J- MR HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS II . - - - - - - - - - - w , ... . II 1 1 W I . JJ I 1 1 - - . : tk'1s&mifWlH.-- .U"J-jwi"wn.ii,. .iimim.uiMi ' j I 1 f -1 ' : v - I .te:- ofteriho' w : ' , . Y 1V4,VT'3 a "wsrv r-' : ' : : : , ---r freel "rc " " 1 P,Fe -epT rri he A V "cga "ey? -cFTtJ. M ee sews. cit 1"' I j , MORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON CITY. OREGON. E. E. Brodie, Editor and Publisher. ''Entered as second-class matter Jan uary 8, 1911, at the post office at Oregon City, Oregon, under the Act of March , 1879." TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. One Tear, by mail $3.08 Six Months, by mail 1.50 Four Months, by mall 1.00 Per Week, by carrier 10 CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER June 25 In American History. 1841 Alexander Macomb, soldier, hero of the battle of Plattsburg. war of 1812. died: born 1782. 1SG3 Federal attack on Fort Hill, Vickslm nr. repulsed. The assail ants charged Into the crater of an exploded mine. 1870 General Ceorge A. Custer and 277 men of his command massa cred by Rioux at Little Bis Horn. 1912 Democratic national convention met at Baltimore. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. Evening star: Mercury Morning stars: Venus. Saturn, Mars. Jupiter. The brilliant, scintillating star seen close t- the eastern horizon about 10 p. m. i Altair of constellation Aquilla. EDITORIALS THAT BARN Opposition to the ban ORDINANCE ordinance, officially known as Number 6J1, continues, and it is reported that an effort will be waue at a lonnooming council meet ing to have the measure rescinded. Those opposed to the meaaura sav that they base their antagonism to it solely because it is too drastic, and because it works hardship upon the man who has his own littif; barn and keeps therein one cow or thij family horse. On the other side of the fence are to be found the Live Wires of the Commercial club and most of the pro gressive citizens of Oregon City, who see in the ordinance - nothing more drastic than, proper regulation, and who believe the measure perfectly ap propriate for a city of the size .and Husband and Wife Musrt Be Mentally Goriipahiohlble They, Should Grow lip Together CHE s t a- -ti o nary wife, the wife who doesn't grow up, is al ways unhappy. The, mistake women, wives, v have always made is that they have concentrate ed too intensely on emotion. They have made it the only thing iri the world, allowing it to .ABSORB THEM TO THE EXTINCTION OF ALL OTHER INTERESTS. Now, while love is the highest ex perience of life, it is not all, and only the love that is without wis dom assumes to be all. The American wife is APT TO LOVE WITHOUT WIS DOM. I think that has been the trouble with her. It's been the fault of her training. She has been brought up to think that love in the sense of a sentimental rela tionship is the end and aim of her being. But just because she thinks that she is so often unable to keep love after it is given to her. And then what , else does - her future hold? ' NEW HOUSE AND VA ACRES OF LAND 8 minutes walk from car line. New 6-room plastered house, will bo completed this week, full basement; good location; land all improved; fruit and ber ries. Here is a chance to work in Oregon City and for 5 cents and 20 minutes time be in your own home and garden patch, f 2000. 00; part cash, balance on time. Dillman & Howland growth of this community. The Live Wires have endorsed the ordinance with but one dissenting vote, and no body who has the health of the city at heart has risen to oppose it. Ic is touching in the extreme to see a sudden regard on the part of some folk for the humble citizen who keeps a cow or the family horse within the city limits. Whenever there is a fervent appeal for the rights of the common man it is a good plan to look elsewhere for the root of the com plaint. Careful reading of the ordin ance does not show that the poor cit izen who wants to keep his cow or to have old Dobbin in the family barn is very much up against it. All that he has to do is to provide a drain for liquid filth and wash water from the barn, and to empty this daily after it has accumulated. It is also required that he keep a fJy-proof box for refuse not so easily disposed of, and that this box must be emptied at least once a week. The average man who keeps any kind of a domestic animal does these things as a matter of course, and as much for the animal's comfort as for his own. He will not find the ordin ance a hardship. It does not require, as is stated by the enemies of the measure, that the barn must have a concrete floor and must be connected with a sewer. It simply provides for common decency. There may be some people whose barns have not been kept In .even this reasonable state, of cleanliness if there are, it is time the city did something to make them reform their ways. The 444444444 By feLLEN Glasgow, Novelist HUSBAND AND WIFE MUST BE MENTALLY COM PANIONABLE IF THEIR HAPPI- 2 INtSS IS l(J LAS I TH ROUGH THE YEARS. THAT'S THE, GREAT THING. It's of essential importance that the wife should not permit her inimfto become INACTIVE, . I approve of her being interested in suffrage, in her club, in social work, in anything that will keep her thoughts from FLOWING IN ONE NARROW CHAN NEL. : I want to protest against the self sacrificing woman, the wo man who gives and gives to- life and never takes. She HARMS HERSELF, AND SHE HARMS THOSE WHO ARE DEAREST TO HER. Devotion should not be so inflexible that it allows no space for devotion in return. Since it is more blessed to give than to receive, why should one person try to moropolize the blessing ? MORNING ENTERPRISE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1913. man the "small" man who has but one horse or one cow, and who habitu ally takes good care of his" stock, will not object to the ordinance. Hence the wai! set up in his behalf is found quite unnecessary. The ordinance does hit, however, the big livery barn, or the trade stable, that is contained in a ranir shackle building, filth-soaked and un healthy alike for -man and beast. These places, of which there are too many in Oregon City, are within the sewer districts, and should be put in decent shape. They should be con nected with the sewers, their floors should be relayed, and some modern Hercules ought to be found to cleanse them thoroughly. If this barn ordin ances is to prove the. needed Hercules, more power to it. The man who op poses the barn ordinance is not op posing it because he feels that it is doing an injustice to the humble own er of a family animal he' is opposing it either because his owp barn is a shame to the. community, or, because he has been reached in some mysteri ious way by the men who see in the new measure a demand for some very considerable expense on their part to put their big, unsightly, unsanitary and noisome barns and stables in fit condition. HOW TIMES Thirty-seven years ago HAVE CHANGED today the first telephone was put on exhibition at the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia and people marvelled at it and said that it was just the finest thing in the world. To us things are somewhat different. Telephones are on exhibi tion everywhere, and every time a modern American tackles . one he or she says it is anything but the nice est thing in the world. We curse the telephone propably with, more en thusiasm and heartfelt sincerity than anything else of present-day life yet were we deprived of it we should be utterly lost. What was a novelty less than half a lifetime ago has become a necessity, and with our familiarity nas come a hardened and seasoned contempt. The telephone is really a very nice thing, when it works. One can talk over its mystic, wires from Denver to iNew xorK, ana from Oregon City to Salt Lake, and hear with perfect dis tinctness. But when - we try to call up a friend on the next block the lins roars, sputters and buzzes, and finally we slam the receiver on the hook and vow that we will have the pesky thing thrown out of the . house at the end of the week.. We find that the tele phone will call us in time to go to work, will tell us what the weather Is going to be, will give us the scores of the ball game, and will chase all over town to locate a business appoint ment for us, and. we do.n't appreciate it; but when, in the stilly hours of the night somebody calls us by, mistake, or the. other party on the line has a call, we rave and vow that the tele phone Is the worst torment ever creat ed. Such is the way of the world. " Thirty-seven years ago people laughed at the telephone, or else they thought it a fine electrical instru ment; today they seldom laugh at it, and totally disregard its perfections and refinements. In former years we had to wind a crank and go through various gymnastics to call central; now we just lift the receiver off the nook. In former, days we used to wonder what would happen if the jars of battery. fluid" In the big box in the hall should break, or if the lightning should come in on the wires; now we have no troubles or fears, yet we don't appreciate our blessings. Thus have thirty-seven years of comfort ana convenience made us grouches, it was ever thus. - . "THIS IS MY 67TH BIRTHDAY" " i. Sir William U n u-.j Sir William H. D. Haggard, one of uro vBwraa uiemoers oi the British diDlomat.ic Rprvioo . u mil l UUC iOt 1846. He is the eldest brother of Sir ti. tiaer Haggard, the well known novelist. After completing his educa tion at Oxford University he entered the diplomatic service In i869 as sec retary of lecation at Dirt fla With the exception of a few years"at Ainens ana Tunis his service has been confined to the South American re publics. Prior to becoming the Brit ish minister to Brazil, which post he now holds, Sir William had served in similar capacities at Quito, Caracas and Buenos Ayres. Congratulations to: Princess Margareta, of Sweden, 14 years old today. Bishop William A. Quayle, of the Methodist Episcopal church, 53 years old today. . , Le Baron B. Colt, United States senator from Rhode Island, 67 years old today. ; : Rt Rev.' John Grisdale, Lord Bishop of JuAppelle, Saskatchewan, 68 years old today. . i : : i i Beautiful Southern Belle Is One of June's Pretty Brides WHEN Invitations were sent out for the wedding of Miss Ethel McCor mlek, one of the prettiest daughters of the south, to Francis H. Mc Adoo, son of Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo, on June Z a buzz of Interest was manifested among society circles In Washington, Bal timore and New York.- Miss McCormick's beauty is of the pronounced southern type. She is as talented as she is vivacious and charming. She is the daughter f Mrs. Isaac E. Emerson and stepdaughter of Captain Emerson, who live at Brooklandwood, a fine country estate twenty miles from Baltimore. The wed ding was scheduled to take place there. RISE AND FALL OF SAWBILL The End Came With a Rush When the Gold Vein Vanished. Fur from the railroad and more than forty miles away from ' the nearest white resident, bidden in the wilds of one of the most picturesque parts of the province of Ontario, Canada, spec ter like, stands the. deserted village of Sawbill. once a bustling mining camp where several hundred men were employed.- The end came suddenly. Tools were drupped where workmen were install ing a dynamo; dishes and furniture and household jjoods were left as they were when the word came that the mine hud dosed. : The books end on July 31, 1901. The store was left with its stock of goods on the shelves, the hotel closed its doors, its contents in tact, and the postoffice ceased to be. Only a watchman, was left. : . Sawbill grew out of a gold strike. The ledge, reported fabulously rich, quickly gave out when real mining was attempted. A road was built through the wilderness, a "power house was erected, a forty stamp mill went up along with a hotel, store, postoffice and many buildings for the employees. On Aug. 15. ISiiit. .the electric lights were turned on. The telephone line was opened. The water rushed through the huge flume across the lake, the giant turbine revolved, the dynamo hummed, and the power for operating the mine's machinery was at hand. , But the $200 per ton output of the little mill .first installed proved to be only a deceptive lure for all the dol lars that were poured into the enter prise. When the big mill did run the greatest amount of gold obtained per ton was said never to have exceeded $1.87. - The shafts were sunk deeper, new ones were opened, but the wide veins of ore which showed on or near the surface narrowed to thin ribbons or to nothing at all. The gold ob tained could not begin to pay the oper ating expenses. The mill and its machinery, the pow er plant and its equipment, stand as though waiting for the whistle an nouncing the beginning of a day's work, though the last evidences of the half million spent at Sawbill.. are dis appearing before inevitable decay and the encircling and encroaching forest Robert E. Pinkerton in Ontario Globe. Formosa's Ancient Tree. In Formosa there is a tree between 2.r0p and 3.000 years old. with a cir cumference of sixty-five feet and the lowest branches forty-five feet from the ground. The tree is a species of cypress, the Japanese beniki. Heari to Heart Talks By JAMES A. EDGERTON THE DIVINE LAW. In music love is expressed by har mony, hate by discord. Love somebody. Help somebody. Lift up somebody. Bless somebody This is the divine law. Live not unto yourself alone. For get for a time your selfish ends. Get out of the narrow shell of your ego tism. . Brighten the lives of those around you. Make sweeter the cup for some other of God's children. Life is dreary enough at times for all of us. Then how much a kind word, a good deed, helps! - . Our hearts yearn for sympathy as the Sowers yearn for the dew and the rain. - Love Is spiritual sunshine. Make your soul a sun to radiate light and warmth to all about you. Hatred kills. Love gives Hfe. Hatred embitters. Love sweetens and purl fies. Hatred degrades. Love elevates. Hatred is the road to hell. Love is the path to heaven. . Leave a plant without sunlight and it withers and dies. Leave a heart without love and it becomes stunted and dwarfed. Love, attraction, mutual dependence and helpfulness run through all mat ter, all life, all the uni versa Love binds the atoms together, draws force and sustenance to the organism and forms the invisible chain which holds the worlds and suns in space With bonds of affection, patriotism and brotherhood it unites the family, nation and the race. It is the soul of the social system. It is the regenerating power of the world. A child needs love as much as it needs food, shelter and raiment. While the physical comforts are essential for its bodily growth, love Is required for its spiritual unfoldment Love attends us all along the journey of life. It is with the Infant at birth. It Is the monitor and guide of child hood. It Is the miracle and sweetness of youth. It is the stay of manhood and the protection of manhood. It Is the comfort of old age. It closes down the eyelids in the last sleep. . A Nice Little Bull. . An Irish doctor sent this bill to a lady: "To curing your husband till he died. 25." V ; By Gross Automobiles for Piire PHONES: MAIN 77; A 193 Miller-Farker Co. The Pimpernel. Pimpernel petals open in the morn ing during fine weather (usually from 7 to S o'clock and close in the afternoon (from 2 to 3. Slionldthey fail to open in the morning or close earlier than usual rain may be expected. Wants, For Sale, Etc Notices under these classified headings will oe 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), $1 per month. Cash must accompany order unless one has an open account with the paper. No nnancial responsibility lor errors; wnere errors occur free corrected notice will be printed for patron. Minimum charge 15c. Anyone that Is fnt 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. 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 Sellwood, $1500.00. Good business- lot Sell wood 100 ft. by 100 ft, $3000.00; terms upon application. Also 7- Toom 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 Eighth 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 wit'i 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 2409. 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- - f ice. HELP WANTED FEMALE WANTED Washing and housecleaj ing by day or hour. Phone Main 1881. WANTED General housework or second work. Address May Ander son, Oregon City Rt 6, Box 105. - The man with a savings account has two fold satis faction; every dollar earned Is a credit in his past record; every dollar saved is a friend for the future. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY D. C. LATOURETTE, President F. J. MEYER, Cashier. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON CAPITAL $50,000.00 . Transact a General Banking Business. Open from A. M. to 9 P. M iHFtiRY iiR SAYSl MISCELLANEOUS 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 sess Damages and Benefits for csiaousning a street on tne Biurr Between Sixth Street and Seventh Street. Notice is hereby given that the City Council of Oregon City, Oregon, at a special meeting thereof held on ithe 20th day of June, 1913, at 4:30 . o'clock p. m., appointed three dis interested freeholders, of said Ore gon City possessing the quality of jurors of the circuit court of said Clackamas county, to to-wit: John Lewellen, W. A. White and William Andresen, to view the following de scribed proposed street, to-wit: Ail the property lying between and west of the following described linj and the bluff lying in lots 1, 2, 3 . and 4, block(34, Oregon City. Clack amas county, Oregon. Beginning at a point two (2) feet southerly from the N. E. corner of lot 1, block 34, and on the property line of High street, thence 5 feet on a line 45 degrees to the right from - High street to the B. C. of a curve having a radius of 331.1 feet, thtnee on said curve 245.2 feet, moro or less to the E. C. (said curve" to have a central angle of 42 . degrees, iS minutes) thence on the tangent to said curve at said E. C. 48 feet more or less to. the north line of Sixth street, at a point 103 feet from -i he west line of High street.. A .1 . : n . . . iAVn auu mane ttu aoacsfliiicui ui liic tau.- ages to the property proposed to be appropriated therefor and also an assessment of benefits to said property benefitted by the open'tig of such street and the said C'.tv Council assisgned the th day of , July, 1913, at 3 o'clock p. in., in th office of the City Recorder of Ore- " f- 7.ty, Oregon, as the time and Wf such meeting and directed uit Notice jSEn.jfid be given as re quired in Seeuoii '60 of tha "city charter by publication in the -Morning Enterprise on Wednesday ; the 25th day of June, 1013. By order of the Council , of Oregon City, Oregon.- - L. STIPP, Recorder. 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 having been appoint ed by the county court 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 of the estate of Robert Han son Wilson, deceased. . Dated; June 4, 1913.