Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, March 22, 1913, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    MORNING ENTERPRISE. SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 1913.
SCOOP
THE CUB
REPORTER
Scoop Has A Bad Influence On The Boss
HOP
COOP-txiAMBLINCV GROUND "THIS OFFiOE-
HS GOT To STOP - I DONT BELIEVE. tN T
fANL WONT SWO R)R IT- NEXT TMe
. Y7
5-SM-3cNn?R- "WSJ
JU5T CALLED fE.
ON POLUMCr "VlE B0NE5--
uETS SHOOT up OMDER
THEi OO WHERELHe.
MORNING ENTERPRISE
OREGON CITY, OREGON. - i
E. E. Brodie, Editor and Publisher.
"Entered as second-class , matter Jan
uary 9, l!tl, at the post office at Oregon
Citv, Oregon, under the Act of March
3. 1879."
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One Tear, by mail $3.00
Six Month's, bv mail 1.50
Four Months, by mail 1.00
Per Week, by carrier
.10
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
March 22 In American History.
1004-Cession of New Netherlands
i New Yorki to the Duke of York.
1820 Commodore Karron and Coinmo
, dore Decatur of the Onited States
navy fought a duel at Bladensburg,
Md.; both wounded, the latter mor
tally. 1889- Stanley Matthews, noted justice
of the United States supreme court,
died; horn lS'J-4.
l!HMi Dr. Robert Ogdeu Doremus. well
known chemist, died; horn 1824.
1911 -Charles i'ereg Lincoln, cousin of
Abraham Lincoln. Ions; connected
with federal diplomatic and depart
mental services, died at El Reno,
Ukla.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
(From noon today to noon tomorrow.!
Sun sets tl:13. rises 0:01. Evening
stars: Mercury. Venus, Saturn. Morn
Utg stars: .lupiter. Mars. Eclipse of
the moon partly visible in the United
States after midnight. Moon sets in
total ei-lipse after daylight. It enters
the shadow at Boston 5:28 a. m.:
Charleston, S. C. 4:5.'! a. m.; Chicago,
4:22 a. m.; Denver. 3:12 a. m.; San
Kranrisco, 2:02 a. tu.
CityProperty
9-room plastered 2-story house
bath and toilet up stairs. Toil
et down stairs. 2 large halls.
5 lots, each 50x100, partly set
to fruit.
$2750.00, $1500.00 cash, bal
ance on long time.
Dillman&Howland
Opposite Court House
TUFTS HONORED BY
suitable for ordinary methods of cul
tivation have nearly all been taken
up, 200,000 acres of agricultural lands
in forest reserves were opened to
settlement and entered. The new
fields opened to the homesteader un
der irrigation projects have far ex
ceeded in fertility and value the rich
est farms of the Middle West The
reclamation service has 1,200,000
acres for which water is available,
and 840,000 acres have been settled
on and cultivated. The national for-
j ests have 187,000,000 acres, with
one-fifth the country's total supply
cf timber. From these forests the
lands suitable for agricultural settle
ment are being segregated, and near
ly 2,000,000 acres have been restor
ed to entry."
The old song which ran "Uncle
Sam is rich enough to give us all a
farm" has to be understood in accord
ance with the facts. Uncle Sam's
nephews and nieces have become too
The sixty-seventh birthday of J. A.
Tufts, county treasurer, was observ
ed Thursday night' at the meeting
of the United Artisans. Mr. Tufts is
treasurer of the organization. - After
the business meeting ice cream and
cake were served. Mr. Tufts was pre
sented a cake, made by Mrs. E. H.
Cooper, which contained 67 candles.
His name was formed with candles.
Mr. Tufts is a member of MeacJ;
Post, Grand Army of the Republic,
having been a member of the Four
teenth Wisconsin Infantry, fie was
born in Calis, Mo., and went with his
parents when four years of age to
Wisconsin.
Miss Sylvia Pankhurst as She
Looked In London Jail Cell
RAILWAY MEETING TO
E HELD TONIGHT
i A big meetingof persons Interest
! ed in the Clackamas Southern Rail
! way will be held at Beaver Creek
j at 7:30 thjs evening. The officers
and directors of this -city witt" attend
the meeting and make addresses.
Grant B. Dimick, secretary, said Fri
day night that the object of the meet
ing was to acquaint the residents, of
the Beaver Creek section with the
i wonderful results that had been ac
j complished by the company. B. T.
j McBain, mill manager of the Willam-
ette Pulp & Paper Company will be
! one of the speakers.
numerous nearly 100,000,000 now !
against about 80,000,000 then for j
him to give each of them the farm !
he or she may fancy. But there are
still a lot of farms for those who j
really wish to be farmers. j
STILL FARMS FOR Walter L. Fish-WOULD-BE
FARMERS er, who has
just returned from the head of what
had become known in Washington as
"the trouble department," expressed
me nope anu oenei, at a umner giv- THE ELEVATOR TO The people!
en by the Commercial Club of CMca- HILL SECTION of Oregon x City j
go to him and former Secretary of have decreed that an elevator be
the Treasury Franklin MacVeagh, Dla(.fid from rhfi business section!
that he had done something in his j downtown to the residence district. '
two years to remove from the Inter-j The money .g available an elevator!
lor portfolio some of its evil reputa- ; is a real necessity. Now some one !
t'on- ' tries to delay matters with a railroad ,
Mr. Fisher doubtless surprised some j proposition, which, while, it may j
of his hearers we know he did some j sound eonri to some is a sennrnte !
readers by his statements of the
proposition.
If
e wants to
extent of thj public domain still I build a raUroad all well and
open to homestead settlement ant of j ood, $12,500 won't go very
the continuing activity of acquisition
of public lands by citizens who want
them for homes for themselves and
their families. During the year end
ed June SO last 14,500,000 flires of
public lands were entered and 10,-
far on such a project and cannot be
used except for an elevator while it
will come very near putting the best
elevator in the world into operation
and will not hurt a street railroad if
one is to be built either with local or
HAZING IMPERILS
LIFE OF MILLWORKER
Joe Czarnecki, a lG-year-old boy,
employed by the Oregon City Monu
facturing Company, received a severe
beating at the hands of a number cf
his fellow employes Thursday after
noon. Czarnecki, who is a. young
Bohemian, had just been given a p-o-motioh
and it is allege.d that the six
boys who attacked him were jealous
The boy was much bruised about the
chest and abdomen. Dr. C. H. Meiss
ner was summoned and removed the
boy to his home at Mount Pleasant.
Dr. Meissner stated Friday night
that no bones were broken. It was
said that two of the boys connected
with the hazing were James Langan
and Walter Newman.
Ji
I
pi??S i :'!ti
i : i- ::':Ti:o i : J-i
N If , x 1 "f i Sl
SS- - i i
iU:-::::::'-i:i"-? ::i':;' ' i
I U ' " ' , I ' 1 - - -' !
l : , i
;L ."v.?l . mi
Automobiles for Fiire
PHONES: MAIN 77; A 193
IVIiller-iPar'icel? Co.
. WANTrD LIVESTOCK-
WANTED Cows fresh or coming i
fresh soon, W. C. Berreth, 1480, j
Macadam Street, Portland, Oregon
WOOD AND COAl-
OftKGON CITY WOOD AND FUKlJ
CO , F. M. Bluhm. Wood and coa; j
delivered to all parts of the ci'.y j
SAWING A. SPECIALTY. Phoi 1
your orde-s.
Pacific 1371, Home j
i
THE SPIRELLA CORSET
The best made to measure corset, un
equaled for style aad comfort, an
official guarantee with each corset
will be pleased to call and take
your. Measure. Mrs. Adalyn Davis,
Corseiiere. Phone 3552, Room 4
Willamette Bldg.
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 & Schuebei's office,
City.
NOTICES
Photo by American Press Association.
fT" NGLISH suBragettes have uo more fear of prison cells than the aver
pj age small boy has of skating on thin ice. Such "votes for women'
gl e patriots as Miss Sylvia l'ankliurst, for example, just dote on jail
Here you see how she looks when locked up and wearing prison garb
Recently stn- was arrested and sentenced to three months in prison. She did
not threaten to "strike." Her sister, Miss Christabel Pankhurst, is not so fom!
of cell life, for she has remained in France ever since the London bobbies
wanted her for violence a year ago Their mother, Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst
one of the principal leaders, is like Miss Sylvia and has been arrested often.'
000,000 acres patented, and half of j imllorted capital The elevaior
COMMITTEES
EAR
these were taken under the home
stead laws in tracts of 160 acres or
less. Mr. Fisher thus succinctly put
the public land situation:
"While the typical homestead lands
a surety, while the railroad scheme i
is still only one of those castles we !
hear of that are built in the air. j
STY IS CLEANED
If it Happened it Is In . trie Enter-
Italian Women Be
I The civic committee of the Live
I Wires and the council committee on
i ! health and police held a joint meet-
; ing Friday evening, when the sani-
I tary condition of the city was discuss
ed. The council committee reoorted
that out of 16 reported unsanitary
locations iu the town, 10 had been re
ported tc have been cleaned, by the
chieF of police. The Live Wire com
mittee stated that of the 90 unsan
itary places that they reported, 25
had been cleaned and others had
started.
A joint committee was appointed
to draw up ordinances providing for
sanitary barns, the control of gar
bage, and minimize the fire risks.
The committee is composed of Dr. J.
A. Van Brakel,. Livy Stipp and Fred
Metzner.
On the first Monday of each month
the city garbage wagon will collect
the garbage south of Seventh Street
from the bluff to Jackson Street. On
Tuesday, north of Seventh Street
from the bluff to Taylor Street and
Wednesday the downtown section and
Greenpoint. Any garbage that is not
out at the above dates will have to
be carried away at the cost of the
owners.
Wants, For Sale, Etc
! Ne:ces 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
i inch card, (14 lines), $1 per month.
Cash njust accompany order unless one
! has an open account with the paper. No
I financial responsibility for errors; where
errors occur free corrected notice will be
I printed for patron. Minimum charge 15c.
City Treasurer's Notice.
Notice is hereby given that there
are sufficient funds on hand in the
treasury of Oregon City to pay: .
All outstanding .Sewer District
No. 9 warrants endorsed prior to
date except warrant No. 4 for
?C4.8S.
All Water Street Warrants en
dorsed prior to. Jan. 5th, 1912.
All Mfonroe Street Warrants en
dorsed prior to July 5th, 1912, and
N warrant No. 26.
All Washington Street Warrants
endorsed prior to June 9th, 1912;
excepting Nos. 56, 57, 58, 59, 60 and
61.
All Fourteenth Street Warrants
endorsed prior to April 9th, 1912.
Interest ceases on date of this
notice.
Dated at Oregon City, Oregon,
this 21st day of March, 1913.
M. D. LATOURETTE,
City Treasurer.
Because They Eat
Spaghetti
M"I-M"I"H-H-H
By LIN A CAVAL1ER1..
I"H"I"K"K"I"i"M' I ;!:! .M-.h-i-H-h-
Italian Prima Donna
-H"H"I"1"M"I"M' I I 'I"M"M"1"M-M-;-
RULY. THE SPAGHETTI IS AN AMBROSIAL FOOD, fit fhr
GODS AND FOR GODtiESSES. AND I BELIEVE THAT IT
MAKES ONE BEAUTIFUL. FOR ARE NOT THE WOMEN OF
MY ITALY THE LOVELIEST IN ALL THE WORLD? AND
'DO THEY NOT PARTAKE OF THE SPAGHETTI? IS IT NOT TO
THEM THE STAFF OF LIFE?
They have not indigestion and white, fat faces and slow moving
bodies. They are tall, and there is a dusky red in their brown cheeks,
for they are well, gloriously well, and the reason is that EASY TO
DIGEST SPAGHETTI.
I eat anything bread, soup, meat, vegetables, sweets and my
spaghetti. Always I have the appetite. I do not know why, but I
do. And my singing is not troubled that I eat as other people. No,
indeed 1 And I do not grow fat, no matter how much I eat. Is not
that pice?
I think the fat, ugly woman is the lazy woman. Sometimes her
body is LAZY; sometimes her brain is lazy; sometimes both. NO
ONE WHO IS STUPID IS REALLY BEAUTIFUL. The eyes
are dull and the smile is vacant unless there is a lively intelligence
behind. . . -
I WORK, but no one knows how I work. I study, study and
practice, going over my old, old, scales', learning the new songs and
operatic scores. That keeps my brain WAKED UP AND
LIVELY. I do not let it get what you call "slow.'
.T..i;;;.,;;.jj.j.4
A P t
autiiui $j "
i ! Oregon wms:
1 Ifeff y&mBmm -g
'& VS?23T BOUH.O ' r 1 V 1. 1
1 COLONIST-FARES P'J 1
fc TO ALU POINTS IN OH-GCN. OaiLV '
MARCH 15 TO APRIL 15, 1913 f jj I
I SOUTHERN PACIFIC ' j
f CHICAGO a3.oo AJV) VVt
fi NEW OHI.Ei3 - - . 43.oa K??CHA
5 MEMPHIS - - - - 45.60 Z-.
mo" on.Es ct;ce c?Battf.rnojiau uw V ?rTr -f !
Colonist Fares are WS5X-SOtNDonlv. but car. j 3&tl I J
E bo preptud ft-oiu an. point. If yveivva ir!eni of i""" 1
t relatives in tUeKast who des'.re to ' -j5t: in Ura. N?Cl? I
g bob." ynii con cepoUt fa.-? with youj- local ' V- I
B agent and a ticket viji bs teUcrarhcJ to any
E address desired. ?Ca!l on nearest asent cr write
to-tiie ucdersifrneti lor iiiustrated Ortgon litera
ture to send East
lolia H. Scott, Genaral Passmjer Hjtnt P3rajnd, Orspra .
WANTED Work on farm or in pri
vate family for chores. Apply to F.
H., care Enterprise.
FOR RENT
DESIRABLE ROOM for rent. 9x14
newly furnished. Bath, Toilet and
Phone. $S.OO per monta. Main
Street. Phone Main 2617.
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.
Eggs for Hatching.
White Leghorn, $1.50; Barred Rocks,
$1.00 per 15; Indian Runner, $1.00
pef eleven. The kind that lay.
Corespondence 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.
WILL TRADE almost new piano for
cow (Jersey preferred) and some
cash. For particulars address F.
W. Prudhomme, box 373, Gladstone,
Or.
FOR TRADE
WILL TRADE one binder for cow,
horse or buggy. Inquire this office.
Notice of Application of Liquor
License.
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 319,
7th Street for a period of three
months.
CLAUS KROHN.
Treasurer's Notice.
I now have funds to pay County
Road Warrants endorsed prior to
October 1, 1912. Interest ceases
on such Warrants on date of this
Notice.
March 22, 1913.
J. A. TUFTS,
County Treasurer.
Notice is hereby given that the part
nership heretofore existing between
Earl AlpMn and George Wilson,
under the firm name of Alphin &
. Wilson, was dissolved in December,
1912, and said George Wilson has
no authority over my sub-contract
with the Oregon Egineering & Con
struction Co.
EARL ALPHIN.
Summons.
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon, for Clackamas County.
Hilma G. Phillips, Plaintiff, .
vs."
Gecrge E. Phillips, Defendant.'
To George E. Phillips, Defendant:
In the name of the State of Ore
gon, you are hereby required to ap-
pear and answer the complaint fil
ed against you in the above entit
led suit on or before the 28th day
of April, 1913, and if you fail to ap
pear and answer said complaint cn
or before said date which is six
weeks from the date of the first pub
lication of this summons, the plain
tiff will apply to the court for the,
relief demanded in said complaint,
to-wit: for a decree of divorce.
This summons is served - upon
you by publication once a week for
six consecutive weeks in the Morn
ing Enterprise, by order of the Hon
orable R. B. Beatie, County Judge
in the absence of J. U. Campbell,
judge of the above entitled court
made and entered in said suit ok
the 14th day of March 1913.
Date of first publication March
loth, 1913. .
Date of last publication April '
26th, 1913.
T. B. McDEVITT, Jr.,
x . Attorney for Plaintiff.
Notice of Application for Liquor Li
cense and Pool Table License. '
Notice is hereby given that we will
at the next regular meeting of the
City Council apply for a license t
sell liquor and operate a Pool Table
at our place of business 722 Maia.
Street for a period of three monthe.
PETER KERN and J. L. CAMERON.
Summons.
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon, for the County of Clacka
mas. Elmer E. Armstrong, Plaintiff,
vs.
Cassa Armstrong, Defendant.
To Cassa Armstrong, the above nam
ed defendant:
In the name of the State Of Ore
gon, you are required to appear
and answer the complaint filed
against you in the above entitled
suit, on or before the last day of
the time prescribed- in the Order
for Publication of this summons,
to-wit: on or before the 7th day of
April. 1913, said day being the ex
piration of six weeks from the first
publication of this notice; and if
you fail to appear and answer, for
want thereof the plaintiff herein
will apply to the said court for the
relief prayed for in the said com-.
. plaint, to-wit: that the bonds of
matrimony heretofore existing be
tween yourself and plaintiff herein,
be dissolved and forever annulled,
an'1, for such other and further re
lief as to the Court may seem just
and equitaBle.
This summons is published by
the order of the Hon. J. U. Camp
bell, Judge of the Circuit Court for
Clackamas County, Oregon, made
February 20th, 1913. By said order
it was directed that this summons
be published in the Morning Enter
prise once in each week, for six suc
cessive weeks and the date 6f the
first publication thereof is February
22nd, 1913, the date named in saii
order for the said first publication.
MARTIN, WATROUS,
Attorney for Plaintiff, 607 Yeon
Bldg., Portland, Ore.
REPAIR ANYTHING
AND EVERYTHING
MILLER-PARKER COMPANY
IS'ext Door to Bank of Oregon City
THE FIRST STEP
To a successful career is the establishing of a sound, safe
bank connection. This bank will welcome you as followers
in the footsteps of the many successful men who began their
career by opening an account with it.
THE BANK OF OREGON CITY
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
D. C. LATOURETTE, President."
F. J. MEYER, Cashier.
THE FIRST NATIONAL irANK
OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
' CAPITAL $50,000.00
Transact a General Banking Business. Open from ft A. M. to ? M .