Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, September 17, 1913, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    V
CO
I MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS - - By Gross II tlHENRY JR 5AY5I
l-ft jprf. M4...THE C'PMt MEAK To ' H fttoreodHt T " THS ,CHMSE V?) ' PU
"f S' .' ;
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
IN THE SEATS It is a strange commentary upon the power of
OF THE MIGHTY human 'greatness, a severe blow to the pride of
place that the body of Timothy Sullivan could have rested for 13 days in
an obscure corner of the morgue in New York City unknown and unrecog
nized by the throngs that daily pass through those corridors until a chance
policeman, befriended in Big Tim's days of power and influence, saw the
remains of the great leader and announced his identity to the custodian of
the place.
Once the dominating factor in the politics of the metropolis and of the
state, the thousands that passed through the halls of the morgue did not see
in him the man whose lead they had followed blindly for the past 10 or 15
years and did not recognize in him the one who had straightened out the
political tangles of that state unerringly during that time.
During his years of power, Sullivan was reckoned as the dominating
influence in the politics of New York state. He controlled the activities of
the Tammany club and directed its energies and influence as he willed.
Without him no campaign was conducted and without his direction no
candidate for office succeeded in gaining the votes of the great following
that blindly adhered to whatever Big Tim told them in matters of politics.
From the waifs and tramps of the Bowery and the East Side to the four
hundred in the fashionable quarters of that city, the people followed the
lead of the boss through all of the years that he took such a part in the
affairs of the Tammany club and the activities of the state and the city
of New York.
The throngs that followed the body of the leader through the streets
for the last time were testimonials of the power that he had over those
with whom he had come in contact. In that long procession were men and
women of every walk in life. The East Side seemed tp turn out to give
the last honors to the leader and the people from the better sections of
the city were as anxious to show their devotion to him as were those whose
friendship he seemed particularly to value and who were proud of their
devotion to him.
Sullivan, seldom took office for himself though his leadership in the
political battles of his day gave him every opportunity to gain honors that
others coveted but he held such a strong hold over such a large proportion
of the city's population that no man of his' political faith could hope to be
successful in his ambitions without the support and influence of the giant
Irishman.
His hold upon the people of his city and state gave him a national
prominence in the councils of the leaders and made him a factor to be reck
oned with in every campaign. A leader of the old school, a follower himself
of the tenets of the Tammany club, he was the most potent factor in public
affairs where that organization weiled an influence and was instrumental in
,' framing the policies and activities of that machinery along the lines that he
believed would be most beneficial to his state and to his friends.
In view of his dominating leadership for so many years it seems all the
more remarkable that none of those who passed through those halls for 13
days in that city should have recognized the body of the boss and that it
'should have remained for a policeman who had once been befriended by that
leader to save his remains from a resting place in the potter's field.
, AGRICULTURAL In all of the farm ing sections of the state, Oregon
LIBRARIES is planting libraries that cover the field of scientifiic
farming and that deal with subjects interesting to every tiller of the soil.
From the man who raises grain and hay in the same ways that they
- are produce in his native states of Iowa or Nebraska to the one who, with
cut experience or training, is attempting to produce an orchard of peaches
or prunes, the new libraries come as a gift of immense value and will soon
. gain a position that, will make them indispensible to the agricultural develop
ment of the state.
- Oregon City has already received
with the subjects of farming from every
Universal Peace Is Assured
By Professor THEOPHILE MANN of Frankfort on the Main, Germany
"I J ORLD peace." How different are the attitudes of men when they
yy hear words like these. Some are totally indifferent or 6mile at
such an idea, and 6ome others sneer at it; others long for uni
versal peace and work for it with all their hearts. WORLD PEACE
IS A HIGH IDEAL, it is true, but it is one of the ideals mankind
cannot get rid of. In all ages there were men who dreamed of a time
of undisturbed peace and happiness, some of them melancholily looking
back npon a golden age of the past irretrievably lost, some hopefully
WAITING FOR A BRIGHT AND PEACEFUL AGE TO COME.
The saints and prophets of the Bible are among this latter group of
men of hope and courage. To one of their number we owe the glorious
words, "They shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears
into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation;1 nei
ther shall they learn war any more."
THE PATH TO THIS GLORIOUS GOAL SEEMS LONG AND WEARI
SOME, YET IN SPITE OF THOSE WHO SAY THAT IT IS IMPOSSI
BLE TO READ IT,WE FRIENDS OF PEACE KNOW THAT OUR GREAT
CAUSE IS MOVING ONWARD AND WILL FINALLY BE CROWNED
WITH SUCCESS-
Editor and Publisher
NEWSPAPER '
several hundred volumns that deal
angle and that give the most up to
OREGON CITY,
date methods of agriculture that have been produced in the last decade.
Every angle of the subject is dealt with by men who know, by those who
have made the question their life study and have conducted the investiga
tions and experiments -of which they speak. They are authorities in their
field and their books are ranked high in the wealth of research that has
been devoted to bettering and improving the condition of the farmer in the
w est.
Western agriculture and horticulture are as different from the same
activities in the eastern states as the varied conditions of nature can make
them and the experiments that have been conducted by the experts in that
research field have been along lines not before attempted in the older and
more settled commonwealths of the country.
On the farms and orchards through this and other western states are
many men who have had no training in the country's schools of agriculture,
$'ho have not received the instruction that is now given to the farmer and
orchardist through the movable schools and institutes. To them, these books
ttre of particular interest and for them they will prove beneficial in the pro
duction and marketing of the crops. , "
The farmer of today no longer drops his seed into the ground and trusts
to luck and the rain to bring the crop to harvest. He is scientific in every
way. He has become a student of the conditions under which he works.
He no longer uses as much muscle as he did but backs behind the muscle
and physical effort that he does exert the power of an active and educated
mind. More brains and less muscle has been his slogan for several years
and is rapidly becoming the slogan of every man on western farms.
There is no class of men, either in business or in some elarned profession,
that puts forth more effort or studies more painstakingly the newest ways of
doing things and the best improved methods of meeting conditions than does
the farmer of this state and, generally, of the west. Bulletins sent out by
the experiment stations are not now scanned hurriedly and thrown to one
side but every thought that they contain is digested and what is better
is put into practice as soon as conditions arise that demand solutions of that
kind.
Instructors from the various colleges of the west now know that the
farmers are more well informed and better posted on the recent happenings
of farm development than ever before. They know that when they attend
the movable schools some of the farmers will demand explanations of "state
ments that have been made in recent bulletins and otherwise exhibit an inter
est in the wTork that the colleges are doing for the man on the land.
In- the same way, the libraries that are now being scattered thrugh the
tural communities will prove of material and practical benefit to the farmer
and will teach him those things about his land that have baffled him and
delayed bis crops and that will, eventually, save him money in his produc
tion and marketing accounts.
A bank ' account is a storage bat
tery charged --with, the currant of
prosperity.
The Bank of Oregon City
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
Heart to Heart
Talks 1
NOTHING TO LOVE.
Who is the poor man?
Is it be who has nothing of the
world's goods, who must stand by the
side of the road of life and be powder
ed by the dust of his neighbor's auto
mobile or spattered with its mud?
No. He can, move aside from the
pathway and let the rush go past him,
or he can mingle in the strife and win
automobiles for himself.
Neither is it the mau who has little
and is desirous of having more. To
him the same course is open, especially
in this land of opportunity..
The really poor man or woman is
the one who has nothing to love.
It need not he husband or wife or
child or sweetheart. It may he a par
ent or brother or sister or friend, it
may be an adopted child. It may he
all mankind, for there are souls, unfor
tunately rare, who can find it in them
selves to extend their love to ail creat
ed things.
In lieu of somebody or something
better, it may be a cat or a dog or a
bird or a pet animal of some other
sort. It may even be a plant
Something to love every one must
have if the soul isto be kept alive.
The thought was suggested by a
newspaper poem printed a few days
ago. It Tead in part: (
It's pot the bein' old and sick and .losin'
all you've had --
Nor the comln' to the poor'us at the
end.
But the thing that goes the hardest and
the thing that hurts so bad
Is the havin' nothin' left for you to
tend.
Oh. it's not the bed you sleep on. nor the
clothes you get to wear, .
Nor the food to eat when all is said and
done: .
It's the havin' somethln' loite to you and
glad when you come near 7
And the steps a-runnin' out to meet
your own. ; . .
In the-rest of the poem the skillful
writer a woman, by the way tells In
sixonie Inimaeea story of A woman
OREGON. WEDNESDAY,
wuo tended her brothers and sisterf
until they went out Into the world;
then she nursed other children until
they. too. in their turn grew up.
Careless thinkers say ' oftentimes
that only women feel this great urgent
need of having something to love. They
attribute it to the maternal instinct.
Rut ask any man or woman who has
looked ever so slightly into the interior
of the human heart and you will learn
that the feeling is shared by men, by
the worst of men as well as by the
best.
Even the murderer in his cell has
been known toeherish an insect for
want of something better to love. And
the good man knows no greater joy
than to have his own "kiddie" run to
meet him with the glad cry of "daddy."
PROFIT SHARING LABOR.
There must be a motive back
of all labor which will make the.
laboring man take special inter
est in his work He must have
something to look forward to
besides the actual daily wage
which he receives The work
man's idea forty years ago was
uot to avoid work Now. when
more pay and shorter hours re
ceive almost constant attention,
the men are likely to come to
think of these things all the
time. Some of them probably
constantly are thinking of ways
by which they can do as little
work as possible rather than
ways by which they can do as
much as possible. With more
' pay and shorter hours not re
suiting in happiness, it becomes
" necessary to plan some other
means by which the great mass
of laboring people may get their
enjoyment while working. The
system of profit sharing will
keep the employees interested in
their work and consequently con
tent A certain company is a"
splendid example of my profit
sharing idea and gives each of
its" employees a certain per cent
"of the profits annually and has
done so for twelve years. I te-
eve the plan is one that can be
. adhered generally, except hi
cases uf absentee ownership.
Charles W. Eliot . ,. .' ;
SEPTEMBER 17, 1913,
STORE AND DWELLING
FOR SALE
Store building 18x30 with
about $800.00 general merchan
dise stock. New 5-room buuga
horse, deliver wagon, buggy
low, 18x30; telephone central,
and harness. iVs acres of
ground, 2 acres cleared, bar-'
ancs of land parked and slashed.
Situated on one of the main
roads of Clackamas county at
corner of cross roads. Good lo
cation for store and blacksmith
shop. $3000.00, part cash, bal
ance on time.
DILLMAN & HOWLAND
Sept. 17 In American History.
1777 Congress invested General Wash
ington with absolute power, mak
ing him military dictator. .
1787-The United States constitution
was ngreed to by eleven states in
a convention
1802 Battle of Antietam. Maryland;
losses about 12.000 on each side.
Confederates abandoned the field.
1911 Colonel J. J. MeCook, last of the
"fighting McCooks" of Ohio, noted
in the civil war, died; born 1844.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS.
Evening stars: Mercury, Jupiter.
Morning stars: Saturn, Venus, Mars.
The brilliant Vega of the little con
stellation Lyra seen descending west
from the point overhead about 9 p. m.
Problem of the Two Jacks.
Here's a Judge Crutchfield story
from Richmond: '
"Two fellows charged with gambling
said in defending themselves that they
were not gambling, but merely playing
with the deck, seeing if they could get
two jacks out at the same time.
"Crutchfield looked them over care
fully and said slowly: 'I will give you
six months, suh. and you twelve
months. Now. see if you two jacks
get out at the same time.' "New York
Telegraph.
Envelopes.
Nine-tenths of the letters handled
by the United States mai!are iu the
usual business size envelopes.
&$$'$38SS$"$'SS,S
L. G. ICE. DENTIST $
$ Beaver Building S
S Phones: Main 1221 or A-193 S
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; halt
Inch card, ( t lines). $1 per month.
Cash must accompany order unless one
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 15c.
Anyone that is fir. 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, -v simply wish to be
of assistance to any worthy- person.
HOW would you like to talk with
1400 people about that bargain yon
have in real estate. Use the En
terprise. HELP WANTED FEMALE
WANTED Woman to work by day.
Telephone Main 1722, 511 Center Si.
FOR SALE.
CHAIRS FOR SALE Straight backed
cane-seated chairs at C. S. Church.
A Bargain. Apply Main 2831.
FOR SALE SNAP Practically new
1913 Cole Automobile; fully equip
ped and extra equippment. For
particulars see Mr .Sullivan, room
300, Masonic building.
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 eoai, 4-foot and 16-Inch
lengths, delivered to all parts of
city-; sawing especialty. Phone
your orders Pacific 1371, Home
A120. F. M. BLUHM '
FOR RENT.
LOST AND FOUND
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 Oregon City.
Boy of Sixteen, willing to work, wants
place to hoard and go to school.
Main 2574.
NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR
. LIQUOR LICENSE
Notice is hereby given that I will at
- the next regular meeting of the
City Council apply for a license to
sell liquor at my place of business,
ELECTRICAL WORK
Contracts, Wiring and Fixtures
WE DO IT '
Miller-Parkier Co.
207 8th St., for a period of three
months.
GEO. MALOWSKI
NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR
POOL HALL LICENSE
Notice is hereby given, that we will at j
' the next regular meeting of the City
Council apply for a license to. run
and regulate a pool room at our
place of business, 524 Main street,
for a period of three months.
BAILEY & PRICE
NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR
, LIQUOR LICENSE.
Notice is hereby given that we will
at the next regular meeting of the
City Council apply for a license to
sell liquor at our place of business,
523 Main street, for a period of
three months.
ZAK BROS.
Request for Bids
In the District Court of the United
States, for the District of Oregon.
In the matter of Barde Sc. Leavitt,
bankrupt
As trustee in bankruptcy of the above
entitled estate, I will receive seal
ed Tids 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, worss and
merchandise of the same character
as aboxe set forth, together with
fixtures contained in the store
room formerly occupied by Barde
& Levitt at Corvallis, Oregon, said
merchandise being of the inventor
ied value of $17,625.71, and said fix
tures being of the inventoried value
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, nd
said fixtures being of the inventor
ied 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 store room
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. Bids will be received upon said
property up to and until Thursday,
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 h7
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 the County of Clacka
mas. Harry Frederick Holland, Plaintiff,
. vs. '
Margaret Ellen Holland, Defendant.
D. C. LATOURETTE, President.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
CAPITAL $50,000.00 ' -Transacts
a Gsnsral Banking Buslnssa. Opan from 1A.M. ts I P. M.
To Margaret Ellen Holland, the
above named defendant:
In the name of the State of Ore-.
gon you are hereby required to ap
pear and answer the complaint filed
against you in the above entitled
court on or before Wednesday, the
15th day of October, 1913, said date
being the expiration of six weeks
from the first publication of sum
mons; and if you fail to appear and
answer said complaint, for want
thereof the plaintiff will apply to
the court for the relief prayed for
in the complaint, to-wit: for a de
cree forever dissolving the bonds of
matrimony now existing between the
plaintiff and the defendant.
This summons is published once
a week for six successive weeks by
order of Hon. J. U. Campbell, Judge
of the above entitled court, dated
September 2d, 1913, directing the
first publication to he made on the
3d day of September, 1913, and the
last on the 15th day of October, 1913.
HUME & McDEVITT,
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
432-433 Mohawk Bl.dg., Portland, Or.
I
Summons.
In the Circuit Court of the State of
' Oregon for the County rf Clacka
mas. Anna Stoffle, Paintift,
vs. '
J. B. Stoffle, Defendant.
To J. B. Stoffle, Defendant:
In the name of the State of Ore
gon, you are hereby required to ap
pear and answer the complaint filed
against you in the above entitled
suit, on or before the ,17th day of
October, 1913, and if you fail to
move, demur or answer, plaintiff
will take a decree against you, for
ever dissolving the bonds of matri
mony heretofore and now existing
between the plaintiff and yourself
and for such other and further relief
. demanded in the complaint as to the
Court may seem just and equitable.
Service of this summons is made
upon you by publication in pursu
ance of an order of the Honorable
J. U. Campbell, Circuit Judge of
Clackamas County, Oregon, made
on the 2nd day of September, 1913,
ordering such publication in the
Mbrning Enterprise, once a week,
for six consecutive weeks, the first
publication being September 3rd,
1913, and the last publication be
ing October 15th, 1913.
0. J. MICHELET,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
GUARDIAN'S SALE
Notice is hereby given that, pursuant
to-an Order in the County Court for
Clackamas County, Oregon, on the
11th day of August, 1913, the under
signed, as guardian of the person
and estate of Frieda Braunschwei
ger, an insane person, will, on and
after the 9th day of October; 1913,
. proceed to sell at private sale, and
continue to sell until the same is
sold at the First National Bank,
Main street, Oregon City, Oregon,
all of the right, title and interest
of said Frieda Braunschweiger in
and to the following described real
property, situated in Clackamas
County, state of Oregon ; an undivi
ded one fourth- (1-4) interest in and
to lot numbered nine (9) in block
. numbered forty-nine (49),- Oregon
Iron & Steel Company's First Addi
tion to the town of Oswego; the
terms of said sale are total purchase
price to be paid in cash. All sales
made subject to confirmation by the
above Court.
. EDWARD BRAUNSCHWEIGER,
Guardian for Frieda Braunschwei
ger. E. Fv and R. B. RILEY,
Attorneys.
Dated and first published Septem
ber 10th,' 1913.
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that the under
- signed legal owners of the property
bordering on the alley through
Block 109, Oregon City, Oregon, in
accordance with a petition hereto
fore filed, will on the 5th day of No
vembel.913, apply to the City Coun
cil of Oregon City, Oregon, for an
order vacating a strip of land five
feet in width on either side f said
alley through said block 109 in accord
ance with Section 3281 Lords Ore
gon Laws.
Jos. E. Hedges, owner of lot 7,
Block 109; Carl Joehnke, owner of
Lot 6, Block 109; Otto Erickson,
owner of Lot 3, Block 109; W. L.
Mulvey, owner of Lot 2, Block 199,
less W. 15 feet of Block 109; Frank
E. Andrews, owner of W .15 feet of
Lot 2, Block 109.
F. J. MEYER, Cashier.