Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, June 01, 1913, Image 2

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    MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS
tot.M.Dg &we you t& oHoensTAHD 'H that ev vesTec pay ftMj, I U efctuT . " CoTm
j . . er B$TdMgy thaT i w wat to se J erJj - - -v ' hA jQA i
j 7- " 1 V
. - ... . .. 6225 . . '
v" ' r
i 1 - - i .
MORNING EHTEEPRISE
0RE6N CITY, imN.
E. E. Bretfle, Edtw and Publisher.
"Entere u ecn4-elaae matter Jan
uary , 1S11, at tae vast afllca at Oraeoa
City, Oreren, unier the Aet af March
S, U79."
TBMfS OF SUBSCRIPTION-.
One Tear, y mail J3.M
Six Mentha, by mail 1.6
Few Mentha, by mail l.et
Per Week, by oarrier It
CITY FFICIAL NEWSPAPER
June l in American History.
1792 Kentucky admitted to the Onion
as a state.
1S13 Desperate naval battle off Bos
ton harbor between the United
States frigate Chesapeake and the
British frigate Shannon. The Ches
apeake surrendered after her com
mander. Captain James Lawrence,
had been mortally wounded.
1872 James Gordon Bennett, founder
of the New York Herald, died in
New York city; born in Scotland
1705.
1910-Dr. Elizabeth Black well, pioneer
woman physician in the United
States, died: born 1821.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
Evening star: Mercury. Morning
stars: Venus, Saturn, Mars, Jupiter.
The planet Venus in conjunction with
the moon at 4:04 p. m. June constella
tions, visible 8 to 10 p. m.: Bootes.
Ursa Major. Ursa Minor. Draco. Cas
siopeia. Cepheus. Cygnus. Lyra. Aquil
la, Hercules. Scorpio. Libra. Virgo.
Corvus. Hydra. Leo. Gemini. Auriga,
Ophyiohus. Perseus. Serpens Erening
star of the month ; Mercury. Morning
stars: Venus. Saturn, Mars, Jupiter.
"LIFE" AND Apropos of Mr. Bry
THE WEST an's habit of serving
temperance drinks at his state ban
quets, and also apropos of the Cal
ifornia ruction about the Japanese,
"Life," a breezy periodical published
in New York, and having other claims
to greatness as well, remarks editor
ially that the principle thing the mat
ter with Westerners and the West is
that this section of the country is too
young and provincial. Coming from
New York this is good. Or maybe it
is funny. "Life"' is usually funny,
and maybe its editorial was so meant
to be.
The West must plead guilty to be
ing young but as to being provincial,
that is another matter. Probably ev
ery person in the West knows more
about the doings and habits and cus
toms of the rest of the world than
does the average New Yorker. The
typical Gothamite has his vision lim
ited by the East river on the one
hand. Washington on the south the
Hudson river on the west and One
' Hundred and Twenty-fifth street on
the; north. People who live beyond
. : " that shopping thoroughfare, whether
" in Upper Harlem or the Bronx, are
not regarded as belonging to "our
set" by good New Yorkers.
.'. 'y . New York still thrills over "est-
ern" moving pictures, many of which
are enacted and made in New Jersey.
. " ' Its ' knowledge of the real West, and
of the West's broadness and inde-
' pejidehce? and development, is limited
. - V to' what it reads in Mr. Willie Ran-
, olph Hearst's "magazine sections,"
and to the gossip that sifts gradually
r jnto the Great White Way about San
Let People Use the
Schools
By Dr. HENRY M. LE1PZIGER. Supervisor of Lectures of
New York Public Schools
ODAY many of the schoolhouscs f the country are open day
and night all the year round for nil r I purposes that bear
upon our civic or social Hi.-: their portals entered NOT
ALONE BY CHILDRKN. HI T -V ISITKD . BY THE
YOUTH AND UTILIZED BY l!li: M.1. -
- The primary duty of the schoolle.iiM' mii-i -it ! the education
of the young, but in a democratic emnm uiiiv wii,.;- perpetuity rests
on the intelligence of its electorate i! i- i -iitVftiK' importance that
instruction .shall NOT BE C(). ! N ! .1 TO THOSE OF
SCHOOL AGE ALONE. .
The frontier of education ha? Ih.-h i-ic! !:mI hv socializing the
Bchoolhouse. Education is not itistnii-M.". m - three Us alone, but
a harmonious development of the cut in U lna.
OUR CURRICULUM INCLUDES THE1 1 RAIN ITG OF THE HEAD.
THE HAND AND THE HEART, AND 4 SO OUR INTERPRETATION OF
EDUCATION IN A DEMOCRACY INCLUDES THE DEVELOPMENT OF
THE AESTHETIC SIDE AND THE SOCIAL- SIDE, AS WELL AS THE
UTILITARIAN SIDE.
HOT? YES,
A cool home on the hill, two
blocks from the bluff, 4 blocks
from 7th street steps, on the
corner; one street improved,
concrete sidewalk in on the oth
er street; 5-room up-to-date
house with sleeping porch.
Wood shed; plenty of room for
a good garden. $1650.00, $650.00
cash, the balance to run for 3
years at 6 per cent, or on
monthly installments. If you
see this place you will want it.
Dillman & Howland
Francisco and the Alaskan coal fields.
To New York all Westerners wear
sombreros, pack Colt's 45's, and drjnk
red whiskey. Therefore, New York
and "Life"' are duly shocked that Mr.
Bryan should offer his guests grape
juice and lemonade.
Maybe New York ought to be
shocked. Perhaps the process of re
ceiving the shock will make it more
broad-minded and charitable. And if
this results, maybe when the editor
of "Life" next comes West, and some
hospitable soul invites him to have a
drink, and offers him only one brand
of beverage, with the commen: "you
can drink my brand of poison or go
without, stranger, for its all I've got,"
maybe then "Life" will-realize that
there is a sort of noble hospitality in
it after all. The man who has the
consumate nerve to offer to profes
sional diplomats a temperance drink
at a state banquet deserves some
thing better than sneers; he de
serves a medal-Tor bravery.
"THIS IS MY 44TH GIRTH DAY"
Ernest Fox Nichols
Dr. Ernest Fox Nichols, presendent
of Dartmouth college, was born in
Leavenworth, Kas., June 1, 1S69. He
attended Kansas Agricultural college
and Cornell University and later went
abroad for post-graduate work at the
University of Berlin and Cambridge
University. Dr. Nichols began his
career as an educator in 1892 as pro
fessor of physics at Colgate Univer
sity. In 1898 he accepted a similar
position at Dartmouth College and in
1903 he became professor of experi
mental physics at Columbia Univer
sity. He has been president of Dart
mouth since 1909.
WOMAN SUFFRAGE.
The idea of the mastership of
man over woman has changed to
the idea of equal partnership
and right between man and wife,
and the loftiest type of family
life that I know is in the homes
where that equality is accepted
as a matter of course. Votes for
women will not cure nil evils. If
1 thought that I'd take 'em away
from men. But in no state
where suffrage has been tried
has it done damage, and in ev
ery state it has bettered social
and industrial conditions. AH
the arguments against it are du
plicated in the arguments against
manhood suffrage a century ago.
Our democracy is based on the
theory that the average man
,shall be the controlling factor in
the government Our whole'lef
fort is toward that We have
made the average man the mas
ter. All we proose to do now is
to put his ' partner alongside
uim. Colonel , Theodore Roosevelt
MOBBING ENTERPRISE, SUNDAY, -JtTNE 1,
Cost of Living Is High
Because We Are a
Nation of Cities
We
Are
Poor
Farmers
By Rev. Dr.
MADISON C.
PETERS
tt - '
S)
HE COST OF LIVING IS HIGH BECAUSE WE HAVE, RAPIDLY
BECOME A NATION OF CITIES.
Fifty-five per cent of our population todaylives in cities
and towns. Twenty-five per cent of our population lives in
cities of one hundred thousand or mare. In 1950 there will be three,
hundred million people in the United States, and if the present drift
continues seventy-five per cent of them will live in our cities. Then
we will have a FAMINE AND THEN A REVOLUTION. The
high cost of living brought on the French revolution.
OUR LIVING IS HIGH BECAUSE WE ARE POOR FARMERS. TO
REDUCE THE HIGH COST OF LIVING OUR FARMERS MUST BE
TAUGHT HOW TO INCREASE THEIR YEARLY YIELD. TO THIS END
I WOULD GIVE NATIONAL AID TO AGRICULTURE AND TEACH
AGRICULTURE IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
The living is high because our immigration of more than one mil
lion a year CROWDS, EIGHTY PER CENT. OF IT, INTO
OUR . CTTLES. These newcomers should be distributed on the soil
and become producers rather than consumers.
S I would reduce the high cost of living by ESTABLISHING A
PUBLIC MARKET IN EVERY CITY IN AMERICA, as
they have done in Europe. The ELIMINATION OF THE MID
DLEMAN and liis profits and expenses by buying direct from the
factory is the solution of the problem, and the parcel post is helping
in that direct "on. .
eart to Heart
Talks
By JAMES A. EDGERTON
A RAINY DAY.
As I write this it is raining. The
water just outside my window is
plunking down from a leak in the
eaves.
Rainy days have their uses, but for
myself I prefer to invest in sunshine.
On a rainy day 1 can almost believe
in; infant damnation, whereas when
the sun is shining it is utterly repug
nant. .
However. 1 did not start out to talk
of the weather nor again of theology.
Tho things are only thrown in as
background.
So we will literally turn our backs on
both, throw a fresh log on the hearth,
pull up the most comfortable chair,
light our pipes and talk things over.
You want to get on in the world.
Well, that is Just what 1 want you to
do. You can't get on any too fast or
too far to suit me so long as you play
the game square.
Are you playing it square? Think it
oyer. You need not tell me, but you
had better not try to deceive yourself.
We will assume that you are. I do
not believe a man like you could long
be content to play it any other way.
Now. since you play fair, why don't
you get ahead faster? Maybe yon
don't work hard enough.
You can't get anywhere unless you
"stir your stumps," as the saying goes.
The only way to arrive is to move.
Assuming, however, that you work
hard, what is the trouble? Possibly
you do not nse enough intelligence.
Outwardly" all men look pretty much
alike." They have the same kind of
hands and legs, faces and bodies.
They are not widely different In phys-
fiet
Rid of
Middle-
man
Of
New
York
icj.'i i 'i;i:':cl-"ris;cs.
Vli;it is it. t'i 'ii. thnt differentiates
them. th:-,t niiikes one a world celeb
rity ti:.(i til" other a clodhopper? Why.
it is !i meiv mutter of brains. The
winner is bontei to find out the truth
alMMit things, while the other takes
hearsay or prejudice or some othei
half baked or inadequate process.
You have got to get right down to
business and think things out
But-
If you play' fair and work and think,
and if you do all- these hard enough,
nobody can stop- you.
TAMED THE MONARCH.
The Part a Silvar Inkstand Played In
a National Cria'a.
The pages of history record many In
stances in which trivial" incidents have
shaped the destinies of nations. Ac
cording to a utory in the New York
Tribune., a mull silver .inkstand and
the quick wit of a prime minister once
played hu importunt part in the history
of the Netherlands.
William III., king of the Netherlands,
was n man of violent and ungovernable
temper. Although in general a clever
statesman, he was Inclined, for some
reason or other, to involve Holland in
the trouble that was brewing between
France and Germany in 1870. He was
deaf to the appeals of his ministers,
who foresaw the ruiu to the country
that war would bring.
Thorbecke. the prime minister, re
solved to make one last attempt to
change his soverigu's resolution. On
entering the royal presence Thorbecke
was gi'eeted with a rough "Good morn
ing! What's the news?"
"Nothing particular, your majesty.
Only the 'people of The Hague are talk
ing a great deal of nonsense about your
majesty." -
"About me!" exclaimed the monarch,
in wrath. ""What do they say about
me?"
"Well, sir." answered the old states
man. "The Haguers declare that your
majesty has become stark, staring
mad!" Before he could utter another
word King William, bis face purple
1913.
with fury. Jumped up and seized a
heavy silver inkstand, with the inten
tion of hurling it at the head of the
premier. Fortunately a projecting an
gle of the Inkstand caueht In the tahle-
cloth and dragged it off the table with
everything upon it -In the confusion
cne aiscnarge or the missile was delay
ed for a moment
"Sire," exclaimed Thorbecke quietly,
'if your majesty hurls that beautiful
inkstand at my head The Haguers will
nave much reason for their assertion!"
For a minute the angry king gazed in
silence at his minister. Then he grad
ually lowered his arm and replaced the
inkstand on the , table. He walked to
one of the windows and stood lookinc
out for a few minutes. Returning to
the table, he resumed his seat, and
said, as if nothing hnd happened:
"And now tell Hie what you have got
to say." ' " -
Ah hour later, when the statesman
left, he carried with him the monarch's
promise to issue a. proclamation that
would declare the"" neutrality of Hol
land. .
Dropped.
"Why does Miss Eider always drop
her eyes when she meets yon?"
"If you will never give it away 1
will tell you.' She drops her eyes be
cause I saw her drop her teeth one
day."
mm TRCJCRURCHES
Mountain View Union on Molalla Ave-
' nu e (Congregational.) Sunday
School at 3:00 P. Mv Mrs. A.
S. Martin, superintendent. Bibla
sti!dy Thursday .afternoon at
2:0. Prayer meeting Friday even
ings at 7:30. ' Preaching, morning
service at 11: evening service at .8.
First Baptist Church; Rev. W. T. Mill
iken, pastor Bible chool at 10:00;
morning worship at 11100 a. m.
sermon topic, "Ahe Expelling Pow
er of a Great Principle;" Bible
school at 10 a. m.; W. Oregon City
Bible school at 11, and Canemah
Bible school at 3; juniors at 3 and
intermediates at 4; B. Y. P. U. at
6:45. Visitors are cordially wel
comed at all services.
First Church of Chriat, Scientist
Ninth and Center streeU. Serricea
Sunday 10:45, Sunday school immed
iately after; service topic, "Ancient
and Modern Necromancy."
Catholic Corner Water and TamUl
streets. Rev. A. Hillebrand, pastor,
residence S12 Water; Low Mass
a. m., with sermon; High Mass
Mass every morning at 8
St. Paul's Church Holy communion
8 A. M., Sunday school 10 A. M
Holy Communion 11 A. M. Even
ing prayer and sermon 7:30.
First Presbyterran Church Rev. J. R..
Landsborough, minister. Sabbath
school at 10 o'clock, Mrs. W. C.
Green superintendent. " Morning
f worship at 11:00 o'clock, subject,
"Some Memorials, Y. P. b. (J.
E. at 6:45, topic, "India's Awaken
ing," leader, Ruth Brightbill; even
ing worship at 7:30, when Prof. F. J.
Tooze will preach the baccalaureate
sermon for the high school graduat
ing class.
Parkplaee Congregatlenal Rev. C. L
Jones pastor, residence Clackamas;
Chriatan endeavor Thursday even
ing 7:30. Sunday school 10, Emery
. French superintendant; preaching
services each Sunday, alternating
between 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. nt.
Willamette M. E. Church ' Reimlar
preaching at 2 p. m., Sunday seheel
3: IS p. m., Mrs. Fromong snperin
trident .
Zion Lutheran Church Rev. W. R.
Kraxberger, pastor.
United Brethern S. S.- 10:A. M.,
preaching 11 A. M., C. E. 6:30 P.
M., preaching 7:30 Pi M. Welcome
to all. F. Clark, pastor. - .
Evang. Lutheran Church, corner Jef
ferson and 8th St., Rev. W. K.
- Kraxberger, pastor Sunday school,
10 o'clock a. m.; divine service, 10
a. m. -
First' Methodlst Episcopal Church,
The church of the cordial welcome,
-T. B. Ford, pastor, residence 702
11th and John Adams Sts. Sunday
services: 9:30 Sunday school cab-
inet in the pastor's study; 9:45
Sunday .School sesion. Prof. J. R.
Bowland, superintendent; 11:00
public service, sermon by the pas
tor; 12: m. class meeting, Moses
Yoder, leader; 6:30 Ep worth Lea
gue devotional meeting; 7:30 even
ing service.
Lutheran Church, 'Scheubel, on Sun
day, May 11th, service at 3:00 p. m.
Everybody invited. The English even
ing service will be deferred one
week. H. Mbu, pastor.
German Lutheran Church, Ohio Synod
Rev. H. Mau, pastor Sunday May
25th Sunday school at 8:30 a. m.;
service at 10:30 a. m. Everybody
is cordially invited. Cor. J. Q.
Adamas and 8th Sts.
Christian Church, Gladstone Bible
school, 10 a, m.; preaching at 11 a.
m.-; Junior Endsaver, 6:30; song
service and sermon, 7:30; baptism
at the close of services.
Congregational Church, Geo. Nelson
Edwards, pastor, residence 716 Cen
ter street, phone Main 395 Morn
ing worship at 10:30 a. m.; Sunday!
school at ll:t0; Christian Endeav
or meeting at 6:45; evening . wor
ship at 7:45.
By Gross
WE REPAIR ANYTHING
AND EVERYTHING
MILLER-PARKER COMPANY
Next Door to Bonk of Oregon City
' THE BRAVE HEART.
Whatever life shall bring to me,
That will 1 take most thank-
fully.
Some bitter cups my lips must
drain.
Some days be dark with mist and
. rain.
Life is not play, but battle; long,
And favors neither weak nor
strong.
And only he of faithless heart
Would stand from strife and
stress apart. "
Only: he in coward guise -Would
have life -ordered other-
. wise.. . .
; Arthur Wallace Peach. .
Wants, For Sale, Etc
Notices under these classified headings
will oe inserted st one cent a word, first
insertion, half a -cent additional inser
tions. One inch card, $2 per month; half
inch card. ( 4 lines), il per month.
Cash must accompany order unless.-one
his 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.
Anyone that is o;t. 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 tfaat bargain you
have in Real Estate. Use the Enter
prise. WOOD AND COAL,v
COAL - COAL
The famous (King) coal from Utah,
free deliverv. Telephone your or
der to A 56 or Main 14, Oregon City
Ice Works, 12th and Main Streets.
ORJtGON- CITY WfOT AND
CO., F. M. BHka. Wewd a4 eM
eHvrel to aH pr ef the -
fA WIN" A tnaUiUrr. Pfcaa
your orde-s. Pacific 1371, Home
10
FOR SALE
FOR SALE--Fine four-year-old geld
ing. Apply W. H. Timmons, Glad
stone. FOR SALE Fine milk cow; also
fine 4-yar-old gelding?' Apply W.
H. Timmons, Gladstone.
FOR SALE OR RENT 5-room house
at Gladstone on county road facing
Clackamas river, -3 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 " station;
$1900, $850 cash, balance terms
a snap. Phone Main 3492.
FOR SALE Ge4 M new Eety orn.
Call E. P. Elliott, Tth aad Main It
FOR RENT
FOR RENT One 6-room modern cot
tage on Taylor street, between 8th
and 9th. Apply to George Randall,
corner 5th and Jefferson Sts.
FOR RENT 6-room house in Ely
. ville. Inquire Beverlin's Grocery
' , store.
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED Honey bees In any kind
of -stands, will pay f l.l per stand
and call and get them anywhere
within 20 miles of Canbr. Address
M. J. Lee, Canby, Ore.
Interest upon Interest male's 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, PreeWent
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF CSGON CITY, OREGON
CAPITAL $50,1)06.00 . '
Transact! a General Banking Business. Open from V A. M. to 3 P. M.
HENRY JR. 5AY5
GIRL WANTED for general hous
work; good salary. Main 1501.
STOCK HOGS WANTED Highest
cash price paid. W. H. Silcox,
Main 2703, Oregon City.
WANTED Washing and houseclean
ing by day or hour. Phone M. 1881.
YOUNG MAN with draft team wants
steady job. "Phone 2476.
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 7 per
cent interest or first mortgage. E.
P. Elliott & Son.
GOOD PASTURE
For cattle and horses; forty acres iu
o'over; running water, well fenced.
Located" opposite my home on tb.3
main road one mile west of the
West side school house. A. K.
FORD, phone Farmers 296, or in
quire of Charman & Co., city dru
. store.
WHO W'JLD LIKE A PLACE LIKE
THIS?
A fine photo studio and hairdress
ing parlors combined; all furnished
and one in mission, camera, len3.
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.
1 L. ALTPETER,
Vancouver, Wash.
$1500,00-For Ten Days Only 5-room
house and 2 lots in Gladstone,
fronting on Clackamas river; 4
room house an 1 lot Sellwood,
$1500.00. Good business lot Sell
wood 100 ft. by 100 ft., $3000.00;
terms upon application. Also -. 7-
room bouse and 2 lots Oregon City,
$2000.00, half cash, balance month
ly payments. Wm. Beard, Oregon
City.
NOTICES
Summons
In the Circuit Court, of the State of
Oregon, for Clackamas County.
Gertimde E. Clark, Plaintiff, vs. Harry
C. Clark, Defendant. . '
To Harry C. Clark, 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 Courts tor ,
the relief prayed for ; in her said ;
complaint, to-wit: For a decree of
this Court dissolving the marriage
contract now existing between plain
till and defendant upon the ground
of cruel and inhuman treatment and
personal indignities, and that she
. resume her former name, Gertrude
E. Mayo.
This Summons is published by order
of the Hon: J. A. Eakin, Judge of
the ''Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon for the Fifth Judicial Dis-
; trict, made and entered on the 10th
day of May, 1913, and the time pre
scribed for the publication of this
Summons is six weeks, beginning
on the 11th day of May, 1913, and
ending with the issue of June 22d,
1913.
Dated May 10th, 1913. -
GORDON E. HAYES,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
F. J. MEYER, .Cashier.