MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS iy.frOSH IT ty&S AFELLER.T ' . AMOUNT To SOtfE THfrjTj . f op POCT6J2.J HeAiN"rA I P,& rftY C f6' CmCt) ; IfOUp To BE THE TATHEfcOP HT? Trfl Hes rfA BE A CIVIL- , I 6NA SCOW OP To . A frieS, AtfCfrVd MTVemJ -WoiHen At if j nwi J L y l'teee, pea LAvflfep-J ANoTriisr rto send babv AsW ( fro-M' SCT (?) , v 1 ' MORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON) CITY, OREGON. E. E. BRODIE Entered as second-class matter January 9, 1911, at the postoffice at Oregon City, under the Act of March 2, 1879. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION One year by mail : $3.00 Six months by mail .. 1.50 Four months by mail , 1.00 Per week, by carrier -- .10 CITY OFFICIAL THE GOSPEL OF By bond issues and by appropriations through the GOOD ROADS various county being spread over the length and breadth of the state and the logic of road improvement has taken a firmer hold on the minds of the people than ever before in the history of the movement. For more than 20 years, the gospel of road improvement has been taught in all of the commercial clubs and public spirited organizations every where but the question has been neglected from time to time because of the expense that is involved, the ultimate saving both to the city and to the country haying been lost sight of in face of the original cost. But, today, conditions have materially changed. Everywhere -over the state, the people are awakening to a realization that only by the construction of better roads and by the improvement of those that they have can they reduce the cost of transportation to the city markets and cut down the ex pense to the farmer with a resulting increase in the size of his bank account. Jackson county has been one of the leaders of the state in the matter of good roads. A pavement highway that will later form one of the 'links in the great Pacific Highway stretching up and down the coast will be con structed under the direction of Major Bowlby, state highway engineer, at a cost of $500,000. Last Tuesday, the people of that county voted the bonds that would make that unit in the state government one long line of highway creditable not only to the county that builds it but to the state in which it lies. For good roads clo not only reflect credit upon the builder of them but they spread the contagion through neighboring and adjoining counties and dis tricts and inspire -in other governmental units the ambition to show them selves as energetic and progressive as those that have them. ' Good roads are more contagious than smallpox. They spread the fever rapidly through -communities and counties and increase in virilence as they spread. There is nothing better than a good road to enforce the" logic of road improvement and there is no more wholesome force for the betterment of the public highways than the existence, either in this county or adjoining ones, of thoroughfares that are completely up to date in the matter of scien tific construction and engineering. For the improvement of the highways of the state, Jackson county has taken a step in the right direction. Its heavy vote for the construction of the new highway" indicates the progressiveness of the voting strength of that unit in the state government. It shows that the farmers there re alize the importance of a good road in the question of transportation of products to the markets and that this importance has been impressed upon the people of the cities in the county until they have supported heavily and enthusiastically the demand of those farmers for better road work and more road work through the districts. ' , Such a step on the part of Jackson county will have a wholesome effect upon the other units of the state in the matter of road improvement. It will show other counties how a good permanent highway can be built at a cost that is in nowise prohibitive. It will prove, beyond the possibility of ques tion, that a good highway cuts the transportaton cost, that it adds money to the farmer's bank deposit, that it means an annual saving in that county alone of nearly enough in one single year to pay for the construction work. There is nothing succeeds like success and there is nothing that gives a greater impetus to the most up to date road building than the actual con struction of a' road by capable engineers and thev results that are gained the f Y"c4" DAOr OTtai- i -o nmnlafi'An Clackamas county has also taken an important step forward in the matter of better roads when the commissioners let a contract the other day Unskilled Labor Is a Waste That Could Be Rectified By OWEN R LOVEJOY. General Secretary of the National Child Labor Committee THERE IS NO TASK WHICH CAN BE A3 WELL PERFORMED BY THE UNINTELLIGENT A3 BY THE INTELLIGENT WORKER, AND IT IS AS TRUE THAT NO WORK EVER WILL EXI8T WHICH IS SO 8INIPLE THAT THE TRAINED WORKER CANNOT DO IT BETTER THAN THE UNTRAINED WORKER. ' The minimum wage must be advanced ami will be as the average of trained intelligence is raised. ' The theory that there should be, for the good of the community, a large class so unskilled that they are glad to get any work to do at any wage has been a STUMBLING BLOCK IN THE PATH OF PROG RESS for, lo, many years. We are VERSANT WITH ITS FALSITY. , . " . In the United States there is no such thing as any industry demand ing UNSKILLED labor. The presence of such labor is A NA TIONAL HANDICAP. We have it plentifully. We have thousands of unskilled workers who can do any rough old job you put them at and do it wrong. - . ; ' But no kind of work which ever has been done by any human being, from the painting of a picture to the gathering of garbage, CAN BE DONE AS WELL BY UNSKILLED AS BY SKILLED WORK PEOPLE. We must, as soon as may be, remove the wrong impression from our minds. It has been the base of much of our industrial trouble. Editor and Publisher NEWSPAPER courts, the gospel of good roads is now beginning to become CON OREGON CITY, for one mile of macadam on the River road running near Milwaukie. The court has also planned the construction of several bridges through the county that shorten the haul and add materially to the reduction in the transporta tion cost. Shorter hauls and easier hauls are the-results that are to be gained from road improvement everywhere and-they can be as easily gained in Clackamas County as they have been in thousands of other places through the state and nation. . ., " ... The first step has been taken. The county court has let its first bid for a permanent road one good long mile of it. There is no reason why more miles should not be added to that important highway in the county or why miles of road elsewhere should not be built where they will form main trunk lines for a permanent system of road construction adding to the bank roll of the farmer and faciliating the ease of haul into the markets of the city. ' HOME STUDY IN Individual study is the key note of a teacher's SCHOOL TEACHING success and upon the extent to which he applies that investigation of the peculiar characteristics of each child before him in his classes, together with the home life depends that teacher's results in the child in his daily work. - Superintendent L. R. Alderman delivered before 1000 of his teachers a meeting the other day in his high school auditorium and impressed upon the faculty mind of that gathering the importance that each individual case bears to the general average of success in school work. - - No truth is so strong in educational work as that which the new-superintendent emphasized at the meeting that the teacher's work is not done when the gong has sounded for the end of the session nor is all of the work fo be done in the class room when the child is in school. . Outside of the school room, there are influences at work that may counteract all of the efforts that teacher has put forth during that day and that art enough to discourage the best professional man or woman on the faculty of any public institution. Years ago, children failed to pass their examinations, dropped behind in their classes, showed no interest in their work in spite, of all that the teacher iuld do or say that would stimulate in them the interest that was lacking. Investigations revealed the fact that some of these children were suffering from maladies of various kinds, that they were not physically fit be in a school room, and that their diseases were such that tbey-could not concentrate their mind upon the work in hand. - These discoveries resulted in' the campaign that has now spread over the whole country for free examinations for every child who attends the city schools and for medical investigations into the cause of every delinquency that exists in class work. . The results of these campaigns have been astonishing. They have shown an improvement in the work of 90 per cent of the children who were, be fore, unable to handle their class work or who showed that they couU not hold their minds to their studies. A thorough study of home life surrounding each child in the city schools will reveal things to the teacher of which he had not dreamed and will give him pointers on the methods that should be used in the developing of an interest in the work of the school and in the average of sucoess in the class of which he is a part. , 1 Tis too late to spare " ' When the pocket, is bare The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY - Sept. 16 In American History. 1402- Columbus with bis fleet entered the sea of Sargasso. 1776 Battle of Harlem Heights or Harlem Plains. New York city. Washington . personally " directed the colonial riflemen, who defeat ed Hessian opponents. 1883 Junius Brutus Booth, actor and manager, eldest son of the distin . guisbed actor of that name, and brother of Edwin, died; born 1821. 1901 State funeral for William Mc Klnley at capitol in .Washington. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. Evening stars: Mercury, Jupiter. Morning stars:-Saturn, Venus. Mars. Planet Mercury 'in superior conjunc tion with tbe sun at 3 p. m.: changes from a morning to an evening star, setting west by south in the early evening. AFTER DROUGHT. Oh. the good rain. . Singing down the perfumed lane. Swinging out upon the fields to the growing grain! Oh, the clean sound " Of the blue army all around. Sweeping through the . valley,' drenching the dull groandl Now they have comet t With the roll of thunder's drum " The blithe troops of rain. In sud den delirium! - ; , ' -C H. Towne, in Collier's - Weekly. ".- Mi Limit, A man may make a guess at what a woman is going to do, bat that la his limit Chicago News. OREGON, TUESDAY, that surrounds that child out of school, class room and the standing of that of the Portland schools in an address drove home the force of that logic at THE GOOD ROADS MOVEMENT. Gratifying Progress Shown In Road Construction Everywhere. That there are upward of $400,000,000 of good roads bonds issued and . out standing is indicated by the Good Roads Year Book of the United States., tbe 1913 edition of which has just been Issued, containing a resume or the whole road situation. It Is evident that, whatever may be the faults in methods of construction and maintenance, mon ey is being spent In sufficient amount to bring about a vast Improvement in the public roads. The year book shows $137,000,000 of state and road bonds authorized and $156,000,000 of county bonds outstanding on Jan. 1, 1913. making a total of $293,500,000. As this is based on reports from about 75 per cent of the counties In the Unit ed States and as a large number of the individual townships have not reported, it is estimated that the amounts not re ported would run the aggregate up to probably $350,000,000, to which should be added ten or fifteen million dollars of the bonds voted in 1912. which have not yet been issued. Gratifying progress in road construc tion during the past few years is indi cated by the statement In the year book that, while the percentage of all road improvement in the United States at the close of 1909 was &66 per cent the revised statistics to Dec. 31. 1911. show an improved mileage of 10.1 per cent or a net gain of 1.44 per cent This does not sound so Impressive in terms of percentage, but It means that in the two year period more than 34. 000 miles of improved roads were con structed, or 10,000 miles more than the entire mileage of national roads in France. Scientific American. . SEPTEMBER 16, 1913. WILLAMETTE ' 1 block from car line. Good a room house. Living room, dining room, 2 bed rooms and kitchen. Fruit cellar, wood shed. Fine lawn with rosa bush es. 20 apple trees 6 years old. 10 young trees, all kinds of berries. 3 lots each 70x139. All good soil fre from stonas. $2000. For terms see DILLMAN & HOWLAND FIRST FOOTBALL GAME The first football game in which the Oregon Agricultural College plays this season will be a preliminary clash between the O. A. C. freshmen and the University of Oregon freshmen, October 1. , L. G. ICE. DENTIST Beaver Building S e Phones: Main 1221 or A-193 Wants, For Sale, Etc Notices under these classified headings will oe Inserted at one cent a wor& first tions. One inch card, $2 per month; taH Inch card, 4 ltnes), Jl per month. Cash must accompany order unless on insertion, half a cent 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 16c Anyone that is "tt of employment and feels he cannot afford to ad vertise for work, can have the use of our want columns free of chargn. . This places "o obligation of any sort on you, vn simply wish to be. of assistance to any worthy person. HOW woulu you like to talk with 1400 people about that bargain you have in real estate. Use the Enterprise.-- FOR SALE. FOR SALE Fine combination saddle and buggy horse. Lady can drive. For sale at a bargain. Address 411 Main street. WOOD AND COAL OREGON CITY WOOD & FUEL CO. Wood and eoal, 4-foot and 16-inch lengths, delivered to all parts ot city; sawing especially. Phone your orders Pacific 1371, Home A120.. F. M. BLUHM FOR RENT. LOST AND FOUND LOST The door to an automobile lamp belonging to W. L. Mulvey. Return to Enterprise office. Reward. MISCELLANEOUS FOR TRADE As- first payment on a small house in , Gladstone, or near by, any part of eleven lots in Crook county, Ore. W. J.-Wheaton, Sixth and Water Sts'k-Oregon Cit. - Boy of Sixteen, willing to work, wants place to board and go to . school. Main 2574. Request for Bids In the District Court of the United States, for the District of Oregon. In the matter of Barde c Leavitt, bankrupt "'. As trustee in bankruptcy of the above entitled estate, I will receive seal ed bids for the following stocks of merchandise and fixtures formerly the property of Barde & Levitt, sit uated in the cities of Salem, Corval lis, Hood River and Oregon City, Oregon: 1. Stock of goods, wares and mer . chandise, consisting of shoes, men's clothing and furnishings, hats caps, suit cases, umbrellas, etc., . together with fixtures contained in the . store room formerly occupied by Barde & Levitt at Sa lem, Oregon, said merchandise be ing of the inventoried value of $17, 566.83, and said fixtures being of the inventoried value of $1,313.40. 2. Stock of goods, wores and merchandise of the same character as above set forth, together with fixtures contained in the .store room formerly occupied by Barde & Levitt at Corvallis, OregonTiaW merchandise being of the inventor ied value of $17t625.71, and said fix tures being of the inventoried valus of $2,010.00. 3. Stock of goods, - wares and merchandise of the same character as above set forth, together with fixtures contained in the store room formerly occupied by Barde & Levitt at Hood River, Oregon, said merchandise being of the in ventoried value of $8,605.14, and ' said fixtures being of the inventor . led value of $254.00. . 4. Stock of goods, wares ' and . merchandise of the same character as above set forth, together with . fixtures contained in the storeroom formerly occupied by Barde & Levitt at Oregon City, Oregon, said mer handise being of the inventoried value of $22,784.63, and said fixtures being' of the inventoried value of , 2,147.75. - Total value of said merchandise $66,582.31. - Total value of said fixtures $5,-725.15. By Gross ELECTRICAL WORK Contracts, Wiring and Fixtures WE DO IT Miller-Parker Co. Bids will be received upon said liuieiiy up w auu uuui muiauaj1, September 25, 1913, at 12:00 o'clock noon, at my office, the same to be received upon parcels as above set forth numbered Page 1. - 1, 2, 3 and 4, and for the pro perty as a whole. Should the total of the- highest bids for each of the parcels as above set forth be greater than the high est bid for the whole, the said bids will be accepted -subject to the ap proval of the Court for said parcels; but should the highest bid for the whole be greater than the total of the highest bids for each of the par cels, the said highest bid for the whole will be accepted subject to the approval of the Court. All bids must be accompanied by certified check for ten per cent. (10 per cent.) of the amount of fered. Inventories of the above stocks may be seen at the respective loca tions of the stocks as to each of said stocks, and in ventories for all of said property may be also seen at my office, and the properties may be inspected at their respective locations. R. L. SABIN, Trustee No. 7-lst St, Room 8, Portland, Oregon. -' - SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the state of Oregon, for Clackamas county. Maude M. Watson, Plaintiff, - vs. ' Valentine Watson, Defendant To Valentine Watson: . . In the name of the state of Ore gen you are hereby required to ap pear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled . court and cause before the 16th day of September, 1913, six weeks from the day of the first publication of this summons. If you fail to appear and answer, the plaintiff will take judgment against you for want thereof and for the relief prayed for in her com plaint on file herein, to which ref erence is hereby made and more particularly as follows: For a judgment against you and a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony now existing between you and the plaintiff, Maude M. Watson and for such further relief as the court may deem meet in the premises. -This Summons is served by .- publica tion by virtue of an order made by the Honorable J. U. Campbell, judge of the above entitled court, and dated August 4th, 1913, to be published in the Morning Enter prisa, a newspaper of general cir culation in said county and state. . JAS. S. STRICKLER, Attorney for Plaintiff. Corner of Albina and Killings worth Avenues, Portland, Oregon. Date of first publication, August 5, 1913. . Date of last publication, Septem ber 16, 1913. SUMMONS In the Circuit court of the state of Ore gon, for Clackamas county. Lena Ieota Huff, Plaintiff,' vs.. John Edgar Huff, Defendant. To John Edgar Huff, the above named defendant: In the name of the state of Oregon you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled cause on or before the 30th day of September; 1913, and if you fail to . so appear and answer, for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the court for the refiel prayed for In her said complaint, to-wit: For a decree of divorce setting aside the marriage contract existing between herself and the defendant and that she be restored to her maid en name. namelv. which la Tni ,Leota Hamrick and that she have "such other and further relief as may be meet with equity. This summons is published by or der of the Honorable J. U. Campbell, judge of the circuit court of the state of Oregon for Clackamas coun ty for the fifth judicial district made and entered on the 8th day of Aug ust, 1913. and the time prescribed for the publication of this summons is six weeks beginning Tuesday, August 12, 1913, and ending with the issue of September 23, 1913. W. B. GLEASON, Attorney for Plaintiff 2-3 Mulkey Building Portland, Oregon. ' D. C. LATOURETTE, President THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CAPITAL frtnucu 9 General Banking BimIumb. HEIIRY JR. 5AY5 M I SEEN PA not iMreeesu; SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the state of Oregon, for the county of Clack-, amas. Elizabeth Janney Ford, Plaintiff, vs. - William Hayden Ford, Defendant. To Wiliam Hayden Ford, the above named defendant: . In the name of the state of Ore gon, you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above en titled court, and suit, on or before the 22nd day of October, 1913, said date being more than six weeks from the date of the first publica . tion hereof, and if you fail to ap pear and answer the complaint of th nlflintiff therein nla intiff wriTl apply to the court for the relief prayed for in her said complaint on file herein, to-wit: For a judgment that the bonds of matrimony exist ing between yoursalf and plaintiff be dissolved and that the custody of the minor child, Virginia Ford, the issue of your marriage with plaintiff, be awaraed to plaintiff and for such other and further re lief as to the court may saem just and equitable. This summons is published in the Morning Enterprise, by "order of - Hon. J. U. Campbell, judge of the above entitled court, and which or der is dated the 5th day of Septem ber, A. D. 1913. The first publica. tion of this summons ' is Tuesday, September 9th, 1913, and the date of the last publication of this summons-is October 21st, 1913. -LIDA M. O'BRYAN, -Attorney for Plaintiff. SUMMONS In the Circuit Court, Clackamas coua ty, state of Oregon. Anna Tmha fafla T)lnl. ..luwo vaiiai i iaiuLui, vs. Fred Trube, Defendant. To Fred Trube, defendant: In the Name of the State of Ore gon: You are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint fil ed against you In the above entitled suit on or before the expiration of six (6) weeks from date of firs, publication of this summons, to-wit: -On or before the 30th. day of Sept, 1913, and if you fail to answer for want tnereor plaintiff will appl7 to the court for the relief demanded therein, to-wit: First: That that warranty deed under date of the 2oth day of MJarch, 1890, as given by Katherine E. Trube to Henry Trube, and as racorded in book 38 of deeds page 27, Clackamas county, Oregon, be changed and reformed to read as : follows, to-wit: The east half (E. . ) of the north east quarter (N. E. ) of section-numbered eleven (11) and the northwest quarter (N. W. J of section numbered twelve (12; . in township three (3), south of ' range one (1) west of the Wiliam- ette meridian, instead of the east half (E. H) of the northwest quar-. ter of section numbered eleven (11 .and the northweKt miartor (Iff w H) of section numbered twelve (12) ' in township three (3) south of range one (1) west of the Willamette meridian. Second : That that certain war ranty deed under date of the 21st day of July, 1902 from Henry Trube to Anna Trube, as recorded in book 83 of deeds at page 306, Clackamas county, Oregon be changed and re formed to read as follows, to-wit: Til. nna ItAl. T71 , A. . cooi, uaij. ya. 7a 01 Lue nonxi east quarter (N- E. -4) of section numoerea eleven (11) and the nortlt; west quarter (N. W. ) of section numbered f12l in tnvnohin ti.. (3) south of range one (1), west of" - the Williamette meridian, instead or tne east half (E. H) of the north east (N. E. ) of section number ed eleven (11) and the northwest (N. W. ) of section numbered . twelve (12) Third: And for such other and ..further and different relief as to "the mind of this court may seem just and equitab in the premises. This summons is published by virtue of an order bearing date of the 16th day of August 1913, of the Honorable R. B. Beatie. iudee of the County court, of Clackamas county, Oregon, directing that said order be published once a week for six (6) consecutive and successive weeks in "Morning Enterprise," a newspaper of general circulation, published in Clackamas county, Ore gon. Date of order, August 16th, 1913. Date of first publication. Aueust 19th, 1913. .- -. Date of last publication, Septem ber 30th, 1913. : MILTON REED KLEPPER, " " Attorney for Plaintiff. 1122 Yeon Bldg. Portland, Oregon. F. J. METER, Cashier. OTY, OREGON ISuMWflm ' Open from 1 A. M. t . M