Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, May 30, 1913, Image 2

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    MORNING ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, MAT 30, 1913
MORNING ENTERPRISE
OREGON CITY, OREGON.
MR, HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS
By Gross
E. E. Brotfie. Editor and Publisher.
"Entered as secmd-class matter Jan
uary , 1511, at the seat office at Ore son
City, Oregon, under the Aet of March
I, 1879."-
rams OP SUBSCRIPTION.
Yme Tear, by mail , $3.0
Six Mentha, by mail 1.5
- f our Mentha, fey man 1.68
Per Week, by earrier. .11
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
May 30 In American History.
1&-The Grand Army of the Repub
lic instituted the general observ
ance of Soldiers' Memorial day in
the' northern states.
1887 Major Ben: Perley Poore, jour
nalist and HUthor, died; born 1820.
1890 Memorial to General James
Abram Garfield dedicated at Lake
view cemetery. Cleveland, O.. Pres
ident Benjamin Harrison participat
ed in the ceremonies.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. .
Morning stars: Venus, Jupiter, Mercu
ry. Saturn. Mars. The constellation
Cygnus (the Cross! rises in the north
est about 6 p. m. Venus at Its great
est brilliancy at 3 a. m.
WHY WE KEEP Memorial Day is
THE DAY APART not a holiday.
It is not a celebration. Nor is it a
day of mourning, as some would have
it believed. It is unique upon the
calendar as a day for meditation, in
trospection and new resolves.
Formerly May 30, was a day of gen
eral mourning. Then the pendulum
ofTmblic opinion swung to the other
extreme, and the day was regarded
as a holiday. But now it has come
to be regarded as a day apart from
all other special days of this nation,
as a brief season when from the ashes
of past sorrows, a hope for a new and
greater future is to rise phoenix-like.
And this is the light in which the
day should really be regarded.
To those who lost fathers, hus
bands, brothers or other kin in the
great war, Memorial Day must nat
urally have more of sorrow in it than
for those of the later generation, to
whom the honors of a really ghastl
war have never been brought home.
But to all the day must also partake
of a national season of review, of con
sideration of the past, and of individ
ual propbcy of the future. And,
with all respect to the soldier and
sailor dead whose memory is cherish
ed upon this occasion, this is really
as it should be, and as the heroes of
the great battles fought to save the
nation would wish it were they alive
at the present time.
The Civil War, the great conflict
wMch was responsible for the found
ing of Memorial Day custom, was a
conflict of righteousness. It was not
entered into by either North nor
South for gain or for conquest. The
North turned against its brothers in
the South because it felt that the
union of the states was endangered,
and because it felt that slavery
should not exist in the land of the
free. Dixieland, on- the other hand,
went into the great struggle from mo
tives equally as unselfish, and as
seemingly justifiable from the South
ern point of view. The South, through
long familiarity and custom, saw
nothing in slavery but the doctrine
of chattel ownership, and in its aba
donment it saw only ruin and confis
cation. The South, filled with the
same spirit of freedom that had made
its leaders valiant in the struggle
againt England in colonial days, be
lieved in the doctrine of state's rights.
The conflict of ideas brought on the
more sanguinary conflict of brothers
of one race.
Both sides fought valiantly, en
dured hardship, made noble sacri
fices. After four long and bitter
years, the North won its contention.
In the years that have followed the
South has seen that it was in the
wrong, and bitterness has given away
to other feelings. While the original
dispute might have been settled in
other ways, at the time it seemed
that only through battle was honor to
be satisfied; and honor was satisued.
The war, however, left thousands o
homes in the North and the Soutj
desolate,, and out of this desolation
grew the first spirit of Memorial Day.
Now the wounds of this desolation
have healed. There is no North nor
South in the sense of former years;
and in the obliteration of the old bor
der line has come to pass also the ob
literation of the bitterness of 1861.
In its place has come the thought
that these United States are the
homes of a people who love freedom,
who believe in equality, and who are
ever striving for betterment. To the
people of today Memorial Day is a
sacred time; a "time for prayerful
' thougnt of the past and for the fu
ture. By the blood that flowed on
the fields of the war there has been
cemented a fellowship that is nation
wide in the cause of freedom and al-
. vancement, and those who shed their
life-fluid that this might come about
are regarded as devoted soldiers in
the cause of right, no matter upon
which side they fought. They gave
their all that a great question might
be settled," and that the United States
might continue its history unbroken
as the greatest nation of the world.
They died that we might get our her
itage, costly and sanctified by the
sacrifices of hundreds of thousands
of men and women.
. What more fitting, then, that Miem
orial Day should be a festival of both
honor and hope honor for those who
by their bravery and nobility in the
past have made the present possible;
and hope that the future may be kept
as bright as the ideals of the squad
rons of Blue and Grey? What more
. ' i i
YOU
This lis the month, the week,
and to-day is the xlay for you to
be looking forward for the com
fort "and pleasure of your fam
ily by purchasing a good home.
DILLMAN & SHOW LAND have
just what you want in the way
of City property as well as
small tracts. SEE THEM.
fitting than today, -In honoring the
dead, we should also take thought cf
the morrow, and so shape and plan
our actions and our intentions that
the great work of preservation Of
the union may be continued into a
work of continuing the union and
perfecting its progress? Surely this
is both tribute to the heroes, and wis
dom for the present. Memorial Day
should be to each one of us the timo
to pause nd think deeply; it should
be a time to consider the cost of our
present greatness, and to ask our
selves if we are doing our duty by the
past in making today worthy of the
men and women who gave us our
heritage of undivided freedom.
Memorial Day is a time of hope; it
is an occasion when the glory and
nobility of the souls who risked all in
battling for principle should be re
flected onto the present, and should
show, in white and pure light, the
steps to be taken in the future to
maintain unblemished the destiny
and the greatness-of the union. It is
a day when each citizen can do noth
ing better or more fitting than to
search his or her soul, and cast out
therefrom all pettishness, all dishon
or, all tawdry littleness, and resolve
to be in thought and action a true
American a loyal American who can
reach back across the years and greet
the heroes of 1861-65 with open smil
ing face, and say:
' "You died to give me what I have,
hereafter shall my life and my devo
tion to the needs of my country prove
to you how deep is my appreciation
of the life you laid down for the na
tion your nation and my nation."
GIVE BACK THE FLAGS;
TWINE NEW WREATHS
NEW heroes come to claim applause
And bask in worldly glory.
To hear the people's glad huzzas
And shine in song and story.
Past wrongs appear as present rights.
Old scores and hates are buried.
And always unto fairer heights
The Bons of men are hurried.
But rich In honor still they stand.
And bright their pages shine.
Who fought for their God given land
And siived your land and mine.
We may forgive, we may forget
The wrongs which rent asunder'
The bonds that should have bound and let
Ebcape the cannon's thunder.
I greet my father's foeman's son
As trusted friend and brother
Our sires met with aword and gun;
We clasp hands with each other '
But, though the wrongs are worn away.
There still are wreaths to twine
For them that suffered In the fray
For your dear land and mine
The scara are healed upon the trees
That felt the shock of battle;
The ruts arf. smoothed upon the leas
Where graxe the peaceful cattle.
Oh, let the tattered emblems go!
Give back each Mag and token
That tells of brave hearts plunged in woe
And Knightly spirits broken.
But ever while brave hearts beajt true.
And sun and stars shall shine
Fresh laurels for the heroes who
Bayed your proud land and mine!
ALUTE. THE
I sa- i Ilk JfcA
mH ROUGH the boom of the guns that
thunder
Their yearly salute to the dead
There comes again the minor refrain
From the guns of the days long fled.
When brave men fell In a smoking hell
And the earth was splashed with red.
In the smoke ot the salutation
The old scenes rise to sight
Where the red sun reeled o'er the battle
field Till the dun clouds veiled Ita light.
And the flag was seen through the rifts
between -As
it drew the tides of the fight.
rpHERE arise again the faces
Of those who went down in the fray.
Whose blood congealed on the shot swept
field '
As their life tide ebbed away.
The boys in blue back In sixty-two.
Our comrades of yesterday.
SHELBY GOT THE HORSE.
Californian Tells How He Lost Valu
- able Animal.
"I was ver.v anxious to see General
Joe Shelby .during my stay to Kansas
Uity and remvt that be is away," said
Charles (' Allen of Los Angeles.
."Mj first kuowiedge of Shelby was
durum tin- war and was down In the
soiitlif-ii portion of Missouri. Shelby
was in i-oiiiNiiind of a force of Confed
erate soldiers who were galloping over
the country and making It very boffor
any small bodies of Federals they
overtook, A l.'nion regiment, in wbicb
1 was it 11 officer, was very short of
provisions one day. I decided to ride
on abead of the command and see if 1
might possibly find something to eat
I was uci-ouipauied by our body serv
ant, a faithful negro, who on that trip
rode my horse That horse was the
pride of niy heart. We were both
very tired, and i soon nodded my
bead uud dozed as I was riding, and.
while I was thus oblivious of my sur
roundings the uegro went on abead a
short distance. Without warning we
rode directly into a strong force of
Confederate -cavalry, commanded by
Shelby. I was aroused from my doze
by the commands to the negro to halt.
"I cast one hurried glance in front,
saw the Confederates In force, wheel
ed my horse and Bed up the road at
the best gait iossible and with enough
bullets whistling around me to load a
small wagon. It was a rave that was
run in earnest. The stake was human
liberty, and you bet 1 gave that horse
all tbe encouragement I knew bow
and finally was able to get back to a
place of snfety. But that horse! He
was a. fine fellow, and 1 lost him and
the negro. Since tbe war I learned
that after the capture the horse be
came the property of General Shelby
and was ridden by him for many
months during tbe hardest service be
saw." Kansas City Journal.
THE BATTLE OF ANTIETAM.
How One Darky Learned All the Facts
With Safety.
"Negroes generally have funny an-,
swere for almost every question." said
L. W Mitchell of Atlanta to a group
of comrades at Camp Roosevelt "ou
have'beard perhaps of tbe fellow who
was visiting ut the Bcene of the battle
of Antietam and met an old woolly
bead African, who took pleasure In ex
A Memorial Day Poem
By JAMES A. EDCERTON
Copyright. 1913, by American Press Asso
ciation. J
From out of a smoke framed vision
These lost ones upon me gaze:
There was brother Roy with the face of a
boy
" And a trick of our mother's ways.
And good old Ben he waa captain then
My playmate of other days.
TJOY fell in the fight at Shiloh.
As his head lay on my breast,
"Tell mother." be sighed, "I loved ber
and died
Trying to do my best"
Then Captain Ben at the head of bis men
Went down on Lookout's crest.
plaining to tbe visitor all "facks about
the engagement there. Tbe negro w9s
asked if he was present when the fight
took place, and bis answer was:
" "Sartinly. sah; sure. I wuz right
hearb '
" "Guess you saw the whole thing?"
"'Deed I did. sab. an' it wuz right
bilious times, sah '
" 'What position did you occupy?'
" "1 wuz down in de cellar, sab. I
got down dar to keep out de way of de
Yankees, case I knowed dat I would
be 'bleeped ter whoop fer dem. an I
knowed dat Marse Bob Lee didn't spec
dat of me. so I jis' get down in de cel
lar an' let em tit It out' "
The Sphinx.
The word sphinx is from the Greek
and means the strangler and was ap-.
plied to a fabled creature of the Egyp
tians which had the body of a lion, the
head of a man or an animal and two
wings attached to its sides. In the
Egyptian hieroglyphs the sphinx sym
bolized wisdom and power united. It
has been supposed that the fact that
the overflow of the Nile occurred when
the sun was In the constellations Leo
and Virgo gave the idea of the com
binations of form in the sphinx, but
this idea seems quite unfounded. In
Egypt the reigning monarch was usual
ly represented in the form of a sphinx.
London Notes and Queries.
Exorcising Disease.
Very curious methods were em
ployed by the ancient Babylonians to
exorcise disease. The sucking pig and
kid played an important part in the
remedies. The pig or kid was to be
killed, cut up and placed upon the sick
man. The heart of the pig. which had
been placed upon the sick man's heart,
was to be held by him. and the pig's
heart was to be as bis heart, the blood
as. bit blood, tbe Uesb as bis flesh, and
the pig was to be in his stead. The
kid was dealt with in the same way.
being placed upon the sick man.
Pessimistic
"Is Jinks well off?" "Yes, but he
does not realize it. He is to be married
next month." Buffalo Express.
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; naif
inch card. ( 4 lines), $1 per menth.
Cash must aoeompany 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
DEAD'
''The dead past rises before me
Till It seems like yesterday.
And 1 rub my eyes as I realize
It Is fifty years away
There remain, like ghosts oi those might)
hosts.
These tew m us oent and gray
lOMRADKb and trienn? ind brothers.
Ali of !nern gone anad.
And when next May brings again this day
A few more nau:-s will'be read
Parhaps lhy li oe ours as men deoa with
flowers
The graves or the soldier dead
80 be It. We II Know rot our country
We have dune oui little share.
That Old (Slnrv waves annve our graves.
And we kept hei fold? in air.
And that those 'e ive n the realms
above
Will welcome us over there.
Anyone that is ft of employment
and feels he cannot afford to ad
vertise for work, can have the use
of our want columns free of charge.
HOW would you like to talk with
1400 people about that bargaia you
have in Real Estate. Use the Enter
prise. WOOD AND COAL.
COAX, 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 CITY WOOD AND FTJBL
CO., T. M. Blukm. Wood aad coaJ
delivered to U parts of the city
BAWINa A SPECIALTY. Phone
your orders. Pacific 1371, Home
B
FOR SALE Cow and calf. Call at
7th and Monroe St. livery barn. .
FOR 8ALE
FOR SALE A Good Bargain For
Cash 6-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 sure a good bargain.
17th and Harrison St, telephone
Main 3594.
FOR SALE OR RENT 5-room house
at Gladstone on county road facing
Clackamas river, 2 blocks from Arl
ington station; rent $8.00; sale
terms on application to Wm. Beard,
1002 Molalla Ave., Oregon City.
FOR SALE House and two lots in
Gladstone, 100 feet from statioa;
$1400, $850 cash, balance terms
a snap. Phone Main 3492.
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 Bab7
home, would make a fine general
store; has fine room on second
story, building about 30x50. Se? 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 150L,
ELECTRICAL WORK
Contracts, Wiring and Fixtures
WE DO IT
IVIiHer-IParlcer Co.
LOST Between 4th and 5th street
on Washington, an inner tube- of an
auto tire in a small bag; finder
please return to Williams Bros
Transfer Co.
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.
BIDS FOR WOOD Bids will be re
ceived by the trustees of the Elks
Lpge, 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 7 per
cent interest or first mortgage. E.
P. Elliott & Son.
1
GOOD PASTURE
For cattle and horses; forty acres in
olover; 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 r- 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
they wish. See owner.
. L. ALTPETER,
Vancouver, Wash.
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 KIRSCHNER.
SUMMONS
In the Circuit Court of the Stats of
Oregon, for Clackamas County.
Mary Beatrice Tripp, Plaintiff
vs.
Wm. H. Tripp, Defendant.
To Wm. H. Tripp, 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 30th
day of May, 1913, said date being
the 1st day of the publication of
this Summons; and if you fail to
answer, for want thereof the plain
tiff will apply to the court for the
relief prayed for in plaintiff's com
plaint, to-wit:
For a decree forever dissolving
the bonds of matrimony heretofore
and now existing 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
anse of an order of the Honorable
J. U. Campbell, judge of the above
entitled court, made and entered on
' the 29th day of May, 1913, directing
that the same be published once a
week, for six consecutive weeks in
'the Morning Enterprise, a newspa
per of general circulation In the
county of Clackamas, State of Ore
gon. Date of first publication May 30,
1913.
Date of last publication, July 11,
1913.
E. J. MENDENHALL,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
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
CITY, OKSOON
CAPITAL fWUMO
Transacts General Bankli tuslaeee.
SUMMONS
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon, for the County of Clack
amas. Leonard Lee Grieshv. Plaintiff
... VS.
'Martha M.."-Grigsby, Defendant.
To Martha M. Grigsby, Defendant:
In the name of the State of Ore
gon, you are hereby" required to
appear and answer the complaint
filed against you in the above -entitled
court and cause, on or before
Saturday, the 12th day of July, 1913
and if you fail to answer, for want
thereof, the plaintiff will take a de
cree against you divorcing him
from you, and freeing him from all
obligations of the marriage conract.
Notice of this summons is made upon
you by publication in the "Morning
Enterprise" for 6 successive weeks
by virtue of an order dated May 29
1913, signed by the Honorable J. U.
Campbell, judge of . the Circuit
court, of the State of Oregon, for
the county of Clackamas.
Date of first publication, May 30,
1913.
Date of last publication, July 11.
1913.
HUGHES & MCDONALD,
301-3 Failing Building, Portland,
Oregon.
ORDINANCE NO.
An Ordinance providing for the care
of grabage.
Oregon City does ordain as fol
lows: Section l.v All garbage, not immedi
ately burned or otherwise destroy
ed, shall be kept in tight metal re
ceptacles and which shall at all
times be kept covered with a tight
fitting metal lid and shall be emp
tied at least once each week. .
Section 2. Any person violating any
of the provisions of this ordinance
upon conviction in any court of
Oregon CitytiShall be punished by a
fine of not more than .Twenty-five
($25.00) dollars or imprisonment in
the city jail of not more than five
days or by both such fine and im
prisonment. Read first time and ordered pub
lished at a special meeting of the
city council held May 28, 1913. To
come up for second . reading an.l
final passage on June 11th, 1913 ht
8 o'clock p. m.
L. STIPP, Recorder.
SUMMONS
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon, for the county of Clac't
. amas.
Susan Davis, Plaintiff,
vs. .
John Davis, Defendant.
To John Davis, defendant: - 4
In the Name of the State of Ora
gon: You are hereby required to
appear and answer-the complaint
filed against you in the above en
titled action on or before the 12th
day of July, 1913, and if you fail to
answer, for want thereof, the plain
tiff will take a decree, dissolving
and setting aside the marriage re
lation and contract heretofore and
now existing between the plaintiff,
Susan Davis, and also a decree
awarding the care and custody of
their minor child to the plaintiff.
Service of this summons is made up
on you by publication in pursuance
of an order of the Honorable R. B.
Beatie, county judge of Clackamas
county, Oregon, for the reason that
the Honorable J. U. Campbell, Cir
cuit judge, is absent from said
county of Clackamas, said order
having been made on the 28th day
of May, A. D. 1913, directing such
publication in the Morning Enter
prise once a week for six (6) con
secutive weeks, the first publica
tion being on May 30, 1913, and the
last publication being on July 11th,
A. D. 1913.-
HICKS & BROWNELL,,
Attorneys ior ,riaintni. -
F. J. MEYER, Cashier.
from A. M. te P. M.