Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, May 28, 1913, Image 2

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    MOKNING ENTERPRISE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1913
I MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS By Gross
1 1 ..I
MflDNlNfi FFJTFRPniiF
OREGON CITY, OREGON.
E. E. BrHa, Edlter no Publisher.
"Entered as secand-class matter Jan
uary , Mil, at the ot office at Oregon
City, Orecan, under the Aet of March
, 179."
TKRMS OP SUBSCRIPTION.
One Tear, y mail
Six Months, y mall
Four Months, by mail....
Per Week, by oarrler
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
May 28 In American History.
1843 Noah Webster, the philologist
and lexicographer, died; born 1758.
1908 Lieutenant General Stephen D.
Lee. distinguished soldier of the
Confederate States army, died: born
1833.
1012 President Taft Informed the Cu
ban government that the United
States would not intervene In the
-negro Insurrection.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
Evening star: Saturn. Morning stars:
Venus, Jupiter, Mercury, Mars. The
Pole star in constellation Ursa Minor
(Little Bear) marks the exact direction
of north.
HONOR TO WHOM In commenting
HONOR IS DUE upon the action of
the Daughters of the American Revo
lution in marking the Santa Fe Trail,
the St. Louis Globe Democrat of re
cent date takes issue with the patriot
ic women as to the wisdom of their
movement to outline the historic
southern route across the deserts. As
the St. Louis paper sees it, more real
honor would he accorded those to
whom the honor is due were the
same funds and energy expended up
on marking the famous "old Oregon
trail;'' over which there came in early
years the men and women whose off
spring have become the backbone and
the pride of the Pacific coast today.
The real historic trail was the
northern one, says the Globe Demo
crat, and over it came the men who
blazed the way into the gold diggins
of California and the vast timbered
stretches of Oregon and Washington.
It was first blazed by the Oregon
pioneers, who had for their guides
the trappers who had roamed over
the Rocky Mountain region and pene
trated clear to California and Oregon
in the earlier years of the century.
Fremont became famous for his ex
plorations in 1843-44, and gained the
name of "the Pathfinder" for cover
ing with light pack-horse equipment
the same route over which the Ore
gon pioneers had laboriously taken
their heavy emigrant wagons several
years betore, and witn the use of tne
same trapper guides.
an Oregon trail only. Then came the
great gold discovery m lsis, and tne
rush of the following year to Calif
ornia. The old trail was followed un
til the Rocky Mountains were crossed,
and then the goJd hunters left it to
go further southward through Nevada
to the various passes in the Sierras.
.Over this trail through the South
Pass went many thousands of men,
women and children. .There were
tragedies of death from Indian at
tacks, from exhaustion, from starva
tion, and one year from an epidemic
of cholera. Human graves marked
its entire length. It was literally a
Via Dolorosa. But it was the great
est of all the arteries through which
-the blood of the nation poured to Am
ericanize and win for freedom the
vast expanse of the Pacific coast.
Pretty Duchess,
Husband,
m f--' 'its. 4 ? -!wrv v
m ujf' " -' ' ' ' " l m
v '-&4 ' r " ' "''"' '' -I ! :
THIS Is the pretty Duchess of Westminster, against whom a suit for di
vorce was died by the duke with sensational allegations. The friends
of the duchess hastily came to her defense and said that she would
not only show that her husband's suspicion was not justified, but
would turn the tables and would bring a counter suit, naming a popular Eng
Usb show plrl The Westminsters have two children. They have been
estranged -fir sKe-tl2?--5tB4..iae .announcement that the duke had brought
suit did not online any surprise la English society or upea the continent It
was the Duke of Westminster-wb paid the expanses of sending the English
polo team to this country to compete for the International trophy on June 10.
. J '. ; , J . fefrS
s
' - - " ' ' " Mi ' .mi ' ,..X, . . , , , , , i sw I
50 ACRES ON CLACKAMAS
SOUTHERN
"Will net from $1500.00 to
$2000.00 per year; 6 miles
from Oregon City; R. F. D,
cream route, and telephone;
mile from school and church.
42 acres in crop, 8 acres in tim
ber and pasture; family or
chard, living water in pasture;
fairly good house, barn will ac
comodate 8 horses and 8 cows
and hold 30 tons of hay. 4 good
cows, 3 horses, 4 pigs, 50 chick
ens, buggy, farm wagon, plows,
harrow, mower, hay rake, culti
vator and other farm tools; sup
ply of wood and feed, good
kitchen range, cooking utensils,
sewing machine, churn, iron
beds, tables, etc. Price is $7,
750.00, $2,500.00 cash, balance
on time. Ask your neighbors
what they will take for their
land adjoining this and you will
see that you are making about
$2,000.00. The owner is con
ducting another business and
feels that he must neglect this
place and rather than do this is
willing to sell at a sacrifice.
Dillman&Howland
Opposite Court House
THE ROOT OF After much digging
THE MATTER and much useless
throwing of dirt, which had to come
out, but need not have been used for
argument, the root of the question
raised in California begins to appear.
The opinion that the question is
ethnical, and neither commercial nor
political any farther than commerce
and politics are parts of an ethnic
consciousness, is finding wide ac
ceptance now.
For this reason it has been easy to
see, from the beginning of the Cali
fornia controversy, that the Japanese
position, however, diplomatically
stated, is one more of resentment of
our naturalization laws than one of
claim of violated treaty rights. That
is the fact which gives the situation
its most sinister appearance. The
Japanese resent the national statute
excluding Asiatics from citizenship
more than they would be called upon
to resent a treaty violation.
Treaty violations have been fre
quent in history, but such a violation
is not an affront. It involves no
derogation of dignity of the nation
the treaty rights of which are violat
ed, whUe the exclusion of a proud
people from possible citizenship is
such a derogation. The United
States naturalization law rests upon
Sued by Her ,
May Turn Tables
an ethnic consciousness which noth
ing will change.
In other words the dispuate is bas
ed upon, and rests upon, the conflict
of bloods. The Japanese are not a
Caucasian race, they cannot hope for
assimilation in this nation any more
than can the negro. In fact, their po
sition would be the same as that of
the negro had they not a powerful,
proud and fasf-developing nation be
hind them to which an appeal could
be made. It is not a question of
treaty discrimination it is a question
world-wide in scope, a question rest
ing soleily upon the natural dstaste of
the" Caucasian to regard with equality
any people not of the same hued skin
and the same racial characteristics.
Heart to Heart
Talks
By JAMES A. EDGERTON
IN THE MORNING.
In my boyhood the sun always rose
in the east During subsequent wan
derings, owing to my faculty of get
ting turned around, it rises in the
south, the west, the north or most any
old direction except the right one. So
when 1 think of a morning it is usual
ly of a morning of my boyhood. The
points of the compass are necessary to
the proper appreciation of such things.
When I was a boy the sun used to
rise and shine into my window through
an old locust tree. There was some
kind of wonderful bird that sang to
It I do not to this day know what
kind of bird it was. but the song was
very sweet I get a sort of shivery
happiness away down inside of me
when I bear it to this very day.
Those were wonderful mornings
when I was a boy. There were gener
ally dewdrops on the hollyhocks, and
they gleamed well, as the dew does
gleam on hollyhocks when you are a
boy. You know how it is yourself.
Don't expect me to spoil it by compar
ing it to diamonds or any such junk.
That would be out of the picture. 1
knew nothing about diamonds then
and know little now.
So when I think of a morning scene
it is of those morning scenes. There
was the little hill in the sheep pasture
across the road, and the summer sun
peeped up over its shoulder. And there
was the cherry tree where the swing
was, and the sun sort of slanted around
from the hill and through the locust
and into this cherry tree.
A little farther on was a strip of
woods where the whippoorwllls and
the frogs sang at night and where we
made paths through the leaves so that
we could creep up on the squirrels
without scaring them. All of that is
in the picture, although it may seem
that the paths are paths of digression.
Yes. and there were dreams. No
morning when you are a boy is com
plete without dreams.
There" were dreams of fame, of love
and of high adventure, of course. All
boys have them. Yet in my own case
there was one particular vision that
did not concern me personally or con
cerned me only ns a part of the genenil
huinnn scheme. It was that we are
in a new morning of humanity o:
which those physical mornings wert
but symbols. Tuere was a better dsi
cominir n new order.
Mjiybe the dream Is coming true
Perhaps there Is a new day brealnic
over the ei-rtt,. Perhaps there in i
new moniintr for (in inanity.
Almost the Speed Limit.
"No man is a coward to himself,"
said the war veteran oracularly.
"At Chattanooga one of the men in
my company left early in the action,
.and no ou saw him till after the bat
tle, when he appeared in camp un
bounded and unabashed. Some of the
boys accused him of running away, but
he- wouldn't admit it
" 'I only retreated in good order,' he
declared.
"I heard of the matter, and a few
days later 1 asked him if he had any
idea how fast he had 'retreated.'
" 'Well, I'll tell you. cap'n,' he said,
"if I'd been at home -and goin' after
the doc-tor folks that see me passin
would have thought my wife was right
sick!' "Youth's Companion.
A Story of St. Paul's.
A singular fact in the history of St.
Paul's cathedral. London, is that the
first stone which the architect ordered
the masons to bring from the rubbish
of the former cathedral, destroyed by
fire, was part of a sarcophagus, oij
which had been inscribed the single
word "Resurgam" ("I shall rise again").
The prophecy was fulfilled, for out of
the ruins of old a veritable poem- in
marble has arisen.
The classified ad columns of The
Enterprise satisfy your wants.
I nl : " ; 1
JYIflady'8
JVIxrror
For Summer's Tan. ,
If your skin becomes sunburned you
have no time to lose. You may laugh
at the idea ,0 special treatment be
cause you have often been burned and
brown without, as you believe, any
really harmful results. Such results
may not be fully apparent at once, but
in a short time small faint lines ap
pear, and the skin assumes a sort of
dry and cracked appearance. These
lines, although faint at first, if -not
properly treated become deeper and
soon develop into premature wrinkles.
As a soothing application and cure
for sunburn buttermilk is most effec
tive. Apply it freely with a soft cloth
and rub it will into the face, neck and
chest. The hands and arms should re
ceive applications also if they have
been burned. Then the parts must be
thoroughly saturated with the milk and
allowed to dry.
Now put a teaspoonful of borax into
a basin of tepfyl water and carefully
and .gently wash off the buttermilk.
Pat the skin with an old bit of soft
linen and then with the finger tips
massage or work into the skin very
softly some of the lumpy pieces of the
milk and allow it to dry thoroughly
into the skin. Buttermilk not only
bleaches and cleanses the skin, but it
nourishes and feeds the dry and shriv
eled parts. After sunburn buttermilk
should be applied as soon as possible
and allowed to remain on the skin.
Soap and water must not be applied
while the skin stings or smarts. 9
To obtain a soft elastic skin the but
termilk treatment must be repeated
daily. A disagreeable feature of the
milk as a cosmetic is its odor. For
this reason it is sometimes best to ap
ply it at night and to use reliable skin
food and powder during the day.
However, if you are alone and you do
not mind the odor then bathe in it all
you wish. Because of its efficiency as
a bleach and as a food both for the
body and skin and because of its com
mendable cheapness, which is a point
well worth considering, it occupies an
important position in relation to health
and beauty.
Fresh Air Always.
Seize upon every chance to keep out
In the open air. If you can do no more,
stick your head out of the window as
many times a day as you can. Walk
Instead of ride whenever you can,
whether you feel like it or not. Train
yourself to it. Keep out of the cars
as much as possible; the air in them
Is not of the purest. On all occasions
walk, exercise, play, do anything in the
open if it is only to sit in the sun and
take a sun bath. Get this one point
well fixed in your mind that the great
est tonic given us is the fresh air,
whether it be cold or warm, rainy or
sunny, clear or murky. It is always
healthful and the finest element that
we can take into our systems.
Cause of Dandruff. .
There are four main causes for the
prevalence of dandruff ill health, wor
ry, pressure of close hats and theuse
of quantities of false hair. Ill health,
especially nervous disorders, are in
stantly communicated to the scalp.
When one feels full of life and energy
the hair responds readily to the hur
ried or careless touch. When 111, hair
is stubborn, stringy and generally un
ruly. Worry is really an, affection of
the nerves, so that those who indulge
in this form of mental folly always pay
the price in dull, oily looking coiffures
and irritating dandruff. . .
Improving the Looks.
We owe it to our friends as well as
ourselves to look our best at all times,
and the girl who can improve her ap
pearance without harming herself
should do so. Nothing gives us quite
the self confidence as to feel we look
well.
Actresses are usually warm hearted,
sensible and cheerful. That is be
cause they- make the best of them
selves in face and form. An old say
ing is true, "The face is often a re
flex of the mind," and in a measure it
is no less true that the mind is a reflex
of the face. '
For the Outdoor Girl.
A hot bath and a vigorous rubbing
after a day outdoors is a necessity both
for cleanliness and to prevent fatigue.
The feet and the face and hair natural
ly suffer most, and where much walk
ing is done one should be careful not
only to bathe the feet in lukewarm, wa
ter and soda at night, but also to keep
the soles powdered and take heed that
the stockings are well fitting and with
out creases. Even though the shoe be
well fitting much misery is caused by
too long, too short or too heavy stock-
FASHION HINT
By JUDIC CH0LLET
This misses' frock is a charming one
for general summer wear, for gradua
tion and for all the important occa
sions of the season. In the illustra
tions it is made of eyelet embroidered
voile over a skin of messaline.
For the sixteen year size the gown
will take two and a quarter yards any
HISSES GRADUATION GOWN.
width, if there is neither figure nor
nap, a yard and a half of bordered ma
terial thirty-four inches wide for the
tunic, one and a quarter yards twelve
inches wide for the blouse, a 'half yard
twenty-seven inches wide, for the
chemisette and three-eighths of a yard
eighteen inches wide for the yoke.
This May Manton pattern is cut in sizes
for girls of from sixteen to eighteen years
of age. Send 10 cents to this office, giving
number, 7852, and it will be promptly for
warded to you by mail. If in haste send
an additional two cent stamp for letter
postage. When ordering use coupon.
No.
Size.
Name ..
Addrsss
Meanings of Dyke.
"Dyke" has even more divergent
meanings than ditch in Lincolnshire
and bank in Holland. In Scotland it
means a low wall or fence of turf or
unmortgaged stones, and in some parts
of northern England a "dyke" is a
hedge. Yet there are other northern
districts where it is a pond. Originally,
in English at any rate, "dyke" or
"dike" and "ditch" both meant what
ditch still means to us, but as the dig
ging out of a ditch necessarily involves
the raising of a mound with the dug
out earth the words came to signify
ditch and mound together and eventu
ally In some cases the mound alone.
London Standard.
Skinning GoafsT
The Abyssinians and Somalia are
considered the most expert in skin
ning goats. The former rarely permits
his knife to touch the animal after
killing and during the skinning proc
ess and by the means of a bellows re
moves the skin in an excellent condi
tion. Somali women are also very
adept in this art and exercise great
care throughout
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. ( 4 lines), Jl 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 16c.
Anyone that is ot of employment
and feels he cannot afford to ad
vertise for work, can have the use
of our want columnB free of charge.
HOW would you like to talk with
1400 people about that bargain you
have in Real Estate. Use tie Bator
prise. WOOD AND CAL.
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.
yVuLtorrxobiles for
PHONES: MAIN 77; A 193
Miller-Farker Co.
ormoon crrr wood and rum.
CO.. r. M. Elutan. Wood and eosJ
Uvere to all pares of the
BAWTNO A SHBCIALTT. Pfcoa
your orders. Pacific 1371, Home
FOR SALE
FOR SALE A Good Bargain For
Cash 5-room house and 3 lots, good
well, big barn, chicken house en
closed with wire netting. City wa
ter attacked. Call and see this
place; it is sure a goed bargain.
17th and Harrison St, telephone
Main 3594.
FOR SALE Good as new Esty organ.
Call E. P. Elliott, 7tb and Main St.
FOR SALE Double surrey, $65.00, or
will trade for good cow. Inquire
this office.
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. Ses E.
P. Elliott & Son.
FOR RENT One 6-room modern cot
tage on Taylor street, between 8th
and 9th. Apply to George Randall,
corner 5th and Jefferson Sts.
MISCELLANEOUS
GIRL WANTED for general house
work; good salary. Main 1501.
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 $1.90 per stand
, and call and get them anywhere
within 20 miles of Canby. Address
M. J. Lee, Canby, Ore.
GOOD STEADY middle-aged man and
wife want work on farm at once;
lady good cook no children. Ad
dress R. R. No. 2, box 170, Oregon
City, Oregon.
WANTED Convalescent 0r invalid to
nurse at my own home; best of
care and a good home. Mrs. L. Paul,
122 Center St.
TO EXCHANGE A beautiful home
of 12 acres at Falls City, for house
and lot in Oregon City or Gladstone.
Thomas Crowley, box 45, Oregon
City.
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.
MONEY TO LOAN
WE HAVE $1,000 to loan at V per
cent interest or first mortgage. E.
P. Elliott & Son. -
GOOD PASTURE . '
For cattle and horses; forty acres in
clover; running water, well fenced.
Located opposite my home on the
main road one mile west of the
West side school house. A. K.
FORD, phone Farmers 296, or in
quire of Charman & Co., city drug
store.
WHO WOULD LIKE A PLACE LIKE
THIS?
A fine photo studio .and hairdress
ing parlors combined; all furnished
and one in mission, camera, lens,
stock and ready to walk into. Cheap
rent, a main street, ground floor
with large basement, four-year lease.
Clear of incumberance; price $1,000.
Will trade for real estate of some
value. Will teach' buyer the arts if
Interest upon Interest makes money grow quickly. Is
yours growing this way? Your money in our sav
ings department will be earning interest. upon Inter
est at the rate of 3 per cent.
The Bank of Oregon City
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
D. C. LATOURETTE, President.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OFOKSGON CITY, OREGON
abita 1 cra iim nn
Transacts a. GeneraJ Banking Business.
they wish. See owner.
L. AliTPETER,
. " Vancouver, Wash.
NOTICES
NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR
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
207, 8th street "The Beer Hall'
for a period of three months.
ANTON KIRCHMEER.
SUMMONS
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon, for Clackamas County.
Theresa Simmons, Plaintiff,
vs.
John R. Simmons, Defendant.
To John R. Simmons, the abova
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 tho
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 th
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. QuiclCf ,?!aintiff,
vs.-,,...
Pearle E. Quick, Defendant
To Pearle E. Quick, the abor
named defendant:
In the name of the State of Oregon,
...... ova 1, DMhv vmifrArl tn snnpar And
j - - - -1 '
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 o$
six full weeks from the first -putH
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 fop
the vrelief prayed for in his com
plaint, to-wit:
For a decree disolving the bonds
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'
th last nnhlicatinn thereof is Mav
28th, 1913, which publication shall"
be made once a week for six con
secutive weeks afte the first pub
lication of said summons.
. WHEELOCK & WILLIAMS,
Attorneys for Plaintiff. -
F. J. MEYER, Cashier.
- - ' Open from A. M. to P. M