v r s SCOOP THE CUB REPORTER THAT rvWAKTTO F?eAKOF-x--. ... GAME- PLACE. THAT LOOKS J BAwG-blNfr-- LgrfflW I iVl .SlOC- X CAH OTJST- , GrAM8UMr-&0 FME- foi " - ' PRETTY SOFT - WH DOtMT 3U DRAW SprJ1f I 1 r?S CSCOOP STTIKS-lififtf " UPAUTTULGAND - A WE TW M VACE, - 6o OVER, i I f 1 J Jl SBS JCOO P rCr "WERE QOD SEVHTTvVO-) take, so much money" imREAMDctEAMup XjLV Js P 42rTBIli ! fTVC Slr?r- J MUrHT, J I fcUWtTM TWO- 1 1 ' MORNING ENTERPRISE! OREGON CITY, OREGON. E. E. Brodie, Editor and Publisher, "Entered as second-class matter Jan uary 9. Mil, at the post office at Oregon City. Oregon, under the Act of March 3, 1879." TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. One Tear, by mail 3'22 Six Months, by mail 1-50 Four Months, by mail 100 Per Week, by carrier -10 CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER March 13 In Amerisan History. 1734 I!irth of Thomas M.Kcan. "sign er" for 1 Vnnsvlvniiia or 1 lit- Dee liinitinn of liii'i'hlfti"e: died 1817. 1817-Feth (Jri'Hii. imifit fish ciilturist iind authority. Iinin; died 1SSS. 1S2S- John .1. Kims, conti-iiller of the United t;ilc treasury under Pres ident lir.nii. born: died lS!rj. 1907 Thomas Bailey Aidiii-h. poet, au thor and il;i yw right, died; born 183S. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. (From noon today to noon tomorrow. i Sun sets (1:10. rises t:0,". Evening stars: .Mercury, Venus, Xaturn. Morn ing stars: Jupiter, Mars. SEVENTH STREET SHOULD The BE HARD-SURFACED City Council again has the improvement of Seventh Street under consideration and may decide this evening as to what kind of improvement will bo j put down or a strip of bricks 10 or authorized. The City Engineer has : 2 feet wide could be used in the mid given the Council plans, specifications j die of the street, so as to give the and estimates f,or two methods of j horses a footing. improvements, macadam and hard sur-, At any event the people along this face. The macadam improvement is ! street should insist upon hard sur estimated to cost $23,000. The hard ' face and the council should order that surface improvement calls for an im-! it be put down, provement such as that on lower j to Main street. A number of years ago the city and property; owners went to a, heavy ex- j penre in improving the street and 1 since that time there has ben a ! heavy maintenance expense. The ; improvement never has given a neat 1 appearance and after 20 years of i heavy wear, the pavement is worth-! less and it must be improved at a ; "ceordim: to the CniteJ States geologi cost about equal to the original cost, j ' v'' - i - "'. u'- T1"' Uwest If Seventh Street is improved with j macadam how soon will it be before it is necessary for the city and prop- erty owners to go to another big ex-j 1913, by American Press Association. i t- m Do you think he is as happy as I amt Invested in industries, it belongs to the people. And what is the joy of a tin box full of photo-plate certificates showing a lot of fig ures? You can't take them with you when you die, and when you come t6 die you find you have been. CHASINCJ A FOOLISH IL LUSION AND LOST TRUE HAPPINESS ON THE WAY. ON THE OTHER HAND, WE NEED THE CAPTAINS OF INDUS TRY. IT IS A GOOD THING FOR THE HUMAN RACE THAT THEV HAVE THIS INCENTIVE; THIS ILLUSION THAT THEY HUG. FOR THESE GREAT MINDS ARE ALL WORKING FOR THE CAUSE OF HUMAN PROGRESS, HOWEVER ROUNDABOUT IT MAY SEEM TO US NOW, AND ALL THE WrilLE THEY THINK THEY ARE WORKING FOR SOMETHING THEY WANT AND COULDN'T GET ANY FUN OUT OF IF THEY HAD IT. There isn't any cause for alarm in that direction if we only WATCH THE CROOKS. Let a man make all he can honestly and he will DO IORE.FOR US THAN FOR Hill SELF. I agree with Governor Wilson on that, but I don't see how he is jiing to codify this principle and make it This must be done by EDUCATION', through the school- and I ,- .... - I me newspapers, ine newspapers SCHOOLS ARE NOT. There is too much old fashioned, impractical stuff. Academic. 1 believe they call it Analyze it down and EDUCATION IS KKF.PINCi A IONG WAY BEHIND THE TIMES. : FOR SALE One acre, all in good culti vation, 6-room house, good fruit cellar, spring piped to house. Fine assortment of fruit for one's own use. Small barn with stream- . of water near, good graded school, close to car line. Price $1800, $900 cash, balance time. Dilhnan&Howland Weinhard Building. pense to hard surface the street? If the street is improved w ith hard surface, it will practicaly last for all . time, with little or no up keep ex-1 pense. In ten years the improvement j would be found to be an actual sav- i i ing to the property owners over the j macadam, the original cost of which: would amount to two-thirds that of . a iiard surface. j Many persons argue that hard sur- j face on such a steep street is not: practical where horses must use it,! but one has only to notice the streets I on Portland Heights, the down town! streets of Seattle and Snnka'ne Ave. i nue in Sellwood. All of these streets are steeper than is Seventh street and hard surface proves very satisfactory upon -them. If asphalt proves too slippery a concrete surface; might be Conco:n "t.i ot 3. 'I lid the new piay jet a hand -yes. - That is why ihey expect to get ahead." - Haiti mure American. . West Vircinia. West Virginia's highest mountain is located in I'endleton county and is known as Spruce Knob. Its altitude.-! i""1" " '"" " '4l feet aVove sea level. The average elevation of the state is about 1.500 c . We Need Those Captains of Industry Who Are Honest By THOMAS A. EDISON, the Famous Inventor f E all know that wealth is an illusion. I don't rsjrsv mean by tbis that money enough of it for comfort is an illusion. But i great WEALTH is. What can Rockefeller do with his money ? the law of the land. are doing their share, hit! HI K too much thcorv in n i- schools it- MORNING ENTERPRISE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1913. SOUTHERN RIAMD BY BUSINESS HEN The committee of six business men who volunteered to operate a cam paign' for $30,000 for the Clackamas Southern Railway, received much en couragement on the first day of its work. All persons visited, realizing the importance of the work, gave fi nancial aid. Thursday at 4 p. m. the second passenger car will be run over the road and 75 Oregon. City resi dents, many of them women, will rhave a chance to view the work al- ready accomplished. lne committee in cnarge or tne E h. Dye, H. E. Cross, G. B. Dimick, W - A Huntley and B. T. McBain. Z ; , - . , Handsome Dogs Are Good Dogs, ,n tll(. mtst (.lill.,.u.teristi,. ((f Ellrijsn d()J,s with the KllKlish mmos ns aD unfortunate exception 6f a glaring sort, common sense principles in the canon f jmL,'iiiRnre distinctly marked. In t'"1 case of hounds any good eye can i',k 'M,t the host animals. This was '-"rioiisly illustrated not long since in t"' when an artist taken over one of the ' bigger kennels of foxhounds nicked out the prize and pedigree dogs one alter the other. He went purely, hy his own .sense of what was strong and comely, of "strength and beauty met together." as Shelley says in a very different - connection. London Outlook' U. S. OUSTS AS COLLECTION AGENCY WASHINGTON, March IS. The i United States government as long as j President Wilson remains as its ac tive head: will not act as collection agent in South and Central American republics for big business, or guaran tee any W;.ll street loans to any for eign power. Although official announcement to this e;iect may not be forthcoming f - SpVPrai davs. it was learned frn-n a private source here this afternoon that President Wilson is determined that his administration shall adopt this course from the outset. President Wilson and his cabinet th's afternoon discussed a request by J. P. Morgan & Co.; Kuhn, Loeb & Co.,' and other financiers participat ing in the Six Power loan proposed to be made to China. They wanted the state department to sanction the loan so as the security may be un questioned and the return of the loan guaranteed by Chinese custom collections. President Wilson, however, is de termined, it is learned from an au thoritative source, that Hhis govern ment shall not collect private debts or guarantee any loans and it is un derstood Secretary of State Bryan strongly favors such an attitude. Im mediately after Wilson's inaugura-' tion, representatives of certain finan ciers tried to secure Bryan's endorse ment of the loan plan, saying it was favored by former Secretary of State Knox. Bryan gave these emissaries no eatisfaction. It Is understood- the cabinet dis cussed the advisability of recognizing the new Chinese republic headed by President Yuan Shi Kat.. LATEST MARKETS Prevailing rVrofrnm rftv nrfMa n AH follows: HIDES (Buying) Green salted, 7c to 8c; sheep pelts 75c to $1.50 each. FEED (Selling) Shorts $25; bran $24; process barley $27 to $29 per ton. FLOUR $4.50 to 5. HAY (Buying) Clover at $8 and $9; oat hay best $11 and $12; mix ed $9 to $11; valley timothy $12 to $14; selling alfalfa $13.50 to $17; Ida ho and Eastern Oregon timothy sell ing $19.50 to $23. OATS $22.00 to $26.50; wheat 93; oil meal selling $38.00; Shay Brook dairy feed $1.30 per hundred pounds. Whole corn $29.00. 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 6 l-2c. . PORK 9 1-2 and 10c. VEAL Calves 12c to 13c dressed, according to grade. WEINIES 15c lb: sausage. 15c lb. POULTRY (buying) Hens 10 1-2 tq 121-2c; stags Blow at 10c; old roos ters 7c; broilers 19c. Fruits APPLES 50c and SI. DRIED FRUITS (Baying), Prunes on basis 6 to 8 cents. VEGETABLES C1!!10" sack- : POTATOES About 3oc to 40c f. o. b. shipping points, per hundred, with no sales at going quotations, v Butter, Eggs. BUTTER (I lying), Ordinary eons-' try butter 25c and 30c; fancy cream ery 75c to 85c roll. EGGS Oregon ranch . case count 15c; Oregan ranch candled 16c Scoop Makes A Lucky Alpha and Omega Or the Long N- -t.,, ,, Photo by American Press Association. - i - - fBsmi: i .-' : K ; '- ' 'A fd ) -is-' ERE'S the long and the short of it in dogs, the alpha and omega m canines. The unabridged big fellow is White Stan Barry, a champion St. Bernard; the pocket sized edition is Beau Of id Lady, also a cham pion in her diminutive class They were tli(?'tVo most notable ex tremes at the recent national dog show of the Westminster Kennel club In New York city. Sir Leviathian gave vent to a bay like the last despairing cry of a broken hearted bassoon. Miss Midget emitted a snap like a disappointed baby firecracker on the Fifth of July. Their owners each thought his "dawg" was about the last thing in hairy sublimity, or words to that effect. Wants, For Sale, Etc Notices under these classified headings will oe inserted at one cent a word, first .insertion, half a cent additional inser tions. One inch card, $2 per month; half men card, (14 lines), si 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. Card of Thanks. We wish to thank the many friends and neighbors .in Oregon City and Willamette, who1 assisted us during the recent, illness and death of our mother. Mrs. Sarah A. Rivers: also forM;he beautiful floral offerings. C. W. KENNY and Family. FOUND FOUND In Oregon City on Sunday a orlndle buu dog. Owner please inquire of Dr. C. V: Luther, 34th & Belmont Streets, Portland. LOST Will the person who found a Mack loose leaf note book, which was left at the Commercial Club rooms Thursday,- March 13th, please re turn same to the steward or to County Supt Gary? WANTED Work on farm or in pri vate family for chores. Apply toF. H., care Enterprise. DRESSMAKING Mrs. Frank Hill, 19 Beaver Building, Phone Main 403. FOR RENT. FOR RENT 50 acres, 4 miles from Oregon City on Highland Macadam Road, 30 acres cultivated, will rent for this year's crop, season for $115 Cash. Rent in advance. . Call on C. D. Robeson on Highland Road Route No. 3. FR 8ALE COAL COAL The famous (King) coal from Utah, free delivery. Telephone your or der to A 56 or Main 14, Oregon City Ice Works, 13th and Main Streets. FOR SALE The New American En cyclopedic Dictionary, and Compre hensive Encyclopedia. 10 large vol umes, a bargain. OTIS RAT DAUGHERTY, Route No. 1, Molalla, Or. Strike In Dogs, - and Short of It , FOR SALE Two grey 4-year-old brood mares, well matched. Inquire James Petty, Oregon City, Oregon. Eggs for Hatching. White Leghorn, $1.50; Barred Rocks, $1.00 per 15; Indian Runner, $1.00 per eleven. The kind ,that lay. Correspondence solicited. LAZELLE DAIRY CO., Oregon City, Oregon. EARLY MONTANA POTATOES If you want to raise good clean po tatoes, plant new seed. Thp Early Montana is the coming Potato as a money maker; for seed inquire - of J. R. Livesay, R No. 6, Oregon City. . 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. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. Why pay rent when you can buy a lot in Gladstone for $1.00 down and $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. FOR TRADE WILL TRADE one binder for cow, horse or buggy. Inquire this office. ' WANTFD LIVESTOCK WANTED Cows fresh or coming ' fresh soon, W. C. Berreth, 1480, Macadam Street, Portland, Oregon. WOOD AND COAL. ORBGON CITY WOOD AND TV RI CO . F. M. Blnam. Wood sad eoaJ delivered to all parts of the city 8 A WIN" A SPECIALTY Phone your orde-s. Pacific 1371, Home I HI HOMESTEAD CLAIMS. We do homestead locating and have six good homestead locations in Crook County, Oregon. Good farm land, some relinquishments. In quire at U'Ren & Schuebel's office, City. -' s& A f ii aini nflmfin -ii nnif m n r r nmmirYu ifMirTnTTTrirTir nn ff ,j -Auitomobiles lor Fiire PHONES: MAIN 77; A 193 IVIiller-Farlcer Co. NOTICES 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 my place of business, 528 Main Street for a period of six months. WILLIAM TRUDELL. Notice of Application for Pool Hall License. Notice is hereby given that we will at the next regular meeting of thS City Council apply for a license to run and regulate a Pool Hall at our place of business, 524 Main Street, for a period of three . months. - BAILEY & PRICE. - Summons. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County. Stephen S. Bailey, Plaintiff, vs. Ella F. Taylor, Fred Taylor, Lenore S. Day, W. J. Patterson and F. T. Crow & Company, Defendants. To the above named defendant, W J. Patterson: In the name of the State of Oregon: Your are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint riled against you in the above entitled suit, on the 2nd day of May, 1913, said date being more than six week3 from the 19ta day of March, 1913, on which date publication of this summons was first made; and if you fail to appear and. answer herein, the plaintiff will apply the court for the ' relief prayed for in plain tiff's complaint herein, to-wit: That the plaintiff have and recov er from the defendants, Ella ' F. Taylor and Fred Taylor, the sum of Fifteen thousand ($15,000.00) Dollars with interest thereon from the 27th day of December, 1911, at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum . until paid and for' a further sum of $106.83 taxes -paid as stated with interest thereon at" the rate of 6 per j cent, per annum from the 10th day i of March, 1913, and a further sum of B'ive Hundred ($500.00) Dollars as attorney's fees all in United States Gold Coin, together with the cost3 and disbursements of this suit; " that ,- plaintiff's mortgage of and upon the following described real property, to-wit: All that part of the D. 'L. C. of Jesse Bullock and wife known as claim No. 46 in Tp. 2 S. R. 1, East of the W. M. bounded and describ ed as follows: Beginning at the re entrant corner in the south aiid east boundaries of said claim and run ning thence south 10 chains; thence west tracing the south line of saio claim ,No. 46 33.64 cha ns; thence north 20 chains; thence south 85 degrees west . 20 chains; thence north 20.83 chains;, thence east 0.25 chains; thence south 20.58 chains; thence north 85 degrees east 20.85 chains; thenca south 0.25 chains; thence north 85 degrees east 33.27 chains; thence south 13.18 chains to the place of beginning containing . 73.62 acres being in Clackamas coun ty, Oregon, e decreed to be the first lien upon said real property and superior in right to any other lien upon said land owned by the defendants or any of them; that said real property above described be sold in the manner provided by law and the proceeds of said sale be applied toward the payment of taxes, toward the costs of said sale, the costs and disbursements of this suit and the payment of such judg ment as shall be entered herein in favor of the plaintiff, including aVl torney's fees and the balance if any paid into Court for the benefit of whomsoever shall be decreed to be entitled therto; that said defend ants and each of them, and all per sons claiming under them or any of them, be barred and foreclosed of THE FIRST STEP To a successful career is the establishing of a sound, safe bank connection. This bank will welcome yo uas followers in the footsteps of the many successful men who began their career by opening an account with it. THE BANK OF OLKtT BANK IN D. C. LATOURETTE, President. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OFsOREGON CITY, OREGON CAPITAL $50000.00 Transacts a General Banking Business. BV HOP all estate, right, title, claim, inter est or equity of redemption in the said real property and every part thereof excepting the statutory right of redemption; that the plaintiff have personal judgment and execu tion against the defendants, Ella F. Taylor and Fred Taylor for any de ficiency which may remain of plain tiff's judgment after exhausting all the proceeds of said sale properly applicable to the satisfaction of plaintiff's judgment; that the plain tiff or any other party to this suit may become a purchaser at said sale, and for such other and fur ther iellel 68 may I e meat and eq uitable in the premises. This summons is published in the Morning Enterprise at Oregon City, Clackamas County, Oregon, once a week for six successvie weeks by order of the Honorable Jr U. Camp bell, Judge of the above entitisd court, by order made and dated march loth, 1913. Date of first publication March 19th, 1913. Date of last publication April 30, 1913. LATOIRETTE & LATOURETTE, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Notice of Assessment for Sewer-District No. 8 Construction . " . . Notice is hereby given that an assess ment for the construction of Sew er District No. 8 of Oregon City, Oregon, has been levied and declar ed according to Ordinance No. 617 of Oregon City. The whole cost of sail construc tion is $3406.27, and the assess ments are now due and payable and will bear interest at the legal rate from and after the 24th day of March, 1913, after which time the property against which the assess ment is levied may be sold for said assessment and a further penalty of fifteen per cent added. '.-The property assessed for said . construction dies in said Sewer Dis trict No..."S, Oregon City, Oregon. " .- '-'"'y ''S' .- Jj.' STIPP, Recorder. "'f r Notice' of Assessment for Sewer Dis trict t No.- 7 Construction. Notice is hereby given that an assess , ment for the construction of Sew er District No. 7, of Oregon City, Oregon, has been levied and declar- ed according to Ordinance No. CIS of Oregon City. The whole cost of said construc tion is $8043.69 and the assess . ments are now due and .payable and will bear interest at the legal rate from and after tlie-24th day of March, 1913 after which time the property against which the as sessment is levied may be sold for said assessment, and a fiffther pen alty of 15 per cent added. The property assessed for said construction lies in said Sewer Dis trict No. 7, Oregon City, Oregon. L. STIPP, Recorder. Department of the Interior. Notice is hereby given that Annie M. Leeson, one of the heirs at law, of Alexander Leeson, deceased, of Coltcn, Ore., who, on August 30, 1907, made Homestead Entry No. 16322, Serial No. 01301, 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. Open from a A. M. to S P. MN