40c I.
o. b. shipping points, per hundred,
with no sales at going quotations.
Butter, Eggs.
BUTTER (I lylne), Ordinary coun
try butter 25c and 30c; fancy cream
ery 75c to 85c roll.
EGGS Oregon ranch case count
14c; Oegon ranch candled 15c.
A Cure For Eczema.
' Eczema in any form, whether acute
or chronic, is easily and rapidly over
come by the use of Meritol Eczema
Remedy. Gives positive relief when
all others fail, and we heartily rec
ommend it to any sufferer.
Jones Drug Company, Exclusive
Aget.s.
Root of Evil.
Love of money is the disease which
renders us most pitiful and groveling.
Lourfniis.
Reputation For
Fair Dealing
Worth A Fortune
By John P. Fallon ,
' Henry Ward Beecher once
said, "A reputation for fair
dealing is itself a fortune."
The merchant who is in bus
iness to stay know-s that fair
dealing and absolutely truthful
advertising is the only way to
get customers and keep them.
These are the essentials of
success. They are the princi
ples by which reliable mer
chants who advertise in THE
MORNING ENTERPRISE do
business.
You can rely upon the adver
tisements which appear in this
paper every morning. The
merchants who pay for these
announcements cannot afford
to risk their reputations. They
know it pays them to advertise
only so long, as they continue
, to give their customers super
ior merchandise at honest prices
and provide efficient store ser
vice. Read the advertisements in
THE MORNING ENTERPRISE
closely and constantly every
morning for the latest news
from Oregon City's most re
liable mercantile establishments
War Scenes In Mexico City;
Sharpshooters and the Slain
Photos copyright by American Press
TTATTHEN the dogs of war barked ttiroiii: li the slivi-ts or Mexico City In
tlie rei'C'it uprisiug against the Mailero sii.venunHiit ttrri- wjis
W H spread on all sides. Such scenes as ricpii-ti-il m .w upit;r picture
here, when dead littered the liislivny.s. riinn-l f!if inrcUn r;sMriits
sick with terror Many of the killed were fe.ier-ils lu were iiiked off by
the Diaz sharpsliouters from the top of the urseual nn.l fnmi heiiind ;i-niite
block barricades in the streets. How these sharpshooters spit forth their
glow but deadly tire is shown In the lower picture
HEADQUARTERS FOR
SPORTING GOODS
Base Ball Supplies of all kinds in
stock and fair treatment assured.
" Call in and see
MILLER-PARKER CO.
EIGHT DECREES OF
E
Circuit Judge Campbell has grant
ed decrees of divorce in the follow
ing cases: Josephine Hayes against
F. J. Hayes, plaintiff awarded care
of two children; Blanch Blount
against Walter H. Blount, plaintiff
awarded custody of child; Kathryn
Martin Smith against Chester J.
Smith; Lillian A. Hamilton against
Edmund E. Hamilton, plaintiff's maid
en name, Lillian A. Broughton, re
stored ; Lorena Culver against Eu
gene M. Culver, plaintiff awarded
custody of three children ; Kate M.
Ellis against Henry O. Ellis; Charles
H. Isakson against Margurite Isak
son, and Eva R. Hart against P. F.
Hart, plaintiff being awarded the cus
tody of their children and $10 a
month alimony.
He Filled the Bill.
. A stranger when dining at a for
eign hotel was accosted by a detective,
who said to him: "Beg your pardon.
We are in search of an escaped con
vict, and us a matter of form will you
oblige us by showing your passport?"
"Do I look like a convict?"
"Possibly not In any case I shall
require to see your passport."
The stranger, feeling' annoyed, pre
sented the officer with the bill of fare,
and the latter commenced to read,
"Sheep's bead, neck of mutton,, pig's
feet"
"Very good," be observed. "The de
scription tallies. You will please convj
along with us." Boston Traveler.
13, 1913.
J
Association
- EVLr. . rtiXiLY
Needs a genuine Anti-Sep ic
In the nome. There is hardly
a day that some member of the
family doesn'c suffer from
Burns, Cuts, Scalds, Chapped
Hands ana L;ps, Tetter, Scald
Head, Eczema, Sun Burn, Corns,
etc. Dr.. Bell's Antiseptic
Salve is an old-time fully guar
anteed remedy for these trou
bles. 25 cents a box.
Covered With Sores But Entire
ly Cured
Gentlemen Af.er spending
many dollars and trying many
doctors in treating my lit le
boy, I saw your Dr. Bell's Anti-
Septic Salve advernsea, pur
chased a box, and though ha
was covered with sores from
head to foot he was entircl?
cured after usne enlv "v-i
boxes of Dr. Bell's Antiscp ic
Sale. Verv truly,
" MRS. S. M. G. BYRD,
Route 3. Box 2, Blackstone, S.C.
FOR SALE BY THE :
JONES DRUG COMPANY
SW1SSC0 GROWS
Stops Dandruff and Restores Gray or
Faded Hair to its Natural Color
LARGE TRIAL BOTTLE FREE
ASLEEP AT THE SWITCH
Why Wear Yourself Out Fixing Up
Ord Switches, When You Can Have
A Beautiful Head of Hair All
Your Own.
Swissco grows all the hair you
w-ant. Changes gray or faded hair
to a youthful color without dyeing
or staining. Stops dandruff and all
hair and scalp troubles
Send 10c in silver or stamps to
pay for postage, etc., to Swissco Hair
Remedy Co., 5311 P. O. Square, Cin
cinnati, O. and get a large free trial
bottle.
Swissco is on sale everywhere by
druggists and drug departments at
50c and $1.00 a bottle.
JONES DRUG COMPANY
MISSIONARY SOCIETY TO
MEET THIS AFTERNOON
The Ladies' Missionary Society, of
Gladstone, will have a meeting at the
home of Mrs. Gault this afternoon at
2 o'clock. A special Easter offering
will be taken.
Forced Benevolence.
"Every one spe.-iks of your benevo
lence, madam, and that you provide so
many needy ones with food."
"Yes. yes: when one has three daugh
ters learning to cook at the same time."
Fliegende Blather.
Wants, For Sale, Etc
Notices under these classified headings
will De 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.
Cash 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.
FOR TRADE
WILL TRADE one binder for cow,
horse or buggy. Inquire this office.
FOR- RENT.
FOR. RENT Two nicely furnished
rooms with sleeping porch, patent
toilet and electric lights. Mrs.
Henry Shannon,, 505 Division St.
City.
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 The New American En
cyclopedic Dictionary, and Compre
hensive Encyclopedia. 10 large vol
umes, a bargain.
OTIS RAY DATJGHERTY,
Route No. 1, Molalla, Or.
FOR SALE Two grey' 4-year-old
brood mares, well matched. Inquire
James Petty, Oregon City, Oregon.
LOSE YOUR POCKET BOOK
and your money is gone not likely to return. Lose your
check book and you still have your money. The bank will give
you a new check book. - -
THE BANK OF
OLDIST BANK 1)1
D. C. LATOURETTE, President
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
APtTAL $50,000.00 .
Transacts a General Banking Builneaa. , Open from A. M. to 9 P. M .
Eggs for Hatching.
White Leghorn, $1.50; Barred Rocks,
$1.0!) per 15; Indian Runner, $1.00
per eleven. The kind that lay.
Corespondence solicited. ,
. LAZELLE DAIRY CO.,
Oregon City, Oregon.
Shadeland Challenge White Seed Oats.
FOR' SALE Shadeland Challenge
White Seeds Oats, B. C. Fouts, Clear
Creek, one mile from Logan on
Clear Creek Road.
FOR SALE A genuine Welber $600
piano, taken in exchange on play
er piano. Price $345.00. Can be
seen at Mrs. W. E. Pratt's resi
dence, 706 Water St. Address
Eilers Music House, Portland, Oj.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
Why pay rent when you cai buy a
lot in Gladstone for $1.00 down and
$1.00 a week. See C. A. Elliott,
5th Street near Main.
PAINTING
Painting, decorating, hard wood fin
ishing. F. E. Hill, Oregon City,
Room 19, Beaver Bldg.
WANTED LIVESTOCK
WANTED Cows fresh or coming
fresh soon. 'W. C. Berreth, 14S0,.
Macadam Street, Portland, Oregon.
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 '.neasure. Mrs. Adalyn Davis,
Corsetiere. Phone 3552, Room 4
Willamette Bldg.
WOOD AND COAL-
ORKGON CITY WOOD AND KlifiL
CO . F. M. Eluhm. Wood and coal
delivered to all parts of the ci'y
8 A WINfi A SPECIALTY Phon
your orders. Pacific 1371, Home
.!'
NOTICES
City Treasurer's Notice.
Notice is hereby given that there are
sufficient funds in the treasury of
Oregon City to pay all outstand
ing General Fund warrants endor-.
sed prior to October 5th, 1911.
Interest ceases with date of this
notice.
Dated at Oregon City, Oregon.
March 13th, 1913.
M. D. LATOURETTE,
City Treasurer..
Notice for Bids.
Notice is hereby given that ' sealed
proposals for the furnishing of all
labor and material for improving
Thirteenth Street, Oregon City,,
Oregon, from the West side of Jack
son Street to the East side of Mon
roe Street, will be received by the
Recorder of Oregon City, until 4
o'clock P. M. of Wednesday, March
26th, 1913. , Plans and specifica
tions containing further informa
tion and the kind of improvement
to be made will be furnished upon
application to the said City Record
er. Each bid must be accompanied
by a certified check, equal to five
per cent of t!ie total amount of the
bid, which sum will be subject to
forfeiture to Oregon City in case of
the .failure of the successful bidder
to enter into a written contract
with Oregon City and to furnish
the required bonds for said work,
if called upon so to do, within the
time specified for same.
r . ., l , , . l. .-. . , -i , . . .
blanks furnished by Oregon City.
The right to reject any and all
bids is hereby reserved to Oregon
City or to accept the bid consider
ed most favorable.
Each proposal must state the time
required for the completion of -the
entire work of said street which
improvement must be done accord
ing to the Ordinances of Oregon
City and the Charter thereof and
the plans and specifications govern.,
ing such work.
This notice is published pursu
ant to an order of the City Coun
cil of Oregon City made and enter
ed at a special meeting thereof held
on the 12th day of March, 1913.
L. STIPP, Recorder.
OREGON CITY
CLACKAMAS OOUNTY
F. J. MEYER, Cashier.