MR. H . r ' . - - l l rTHOcslN .s.ocore-J . v ., MORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON CITY, OREGON. E. E. Brodle, Editor and Publisher. "Entered as second-class matter Jan uary 9, 1911, at the post office at Oregon City, Oregon, under the Act of March $, 1879." TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One Tear, by mail $3.09 Six Months, by mail 1.50 Four Months, by mall 1.00 Per Week, by aarrier 10 CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER June 24 In American History. 1497 The mainland of North America rtisrovpred hv John Cabot, who sighted Newfoundland. 1753 General William Hull, soldier, .born; died 1825; surrendered De troit to the British in 1812. 1813 nenry Ward Beecher born at Litchfield. Conn.; died 1887. The British attacked and captured the American post at Beaver Dams, up per Canada 1833 lohn Randolph "of Roanoke." noted and eccentric Virginia states man, died: boru 1773. , ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. Evening star: Mercury. Morning stars: Venus. Soturn, Mars. Jupiter. Due east, close to the horizon, the con stellation Aquilla seen portly risen alout 10 p. ra. CLACKAMAS It is interesting to STILL LEADS note that the first raspberries of the season to appear in Portland came from a ranch im mediately adjacent to Oregon City. It Is still fresh within the memory of all that the biggest 'berries grown in Ore gon this year came from a Clackamas ranch. It is also well to recall that the largest salmon 'are caught at the falls of the Willamette, and that the greatest outlook for diversified farm products in the state this year is also a Clackamas county possession. Fore casts which are reliable, and which have been prepared for the state hor ticulture department, are to the effect that Clackamas county will grow more things, and more kinds of things this year, than any other division in Oregon. Looking back a year or so, it is re called that of all the Oregon coun ties, Clackamas made the best display at the great Middle States land shows. And it was a display that disappoint ed nobody who came here to see if the county really could and did pro duce the things placed on exhibition. In other vfords, Clackamas county told the truth, about herself, and as a result she has profited largely and in many ways. Clackamas county may not be very expert at blowing her own horn. She may lack a complicated press bureau that sends out to all the rest of the country startling boost literature which is more remarkable than it is truthful. She may not break into print every time a box of apples aro sent away; and she may not ship her roses to fancy balls in New York just for the sake of the advertisement. But nevertheless she does things, and a'ii Majority of American Audiences Are Easily Deceived Professor M. V. O'SHEA, "I H NATION CANNOT PROSPER WHEN THE MAJORITY OF ITS Ln PEOPLE ARE SO EASILY DECEIVED AS OUR AMERICAN jf AUDIENCES ARE. THE AMERICAN PEOPLE ARE PARTICU- LARLY-PRONE TO BELIEVE MYSTICAL EXPLANATIONS OF EVERY DAY PHENOMENA. t t There are dozens of new pseudo science8 established every year in America. A considerable proportion of the vaudeville shows are based on "mysteries" of one sort or another. Through special investi gations it has been found that a large number of men and women in this country MAKE THEIR LIVING BY PLAYING ON THE CREDULITIES OF THE PEOPLE. There are regular schools that teach people these "mysteries," many of which have to do with "mind reading" or with so called "superhuman" bodily powers. The average American audience is so READY TO LOOK FOR SUPERNATURAL EXPLANATIONS that they cannot detect what is actually occurriner when a man or woman is "rpndino- the minds" of subjects.,. There is one remedy for this deplorable attitude of mind, and that is TRAINING IN SCIENTIFIC METHODS. IN, THE COMMON. SCHOOLS. American school? "in many places are behind those in one or two of the foreign countries in giving chil dren training in the appreciation of natural 'iw. - - ENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS I , - L 1 I I : : j - - , - ' : A Good Home with Three Lots 5-room plastered house with concrete basement; barn, chick en house and yard; 19 fruit trees, grapes, small fruit; city and well water; lots all fenced and in garden. $1300.00 Dillman & Howland is getting settlers, and is receiving her share of the sort of publicity that counts. This county is truly exceptionly well favored in many ways. It em braces a variety of land and a variety of climates. It contains lowland an' bighareas, and in each section It raises a special and of crops excep tionally well. Its timber resources are tremendous, and its agricultural possibilities are just beginning to be appreciated. It s a garden spot with a superb climate, and it is such a place as Nature must have had in mind when she was making an ideal homesite for a progressive people. In short Clackamlas county has so mucil that speaks for itself that she doesn't have to get up and yell to atttract at tention. People who want the bsst of everything just naturally coma here and get it and that it at it should be. ' A iMATTER OF Next month there is DIFFERENCE to be held a confer ence in this city upon social and moral hygiene. Coming just at thU time, the subject will probably receive considerable attention mainly because the becoming effective of a law pass ed by the last legislature has brought it very much to the front. This law. which provides that no marriage li cense shall be issued until the man obtain proof of a clean bill of health, has roused the state press as have but few other enactments of t'ie solons. Some papers praise it strongly, others are not at all enlisted in its behalf. Among these latter may be mentioned The Oregonian, which sees in the measure little else than 1 opportunity for physicians and justices of the peace to graft. The stand of The Oregonian . and others opposed to the law is some what extraordinary. The Enterprise has not observed that doctors, in gen eral, were In the habit of grafting when opportunity offered; or has it noted any great preponderance of justices of the peace similarly in clined. While it is true that the law may have defects, it; is also true that the measure was framed to abate a condition which is fast becoming per ilous not in Oregon particularly, but everywhers. Washington some years ago enacted an even more strict law. and later modified it to some extent at the earnest behest of its citizens; but Washington still requires that both applicants for a marriage license ; must make affidavit that thsy . are I free from consumption or worse dis- University of Wisconsin MOJINING ENTERPRISE, TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1913 KY'Ta-ow- Uc S"' Q3S3 e:J Jack Ferguson, the Human Submarine, Nearly a Hero Photos by American Press Association. JACK FERGUSON, the human submarine, came pretty near becoming a hero. 4.8 it was. he got on the first page of some of the newspapers in and near New Tort. But as it turned out Jack was glad he remained only a near hero. You see, it was this way: Jack', who Is a diver, went down in the Central park reservoir. New York, to see what was wrong with one of the gates, which bad been out of order for the last sixteen years and which somebody In official life decided at last needed repairing. He came up in a hurry and reported that the rush of water through the gate was so great that his life was in danger. Then the story of the diver who had been caught In rervoir at Boon ton. N. J., In the same way and had lived for two days was recalled. Despite this. Jack went down a second time, taking precautions to guard himself against the rush of water He was successful. He found that the gate was simply jammed, and he came up without trouble. eases which would be apt to cripple, in one waiy or another, children born of the marriage. The trouble with those who com plain of the new Oregon law is that they view it only as an embarassment to the contracting palrties of a mar riage, and not as a safeguard to chil dren unborn. Probably the spreading of the knowledge of social and moral hygiene among the public will result in a different feeling towards the measure and its provisions; for the average American, when once aroused to the menace of moral uncleanliness, will not want to have his own sins, or the sins of his neighbor, passed down to the next generation. This subject is one that a false modesty has too long kept out of the public mind. Real modesty does not consist of forcing suffering upon those who are yet to come into the world. "THIS IS MY 51ST BIRTHDAY" Earl of Powis George Charles Herbert, fourth Earl of Powis, was born June 24th, 1862. He is descended from the famous Lord Clive, the hero of the battle of Plassey and one of the founders of the British empire in India. The pres ent Earl was educated at Eton and Cambridge. He succeeded to his title on the death of his uncle in 1891. The Countess of Powis is generally con sidered one of the most beautiful women of the English nobility. Lord and Lady Powis are particularly rich in charming and delightful residen ces. They have three country places and a magnificent twon house 'in Berkeley Square, London. Congratulations to: Field Marshal Lord Kitchener, one of the most famous of British military commanders, 63 years old foday. Stuyvesant Fish, former president of the Illinois Central Railroad com pany,. 62 years old today. George von L. Meyer, former Post master, General and Secretary of the Navy of the United States, 55 years old today. CALENDAR OF SPORTS FOR THE WEEK Tuesday. Eddie Campi vs. Charles Ledoux, 20 rounds, at Vernon, Calif. Wednesday. Boston American league team cele brates world's championship flag day. Opening of seven-day meeting of Hamilton Jockey club, Hamilton, Ont. Connecticut state championship : f':"A' 111. 1 golf tournament opens at New Haven. North Dakota state, trap shooting tournament opens at Grand Forks. Thursday Opening of great athletic carnival in Grant Park, Chicago. Friday. Jess Willard vs. Charlie Miller, 1 rounds, at San Francisco. Saturday. Central states championship tennis tournament opens at St. Louis. Tri-state championship tennis tour nament opens at Cincinnati. PUBLIC SPIRIT. Are we not. then, called upon by the highest duties to our country, to its free institutions, to posterity and to the world to rise above all loi-nl prejudices and personal partialities, to dis card all collateral questions, to -disregard every subordinate point, and. in a genuine spirit 6f compromise and concession, to unite heart and hand to pre serve for ourselves the blessings of free, government, wisely, hon estly and faithfully administer ed, and. as we received them from our fathers, to transmit them to our children? Should we not subject ourselves to eternal reproach if we permitted our differences about mere men to bring defeat and .disaster upon our i-auseV Our principles are Imperishable. 'but men have but a fleeting existence and ore them selves liable to change and cor ruption during its brief continuance.-Henry Clay. Slighted Johnson. Men who . become suddenly rich should be judged leniently. They have many temptations from which the resl of us are. happily, delivered. Mr. John Johnson, a man of this class.'was desirous to be known as of a literary turn of mind, and to that end proceed ed to purchase a library. One of his purchases was an old dictionary, which, being somewhat out of repair, was sent to the binder. When it was returned to the purchaser he found printed on its back the words, "Johnson's Diction ary." The slight threw him into a fu rious passion, and he demanded of. the messenger: "Why didn't he put the full name on 'John Johnson's Dictionary?" The classified aci columns of The Enterprise satisfy your wants. Wants, Fpr Sale, Etc ' Notices under these classified headings will be inserted at one cent a word, first 1 Insertion, half a cent additional inser tions. One inch card, $2 per month; half , inch card, ( 4 lines), $1 per month. ' Cash must accompany order unless one has an open account with the paper. N 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 that bargain you have in real estate. Use the En terprise. 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 SALE. $1500,00 For Ten Days Only 5-room house and 2 lots in Gladstone, fronting on Clackamas river; 4 room house an .1 lot Sell wood, $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 5-room house and filled lot, $1500.00, or house and half lot for $1200.00. Inquire 724 Eighfi street, on Jackson. FOR SALE Typewriter, Smith Pre mier No. 2, good condition, $20.00. At Western Union Telegraph office, Oregon City. LOST AND FOUND LOST Two steers, branded on hip with "cross, circle and cross'' all connected, and on left side witi connected double "U." Last seen near Sellwood one week ago. Re ward of $10.00 for return to Port land Feeder Co., north Portland, Tel. Woodlawn 2400. HELP WANTED MALE WANTED Young man or high school boy to work early mornings, or all the time if he proves useful. Wages depends on the ability of applicant. Address, E. B. care Enterprise of fice. HELP WANTED FEMALE WANTED Washing and housecleaj ing by day or hour. Phone Main 1881. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Boy's or lady's saddle. Address "S" care this office. MEN wanting. to board and room in quiet private home, call 619 11th St. Two and one-half blocks from Mlain. LOOK this up when coming to Port land: beautiful 100x100 grounds at Mt. Tabor and a good 7-room house and garage ; all newly painted, has both gas, fireplace. All for only $4,300, cash or terms. Phone own er Tabor 286. SUB-CONTRACTING, repairing old roofs and -shingling a specialty. Strictly first-class work only, rea sonable prices. W. M. Price, 118 Seventeenth street, Green Point, Oregon City. L. G. ICE, DENTIST Beaver Building Phones: Main 1221 or A193 NOTICES CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our kind friends and nei?hbors, Catholic Knights, Fire men and the Oregon City Woolen mill, for the kindness and sympathy shown during the illness and death of our beloved husband and father. MRS. KATE FLANAGAN and DAUGHTERS. NOTICE FOR BIDS Notice is hereby given that sealed proposals for the burnishing of all labor and material for the improve ment of Fourth street, Oregon City, Oregon, from the bluff 105 a feet west of the west line of High street easterly to the west line of Monroe street, will be received by the Re corder of Oregon City, until 1 o'clock, p. m. of Wednesday the 2nd day of July, 1913. Plans and speci fications containing further infor mation and the kind of improve ment to be made will be furnished upon application to the City Re corder. Each bid must be accompanied by a certified check equal to five per cent of the total amount of the bid, which sum will be subject to for feiture to Oregon City in case of the failure of the successful bidder v to enter into a written contract with By Gross ELECTRICAL WORK Contracts, Wiring and Fixtures WE DO IT Miller-Parker Co. Oregon City and to furnish the re quired bonds for said work if called upon so to do, within the time spec ified for same. Proposals must be made upon blanks furnished by Oregon City. The provisions of the law relative to hours of labor and security for- ma terial men will apply to a contract let under this notice. The right tp reject any and all bids is hereby reserved to Oregon City or to accept' the bid considered most favorable. Each proposal must state the time re quired for the completion of t4e entire work of said street which im provement must be done according to the ordinances of Oregon City and the charter thereof and the plans and specifications governing such work. This notice is published pursuant to an order of the City Council made and entered at a special meeting thereof held on the 20th day of June, 1913.- L. STIPP, Recorder. NOTICE FOR BIDS. Notice is hereby given that sealed . bids for furnishing all labor and material for the construction of con crete walks and macadam drives in the parks in Seventh and Twelfth street parks, will be received by the City Recorder until 4 o'clock, p. m. of Wednesday July 2nd, 1913. Plans and specifications containing further information will be furnish ed upon application to the City Re corder. Each bid must be accompanied by a certified check equal to five per cent of the total amount of the bid. which sum will be subject to for feitures to Oregon City in case of the faiure of the successful bidder to enter into a written contract with Oregon City and furnishing th3 re quired bonds for said work, if call ed upon so, to do, within the time specified for same. Proposals must be made upon blanks furnished by Oregon City. The right to reject any and all bils or to accept any bid considered most favorable to Oregon City is hereby reserved by Oregon City. Each proposal must state the time re quired for the completion of the en tire work and said construction work must be done in accordance with the ordinances of Oregon City and the charter thereof and the plans and specifications governing such work. This notice is published pursuant to an order of the city council of Ore gon City. - ' L. STIPP, Recorder. 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, 421 Main street, for a period of three months. CLAUS KROHN. NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR POOL HALL LICENSE Notice is hereby given that I will at the next regular meeting of the City Council apply for a licence to run and regulate a pool room at my place of business, 708 Main street, for a period of six months. F. D. COX. Summqnrs 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 I F every man, woman and child had a savings account, the sum total or the world's comfort and happiness would be multiplied many times. The Bank of OLDEST BANK IN 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. to 3 P. M HENRY JR. SAYS to pg-er we 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 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. SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the state of Oregon, for the county of Clack amas. , Charles Wood, Plaintiff, vs. Rena Wood, Defendant. To Rena Wood, defendant: In the name of the State of Ore gon, your are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above en titled court within six (6) weeks from the date of the first publica tion nereor, ana on or beiore tne 29th day of July, 1913, and if you fail to so appear or answer, for want thereof plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for in the complaint herein, to-wlt: For a decree of the above entitled court dissolving the marriage contract heretofore existing between this plaintiff and yourself, and for such other and further relief as the court shall deem equitable. You are hereby further notified that this summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to the order of the Honorable R. B. Beatie, judge of the county court, in the absence of the judge of the circuit court, which order was duly made and en terted of record therein on the 16th day of June, 1913, directing the pub lication of this summoSs once 'a week for six consecutive weeks, - and you are further notified that the first date of publication of . this summons is the 17th day of June, cation will -be on the 29th day of July, 1913. . W. H. BARD, Attorney jfor Plaintiff. 225 Abington Building, Portland, Oregon. - - NOTICE OF FINAL REPORT In the county court of ' the. state of Oregon, for Clackamas county. In. tbtf&f&gr of the Estates of Con-i,falI'Y'-t End Johanna Yost, widow of, Yost, deceased. ' '.JWiite'is hereby '&iven that Jacob F. Yost, admlnutrator of the above entitled estates, has filed in said court his final report of the admin istrator thereof, and any and all persons whomsoever having any ob jections to sam nnai report, or any reason why the same should not Vi approved by the above named court, are hereby notified and required to appear in said court. and present the same on or before the 26th day of July, 1913, at ten o'clock a. m., at the county court house in Ore gon City, Oregon. This notice is published by virtue of an order made by the Hon R. B. Beatie, county judge of the above entitled court, made and entered on the 16th day of June, 1913. JACOB F. YOST, Aminlstrator. WESTBROOK & WESTBROOK, Attorneys for Administrator.' Suite 307 Journal Bldg., Portland, Oregon. - Date of first publication, June 17, 1913. Date of last publication, July 15, 1913. Oregon City CLACKAMAS COUNTY F. J. MEYER, Cashier.