r? MORNING EflTERPBISE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 1913. MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS By Gross HENRY JR. SAYS t scowl . , : N vc. jo oife J : : : tf- "i eg mm Tfi CLOCK Bepor tit tlWVrfcr,, MORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON CITY, OREGON. E. E. Brodle. Edlter and Publisher. "Entered as secand-clacs matter Jan uary S, 1811, at the poet office at Oregon City, Oregon, under the Act of March t, 1879." TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. Otia T.or hv mnfl t3 Aft bii Monuis, bj mau l.ou Four Months, by mail 1.00 Per Week, by carrier 10 CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER June 18 In American History. 1812 The United States congress de- -1 1 ...... T, ciureu wur uu uiem uumm. James Madison was president i860 Adjourned Democratic conven . tion met in Baltimore. 1908 Judge William Howard Taft nominated for president at Chicago by the Republican national conven tion. 1911 James Proctor Knott, ex-governor of Kentucky, noted character in the civil war. died; born 1829. 1912 Republican national convention met in Chicago. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. Evening star: Mercury Morning stars: Venus. Saturn. Mars. Jupiter. The red star An tares of constellation S'-orpio seen newly risen above the wnstlienste: !i horizon after dark. BUNKER HILL Back in Massacbu AND NOW-A-DAYS etts Tuesday they celebrated the anniversary of the battle of Bunker Hill, in which engagement the forefathers of some of the present-day Americans made a noise that attracted considerable at tention throughout the world. There are people who believe that the an niversary of the famous engagement oueht to be a national holiday, but so far this enthusiasm over the first real conflict between the colonials and the British has not extended very far out side of the old Bay state. Perhaps this is because school is usually "let out" before the 17th of June, and when school is out the American peo ple are not over-inclined to pay atten tion to holidays save always the Fourth. While people of Charlestown, Mass., were watching the Ancient and Hon orable Artillery company parade in its weird uniforms, and were cheering the veteran firemen, and listening to the booming of minute-guns and orat ory, people on the other side of this continent were focussing their eyes upon quite different things. In Ore gon City, for instance, there was be ing held a serio-comic meeting, in which certain gentry from Portland were harrangulng the local multi tudes, and telling Oregon City folk that they needed a new brand of freedom, and that they should rise up and throw off the galling yoke of the oppressor, and other things. The Oregon City meeting purported to be held in the interests of industrial lib erty; but as a matter of fact it was held in the interests of industrial li cense. It would be interesting to know if the incongruity of the two gatherings - entered the heads of the soap box orators who spoke so glibly of the workingman's wrongs in these parts. It would be enlightening to know if the agitators who came down here and undertook to run the city had ever heard of Bunker Hill, and the spirit of true American liberty that "Votes For Women" Lead to Divorce Court By Cardinal JAMES QDAL rights do not imply that both sexes should engage promiscuously in the same pursuit, but rather that each sex should discharge those duties which are adapted to its phys ical constitution and are sanctioned by the canons of society. The . SAD RESULTS LIKELY TO FOLLOW IN OUR OWN COUNTRY from an active participation in political strife are foreshadowed by the scenes which are daily occurring in England. Under the influence of such teachers we find woman, especially in higher circle, NEC LECTIN 0 HER HOUSEHOLD" DUTIES. HER HEART IS ABROAD AND HER AFFLICTED HUSBAND COMES HOME TO FIND IT EMPTY OR OCCUPIED BY A WOMAN WHOSE HEART IS EMPTY OF AFFECTIONS FOR HIM. SHE IS STILL AT EASE: HENCE ARISE DISPUTES. QUARRELS. RECRIMINATIONS. 'ESTRANGEMENTS,.' OR THE LAST OF THE DRAMA- IS OFTEN DIVORCE. REDUCED From $2,000 to $1,300 5-room plastered house with concrete basement; well water on porch, also city water; barn 16x24 with 2 sheds; work shop, woodshed, chicken house; 3 lots each 55x100; 10 fruit trees; gar 'den all in. The buildings are insured for $1300.00. You can see THIS IS A BARGAIN. Dillman & Howland first manifested itself there. At Bunker Hill Americans, with shot and shell, announced to the rest of . the world that they felt perfectly capable of running their own affairs, and that they were going to do it. At Oregon City some 137 years later some forra- ! er British subject, and a companion or two, announced that the citizens of this municipality were not going to run their own affairs, but that a group of agitators would do it for them. The contrast between these two conditions is quite marked, to say the least and as the agitators were talking to American citizens, it should not surprise them at all if they get an answer strikingly similar to the one given the British when they tried the same thing over a cen tury and a quarter ago. HIGH THOUGHTS There are gata- AND COLORADO ered today in Colo rado Springs, which is a city inhabit ed largely by tourists, people who im agine they are sick, and hotel-keep ers, several hundred editors and newspapermen from all parts or the North American continent. These scribes and thinkers are taking one of the rarest things in the life of the average purveyor of news a vaca tion. They are meeting in national convention, and while they are doing it they are going to climb Pike's Peak, visit the Garden of the Gods, dive down into the Cave of the Winds, and play poker in Cripple Creek. And they are going to have a good time do ing this, because they know they wont have to write it. up afterwards. The spectacle of a bunch of editors and other such folk having a vacation would be worth traveling far to sea. Also it will be good for the scribes, who day in and day out push pencils or pound typewriters so that ordinary folk may have the news of the world served to them hot at breakfast and not over-cool at supper. Though many people regard newspapermen as pests that must be endured, they are not really such a bad sort, and some of. their work accomplishes con siderable good in this world. Getting down to last analysis, perhaps it is the work that they do not do that ac complishes the good for the mere fear that newspaper noteriety will follow prevents many a man or wom an from being a rogue of high or low. degree. People who criticise the pa pers for printing so much that is sen sational, and for filling their columns with accounts of crime, oftentimes do not think that were it not for these sensational items, and were it not for the stories of violent acts that hor rify the world, hundreds of other wrongs would be committed by people who would feel secure in their secret criminality. . ftflaybe the ideal newspaper has not yet appeared. Maybe the editors and others who will spend the remainder GIBBONS Baltimore United States Senator's Pretty Daughter Late Spring Bride A PRETTY late spring bride of the New York season was Miss Dolorita O'Gorman, daughter of United States Senator James A. O'Gorman. She wed J. A. Maher, son of ax-Mayor Maher of Albany, N. Y. Many persons of national importance were invited. Miss O'Gorman was at tended by her sister. Miss Alice O'Gorman The ceremony occurred in the chapel of the Loyola school. New York city. The couple went to Canada on their honeymoon and will spend the summer at Larchmont, N. Y. of the week romping around over Colorado's scenery will make note of that fact; and resolve to get out bet ter sheets when they return to the grind. But while they are taking their rest they will have the satisfac tion of knowing that others are doing their work, and that on the whole the newspaper, in the abstract, is a great engine for good, whether it be a bad newspaper or a model one. "THIS IS MY 55TH BIRTHDAY" Secretary Redfield. William C. Redfield, secretary of commerce in the cabinet of President Wilson, was born in Albany, N. Y.. June 18, 1858, and received his educa tion in the public schools of Pitts field, Mlass. As a young' man he went to New York City and started on a business career which has been emin ently successful. Mr. Redfield is the head of several great manufacturing concerns and is one of the directors of the Equitable Fire Assurance so ciety. His first public office was that of a representative in congress, to which he was elected from the fifth district of New York in 1911. During his service of one term in tht house "ho. displayed an expert knowledge of questions relating to manufactures and commerce and showed himself an ardent advocate of the downward re vision of the tariff, especially on food stuffs and the necessities of life. Congratulations to: The Grand Duchess Anastasia, youngest daughter of the Czar, 12 years old today. Isaac Stephenson of Wisconsin, the oldest member of the U. S. senate, 84 years old today. Cyrus H. K. Curtis, Philadelphia editor and publisher, 63 years old to day. Rear Admiral Joseph N. Hemphill, U. S. N., retirtd, 66 years old today. CEREMONY. Ceremony keeps up all things. 'Tis like a penny glass to a rich spirit, or some excellent water without it the water were spilt, the spirit lost 1 Of all people la dies have no reason to cry down ceremonies, for they take them selves slighted without it. And -. were they not used with cere monywith compliments and ad dresses, with legs, and kissing of hands they were the pitifulest creatures in the world. But yet uethinks to kiss their hands aft er their lips, as some do, is like little boys that after they eat the apple full to the paring, out of a love they have to the apple. John Selden eart to Heart Talks By JAMES A. EDGERTON THE APOSTLE OF LIBERTY. It is not popular to praise Thomas Paine, perhaps the most misunder stood man of modern times. Yet I am convinced that it is just; and. being so convinced, I will do iL Thomas Paine was the apostle of liberty in three lands in his native England, his adopted America and in France, that he loved. He endangered his own freedom and finally lost it that he might give free dom to all mankind. An intensely religious man, he yet believed in religious liberty and taught it to an intolerant age that misunder stood his motives and his ideals. He believed not only In the Ameri can and French republics, but in a re public of the world. He set the colo nies on fire . for ' independence and heartened their soldiers in the dark days of the Revolution. He helped frame the bill of rights In France. He taught the rights of man in England. His "Age of Reason." which resulted in heaping calumny on his name, was written as much against French athe ism as it was against what be regard ed as superstition in America and Eng land. - This man expressed his faith in God in some of the most beautiful apostro phes in literature and showed a keen appreciation and sympathy with the spirit of the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth, of whose character and moral ideals he spoke in praise. Perhaps he lacked education, for he was ever a commoner, the son of a staymaker and with only a grammar school training. Yet few men have ever written in more eloquent or trenchant English. It has been said that those who come -to save mankind are either worshiped, ns gods or chased as devils. It was poor Paine's misfortune to suf fer -the last named fate. Yet the law of compensation operates, and through It he will some day be placed as high ns he was before made low. for that is necessary to balance the scales of justice. Personally I believew him . to have been the actual-author of the Qeclara tion of Independence, and there is abundant proof to support this view. r . At any rate, he was a prophet of lib eity and republicanism the world arouud. and in this age we should not stone our prophets. HIS FOOLHARDY FEAT. A Nerve Trying Climb Up the Face of a Steep Preoipice. In his book, "Trailing and Camping In Alaska," A. M. Powell, a govern ment surveyor, tells how one of his party , was led into a .most hazardous predicament. , He says: We landed on a grassy nook at the foot of a precipitous mountain spur. After supper one of the trio tried to climb to a ledge of white spar that could be plainly seen from the camp. After an hour's bard work he reached the ledge, but it proved -disappointing. He then saw that he could, not de scend without eyes in his toes. If be could ascend a few hundred feet he might lower himself down a draw by the help of scattering alder brush. He spent another hour in getting to that place only to discover a precipice in the path he bad expected to descend. There was another chance left; he might elimj) to the top of the spur far above. No living man could have clung to Ihe face of that, precipice a minute if it had not been for the moss that was rooted in the small crevices. He continued climbing until about 10 o'clock, when' he paused to look down on the campfire and the water, more than a thousand feet below him. He felt a sickness come over him. so he turned his gaze to the rock wall, a foot from his face. When near the summit he found him self face to face with a perpendicular wall about twelve feet high. There appeared to be a small bench on top of this wall, on which he might rest if he could reach it. He sat for a few moments on a large rock that lay at the foot of the wall: then with his knife he cut niches for finger and toe holds. Holding on by these he climbed up and dug a sort of trench through the moss on the rim above, through which he might draw his body. Then he descended to the rock for a long rest before making the final effort He finally nerved himself to the task, put his fingers in the niches and drew himself from the rock which, with the pressure of the departing foot, said goodby and went bumping down, down, down. The man was left clinging to his niches hope and life above, sure death "below. Big drops of sweat stood on his fore head as he steadily worked up. up. and held with one hand while he dug the other into the moss above. Half of his body finally rested on the edge, while the other half hung in space without a foothold. It seemed impos sible to move from that position until he saw an alder stem, an inch in diam eter, that had grown on the little fiat bench. He tried its strength. It en abled him to pull himself up and lie on the narrow bed of moss, where he thought of friends far away and his own folly. There was but one way out and that was along a six inch shelf about 100 feet to the westward that ended on the -sloping ridge. Along this a man could edge his body by holding on to the jagged places in the rock wall. He took off his shoes and set off along that sloping path, but he had to be careful not to look down from his dizzy height to the distant campfire. The feat was accomplished safely and a thankful mortal lay on the green, grassy ridge in complete collapse. His aneroid barometer recorded 2,140 feet above the sea. and his watch told him that it was balfpast 12 in the morning. The English Breakfast. England has known many changes during recent years. Caste lines have been obliterated, the silk hat is no longer an object of reverential wor ship, actors have been knighted and bands introduced into restaurants. But the breakfast table is the last ditch of British conservatism. The Englishman beats bacon and eggs 365 mornings in the year and welcomes leap year be cause it enables him to indulge in that delightful dish 36(5 times. The mon archy may be abolished and the house of lords deprived of its prerogative. but the English breakfast will remain as it was in the days of the conqueror. New York Herald. That Elusive Gray Hair. "What makes me really mad," said the woman, "is to spend minutes, may be hours, trying to get hold of a white hair that shows up on my head like a dazzling light yet which is tantatiz ingly elusive when 1 try to catch t and then when I do finally separate it from the brown . bair and give it a vigorous pull, to find that I have snatched out a good brown bair and left the white tne still shining!" New York Times. .'.. A Long Stay. Belle Passay-l'm tired of being pur sued for my money. I'm going to the country jind pose is a poor girl and wait for the first man who offers him self. Blanche Innit Well, you stand the country in summer well enough, but you'll find the winters just horrid. -Puck. - In a Brown Study. Many a man who seems dead to the world is only buried in thought Chi cago News. Automobiles for PHONES: MAIN 77; A 193 Miller-Parker Co. FASHION HINT By JUD1C CHOLLCT This skirt is made in two pieces, witt seams only over the hips. It has twe wide tucks. For the medium size the skirt will require five yards of material twenty seven inches wide to make of one ma terial To make of two materials thret yards twenty -seven inches wide wlli TWO PrECE SKIRT. be needed for the upper part and two and one-quarter yards twenty-seven inches wide for the lower. This May Man ton pattern la cut In sizes from 22 to 30 Inches waist measure. Send 10 cents to this office, giving number, 7858, and it will be promptly forwarded to you by mail. If in haste send an additional two cent stamp for letter postage. When orderins use coupon. No. Size.. Name Address The Honor of Brave Men. "You refuse to fight me?" "Certainly." "I believe you are a coward." "Of course you do; otherwise yon never would have dared mention tn matter." Wants, For Sale, Ett Notices under these classified headings will be Inserted at one cent a word, first Insertion, half a eent additional inser tions. One inch card, $2 per month; half Inch card. ( 4 lines), SI per month. Cash must accompany rder unless one has an open account with the paper. No financial responsibility fer errers; where errors occur free corrected netlce will be printed for patron. Minimum charge 15c Anyone that is "it of employment and feels he cannot afford to ad vertise for work, can have the use of our want columns free of charge. This places no obligation of any sort on you, we simply wish to.be of assistance to any worthy person. HOW would you like to talk with 1400 people about that bargain you have in real estate. Use the En terprise. J Boost your home town by reading your home paper. IP THE BEST INSURANCE is the kind that you provide yourself. An account wijh us means a safeguard In times of sickness or lack of work. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY D. C. LATOURETTE, President. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON - CAPITAL $50,1300.00 Transacts a General Banking Business. . Open from 8 A. M. to 3 P. M. WOOD AND COAL COAL COAL The famous (King) coal from Utah, free delivery. Telephone your or der to A56 or Main 14, Oregon City Ice Works, 12th and Main Streets. OREGON CITY WOOD & FUEL CO. Wood and coal, . 4-foot and 16-inch lengths, delivered to all parts of city; sawing especialty. Phone your orders Pacific 1371, Home A120. F. M. BLUHM. . FOR RENT FOR RENT One-room, bath and electric light. Inquire of Main 372. FOR 8ALE $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 house and 2 lots Oregon City, $2000.00, half cash, balance month ly payments. Wm. Beard, Oregon City. FOR SALE OR RENT 9-room house in Gladstone. Will not refuse a reasonable offer. Inquire at this office. - FOR SALE OR RENT 5-room house at Gladstone on county road facing v. inv.rvdinaa iivgi, A uiuv.no iiuiu flit- in g ton station; rent $8.00; sale . terms on application to Wm. Beard, 1002 Molalla Ave., Oregon City. FOR SALE OR TRADE New steam er trunk, brass bound, strapped. Address, C. McDanieL City... MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Washing and housecleaj ing by day or hour. Phone Main 1881. WANTED Middle-aged woman for general housework. Write or call Mrs. J. J. Tyrrell, Gladstone, Ore. Inquire at Freytag's store. WANTED By a very plain man, 40 years old, a private place to board and room no other boarders. Want place near 11th, 12th, 13th or 14th street and near Main.' Meals 6 : 30, 12 to 1 and 5 to 6. Address, M. J. W., this office. L. G. ICE, DENTIST Beaver Building Phones: Main 1221 or A193 NOTICES NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the . County Court of the State of Oregon, for Clackamas County. In the Matter of the Estate of Robert; Hanson Wilson deceased. The undersigned, ha ving been appoint ed by the county ; f oart of the state of Oregon, for Clackamas- county, executor of the estate of Robert Hanson Wilson, deceased, and hav ing qualified, notice is 'hereby given to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against said decreas ed, to present them, verified as re quired by law, within six months af ter the first publication of this no tice to said Robert Hanson Wilson at his residence in Oswego, Clack . amas county, Oregon. JAMES HENRY WILSON, executor or tne estate or KoDert ian. son Wilson, deceased. Dated, June 4, 1913. NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR LIQUOR LICENSE. Notice is hereby given that we will at the next regular meeting of the City Council apply for a license to sell liquor at our place of business 501 Main street, for a period of three months. HUNSAKER & TAYLOR, F. J. MEYER, Cashier.