THE CUB REPORTER jUlr ppdodtfd ocoop L,earns ooui oiscuus Oir flllF raTAV A Domestic: riTrNirt oh how to mawe eiscurrs WITH POTATOE. PEELINGS . ACAD PORK" CHOP BONES MORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON CITY, OREGON. E. E. Bredis, Editor and Publisher. "Entered as aecend-clus matter Jan uary , 1811, at the post office at Oregon City, Oregon, under the Act of March 8, 1J79." TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One Tear, by mail 3.00 Six Months, by mail 1.60 Four Months, by mail 1.00 Per Week, by carrier 10 CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER May 14 In American History. 1787 The first constitutional conven tion met in Philadelphia. Although the United States had long been recognized n a free nation. Its gov ernment was still unorganized and revolutionary. 1863 Capture of Jackson. Miss., by General ! rants forces. This vic tory was followed by a direct at tack upon Vickslmrg from the rear of the Confederate lines. 1900-Cnrl Schurr.. noted German American scholar and publicist, died: born 1830. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. Evening star: Saturn. Morning stars: Mercury, Jupiter, Mars, Venus. Constellation Auriga, in the northwest, Is distinguishable by the first magni tude star Capeila, on the eastern rim of the Milky way, about 9 p. m. THE OTHER SIDE The Enterprise OF THE MATTER in this issue prints the report of the Live Wires' commit tee that investigated the charges pre ferred against the county court, This report is published, as was the report of the committee of three that took things in its own hands at the mass meeting last week, as a matter of news in which all citizens of the county should be interested. The Live Wires, though being dubbed "useless"' by the committee of three, made an independent investigation of the various complaints submitted, and The Enterprise is of the opinion that on the face of things the Live Wires have more thoroughly, probed the several matters than did Messrs. Brown, Sehuebel and Casto. Called into the matter by the first committee to see that fair play should be the ruling spirit of the investiga tion, the gentlemen from the Live Wires had no personal bias in the complaints at hand, and took up each charge with an open mind. The find ings of their probe are given in a dignified form, and show a much greater thoroughness than did the superficial and indefinite mounthings of the disgruntled trio who, as this pa per has before charged, deliberately organized a protest upon county mat ters as the initial step in a "frame up," the object of which was to add strength to their abortive recall move ment. Readers of The Enterprise are urg ed to read both reports, and then to read them a second time. Each read er is asked to pass judgment in the matter on the evidence submitted in ' 1 1 1 - . " I American Schools Can Compare With Best In the World By Dr. KIRSCHENSTEINER, Superintendent of Schools In Munich. Bavaria 771 E Germans may boast of the world. We, too, may boast of having given it Pes talozzi and Froebel. We may also boast that no people even at this day has so systematized the public schools as we have, but we can NO LONGER STRUT AROUND IN THE TOGA OF TEACHER OF THE WORLD. The American pub lie school system is but fifty years old, whereas the German system looks back upon one hundred and fifty years of existence. THERE ARE SOME STATES AND SOME CITIES IN THIS YOUNG NATION IN WHICH THERE ARE SCHOOL ORGANIZATIONS AND ED UCATIONAL ACQUIREMENTS THAT CAN COMPARE WITH THE BEST IN THE WORLD AND FROM WHICH WE GERMANS CAN LEARN AS MUCH NOW AS THE AMERICANS ONCE LEARNED FROM US. The A merican child has an elementary school course of eiht vcars, as is the case in Germany. It.has annually alxmt nine hiimlred hours of instruction, in its full cour,e about seven thousand two hundred hours. In Bavaria the rural child has about six thousand live hundred hours; the city child (Munich) about eight thousand hours. In the United States the hours of instruction are devoted exclusively to secu lar instruction, whereas in Germany from one-fifth to one-seventh of the total time is devoted to religious instruction. mm. mm m -r- . B - I 1 I I . tl I II ICw-..r- M.r- . . A I - ' b If T 1 l -.Al-Xr- I I i. I a --SS4 I I If iTVnc Y-i T 1 Mv,..i- Minc ..F u : II . , - - . I i XSSTOl ii lf -r A.mt- B H .HI 141 -umc y Wvn vt fZD-X HELIEVE I Falls View Addition Lots $25 and up, on easy pay ments. These lots are sightly and can not be duplicated any where in a city of this size. Dillman& How land Opposite Court House the two sets of findings, and in form ing such judgment is asked to take into consideration the form and word ing of the two reports. If this is done, The Enterprise believes that most of its readers will agree that this paper has been justified in all that it has said about the committee of three, its methods and its means of attaining its ends; and will conclude that the county officials have in the main fulfilled their oath to the citi zens who elected them to office. BETTER THAN Young women of "SOCIAL WORK" Gladstone have or ganized a baseball team. Daily they may be observed at practice on the school grounds, and a healthier and happier set of girls would be hard to find. In their exercise they are re futing the time-worn charge that "a girl can't throw straight," and are al so proving that in baseball, as in oth er matters, "curves" are primarily a matter in which femininity , ' excels. These Gladstone girls are doing some thing more than just playing baseball, too; they are learning self reliance, forbearance and rapidity of decision. They are getting general exercise, they are slapping Mrs. Grundy in the face each time they swing a bat, and they are developing true character; for nothing so quickly does away with pettishness as participation in com petitive sport. Some folk do not think the girls ought to play baseball. They fear it will harden them. Probably it will, but only in a beneficial way. Other fault-finders declare that it will cause the young ladies to become "unwom anly." If being "womanly" consists in timidity, lack of power . to make quick decision, laxity of muscle and bodily development, and false mod esty, probably baseball is making these girls "unwomanly." Probably they don't care to sit around the sew ing circle and tear their neighbor's reputations to shreds, probably they take no interest in scandal, probably these young women hall players pre fer stories of constructive merit to the writings of "The Duchess." Prob ably they would rather go out and split wood for a sick woman than to lounge by the fire and embroider a pink bib for the ailing woman's baby. And probably as a result they will grow up to he better women, truer to their duties in this world, and better able to become good wives and home builders. having given the public school to MORNING ENTERPRISE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1913 Scoop , L 1 1 I . ' " , i . I I 1 1 " i i i m " iwcne ixnrwcr.- If - 'ntiv PwCUVTTO A CHEMIST! m This town has the natural advan tages and can secure new industries if it will only GET AMOVE ON I This town will be a better town if the people spend their money with the Home Merchant. This town will be more prosper ous if it Advertises Itself and draws new enterprises here. Let them see There is a lot more hope in this world for a girl who has the nerve to try and dash home from third, when there are two out and a weak sister at bat, than there is for the girl who stands scoffing off at one side and notes that because the players don't wear hair-nets their locks are coming down as a result of the exertions of the game. The baseball girls of Gladstone will amount to something, one of these days, and when they do they will be glad they played baseball in their youth instead of going to pink teas and eating pickles, cake, tea and coffee. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Louis Sager and wife to T.L. Sag er, west half of S. W. Sec. 12, T. I S., R. 2 E.; $1. Charles F. Sager to T. L. Sager, in terest in west half of same; $1. Lotta Sager Cummins and J. B. Cummins, William R. Sager and wife and George Sager, to T. L. Sager, in terest in same; $1. Casper Junker and wife to Robert S. Smith, lots 3 and 4, block 4, Junk er's second addition to Sandy; $5. Philip Kohl to George A. Kohl, 60 acres in T. 2 S, R. 3 E,; (Nathan P. Mack D-. L. C.) $3,600. G. D. Boardman and wife to Henry John Robinson and wife, lot 29, Jen ning's Lodge; $1. A. H. Bell and wife to H- Metzger, S. E. M of the N. E. and east half of S. W. V of N. E. and N. E. of S. E. and the east half of N. W. Yi of S. E. Sec. 6, T. 6 S., R. 2 E.; $10. J. C. Enghbuse and wife to Blaine R. Smith, tract in Isaac Capps D. L. C; $10. William Barlow and wife to Solo mon Miller, lot 12, block 2, Barlow; $225. MacDonald . Potts to W. J. - Alexan der and wife, lot 7, block 97, second subdivision, Oak Grove; $20. STRENUOUS L0VEMAKING. Duke William Tamed Matilda, and She Got Square on Brihtric. A modern lover who resorted to brute force to win his lady would, soon find himself in the street, if not iu the police station. But fashions in pro posals have changed in a thousand years, and when William the Conqueror set out to make Matilda, daughter of the Count of Flanders, the happiest of maidens he adopted measures that were forcible, to say the least. The New York Sun tells the story of his tempestuous wooing: The suitor Matilda had she did not want, and the man she wished to woo her she could not get. The man she did not want happened to be William, duke of Normandy, and he decided to go to Bruges and conquer Matilda. There were no national roads through France in those days, and William doubtless had a hard trip. Perhaps Matilda noticed the mud on his clotljes when she came out of church and found him waiting for her. At any rate, William descended from his horse, and taking Matilda firmly by the back of the neck, rolled her over and over In the.mire of Bruges, planting well directed blows npon her royal face- and body with his other handi Life was elemental a' thousand years ago. Learns About 0KE U P Wake Up! Get Up Early In the Morning! our smoke! This strenuous lovemaking somehow appealed to Matilda. Perhaps it was what she would have liked to do to Brihtric. the gentleman she could not get, who was only the English am bassador at her father's court and not at all a proper person to be snubbing a princess. So Matilda sent word to her father that, "sick in health and dolorous in body." she had firmly re solved to marry no man but Duke William. ' Later, after William had conquered England, he offered his queen the estates of any English nobleman she might name. Matilda did not have to think twice. She not only chose Brih tric's estates, but she put him in prison and kept him there all the rest of his life an excellent argument for the wise custom of restricting woman's choice to one year in four. Too Much Curiosity. A dangerous operation was being per formed upon a woman. Old Dr. A., a quaint German, full of kindly wit and professional enthusiasm, had several younger doctors with him. One of them was administering the ether. EU became so interested in the old doc tor's work that he withdrew the cone from the patient's nostrils, and she half roused and rose to a sitting pos ture, looking with wild eyed amaze ment over the surroundings. It was a critical period, and Dr. A. did not want to be interrupted. "Lay down, dere. woman." he commanded gruffly. "You haf more curiosity as a medical student." Busybodies. It would be a much more progressive world if we reduced the time we give to other people's business. Puck. Wants, For Sale, Etc, Notices under these classified headings will oe inserted at one cent a word, first insertion, halt a eent additional inser tions. One inch card, (2 per month; half Inch card, ( 4 lines), tl 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. HOW would you like to talk with 1400 people about Uaat bargain you have in Real Estate. Use the Enter prise. WOOD AND COAL. 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. OREGON C1TT WOOD AND FUEL CO., T. M. Blukm.. Wood and coal delivered to all parts of the elty SAWING A SPECIALTY. Phone your orders. Pacific 1371, Home B 119 FOR SALE Good as new Esty-organ. Call E. P. Elliott, 7th and Main St FOR SALE FOR SALE By owner About 1 1-3 acres, 6-room house, good well, lights, beam ceiled and plastered, .full basement, Dutch kitchen; easy .payments, $2,650. Bessie E. Bruecl ent, Jenning'a Lodge. Biscuits FOR SALE Gray team, well match ed, weight 2900 lbs. Home phone Beaver Creek, C. F. Weismandel, Oregon City, Route No. 3. FOR SALE At Clackamas Heights, 4-room house and one acre, well improved; no reasonable offer re fused. Apply owner, C. Hinman, Oregon City, Route No. 6. f6r SALE A Good Bajgain For Cash 5-room house and 3 lots, good well, big barn, chicken house en closed with wire netting. City wa ter attached. Call and see this place; it is eure a good bargain. 17th and Harrison St., telephone Main 3594. FOR RENT FOR RENT House in Parkplace. next to Grange hall, near Baby home, would make a fine general store; has fine room on. second story, building about 30x50. Sej E. P. Elliott & Son. FOR RENT Housekeeping rooms. 213 Fifth St., City. MISCELLANEOUS FOUND Purse, may have same by calling at Brightbill's store and proving property. WANTED Girl for general house work. Call J. C. Bridges, 7ti and VanBuren Sts. GIRL WANTED for general house work; good salary. Main 1501. WANTED The use of a horse and buggy for its keep, or will pay a small amount in cash and keep; does not need to be much of a rig, but will have the best of cara and light use. . Addres, "B" care Enter prise. WANTED A" few hQrses or cows to pasture; good grass and plenty of water, 2 miles south of Oregon City. Phone, Farmers 228, A. H. Harvey. WANTED 2 men or women to board and room. Apply 1311 Main St., or Telephone Main 1551. WANTED Honey bees in any kind of stands, will pay $1.00 per stand and call and get them anywhere within 20 miles of Canby. Address M. J. Lee, Canby, Ore. BIDS FOR WOOD Bids will be re ceived by the trustees of the Elks Loge, No. 1189, for 60 cords of No. 1, .sound, first growth fir wood; no objections to rought wood; delivery to be made by August 1st. Address all bids to E. J. NOBLE, secretary. By order of the Board of Trustees, J. F. RISLEY, Chairman. WOMAN, aged 38, with girl aged 7, wishes position as housekeeper for. batchelor or widower living in the country. Thoroughly respectable and capable. Wages reasonable. Address Mrs. Clara Crawford, care Enterprise. WANTED Convalescent 0r invalid to .' nurse at my own home; beat of care and a good home. Mrs. L. Paul, 122 Center St. THE SPIKELLA 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 Blig. . GARDNER AND FLORIST. CHARLES M. MOFFITT Gardner and Florist, planting, prun ing and fertilizing. Alexander Apart ments, West Side, Phone Main 3093. MOLES! MOLES! MOLES The easi est method of destroying moles without the use of drugs, or traps. Absolutely nothing to buy. Send 25 cents in coin for full information. G. A. "YOUNG, Sumner, Iowa,-Box 11 MONEY TO LOAN WE HAVE $1,000 to loan, at 7 per cent interest or first mortgage. E. P. Elliott & Son. MONEY TO LOANon good security $3,500.00 in $500.00 to $700.00 loans. Dillman & Howland. NOTICES Summonrs In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Clackamas County: Sue M. Spalding, Plaintiff, vs. Harry F. Spalding, Defendant. To Harry F. Spalding, the above named 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 suit on or before the 25th day of June, 1913, and if you fail to .appear and answer for want thereof the . plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for in her said complaint, to-wit: For a decree of this court dissolving the marriage contract now existing between plaintiff and defendant, and for such other and further relief to the court may seem meet and equitable. This summons is published by order of the Hon. J. U. Campbell, judge v I Automobiles for Fiire PHONES: MAIN 77; A 193 Miller-F&rlcer Co. of the Circuit Court of the state of Oregon for the fifth ' judicial dis trict, made and entered on the 9th day of May, 1913, and the time pre scribed for the publication of. this, summons is six weeks, beginning on the 13th day of May, 1913, and ending with the issue of June 24th, 1913. S. J. SILVERMAN, Attorney for Plaintiff. 301 Railway Exchange Bldg., Port land, Oregon. REFEREE'S SALE ON EXECUTION. NOTICE is hereby given that by vir tue of a judgment and decree ren dered and entered April 14, 1913, by the Circuit court of the State of Oregon, for Clackamas county, In a suit for partition pending in said court, entitled, H. P. Hult et al plaintiffs, vs. We P. James et al defendants, Reg. No. 11771. I, the undersigned will on Monday, Mfey 19, 1913, at 9 o'clock a. m., at the front door of the county court house in Oreeon City, Clackamas county. Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in hand, the folowing described real property, situated in the county of Clackamas State of Oregon, to-wit: The north half of the southeast quarter and the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section 32, in township 4 south, of range 3 east of the Willamette Meridian, and the northeast quarter of section 32 in township 4 south, of range 3 east of the Willamette Meridian, ex cepting therefrom a 30-acre tract of land bounded and described as fol lows, to-wit: Beginning at the southeast corner of the northeast quarter of said section 32, thence north 60 rods; thence west 80 rods; thence south 60 rods; thence east 80 rods to the place of beginning. The southwest quarter of the north east quarter of section 5, township 5 south, of range 3 east of the Wil lamette Meridian, subject to the lien of a mortgage executed by Vic tor Lundeen to F. R. Beals, Aug. 10, 1910, for $1509 now held by Clackamas Abstract & Trust Co. Also subject to the lien of a second mortgage, executed Nov. 3, 1911, by Emil Lind, Oscar Lind and Robert Olson in favor of Victor Lundeen for $500. All the N. W. quarter of the N. E. quarter of section 5, township 5 south, of range 3 east of the Wil lamette Meridian, excepting, how ever, that portion thereof which lies north of the county road. Sub ject to the lien of a mortgage exe cuted by Olaf A. Forsgren and wife to N. P. Hult, June 5, 1911, for $200.00. All of the N. W. quarter of the N. E. quarter of section 5, in township 5 south, of range 3 east of the Wil lamette Meridian, excepting, how' ever, that portion thereof which lies south of the county road, also excepting therefrom the one acre tract of land described in the died executed by C. R. James and wife to school district No. 53, of Clack amas county, Oregon, dated March 8, 1902, recorded at page 234 of book 88 of the Deed Records of said Clackamas county. That certain portion of the N. E. quarter of the N. E. quarter of sec- tion 5, township 5 south, of range 3 east of the Willamette Meridian, described in that certain deed exe cuted by C. R. James and wife to school district No. 53, of Clackamas county, Orgon, dated March 8, 1902, recorded at page 234 of book 88 of the Deed of Records of said Clackamas county, to-wit: Begin 'ning at a stone in the center of the Canyon Creek and Meadow Brook road, that is 12.70 chs. south of the quarter Sec. Cor. on the north line of Sec. 5, in Tp. 5 S., R. 3 E Will. Mer., and running thence east 3.25 chs.; thence north 3.25 chs.; thence You will be thankful for a neat little bank account when you decide to build a home of your own. The time to start is now. . The Bank of Oregon City OLDCST 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 A. M. o KM. west 3.25 chs.; thence south 3.25 chs. to the place of beginning, con taining one acre, more or less. Sub ject, however, to the conditional use of said premises by said school dis . trict. All of said land wil be sold subject to the liens and the estate herein before mentioned. Date of first publication, April 16, 1913. , G. BLANE NISSEN, Referee. C. A. APPLEGREEN & DAVIED E. LOFGREN, Attorneys. SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Clackamas County. ' Theresa Simmons, Plaintiff, ; vs. John R. Simmons, Defendant, i To John R. Simmons, the above named defendant: ; , In the name of the State of Ore gon, you are hereby required to ap pear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit within six weeks from the 23rd day of April, 1913, said date being the 1st day of the publication of this Summons; and if you fail to answer, for want thereof the plaintiff will ap ply to the court for the relief prayed for in plaintiff's complaint, to-wit: For a decree forever dissolving the bonds of matrimony heretofore and now exisiting between plaintiff and defendant, and for such other and further relief as to the court may seem meet in the premises. This Summons is published in pursu ance of an order of the Honorable J. U. Campbell, judge of the above entitled court, made and entered on the 22nd day of April, 1913, direct ing that the same be published once a week, for six consecutive weeks in the Morning Enterprise, a news paper of general circulation in the County of Clackamas, State of Ore gon. Date of first publication, April 23rd, 1913. Date of last publication, June 4th, 1913. F. J. LICHENBERGER, Attorney for Plaintiff, 602 Corbett Building, Portland, Ore. SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clack amas. Roy R. Quick, Plaintiff, vs. Pearle E. Quick, Defendant.' To Pearle E. Quick, the above named 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 named suit,, on or before the 28th day of May, 1913, said date being the expiration of six full weeks from the first pub lication of this Summons, and if you fail to so appear and answer said complaint, for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for in his com plaint, to-wit: For a decree disolving the bonds of matrimony and mariage contract heretofore and now existing be tween the plaintiff and defendant and for the care, custody and con trol of Violet B. Quick, minor child of plaintiff and defendant herein, and for such other and further re- lief as to the court may seem just ' and equitable in the premises. This summons is published by order of the Hon. R. B. Beatie, judge of the county court of the State of Oreon, for the county of Clackamas, which said order was made and en tered on April 15th, 1913. Date of first publication of this summons is April 16th, 1913, and the date of the last publication thereof is May 28th, 1913, which publication "shall be made once a week for six con secutive weeks after the first pub lication of said summons. WHEELOCK & WILLIAMS, Attorneys for Plaintiff. F. J. MEYER, Cashier.