1 MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS - By Gross Jf VT Tmi 'iTnrSTT? 5BBfSBB!SSSiLlS!!fJ?,g"'gg ' ' -B SSSMMSSSSISS I III J pOWvWKTcHA WAtffVA 60 SFBlWfrJ rJQ 06E.' W9HT0Sf ft &ffT PECX) LaxT) " f rP 1 ' VQyA(2TE2 To WAvfe yoj S7?V) . A v, T?V vE' ' Lite nW tXXCON m W J ..: V : :' JWf - , : ' ' - ' 'S" " S)irW ft' ' ' LEVJEo F0? UTie J THE SiHtee AS LMP IT J " ' HWH 1 Yl . - . . - ' ' . ' ' " 5 MORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON CITY, OREGON. E. E. Brodie, Editor and Publisher. "Entered as second-class matter Jan nary 9, 1911. at the post office at Oregon CitV. Oregon, under the Act of March . 1879." TKRMS QF SUBSCRIPTION. One Tear, by mall .$3.00 Six Months, by mail 1.50 Four Month, by mail 1-00 Per Week, by carrier. 10 CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER Aug. 20 In American History. . 1794 General Anthony Wayne defeat ed the Miamis and other Indians ai Mauniee Kapids. O. 1833 Benjamin Harrison, twenty-third president of the Dnited States, was born in North Bend. O.: died lfiOl. 1847 Battle of Contreras, Mexico The United States forces nnder General Scott won a brilliant vic tory over the Mexicans in seven teen minutes. 1866 Official end of the civil war. President Johnson proclaimed' a state of peace throughout the Cnit ed States. 1886 Ann Sophia W. Stephens. Ameri can novelist, died; born 1813. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. Evening star: Jupiter. Morning stars: Saturn, Venus, Mars, Mercury. Due east from the point overhead in the early evening, constellation Peg asus, six stars making a forked out line, occupies alone the vast space be .tween the Milky way and the horizon. GETTING HISTORY Ac a meeting STRAIGHT of Confederate veterans at the recent Gettysburg celebration a resolution was passed declaring that the civil war could not have re sulted otherwise, for if the 600,000 soldiers of the South under such com manders as Lee and his generals lost "we see that the demonstration was complete, that the thing could not be done, and our failure must give pause ; to those who, in the future would con-, template such an undertaking." The ; argument from a Confederate source ; is of an original nature, but as far as j it goes it is sound. As the impossible J was attempted the result was certain J A slave republic side by side with one that was free could not get along! peaceably. The Mississippi was never designed for two jurisdictions. How 1 cou'd tranquillity be expected on an j inland frontier stretching from the At- j lantic to the Pacific? The mountain 1 people of the South were for the old flag. They could have been held only ' by force. Immigration flowed to the North almost exclusively, and there ' was concentrated the bulk of national : wealth. It is true, as quaintly stated, that "the thing could not be done" if Lee and his veterans could not accom plish it. But there are stronger rea be the result of the Confederate Our Greatest A -3W THE 1 IE GREATEST INDIAN IS 1913, by American Press Association. DIAN BUREAU An examination should be made into Indian affairs, and it should be most searching. I am satisfied that it will be easy to discover a large number of wrongs that have been done the Indians and certain and SERIOUS DEFECTS IN OUR METHOD OF HANDLING THEM. Instead of a temporary commission, which can, I fear, do little more than unearth the various matters of scandal in the various agencies (some of which are now being examined into), I trust the congress will Bee fit to establish a PERMANENT COMMISSION, which shall super: sede the present system of administration and have the fullest power necessary to reorganize the bureau. This commission should get such powers as will permit it to decen tralize the administration of Indian affairs,' allowing great authority to competent, well paid agents in the field. : I am satisfied from what examination I have made that there are tens of thousands of so called Indians whose property to a greater or less degree is under the control of this bureau, who are as COMPETENT TO ATTEND TO THEIR AFFAIRS as any men or women of the white race. There are thousands of others of the half blood who are an expense to the government, who should not be regarded as dependent, but; who should get their , property and be allowed t,o SHIFT FOR THEMSELVES. " ' ; : These questions of policy are fundamental. To deal with this mat, ter adequately any investigation undertaken should be one that searches for causes, not for symptoms. HAVE YOU $150 FOR A HOME? 4-room house papered and ceiled, basment, one year old, spring water piped in house, corner lot 100x118 on car line; $1050.00, $150 down, balance $10.00 per month and 6 psr cent interest. Another 4-room house, cloth and papered; lot 100x100 for $850.00. Same location and terms. Will add 2 lots 50x100 for $125.00. DILLMAN & HOWLAND sons why failure was foredoomed t cause. They are grandly stated in Lincoln's Gettysburg oration. The cause of all republics, all humanity, was at stake. If the United States went to wreck what hope remained for any nation so constituted? Two, divided against each other, would be a sorry remnant of the one founded by Washington and the generals and statesmen associated with him. If Lee's army had been twice as strong slavery would have gone down event ually. It has- bean abolished in a'.l civilized countries. Yet it was in the Confederate constitution. The United States pursues the destiny that, in a general way, was intended by tits founders. Happily, the former Con federates are as patriotic as any citi zens. A man of Southern birth is president. The party that bore the chief responsibilities of the Union cause would respond to any new and worthy call. It will come back, but meantime its love of country is just the same. A HARD Whatever may be. thought KNOT of the wisdom of Mr. Land's mission to Mexico, every right-thinking American is pleased with his peaceful reception and hopes that somehow it will work for good. The stiuation is complicated and delicate. To bring about the elimination of a goveijjhient which we refuse to recog nize, and to get that government to assist us to destroy itself, is, it must be admitted, a task which will re quire the diplomatic genius of a Tal leyrand to accomplish. And it is nothing less than that, if it is to be done peacefully. Huerta is in control of the machinery of administration of the Mexican government. There is no question as to that. He is provis ional president in acordance with the forms of Mexican law. That it is only the form and not the spirit, and that he acquired the office by methods which would not be tolerated for a moment in this country, or in any other country of equal enlightenment, does not alter the fact that he is the provisional president. Our govern ment does not recognize him as such officially, but it is compelled to do so unofficially, for it is only through him that a peaceful settlement is pos sible. The Wilson administration in sists that an election shall be . hel.1 Service Toward tHe Indian Is to Set Him Free By FRANKLIN K. LANE, Secretary ot the Interior SERVICE WE CAN DO FOR THE TO SET HIM FREE, AND THE IN SHOULD BE A VANISHING BUREAU. OREGON CITY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1913. and in this particular it has, we be lieve, the support and the sympathy of the country. But, an election can not be held until it is called by the Huerta government, and Huerta, un der the provisions of the Mexican con stitution, as we understand it, can not be a candidate for president at tbaf. election. In as much, therefore, a an election means his removal, he is in no hurry to call one, and is- not likely to view with good nature our efforts to hasten his going.' . That is the knot which our personal and un official envoy is expected to untie. Can he do it? We hope so. For the pro; tectiou Of the lives and property of Americans in Mexico we hope so. For the preservation of peace we hope so. There are' surer and speedier ways of solving the problem than this which has been chosen by the adminis tration, but if it can be done this wa? so be it. It must not be long delayed, however. Fabian tactics and Quoixo tic policies have already cost us much in American blood and American dol lars. We are a patient people, but we have our limitations. IDEALS. Ideals are like stars; you will not suc ceed In touching them with your hands. But. like the seafaring man-on deserts of water, you choose them as your guides, and following them you reach your des tiny. CARL, SCHURZ. It is the custom to think that only educated persons, men and women ..of book learning, have ideals. Not so. The Power that fashioned the human brain did not give the right to dream, to see beyond the moment, alone to the person who has studied the philosophies of Greece or has delv ed in the mysteries of the higher math ematics. . Some of the finest followers of ideals are found among the dwellers in the wind swept prairies who have never seen the walls of academy or college. Among the shepherds on the lonely heights, fighting cold and snow that their charges may live, are dreamed dreams that are akin to the wisdom of Socrates, the reasoning of Aristotle, the speculations of Kant The cohhler who puts an honest patch on your shoe works a little of his Ideal on the line taken by his waxed thread The bric'kln-yer, squaring his brick true with the wail and laying his mortar properly, reali7.es an ideal. : Som;etiii!es these humble followers of Ideals can put their thoughts into words Then, following behind the plow with the man who holds the han dle, we hear homely wisdom which, if we could translate it into words, would add to the world's store of wisdom." Among the higher, finer spirits who labor hard with their hands and still harder to give birth to the children of their brains, we hear worded poetry that Is kin to the expressed ideals of flie best of writers. The Ideals are there. Only oftentimes the expression Is wanting As Sen n res said, these men cannor touch their ideals with their bands They cannot give body and shape to them. Kut they can do more and better They can live their Ideals So fan you and I And by livini; our ideals we do more good than by merely putting them Into words BEHAVIOR. There is -always a best way of doing everything, if it but be to boil an egg Milliners are the happy ways of doing things, each once a stroke of genius or of love, now repeated and hard ened into usage They form at last a rich varnish, with wlii-h the routine of life is washed and its details adorned. If they . are superficial." so are the dew drops which give such a depth to the morning meadows Man ners are .very communicable Men. catch them from each oth- ' er Consuelo in the romance boasts of the lessons she , had given the nobles in manners on - the stage and in real life. Tal ma taught Napoleon the arts of behavior Genius invents fije manuers. whfch the baron and the baroness copy very fast and. by the advantage of a palace. ' betters the instruction. They stereotype the lesson they have learned into a mode. Emerson. v. Attractive. Hlval What a color Miss Smythe has tonight. I wonder if she paints. "Adorer (turning wistful eyes toward the central figure of an admiring circle) 1 don't know. She certainly draws well. ' - . m V' i lii.csL r H H law 2&Z,m I . .JL A fa i i 2L Cllftt3 1 . ; 1 FALL HATS HERE. j Rembrandt Effects Are the Smart Caper. f S -' kx K 5 ,P 5 1 -X . 33 THE NEW SHAPES IN HATS. Yes. they're here, the new fall hats, early as it is in the season( and you're going to be picturesque, milady, in Rembrandt effects carried out in brown. plush. One of the models is of this artist type, the trimming being merely an inconspicuous band of galon. The other hat is of plush, but a little more ornate in its trimming scheme, metal wings used in Mercury fashion being posed at one side of the creation. Dressy Little Bows For the Neck. This is a season of bows, and there is a great variety of designs. Small bows of color showing a combination of silk and lace or velvet and lace are especially attractive. Many are trimmed with rhinestone buttons. Quite a number are made with ends in jabot form, the bow at the top be ing rather small. Bulgarian silks are raada up into bow and jabot effects. Other materials employed are crepe' de chines, plain taffetas and flowered silks. Besides the entire bow of Bul garian design, touches of Bulgarian colors are also used in giving an en livening touch of color to many of the white designs. Plush and Velvet to Be Fashionable.. There is every evidence of its being a winter of plusb and velvet gowns. The inannfflctnrpi"s have succeeded in GOWN WITH QtlEEB DKAPEBT. ' making this fabric In such light weight that the old objection of clumsiness has 4ieen overruled. Milady, realizing the becoraingness of velvet, is welcomine tbe relitv"- i mum 1 ! "4. 4Sf U to-r --Sip non. oi ima material wim pleasure. The afternoon gown in the cut is of a ribbed black velvet, with a queer pinned about hip drapery of plush, which also is seen on the kimono waist fn bands down either side of the front The Mother's Part. At a recent wedding the bride came down the aisle on hei , father's arm, but at the 'roper moment her mother stepped from the pew and "gave the bride away." so that she had a share in the actual wedding. It was a sweet thought that gave her more than the insi'jnincant part the mother usually has iu a marriage ceremony. Origin of Irish Lace. Irish lace originated from the fail ure of the iwtato crop that caused the famine of 184(5 The abbess of a con vent in County Cork, looking about for some lucrative employment to help the half starved children who attended her schools, unraveled . thread by thread a scrap of point de milan and finally mastered the complicated de tails She then selected the girls who were quickest of needlework and taught them what she had painfully learned. The new industry prospered, and one of the pupils in a pardonable "bull" declared that "it it had not been for the famine we would all have been starved." Westminster Gazette. Mary Must Not Marry Mark. A curious idea among the Burmese is that people born on the same day of the week must not marry and that if they defy the fates their union will be marked by much ill-luck. To pre vent these disastrous marriages every girl carries a record of her birthday in her name, each day of the week hav ing a letter belonging to it, and all children are culled by a. name that begins with that letter. It is rather hard if the Marys and Marks of Burma fall in love with each other, as in this country. Unlike other oriental lands, the young people are allowed to marry as taste dictates, subject only to the birthday restrictions. FORGIVENESS. Nothing is more moving to man than the spectacle of reconciliation. Our weaknesses are thus indemni fied and are not too costly, being the price we pay for the hour of forgiveness, and the archangel who has never felt anger has reason to envy the man who subdues it. . When thou torgivest, the man who has pierced thy heart' stands to thee in the relaiion of the sea worm that perlp;ates the shell of the mussel, which vraighiway closes the wound with a oearl.--: Richter. Deadly East Indian Duels. . There are a good deai of savagery and stoical disregard of death left in the east yet despite the advance of civilization, and this extends to the so called sports of the people; Thus among the natives of Baroda there ob tains still a kind of gladiatorial dis play in the shape of a fearful fist fight wherein the contestants wear a very formidable cestus of steel studded with murderous spikes. The (fuelists usually big. brawny, athletic men who have been infuriated for the occasion with copious drafts of opium in which hemp Is infused enter the arena sing ing and set to with deliberate intent to kill, one or both invariably succumb ing. ' - i Force of a Cyclone. Careful estimates of the force of a cyclone and the energy required to keep a hurricane in active operation reveals the presence of a power that makes the mightiest efforts of nyin appear as nothing in comparison. A force equal to more than 400.000,000 horsepower was estimated as devel oped in a West Indian cyclone. This greatly exceeds the power that could be developed by all the means within the range of man's capabilities. Were steam, water, windmills and the strength of all . men and animals com bined they could not even approach the tremendous force of this mighty power. Chicago Journal. Teaching the Child by Pictures. One of the quickest ways in which to put an idea or a story into a child's mind is by means of pictures, and the material available for Sunday school or club work is both excellent in quali ty a'nd of great variety.'- There are Bible stories, films on nature study, films illustrating the trades and in dustries, films dealing with a pure wa ter supply, warfare on flies, mosqui toes and tuberculosis In the fine arts are films tracing the progress of archi tecture, lacemaking. pottery, sculp ture and painting, while in literature there are presentations of the work of such authors as Shakespeare. Scott, Dickens and others. Travel and his tory are also shown. Farm Journal. Avitonnobiles for PHONES: MAIN 77; A 193 Miller-Parker Co. iNot omy tne mine owner ana nis em ployee are censurable for waste. It has been estimated that the railroads, the largest consumers of coal, utilize less than 50 per cent of the heat in the coal which they burn under their loco motives. If 60 per cent is wasted by the operator and 50 per cent of that is lost by the railroads only 30 per cent is actually utilized and 70 per cent is wasted, and not the railroads only, but all consumers are equally wasteful. Francis S.-Peabpdy In Coal 4ge. War-field's Debut. r.. ..i ,1 T -., .1 v. . . p I 1 .3 u . . . ; was due to the ambition of a poor San Francisco man to possess a wooden leg. Warfield was an usher in a thea ter whose manager promoted a benefit performance for the legless man. Young Warfield volunteered for the oc casion and went on as a story teller and Imitator of actors be bad studied. His first salaried employment on the stage was as a member of a repertory company at Napa. Cal. It lasted one week. Instead of Cutting Corks. After withdrawing a cork from a bottle the former rapidly expands, and when one wishes to replace it one fre quently finds that it has become too large for the purpose. The usual reme dy in such cases is to pare pieces off the side. This, however, is seldom satisfactory, for the cork, as a rule, is far from airtight, -and in some cases will not even keep the liquid in. A better way is to place It on the floor and roll it backward and forward with one's foot, putting a certain amount of pressure on it. After a few min utes of this persuasive treatment it will have become fairly soft and can be inserted in the bottle without diffi culty. An Odd Place of Worship. Burma can show the oldest place of worship to be found anywhere in the world. Some mile out of Moulmein, in the middle of a great plain, stands a lone rock so peculiar In form as never to be forgotten after once seen; Ages ago the caves which honeycomb ttds fortress were transformed from the habitats of hats and wild animals' into places of devotion. Thousands of images of Buddha are carved on the walls, and in every chamber bronze, stone or wooden gods are standing.. It is computed that many millions of feet have pressed the earthen floor of these sacred and ancient caverns. Westmin ster CJazette.. GLORY. As for fame, consider the intel lect of the people that are to com mand, how insignificant they are and how little in their pursuits and i aversions. Consider also that as one heap of sand thrown upon an other covers the first, so it happens in life a new glory soon eclipses an old one. Marcus Aurelius An toninus. ssss$ss3ses..sss L. G. ICE. DENTIST $ S Beaver Building $ $ Phones: Main 1221 or A-193 Wants, For Sale, Etc Notices under these classified headings will be Inserted at one cent a word, first tions. One inch card, $2 per month; bait The fj'me to save money is in the morn ' Ing of life. Don't put off until after: noon what you can do in the .morning.' The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY D. C. LATOURETTE, President. THE FIRST NATIONAL BAN! OF OREGON CITY, OREGON CAPITAL S&MOO.OO , " Transacts s General Banking Business.- Open fromS A. M. to 9 P.. w HENRY JR. 5AY5 SMSp( 1 6 TWO BftNS MOKE N5W4ftT inch card. ( t lines). SI oer month. Cash must accompany order unless one insertion, nan a eent additional inser- has an open account with the paper. No financial responsibility for errors; where errors occur free corrected notice will be printed for patron. Minimum charge 15c. Anyone that is "it of employment and feels he cannot afford to ad vertise for work, can have the use I of our want columns free of charge. This places "o obligation of any sort on you, n simply wish to be I of assistance tp any worthy person.! HOW would you like to talk wlthl 1400 people about that bargain you I have in real estate, use the En . terprise. LOST AND FOUND LOST Handbag containing about $4.50, child's gold bracelet, black! kid gloves. Return this office; re ward. - HELP WANTED FEMALE HOPPICKERS WANTED To campl on river, 10 miles above Oregon City.I Good yard, 50 cents per box; fruid and vegetables. Write A. McCon-1 nell, R. F. D. No. 3, Aurora, Ore. WANTED Experienced housekeeperl good wages. Mrs. Frank BuschJ City. ' FOR RENT. FOR RENT Two clean rooms nicelji furnished, with sleeping porch, pat ent toilet, electric lights, hot anil cold water. Mrs. Henry ' Shannonl 505 Division St., back of Easthanl school. for rent one moflern o-rooni house on 5th street. All latest iml provements. Inquire Geo. Randall! 5th and Jefferson Sts. FOR RENT Furnished downsts-irJ room for rent. Close in, 1007 Mail! St. MISCELLANEOUS' - WANED TO BUY Cottage of 3 or rooms, close, in with good view prd ferred; must have electric lighta Box 196, Postoffice. BOARDERS WANTED Men to boar! and room in private home. Call 618 11th St. ' ' , FOR SALE. FOR SALE Good saddle pony, an! two good milch cows. W. H. Tinl mons, Galdstone, Ore. FOR SALE 5 acres land joining ci; limits of Willamette; clearadl family orchard; several varietk berries; 4-room house, chicken cool and small barn; all fenced; o-pasl enger auto. Owner an invalid. Ad dres, Box 8, Willamette. FOR SALE House and corner lol 724 Eighth and' Jackson Streetl City. FOR SALE New. launch, 26 feet Ion 7 feet 4-inch Tveam. 8 horse nowsl auto-marine .engine. This is a fill nlonaiira hnat Tlemnnsfrntions evel ings or Sundays. Bridge Hotel, HI Seventh St. WOOD AND COAL COAL COAl The famous (King) coal from TJtal free delivery. Telephone your ol d-er to A56 or Main 14, Oregon Cii Ice Works, 12th and Main Streetl OREGON CITY WOOD & FUEL CO.J. Wood and coal, 4-foot and 16-inJ lengths, delivered to all parts city ; sawing especialty. Phoil your orders Pacific 1371, Hon! A120. F. Mi BLUHM. F. J. METER, Cashier