Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, August 09, 1913, Image 2

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    MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS
lyzLts
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
8, 1879."
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One Tear, by mall $3.00
Six Months, by mail 1.50
Four Months, by mall 1.00
Per Week, by carrier 10
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
Aug. 9 h American History.
17S0 Birth in Maryland of Francis
Scott Key. author of "The Star
, Spangled Banner." died 1843.
1813 The British opened a bombard
ment of Stonington. Conn.
1905 First session of the Russo-Japanese
peace conference held at
Portsmouth. N. H.
1911 General G. W., Gordon, com
v mander in chief of the United Con
federate Veterans, died; born 1836.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
Evening star: Jupiter. Morning
stars: Saturn. Venus. Mars, Mercury.
Due southwest about 9 p. m.. the three
stars forming constellation Libra are
low on the horizon.
AS ONE MAN The Molalla Pioneer,
VIEWS IT a newspaper which has
kept entirely out of the recall discus
sion, and which heretofore has taken
no side in the fight, now announces
itself as opposed to the movement.
Editor Taylor has suspended judg
ment in the matter until he could hear
all sides of the argument, and hav
ing digested the information obtain
able, expresses himself as follows:
"We-have read everything we could
get bearing on the present recall elec
tion. We approached it without
prejudices. We did not know a per
son in question. . Not even the edi
tor scrappers in the case. Our con
viction is that there has not been a
.case made against the court strong
enough to warrant their recall."
OPPORTUNITY The question is of
TO BOOST ten asked as to what is
the one thing a commercial club, or
any body of citizens interested in the
advancement of a community, can do
to better that community. The ans
wer is not easy to give, because con
ditions are different in every town or
city, and what would be good advice
for one would not be particularly use
ful in nother. Of course every such
organizations tries to interest new
sett'ers in its own community, and en
deavors to put before the rest of the
world the attractions of a home in or
near its own town, where everything
is painted as bsing ideal.
Sometimes, though, in doing this,
such organizations over reach the
mark, and miss opportunities near at
home. Oftentimes, -when new set
tlers have been attracted, and have
been procured, there is still work
that can be done. For instance, if a
man comas from Minnesota to some
Western section, and settles down, it
is quite as necessary that, he be pro
vided with a means of livelihood as
it is that he be told the advantages of
the community into which he has
moved. And herein lies a line of ef
fort that any commercial club or sim
ilar organization may well specialize
in.
Probably no such organization can
create a market for the products
' raised in its vicinity, but it can help
find a market. If a new settler is de
voting himself to raising poultry, for
instance, the commercial club might
try and make it easier for him to find
a market for his eggs. If the new
settler is growing potatoes, the civic
organization of his community might
Dollar' Spirit Prevails In England
. t-
' By G E. JERNINGHAM, "Marmaduke," English Journalist
PROBABLY there never was a nation so susceptible to influences from
. the outside as is England. Even within the last half centnrv
France, Germany and the United States have STAMPED DIS
TINCTIVE IMPRESSIONS upon English manners and customs and
greatly modified the course of thought othe country and the character
of its people. . ' : -
.IT IS A HARLEQUIN JOHN BULL THAT WOULD NOW BE A
BETTER REPRESENTATIVE OF THE RACE. -TO HAVE A FRENCH
MIND IN AN ENGLISH BODY IS ATTEMPTED BY MANY A COM
BINATION TO WHICH IS OCCASIONALLY ADDED THE " DOLLAR
SPIRIT PECULIAR TO NEW YORK. - ENGLAND IS THE PARADISE
OF THE UNSOCIABLE.
It is the millionaire who is the attraction, nofc the woman nor the wit.
EVERYTHING IS FOR SALE family portraits.'treasures accumu
lated through ages, the--estates, wines, cigars, motorcars, titles, friend;!,
6ons, daughters.
NEAR BARCLAY SCHOOL
5-room house with bath and
pantry, hot and cold ater, elec
tric lights basement; lot 66x105.
You can watch your children go
in the school house door from
this place. $1500.00; $500.00
cash balance on every easy
terms. . "
Dillman & Howland
Weinhard Building
do m,uch by making it easy for him
to dispose of his crop. Such work
can be done by urging local grocery
men, butchers, commission men and
other merchants to buy home-grown
produce in preference to buying prod
uce elsewhere.
Buying home-grown stuff at home
not only helps the settler, but it helps
ths market community. The farmer
who drives into town with a load of
spuds, and who can sell them for cash
in town, is pretty apt to spend some
of that cash next door buying goods
for dresses for his children, or shoes
for the boys, or shingles for, the barn.
On the other hand, if the farmer
drives into town with a load of spuds,
and his crop is not purchased, he will
either drive on to the next town to
dispose of themi, and do his buying
there; or he Will drive back home
again with a well-deve'oped grouch,
will ship his produce to some metro
politan market, and will then order
what he needs from a mail-order
house in Chicago.
In such cases the central community
of his district gets no benefit from
his presence. And the settler will
not be a booster for the community,
and if any of his friends back East
write to him . and ask him about his
new home, he will answer them that
it is si. pretty place, but that there is
no use of their coming out, as the
trade field is limited. And in that
way he becomes an actual hindrance
to the community, and cannot be
blamed for so being.
This is a side of the commercial
club question that is not sufficiently
regarded in many Western commun
ities. The organizations of this na
ture that look after settlers after they
arrive, it will be found, are the ones
that have a "follow-up system," and
that never cease their interest in peo
ple. They not only get more settlers,
but they place benefits in the way of
those they have secured, and they
help build up both the central town
and the surrounding territory. And
they do all this without spending any
extra money, but merely by urging
their own members to always buy
what the farmer has to sell. They
may not buy at a very high figure,
perhaps, but they always buy, and
buy for cash. And the greater share
of this cash stays in the town through
other trade channels.
North Yakima, for instance, is such
a town. Its commercial club is never
greatly concerned about the Panama
canal, or about coast-wide confer
ences. Its chief business is to make
the lot of peopfe near North Yakima
as happy and as prosperous as pos
sible. Thai it has . $2,000-an-aere ap
p'.e land on which to work makes no
difference. Hoquiam .where acreage
can be had for $100, is working along
the same lines. North Yakima has
been at ii longer than any other com
munity, perhaps, and now all the lit
erature sent out by the North Yakima
Commercial club bears in red . ink
across it the following legend: "Pros
pective settlers who have not at least
$2,000 are not advised to come to this
region."
When a commercial club can print
things like that on its literature there
OREGON CITY. OREGON, SATURDAY,.
must be a reason. North Yakima has
looked after its own, and that is the
reason. Hoquiam's commercial club
is Coing much the same as did North
Yakima's club, and Hoquiam's terri
ory is developing in much the same
way. Other commercial clubs might
do well to copy after these two. Look
ing after one's own may seem selfish,
but it pays. And it is logical.
"THIS IS MY 37TH SlRTHDAY"
I
Earl of Lvtton
-. Victor Alexander George Robert
Lytton, second Earl of Lytton, was
born in Simla, India, Aug. 9, 1876. He
is a grandson of the great novelist,
Bulwer Lytton, and son of the diplo
matist and poet who chose the pseu
donym "Owen Meredith." The -present
Earl succeeded his father in the
title in 1891. He is said to have in
herited, to a large extent, the brill
iancy of his father and grandfather
He has taken a promient part of the
debates in the House of Lords and is
generally regarded as one of the best
orators among the younger genera
tion of British statesmen.
Congratulations to:
Louis v. Hanha, governor of North
Dakota, 52 years old today.
Marvin . Hughitt, former president
of the Chicago and Northwestern
railway, 7G years old today.
Charles Nagel, former Secretary of
Commerce and Labor, 64 years old to
day. Talks
"THE STRAIGHT GAME." .
George Robinson (not his real name),
twenty-four years old, a 'prisoner in
his Britannic majesty's prison of
Wormwood Scrubbs. saw no use in
his continued living, so he hanged
himself in his cell. . And that was the
end of a man who. still very young,
thought that all hope ended for him
when the prison door closed behind
him.
When hope dies, all dies.
In the working of the universe, wise,
though often inscrutable, everything
has a purpose. Even the pitifully short
and bard life. of George Robinson will
help to uplift the world, for he left
a message.
Before he died he wrote a note to a
young woman. In it he said:
The straight game Is the best, after all.
You who laugh at preaching, who
think the teachings of the moralists
are "rot." think over the testimony of
the poor burglar convict. For himself
he realized too late that "the straight
game is the best." ; At the end of a
short note to his sweetheart be
preached the lesson to the world, that
others might read and profit thereby.
He had followed the crooked path,
knew the weariness of the journey and
the disappointment that lies at the
farther end. From afar he had be
held the straight road, traveled in
honor and respect, with hard toil per
haps, but still with the strong arm of
consciousness of right to help over the
rough places. He lacked the courage
t cross over.
He had played the crooked game and
knew that in it the cards are "stacked"
u gainst the player, the dice are loaded,
the roulette wheel is weighted. -
You can't beat it.
He knew the game was crooked, but
he had not the moral courage to break
away from it. To its very crooked
end he played it. for suicide is a
cnmked way of finishing the game, of
casting aside the world's burdens and
responsibilities.
The message of George Robinson
proved that he had intellect enough to
appreciate the meaning of life. If be
bad but had -the courage to stick it
out to the end and to serve his tern,
something might have been made of
him.
1 1 yon are playing" the crooked game
and think yon are going to "get away"
with it think of the convict of Worm
wood Scrubhs and his last message to
the world.
LUCK. . ,
Luck is of your own making.
Luck means rising at 6 in the more- ,
ing and living on $ I a day if you
can make $2. Luck means the hard
ships and privations you have not
hesitated to endure, the long nights
devoted to hard work. Luck means
the appointments' you have' never
failed to keep, the train you have
never failed to catch. Luck means
the trusting in God and your own
resources. Luck comes to them
who help themselves and know
how to wait. Max O'Rell.
"Would you marry a man who nas
the reputation of being not more than
half, witted?"
. "No. but I'll be a sister to you."
Houston Post.
Howard Elliott Rose From $40
A Month to $100,000 a Year
Hj . v y s,y- I
Photo copyright. 1913. by American Press Association. -
THIRTY years ago Howard Elliott followed Horace Greeley's advice and
went west He became a forty dollar a month clerk at Burlington,
la. Now he retuius east to become the $100,000 a year president of
the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad. How did be do it?
Hard work, backed by a well grounded education. His parents weren't
wealthy, and he had a hard struggle to get through Harvard. He was born in
New York city, brought up in New England and won his success in the west
He became president of the Northern Pacific, succeeding Charles S. Mellen
Now he succeeds Mellen as head of the New Haven system. He announces a
new "open door" policy for the New England lines, which will be in contrast
.with the stand of President Mellen, who has long been under fire
When She Motors.
All binds of fashions this year have
their origin in the far east. Now we
have the Bedouin motor cap. which is
slightly modified to suit western
9 " i1"
THE BEDOUIN AUTO OA.
tastes, but the" chief characteristics of
the old piece of headgear are clearly
seen - -
The puffed crown is of bright green
silk and the brim of gray straw.
About the crown Is .a. band of black
velvet dotted with green silk roses.
The veil is of white washable chiffon
cloth.
A Good Suggestion.
When yon go on your summer trip
have four or five pieces of mat or
straw board cut the' size of the inside
of your trunk, so that they will slip
in easily. Wrap dresses in tissue
paper and tie to these boards with
tape. Ytn can pack or unpack and
nothing net-d lie disturbed until it Is
ready to be worn. ' You may almost
live in a trunk with such an arrange
ment - ' .
To Launder Handkerchiefs.
A sheet of glass large enough to bold
two handkerchief on each side Is a
convenient article to put In the trunk
It can be easily exposed to light and
air and irons handkerchiefs better than
a u'indowpane or tuirror.
Sny on Shape.
The Lady What's . the new curate
like. John? John The queerest figure
o' a mau you ever saw. They tells
me as 'ow the only wearin' apparel 'e
can buy ready made is his umbrelly.
London Sphere. -
."TV;
AUGUST 9, 1913.
The Whole Show.
When Rubinstein was traveling
through (he Dnited States upon a con
cert tour it chanced that Barnum's cir
cus followed exactly the same route
chosen by the great Russian." On one
occasion, when the train was filled with
snake charmers, acrobats, clowns and
the like, the guard, noticing perhaps
Rubinstein's remarkable appearance,
asked . hi tn. "Do you belong to the
show';"' Turning his leonine head with
a savage shake. Rubinstein fiercely
growled out, "Sir, I am the show!"
Wants, For Sale, Etc
Notices under these classified headings
will De inserted at one cent a wcn-d, first
tions. One inch card, $2 per month; balf
Inch card, ( 4 lines), $1 per month.
Cash must accompany order unless one
Insertion, half a cent additional inser
his an open account with the paper. No
financial responsibility for errors; where
errors occur free corrected HOtice will be
printed for patron. Minimumcharge 15c.
Anyone that isU 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 -o obligation of any
sore oh you, v simply wish to be
of assistance t0 any worthy person.
HOW" would you like to alk " with
1400 people about that bargain you
have in real estate. Use the En-
- terprise.
LOST AND FOUND
LOST Saturday, August 3rd light
gray ta?'ired jacket on Molalla
road. Leave at this office,
HELP WANTED FEMALE
WANTED Experienced housekeeper,
.-, good wages. Mrs. Frank Busch,
gtty. ".-
MISCELLANEOUS
CAPABLE woman would ' like plain
sewing and dress-makins in country
home by the week. Address "X"
care Enterprise."
LADY can get good board and room
for $15.00 per month at Willamette.
Address H. B. W., csre this office.
WANTED Ten hop-pickers. Write or
phone at my expense. A, A. Grinde,
Silverton, Ore. . '
By Gross
ELECTRICAL WORK
Contracts, Wiring and Fixtures
WE DO IT
Miller-lParker Co.
WANTED Middle aged woman would
like work as housekeeper "between
Oregon City and -Portland. Ad
dress "C" care Enterprise.
WANTED To trade lots in first-class
city in Kansas for rooming house or
Oregon City real estate. What
have: you to offer? Inquire 311 J.
Adams Et.
I-
FOR. RENT.
FOR RENT Four clean rooms. 114
18th St. Come-and see these.
NICELY furnished housekeeping
rooms for rent, new building. Pa
cific phone 1292 or inquire Seventh
Street Hotel on the hill.
FOR RENT Furnished downstairs
room for rent Close in, 1007 Main
St.
FOR RENT Two clean rooms nicely
furnished, with sleeping porch, pat
ent toilet, electric lights, hot and
cold water. Mrs. Henry Shannon,
505 Division St., back of Eastham
school.
FOR SALE.
GLADSTONE PROPERTY, For Rent
One and one-half acres, t good
barn, .other outbuildings, house
partly furnished throughout, piano
included, fruit trees, garden in,
- shade trees; will rent for one year,
six months in advance $14 per
mont'i. : This property is located on
one of the most beautiful spots on
the Clackamas river. I also have a
5-room new bungalow with modern
conveniences, including basement;
this would make an ideal home, for
$12 per month. Come and see these
places. Gladstone Real Estate as
sociation. Percy A. Cross, head
quarters at Gladstone.
PUPS FOR SALE Four hound pups,
will sell for fl.00 eagh. 2 months
o'd. Others sold for $5.00 do not
care to keep these longer. Have
one 10 months old, male, for $5.00.
Will deliver to Oregon City. Harry
Howe, Oregon City, Rt. No. 2, Box
155.
FOR SALE House and corner lot.
724 Eighth and Jackson Streets,
City. '
WOOD AND COAL
COAL : COAL
The1 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. BLTJHM.
NOTICES
ORDER
In the County Court of the state of
Oregon, for the county of Clack
amas. In the matter of the guardianship of
Frieda Braunschweiger, an : insane
person.
It appearing to this court from the pe
tition this day presented and filed
by Edward Braunschweiger, the
guardian of the person and estate of
Frieda, Braunschweiger, an insane
person, praying for an order of sale
of the undivided interest in certain
real estate belonging to said ward,
described as follows: An undivid
ed one-fourth interest in lot num
bered nine (9) in .block numbered
- forty-nine (49) in Oregon Iron &
Steel company's first addition to the
, town of Oswego, in Clackamas coun-
'' ty, state of Oregon thativ is for
-the best interest, of aid, ward "and
necessary that said eal estaie be
sold. -
It is therefore ORDERED . that the
next of kin of said ward, or persons
interested in said estate, appear be
' Make our bank your financial home.
- The strongest plank in our platform
is depositor's protection.
The Bank of Oregon City
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
D. C. LATOURETTE, President
THE FIRST NATIONAL BAN);
OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
CAPITAL $507X0.00
Transacts a General Banking Busines. Open from A M. to S P. hi
HENRY JR.5AY5
His EifrW
fore this court on Monday, the 11th
day of August, 1913, at 2:00 o'clock
p. m., in the court room of this
court at the court house in the
county of Clackamas, state of Ore
gon, then and there to show cause
why an order should not be granted
for the sale of said real estate.
And it is furthered ORDERED that a
copy of this order be published at
least once a week for three succes
sive weeks before the said day of
hearing, in the t "Morning Enter
prise," a newspaper of general cir
culation in said county of Clack
amas, state of Oregon, published at
Oregon City.
'.... R. B. BEATIE,
Judge.
Dated July 18th, 1913, and first
published July 19th,' 1913. -
SUMMONS
ili L iit viivuit, uuuil Ul lilt. DLttlC Ul
-jiOBio jo A"unoo St; aoj 'noSajo
amas.
Gertrude Harrington, Plaintiff,
vs.
Jere M. Harrington, Defendant.
To Jere M. Harrington, defendant:
In the Name of the State of Ore
gon: You are hereiy required to ap
pear and answer the complaint filed
against you in the above entitled
action on or before August 25, 3913;
and if you fail to answer for want
" thereof, the plaintiff will take a de
cree dissolving the marriage rela
tion now existing between you and
and the plaintiff, and also for the
restoration of her maiden name,
Gertrude Greaves.
' Service of this summons is made
upon you by publication in pursu
ance of an order of the Hon. J. A.
Eakin. circuit judge of Clackamas
county, made July 11th, 1913, direct
ing such publicatiou in the Morning
Enterprise once a week for six (6)
successive weeks, the first publica
tion being July 12, 1913, and the
last being August 23, 1913.
B. N. HICKS,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
iNOTICE OF MEETING OF VIEWERS
" to- assess damages and benefits
for establishing a street on the
bluff between Sixth and Seventh
streets.
Notice is hereby given the city coun
cil of Oregon City, Oregon, at spe-
' cial meeting thereof held on the
29th day of July, 1913, at 9:30
o'clock a. m., appointed three dis
interested free holders, of said Ore-
jurors ot tne circuit court or saw
Clackamas county, to-wit: O. D.
Eby, John Lewellyn and Fred Mc-
Panclanl trt vipw tho fnllnwinp' de
scribed proposed street, to-wit: All
of the property lying between ana
west of the following described line:
4. block 34. Oregon City. Clackamas
county, Oregon.
tteeinnme nr. a nomr. two zi ree
southerly from the N. E. corner Oi
lot i, ciock ana on me property
line nf TTie'h Krpat thpnpe feer
from High street to the B. C. of
curve having a radius of 331.1 feet:
thence on said curve 245.2 fee:
grees, 36 minutes) ; thence on
tangent to said curve at said E. C
s ieet more or less to t;is norci
line of Sixth street, at a point 10:
. ieet. irom tne west, line oi jnigi
street. v.
And make an assessment of tht
!' damages to the property propdse;
an assessment oi Denents to sai
property benefitted by the openin;
ui sucii si.reec. ana tne saia cit.
council assigned Monday, the 19t"
IIH.V (IT AlllflHI.- 1 M I A- I : . , 1 1 nfTtlir,
as the tim-e and nlace nf Knoh -mp!
ing ami uirecteu mat notice snoui
or tne city cnarrer rv mm icat.inn 1
lug iviumijig niuLtjrpnse r riua,y. iu
8th day of August, 1913.
gon City, Oregon.
L. STIPP, Recorder.
F. J. MEYER, Cashie