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About Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 17, 1913)
-J mKOOX CITY, OREGON, SUNDAY, AUGUST 17, 1913. Tough. "What did your uncle leave you in his will?" . - "Three guardians, a lot of advice and a little money."Brooklyn Citizen. LOCALBRlCrS J.. L. Swafford, who has been at Sea side, returned home Friday night. His family will arrive here Sunday. William Lettenmaier, assistant clerk in the local postoffice will spend , sunaay visiting witp nis relatives in Aurora. Miss Sadie Weimer of Baker City, who has been spending the last few days visiting with Oregon City friends, will leave for Newport Monday morn ing, where she will spend a few weeks before returning home. W. S. Foster, of Albany, was in Oregon City on business Saturday. Ambrose B. Mulkey, of Stevenson, Mont., was here on business Saturday. Mr. Mulkey will spend a few days in Portland before returning to his home. O. Langley, a business man of Port land, was in the county seat Saturday looking up old friends. He will spend Sunday here. Miss Lottie Nichols, of Springfield, Oregon, who has been spending the loaf th.aa wiuilra Triailtia- Axrlth fi-iorwlsi in this city, returned to her home Sat urday. N. E. Hale, an attorney of Portland, made a business trip to this city Sat urday. Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Turlow of Se attle passed through Oregon City Sat urday on his way to San Francisco. They are making the trip by auto. J. E. Steele, a business man of Salem, was in Oregon City Saturday. Dr. I. G. Ice, Beaver building, has returned from his vacation. Mrs. Mi Dale, of Portland, spent Saturday with Oregon City friends. A. Kyllo, a druggist of Spokane, make a business trip to this city Sat urday. Cel. R. A. Miller, of Portland, was a visitor on business in this city Sat urday. Joseph Delano, of Twilight, made a business trip here Saturday. Merle Jones, a prominent farmer of Mulino, was a visitor in this city on business Friday. B. H. Welch, of Portland, was a visitor on business in the county seat Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Cooper, of Long Beach, Wn., was in Oregon City vis iting with friends Friday. E. J. Dally, of Los Angeles, was here for a short time on business Fri day. " Charles Gates and family, of Oak land, Cal., are stopping in this city looking for a suitable place to locate. C. F. Anderson, who has been vis iting with friends in Eugene for the last four weeks, returned Friday. Mr. and Mrs. R. Marotto, of Amskte, Minn., are stopping in this city for a few days. J. S. Willias, of Los Angeles, was a visitor on business Friday. Ia E. Ely, of Medicine Lodge, Kan sas was a visitor on business Satur day. E. A. Kessler, of Portland, came to the county seat Saturday. Otis Boyles, of Brownsville was a visitor in this city Saturday. A. B. Dentel, of Buttevllle, was in the county seat on business Saturday. The Women of the Woodcraft wil' have a picnic at Magoons' park Wed nesday afternoon. Special cars will leave for the park. A program is be ing arranged and a good time is as sured. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Miller, of Glad stone, who have been spending the last two weeks at Newport, have re turned to their home. Miss Helen Smith, of Canemah, is ... . i i hi. i l : .1 ill at ner uome wilu tj'yuum icvpi. Attorney Gilbert L. Hedges left Sat urday night for Cannon Beach, to spend Sunday with his family. David Eby, who has been visiting with his daughter at Springfield, Ore gon, returned here Saturday and will spend several weeks with his son, O. D. Eby. Dr. H. D. Mount has returned from & trip to Seaside. Mrs. Mount and Hugh, Jr., will remain there several weeks and will be joined by Mrs. An na Howard. Dr. Guy Mount and Raymond Cau field left for Mount Hood Saturday evening to spend a few days. LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR. Courtesy this js love in socie ty, love in relation to etiquette! "Love doth not behave itself un seemly." Politeness has been de fined as love in trifles. Courtesy is said to be love in little things. And the one secret of politeness is to love. Love cannot behave itself unseemly. Courtesy is the love of your fellow man. Henry Drum mond. in Best of Friends. "Are you good friends of the Browns?" "I should think so. We're taking care of their canary, bulldog and gold fish while Chey're abroad." . Detroit Free Press. Difficult Feat. There are lot of difficult feats, but prolmhly the most difficult of all is that of remembering the name of the man to whom you have just been intro-dii.-etl Philadelphia Ledger Li.y hold on life with both bands. Wherever thou mayest seize It, it la Interesting.-Goethe. ... . Woman's World . - Mrs. Diana Betais Pleads For Animals. !' ) ;: ;J i . ft 138, DIANA BEliAIS. - The anti-viviseetionists of New York, headed by the president. Mrs; Diana Belais. have been watching the profes sors of the Rockefeller institution, whom they accuse of extreme cruelty to animals in the pursuit of knowledge by way of their experiments. This in stitute is said to be doing the most original work in the world in tracing the cause of disease and finding cures and Is destined to be the great center of research. It is consequently too bad that anything should interfere with the work except that which is truly humanitarian. No doubt investigation, now begun in earnest, will fix the blame. PREVENTING RUST. Electric Light a Means For Keeping Out Dampness. Families deprive themselves of the pleasure of having their piano in the summer home when the latter is lo cated on the coast or in a climate where dampness rusts the piano strings and puts the instrument all a. jangle. eventually ruining it Owners of such homes may be glad to know how Americans on the isth mus of Panama, where a similar con dition exists, are able to keep their pianos uninjured. Into each instru ment is dropped an electric light bulb, which is kept burning, sending a gentle warmth through the piano and main taining it dry and in tune. Similar in principle is the cupboard lined with canvas and heated with two electric bulbs, in which, cupboard are kept wearing apparel, particularly shoes and cloth garments, that would absorb dampness and become molded. At the seashore and other places where rust corrodes articles of jewelry and even safety pins and the little brass "stickers" that are no good at all when rusty are kept in good condition if left in talcum powder when not in use. It is a good plan to leave an ex pensive watch at home when going to a rust inducing place, as the delicate mechanism is soon affected, and the owner remarks pettishly that her watch "always gets out of order down here." For the Rainy Day In the Auto. When starting off for' a day's- trip strenuous objections are always made by the average woman to taking the heavy rubber blankets, even though she may realize fully that the rains may descend and the floods come and beat upon that auto. She dislikes those blankets not only because they are heavy, but because they are ugly and malodorous two things offensive to her feminine soul. Now, however, she may rejoice, for a blanket comes which is made of a rainproof rubberized material that is pretty, light in weight and hasn't a bit of a "rubbery" smell. It is a good looking thfng, for it Is of a pretty shade of tan and is trimmed with bands and conventional corner designs of stitched velvet of a darker shade than the blanket itself. It has a separate backing of cloth which adds to the warmth of the robe, but not to its weight. Altogether it Is a most welcome substitute for the clumsy and heavy rubber blanket Way to Plant Fine Seed, Have the earth spaded carefully and break . the clods into fine pieces. Soot Is excellent to mix with flower bed earth. Sand is also good because it keeps dirt from becoming too compact. Having raked the bed smooth take an old sieve and sift fine rich dirt over the whole bed. Put your flower seeds into a pepper box and shake them evenly over the surface, and do not at tempt to cover the seed with dirt. In stead, take a blockor trowel and press the seed firmly into the soil. It is best to have the ground slightly damp. This makes a smooth flower bed. The plants will come np evenly and fewer will have to be weeded out. - For the Girl Who Wear Flowers. . When purchasing violets, sweet peas, pahsies. daisies or any flowers that are worn with a tin foil wrapping about their stems, suggest to your flo rist that be wrap a small amount of moist cotton or dampened moss about the stems uqder the tin foil. Thus the cry "I love to wear flowers, but they die so soon,' is silenced, for flowers protected in this way can be worn on the warmest day with little signs of wilting. Suburban Life. A Monument to "Patience." When "Patience" was produced at the Standard theater. New York, and afterward at the Grosvenor for seven months, a remarkable run in those days, the opera was taken off in the full tide of its prosperity to produce another opera. "Claude Duval." The artists of the company were rather chagrined at having to rehearse a new opera when "Patience" was so success ful, so they built a tomb In the base ment of the theater upon which a papier mache statue of Patience was placed, with thelnscription "Sacred to the Memory of 'Patience,' Cruelly Murdered by 'Claude Duval.' Ex- American ; Suffragists Show They Can Do Work of Men Photos by American Press Association. . THIS shows yon what American suffragists can do. They have all along claimed women could do anything men could. Recently a dozen of them donned overalls, old skirts and bloomers and with paint pots Bud paint brushes in hand attacked their clubhouse at Tompklnsviiie. N ? They climbed ladders and clung to the shingled roof, while they used the brush like simon pure union painters! - A crowd of men watched and cheered them. These suffragists determined they would paint their clubhouse Just to prove that they didn't have to depend upon mere man to do it Besides, they said they'd rather sling paint than hurl bricks .;.. A STORY OF 1925 By F. A. MITCHEL The nineteenth century, so prolific in inventions and discoveries, laid the foundation for some remarkable steps In knowledge of the functions of the body. During the first decade of the twentieth experimenters In institutions for original research became aware that there was an intermediate state between life and death, since 'fife in many organisms could be suspended by being frozen in liquid air and after ward resuscitated. It was found that bacteria, the low est plant organisms, have enormous powers of resisting death. Bacteria of various diseases were frozen in liquid air at a temperature of minus 360 degrees F. There are instances of the lives of frogs, rats, snails and fish being suspended by this freezing proc ess, yet on being "thawed out" after several weeks they revived. These animals were found to be per fectly normal when placed in a refrig erating jar filled with liquid air at a certain temperature. After a short time the animals appeared lifeless. A month later they were removed and on being massaged showed signs of life, often reviving completely. It does not appear that these investi gators made experiments with human beings. Doubtless human beings ob jected to being thrust into a glass tank filled with liquid air 360 degrees below zero. Since then there has been no effort to discover whether human beings could be frozen and brought to life. In 1885 a party of tourists started from the town of Champnix, in Swit zerland, by the old route to climb Mont Blanc, the railroad to the summit not then having been built One of the guides, Hans Twingle, twenty years old, was to be married on his return to Anna Blshof, three years his junior. The lovers, in the first freshness of youth, bade each other goodby, the girl in tears, for she had dreamed that she had been separated from Hans till she was an old woman near sixty, when she met him again, be being a youth o.t twenty. At that age he had no sym pathy for an old woman and turned his back upon her. At the parting she feared that her dream boded, some trouble either for her lover or herself. And so it did. When the party re turned to Chamonix Hans Twingle was not with them. He had fallen Into a crevasse on the glacier hundreds of feet deep, and no effort was made to recover his body. The glacier moves at such a rate that it would bring Hans' body down to a point where the ice would give it up in exactly forty years.. Anna Bishof, though she mar ried, all her life hoped that she would live to look once more on the lover of her youth when he should be returned from his icy grave. A few years ago Dr. Donenshunner, an Investigator of the Institute For Original Research, went to Chamonix and heard the story of Hans and Anna. He found the latter an old woman and on questioning her as to the date that Hans' had disappeared learned that the body was due to come forth from the glacier during the summer of the year 1925. On the 1st of July last the doc tor went over to Chamonix and wait ed for the appearance of the body. He did not reveal his- purpose, since It seemed so quixotic that he feared de rision It was to determine with the assistance of the latest scientific meth ods whether Hans was dead or in the suspensory state and, if the latter, whether he could be brought to life. " It wasu late In September before nans' Ooay appearea. or. uonens hunner had revealed his intention to the deceased relatives and secured their permission to resuscitate, him. He had secured a bathtub,, which he filled with water at 33 degrees, or one degree above the freezing point He placed the body fn this tub and grad ually advanced the temperature, mas saging the thorax about the heart and extending the operation over the whole body. , A record of what further expedients the scientist resorted to he turned over to his institute, where they are on file. Doubtless they . would be too profes sional to be given here. The point I wish to mention especially is how his former sweetheart's dream came true. When Hans, still a man of twenty, had been restored Anna, attended by her granddaughter, was introduced to the apartment where he was-.Hans sprang up, brushed by his former sweetheart early knocking her over, and, throw ing his arms around the granddaugh ter, exclaimed: . .. "Anna, dear heart I am back with you In time for our wedding!" "Gott In himmeir exclaimed the old woman. "My dream has come true! He spurns me!" "What is the old hag saying?" qne ried Hans. "Old hag!" whined Anna. Then, los ing control of herself, she seized a broom standing in a corner and bela bored him unmercifully. Dr. Donenshunner blames himself for a scene that was too much for a heart that had been frozen forty years. He did all in his power to bring Hans back to life a second time, but his ef forts were futile. The incident had a singular effect upon the granddaughter, who was but seventeen years old and not prepared for such a strain. She accused her grandmother of having murdered Hans. The people of Chamonix say that the girl gave her heart to a man old enough to b; her grandfather. RIGHT TO INHERIT. The question whether Inher itance is an inherent rlgnt or a grant from public society has been already considered by such great Jurists as Theophilus, Cic ero. Grotius. Vinnius. Cojas. Puffendorf. Bynekerschoek, Leib nitz, Doneau. Lord Mansfield, Montesquieu, Merlin. Toultier, Proudbon and other equally great jurists and philosophers of all times and places, and the best thought of the world at the pres ent time is generally conceded to be expressed, by the conclusion that the tight to dispose of prop erty after death is a natural and inherent right of mankind which cannot be taken away by the state. It is said by one of the greatest of the world's jurists, Troplong, that no country is en titled to be regarded as free where a right to dispose of prop erty by will does not exist Judge R. L. Fowler, Surrogate, of New York. VICTOR HUGO IN EXILE. And the Attic Room In Which He Wrote His Masterpiece. A graphic description of a visit to Victor Hugo in Guernsey and of .bis quaint home there Is given by the late Sir William Butler lu bis autobiogra phy: "Of the many . curious things to be seen in Hautevllle house the master's sleeping room was the strangest Ie had built it on the roof between two great blocks of chimneys. Yon as cended to bis workshop bedroom by stairs which somewhat resembled a ladder. Quite half of the room was glass, and the view from it was mag nificent The isles of Jethou and Sark were in the middle distance, and be yond lay many a mile of the Norman coast Aldernev lav to the north, and oeyonu it one saw we glistening dowa of the triple lighthouses of the Casquet rocks and still more to the right the high ridges overlooking Cher bourg. . The bed was a small camp bedstead, with a table on one side of it iiml a small desk chest of drawers on tiie other, with pens. ink. and paper always within reach. ;.. "Near the bed stood a small stove, which he lighted himself every morn ing and on which he prepared his cafe au lait; then work began at the large table .which stood In the glass alcove a few feet from the foot of the bed. This work 'went on till it was time to dress and descend to dejeuner in the room on the ground floor already de scribed. As the sheets of writing pa per were finished they were number ed . and dropped on the floor, to be picked up, arranged and put away in the drawer desk at the end of the morning's labor. . He called the writ ing table his 'carpenter's bench' and the leaves which fell from it his 'shav ings.' "It was at this table and in this airy attic that most of the great work of his later life was dona . Here were written Les Miserables.' 'Les Traveil leurs de la Mer' and many volumes of poetry." I-t-H-H-I-H"H"I"l"l"I"l"!"l"I"I"I"l"I"l-I-,i I' WHEN BIRMINGHAM SHUT t STOVALL UP. - . T "Who's the fresh busher on the T bench yelling at'meV" asked Sto- 3. f vail, the St. Louis Browns' lead er, of Birmingham, the Cleve- T land pilot between the innings T t of a recent game. "1 haven't X I any bushers. You cornered the 4- market" replied Joe. MYERS PANTHER ON PATHS. Boston Braves' Lanky First Baseman Has Tremendous Stride. When Hap Meyers, the lanky lirst baseman of the Boston Nationals, is in full stride stealing bases he covers nine feet something unusual in run ning. Myers Is leading the National league base stealers, despite a batting aver age of but ,224. which means that be does not .reach first base as often as men like Bob Bescher. Hans Lobert, Doyle and Merkle of the Giants. The average stride of a sprinter Is about six feet and even the "lathey" s'V Photos by American Press Association. TWO VIEWS OF HAP KEYKBS, BOSTON'S FIRST BACKER. - sprinter takes a comparatively short stride.' Myers is six feet six inches and has the longest legs in the league. Myers stole 115 bases "while a mem ber of the Spokane team in the North western league last year. No one ex pects him to duplicate this- in the Na tional, but that long stride gets him over considerable ground in a hurry. A Cincinnati do pester figured that the average base runner takes thirteen steps of seven feet in going from base to base, while Myers takes but ten. Myers is something of a baseball curiosity.- and bis work is watched with interest by the fans. If the time comes that the big fellow climbs into the .300 class as a batter, be is apt to become a veritable terror of the paths to pitchers and catchers. He uses a bat of unusual length. A Story of Beau Nasn. Beau Nash was not entirely a butter fly, as is proved by the following anec dote: His father was a partner in a glass business at Swansea. ' This was little known, and the Duchess of Marl borough once twitted him with the ob scurity of bis birth. "Madam," replied Nash. ."! seldom mention my father In company, not because 1 have any rea son to be ashamed of him. but because be has some reason to be ashamed of me." Another Maxim Mangled. "Success will come to any one who perseveres." . "I am not so sure about that I have been married for ten years now, and my husband hasn't liked anything that I have bad for dinner yet" Pittsburgh Pmt.: . -i s tt iif i sfr - -1 a ' A Spasm of Economy. " "' " In the early eighteenth century a wave of economy-flooded Britain's civil service. . The commissioners of cus toms, about 1722. were filled with ideas of economical reforms. They restrict ed their staff to so many renins of pa tier and a certain number of pens a year. - And. more, they put their own house In order. They issued a self de nying ordinance to the effect that they would in future buy their own break fast coffee, pay their own coach hire and purchase their own books and pamphlets, except the "Book of Rates." PAWUNG WILL HEAD A. A. U. Athletic Politics Names Philadelphia Man as Leader of Union, George F. Pawling of the Middle At lantic association is to he the next president of the Amateur Athletic union. - That Is the newest item in the poli tics of athletics, and, according to the rumblings from the Pacific coast the south and the west the Philadelphia man will have all sorts of backing for the office next November. If elected Pawling will be the young est president in the history of the A, AD. The senior officer serves two years. Pawling ran against G. T. Kirby last year - and showed great popularity among the delegates, and were It not that Klrby was running for bis "sec ond term and that the A. A. U. men did not care to shatter a custom Paw ling might have been returned presi dent. Brooklyn Has Find In Stengel. Brooklyn appears to have picked np an excellent fielder this season in Sten gel, fornerly of Aurora. Stengel is a hard hitter and is largely lasponsible for keeping Brooklyn in the first divi sion so far. He is fast at 4 an excep tionally good fielder ROUND TRIP PARES -FOR - RINGLING BROS. CIRCUS .VIA "The EXPOSITION UNE---I915" Salem, August g 0 Oregon City to Salem and return Woodburn to Salem and return All Other Points One and One-third Fare Tickets will be sold August 23rd from all points" on the Main Line Oregon City to Eugene in elusive; from West Side points Cor vallis to St. Joseph inclusive; aiso from points on the S. P. C. & W, and C. & E. Final return limit Monday, August .25. Call on nearest agent for specific any station, train service, etc. fOfSUH SET I lOtOEM IVUSDU I l ' ROUTES I I I. C. S. An Ethical Power Now, gentJemenC just for a moment, J would speak to you, not as an educationalist but as a preacher of manhood and a lover of his kind. The question of the use of alchohol by the student when study- -ing, has carried me back to the thought. The International Correspond-. ence Schools are not simply educational, they are ethical; they not only make foremen and craftsmen and draftsmen, but they make MEN in capital letters. For you can never awaken any one to his commerciafl possibilities without stirring up all other possibilities so cial, patriotic, philanthropic, intellectual, moral. The moment you suc ceed breaking up one area of inertia you set vibration moving through every part of the being and all kinds of dormant and stagnant powers are set into healthy motion. When a man's mind gets engrossed with an intellectual occupation and Tie finds that he has a grip upon the laws and forces of the universe, the saloon, the vulgar and degrading bow, the curb-stone loafing, and. the hours of inane and ribald waste all seem to be unworthy of him and his self-respect clothes him in a protective armor which helps to keep his entire manhood Inviolate. A ; great American preacher used to speak much about "the expulsive pow er of a new affection," and, having as your life work the duty of both supplying and developing this "new affection" the love cf the best, by ; which the unworthy and base will be expelled, perhaps unconsciously but surely, from many and many a man. Success to you in your work! The Trained Man Never Worries When the chiefs put their heads together to hire or "fire," the trained man doesn't worry. He knows that there is always a place for him. - You can look your job and every man In the face if you possess the training so much m demand everywhere today. The International Correspondence Scnools will go to you In your spare time, whereever you live, and will train you to become an expert in your chosen line of work. Such a training will forever take you off the "anxious" seat. It costs you nothing to find how the I. C. S. can help you. Mark the coupen opposite the occupation for which you have a natural lik ing, mail the coupon today, and the I. C. S. will send you facts showing bow you can earn more money in the occupation of your own choice. INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS H. H. HARRIS, Local Mgr. 505 McKay Building, Portland, Oregon. Explain without, further obligations on my part, how I can qual ify for the position before which-1 mark X. - ; Salesmanship Electrical Engineer Electric Lighting Supt. Telephone Expert Architect Building Contractor Architectural Draftsman Structural Engineer Concrete Construction. Mechanical En?ineer Mechanical Draftsman Civil Engineer Mine Superintendent Stationary Engineer Plumbing and Steam Fitting Gas Engines Name . Present Occupation ' . . ; . . .' Street and No. .................. City State TACOMA VISITORS DELIGHTED WITH PEOPLE OF OREGON After spending a week in Oregon City on a visit to friends, Mr'. J. W. Turner has returned with his family to their home in Tacoma. They ex pressed themselves as "delighted" with Oregon and tlie people whom they have met hers. They motored from- their home to Oregon City and accompanied Mrs. Nettie Lynd on her return here after a visit to the cities of Tacoma and Seattle for the last few weeks. The Turner family expects to again visit the county seat in the near future ani make its home in Oregon. CHICAGO, 111., Aug. 16. Many of, the foremost chess experts of tho central states ars talting pari in the annual tournament of t:ie Western Chsss association, which bad its. open ing today at the Kenwood Chess club in this city. The tournament will last a week or ten days. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Clackamas .Absaract company to Lena Fellows, 12 V4 acres in D .L. C. No. 55K T. 2 S., R. 1 E.f $2000. Jason C. Fellows and wife to Hazel Tooze, 40 acres in Sec, 34, T. 3 S., R. 3 E.; $100. . Anton de Grubissich Keresztur of Abbazia, Austria, by Henry Conlin, his attorney, to tha Continental Realty & Improvement company, E. hi of S. E. , lots five and six in Sec. 29, N. of N. E. Sec. 32, T. 1 S., R. 2 E.; $10. J. A. Soesbo and wife to Elmer C. Dean lot 2 and north half, of lot one, Jennings Lodge; $10. Addie J. Britton to Earl A. Britton, lots one, two, nine and 10, Britton 's subdivision; $1. E. T. Mass, as sheriff to Ray Dun mire, fraction of tract 110, Gladstone; $26.77. - Charles H. Thompson to Charles Thompson company, lot eight and part of lot one, block two, May wood; $.10. Hazel Tooze- to H. R. Nehrbas, half of lot six and all of lot seven in block 11, in Gladstone; $10. . .$1.50 . .70 fares from John M. Scott, General Passenger Agent Portland, Oregon. Civil Service Bookkeeping ' . Stenography and Typewriting Window Trimming Show Card Writing Letter, and Sign Painting Advertising Commercial Illustrating Industrial Designing Commercial Law Automobile Running English Branches . Poultry Farming . Teacher - Spanish 'Agriculture French Chemist German