C21 MR HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS MORNING OREGON CITY, OREGON E E. BRODIE Entered as second-class matter Oregon City, under the Act of March 2, 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 HUERTA'S When Huerta assumes, as he did in his message to the. MISTAKE Mexican congress, that not represent the sentiment of the people of the United States on matters relative to the situation in that sister republic, he exhibits a painful ignor ance of the true conditions as they exist and either has been terribly misin formed by his lieutenants or is willfully blinding his eyes to what he knows is true. If there is one thing in the Wilson administration that appeals more to the rank and file of the body politic than another it is the stand that he has taken on the Mexican troubles. Always willing to go to extremes in his negotiations rather than to make demands and enforce them with the national military forces, Wilson's patience has about become exhausted and he has told the provisional president just how close to the line he may hew before the American government shall call a halt. Huerta attempts to make himself and his people believe that Wilson does not represent the people of the United States and that, though he is chief executive and the governing power, he has not behind him that public sentiment that would enable him to carry out the threats that he has made nor support with the military forces of the nation the demand that he has issued for instant resignation and a different adjustment of conditions in that trouble-ridden state. Nothing farther from the truth could have been conceived even by the mind of a Mexican pirate. While Wilson is president, he is loyally sup ported by every political faction in the land. The scars' of battle have healed and Wilson is president. That fact alone units behind him the solid senti ment of 100,000,000 persons and gives to his demands the support of public opinion that enables him to issue ultimatums and see that they are obeyed. More than his official position and the loyalty that lines behind that place of authority the power of the people of the United States is a whole some respect and an unmixed admiration for the president himself and a general approval of the policies that he has advocated and undertaken. The democratic leader has shown himself, especially in this Mexican situation, as a man of rare ability and remarkable foresight and has already 'succeeded in untangling the knotty skein of Mexican affairs in a way-that would give many pointers to other diplomats more experienced in. t.he school of national chess. No man ever had, as president, since the days of Washington and. Lincoln a more complete endorsement of his policies from the members of 'all parties and political factions than is today given to Woodrow Wilson. His Mexican decisions have met with the approval of the people of the land and his determination along the lines of non interference in the gov ernment of Mexico but a positive insistence on the rights of Americans in that land has merited and received approval from all of the sections of the country. For Huerta to assume that Wilson does not represent the people of this nation, that he is a mere figure head and his policies are not the policies of the nation at large is for. the Mexican leader to blindfold himself to the true conditions as they now are. It cannot be possible that Heurta really believes the message that he read before his congress yesterday. Surely, a man in his position would be the first to realize that a chief executive of another land either had the support or did not have it of his people in the foreign diplomatic policy that he had assumed. So far from real conditions are the Mexican's statements, that his source of information is either grossly wrong or he is purposely attempting to lead his nation with him in an effort to ignore the demands of the United States. Wilson's Mexican policy, as have also most of his other ideas al ready suggested, has met with endorsement from all over the country, and his attitude toward that revolutionary land has been one that has found n note of support in every quarter of the nation. The Mexican government's threat not to allow . the foreign vessels in the waters of that state even in the protection of the American and other foreign interests may precipitate the trouble that the president so ostentatious ly declares he is straining every nerve to avert. Wilson has, in this as in his other plans covering the Mexican difficul ties, the loyal support of the American people and it might pay the piratical presidept to learn that fact before he so complicates matters that the govern- Don't Send Your ! By J. THOMAS HEFLIN. Congressman From Alabama GIRLS SHOULD NOT BE SENT TO COLLEGE. INSTITUTIONS OF LEARNING FOR WOMEN ARE OyERRUN BY SOCIALISM AND THE SUFFRAGE CRAZE, THOSE TWO DEADLY POISONS TO THE REPUBLIC AND THE CHURCH. OVER. THREE-FOURTHS . OF THE YOUNG WOMEN GRADUATED FROM COLLEGE ARE SUFFRAGETTES ANin SOCIALISTS tu Fee arc tuc tuimm vniio niiir.UTrRc NawLEARN IN COLLEGE. DONT SEND THEM. The ideal woman iB the HOME LOVING WOMAN, who has been the INSPIKATION OF THE AMERICAN MAN in building up the nation and bringing it to the present state of development. Any cause which creates antagonism between the sexes and destroys and crucifies sentiment is fraught with DANGER TO THE HOME. I deny that women are ready to repudiate their fathers, brothers and eons by the wholesale in order to wield the ballot. The possession of the ballot means POLITICAL WARFARE. - r ENTERPRISE Editor and Publisher January 9, 1911, at the postoffice at 1879. NEWSPAPER Wood row Wilson, as president, does Girl to College OREGON CITY, ment of the United States, supported by the people of the United States, has to take a hand and exile him and his band of free booters from Mexican soil.- . , EXTRAVAGANCE Figures recently submitted by the Dressmakers' IN FASHIONS .club of Chicago indicate the extent to which some women have allowed themselves to go in the matter of personal .adornment. In the estimates that the report of-the committee contains there are a few In that city who annually spend a fortune of $75,000 on clothes while there are leaders of society in the exclusive sets whose bills run close to $50,000 during the year. - From these enormous figures down to the $200 mark that the factory girl spends on her clothing, there is a wide range of prices for the women who occupy different stations in the social life of that city. Such an expenditure on personal adornment is nothing short of wanton extravagance, regardless of the financial standing of the person who indulges in it or the size of the bank roll of that woman's husband or father. In the . effort to outdistance other women of her set, in the wild scramble to set a pace ahead of her friends and neighbors, in the mad rush to be considered something more than a spendthrift than any of her fellows, some of these women squander sums of money annualy that would make even old John D. squirm at the reckless abandon with which they drop money right and left when they enter their dressmaker's to be fitted for a new gown. - To this wanton extravagance in the social life of the many large cities of the land may be traced, in a large measure, the civic difficulties that have attracted the attention of investigators who are studying the problems of life in the large centers of population. From the figures at hand, it is evi dent that a woman, though she may live and move in the exclusive circles and may attain a prominent and commanding position in the social affairs of her realm, may.yet dress comfortable and consistent with her position in life upon much less than the amount she is now credited with under the estimates of the club. The fact, as. shown by the records, that the dressmakers' bills far ex ceed the necessities in the case indicates the general extravagance to which this nation is addicted in a degree far more noticeable than in the other countries of the world. Excessive expenditures for dress are no less forms of extravagance than excessive expenditures for any other luxury and tend to bring evils of no less importance than reckless abandon in any other form. Buy what thou hast ere long thou shalt The Bank of Oregon City- OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY Special Train TO THE Molalla Celebration VIA I fsZ M S ET I (OGDEN&SHASTAI I 1 ROUTES J I "The Exposition Line 1915" September 19, 1913 A special train will run from Portlond to Molalla and return on the above date on the following SCHEDULE 8:35 a. m. Leave Portland Union Depot . . . .6:lo p. m. 8:45 a. m. Leave East Morrison 6:00 p. m. . 9:10 a. m. Leave Clackamas 5:35 p'. m. 9:22 a. m. Leave Oregon City 5:20 p. m. 9:35 a. m. Leave New Era .s.. 5:00 p. m. 9:45 a. m. Arrive Canby Leave 4:50 p. m! - 9:50 a. m. Leave Canby Arrive 4:40 p. m. 10:20 a. m. Arrive Molalla '. Leave 4:lo P m. ROUND TRIP FARES From Clackamas to Molalla and return $1.50 From Oregon City to Molalla and return 85 .From New Era to Molalla and return .65 FURTHER PARTICULARS FROM AN? S. P. AGENT. JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon. The man with a foresight bump al ready has his winter fuel stored away. Another rare person is the one who thinks he gets more pay than he earns. For a ' short time yet pheasants should be careful about flying in front of guns. " OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1913. no need of, and sell thy ncessar- THE In his abhorrence of Rube journal Ism the philosopher of the Bandon Recorder goes, so 'far- as to declare that any person referring to himself as "ye correspondent"' ought to be giv en lo aay, ot the rockpile for each offense. - - . . - . . STORE AND DWELLING FOR SALE Store building 18x30 with about $80t).09 general merchan dise stock. New 5-room bunga horse, delivery wagon, buggy low, 18x30; telephone central, . and harness. 4 acres of ground, 2 . acres cleared, bal ance 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 COOKING AND DISH WASHING PAIN HUBBY Because she made him do the cook ing and wash the dishes, John T. Hel vey has brought an action for di vorce against his wife, Irene Helvey, in the circuit court. In the complaint, he alleges that he had to do most of the household work and that, at times, he was forced to cook his own meals and to wash the dishes afterwards. He also charg ed his wife with the use of abusive and profane language, with intoxica tion, and claims that she exhibited violent fits of rage in which she would threaten to kill him and the entire family. On one occasion, he says, she threw an axe at him with the threat that she would sp!it his head open, and that she also made threats to kill his father and her own mother. They were mar ried in Oregon City, January 19, 1910, and have three children Albert O.. two years; John F., one year, and Etta E.. eight months. Judge Campbell granted the di vorces of Elizabeth Steepy from Wal ter Steepy, and W. J. Earl from Delia Earl. SAILORS ON AMERICAN BOATS WILL BE SENT TO SCHOOL WASHINGTON, Sept. 17. Secre tary Daniels will extend to every ship in the navy the system of instruction for apprentice seamen in common school study and advanced classes in certain technical branches which he recently established at naval training schools. Secretary Daniels said to day his object in establishing floating schools was to encourage every en listed man to choose some trade to foV.ow in the service which would fit him for civil life in case he did not re-enlist. "This system of instruction," said Secretary Daniels, "ought to convince the people at large that service in the navy is not exclusively military, that the time of the enlisted men is not completely given up to occupations that unfit them for civil pursuits, but that the man is the gainer, not only physically and mentally, but in many practical matters that affect his suc cess in life. In other words, the new plan is calculated to convince both the men and their kin that the navy is in truth a manual training school and that service afloat is an educational advantage to those who enlist." AMERICAN SHIPS WILL STAY POT REGARDLESS OF HUERTA . WASHINGTON, Sept. 17. Ameri can battleships probably will remain in Mexican waters despite General Huerta's declaration that they will be unwelcome after another month. There was no official expression of this Government's attitude today, but it was plainly indicated that the Unit ed States would keep is vessels on the Mexican Pacific coast and Atlantic coast as long s the preservation of the sofety of Americans warrants. It was pointed out that by inter-national law the United States clearly has a right to protect its citizens in a foreign country where internal dis orders prevail and to that end may dispatch warships to ports where Am erican interests demand protection. It was pointed out today that Amer ican warships in Mexican waters would continue to adhere strictly to the injunction of President Huesta not to "entail an attack on the dignity and sovereignty of Mtexico," but fur ther than that it is not likely that the Wilson Administration will accept dic tation from Huerta as "to the circum stances in which American vessels may lie off the Mexican coast. Catarrh Goes Snuffles and Hawking Cease The best nose and throat specialists advise their patients to breathe Eu calyptus to destroy Catarrh germs and hejh.1 the sore, raw spots. Booth's HYOMEI is Australian Eu calyptus combined with Thymol, and some listerian antiseptics. Breathe it through the litle pocket inhaler, and in vapor form as directed, and . this antiseptic balsam will surely -destroy all germ life and all Catarrh misery. - It's guaranteed for Catarrh, coughs, and croup; it relieves stuffed -up head in 5 minutes and refreshes the entire nasal tract. Complete outfit with di rections for use $1.00 If you own a HYOMEI inhaler get a bottle of Booth's HYOMEI for 50 cents at Hunt ley Bros Co. and druggists everywhere Just breathe It no stomach dosing. ' For Sale By - HUNTLEY BROS. Co. By Gross WE REPAIR ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING MILLER-PARKER COMPANY Next Door to Bank of Oregon City It is reported from Marshfield that there is at that place a great shortage of help in all lines, principally in log ging and-railroad work. Several hun dred men could be placed. President W. H. Kline of the Corval lis fire department got a birthday an niversary bazing last Friday night. The boys sot in to play fire horse with him, and so outraged his presidential dignity that he was just on the point of telling the entire company to go where the firefighting is always good, when up jumped the spokesman of the crew and hung a fine trap-shooting coat on him. And then he told the boys they needn't go. Swissco Proves It Grows Hair Stops Dandurff and Scalp Diseases, Restores Gray or Faded Hair To Its Natural Color SWISSCO WILL DO THIS FOR YOU Swissco produces astounding results so quickly it has amazed those who have used it. - We will prove it to you if you will send 10c in silver or stamps to pay postage and wa will send you a trial bottle and our wonderful testi monials. There is no excuse for. baldness. Write today to Swissco Hair Remedy Co.,. P. O. Square, Cincinnati, Ohio. Swissco is on sale at all druggists and drug departments at 50c and $ l.Oo a bottle. Jones Drug Co. S 3 3 $ 3 '$'&'$ ? L. G. ICE. DENTIST ? $ Beaver Building $ S- Phones: Main 1221 or A-193 Wants, For Sale, Etc Notices jmder these classified heading! will be inserted at one cent a word, first tlons. One inch card, $2 per month; baM Inch card, ( 4 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 fit. of employment and feels he cannot afford to ad vertise for work, can have the use of our want columns free of charge. This places 'o obligation of any sort on you, 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, 5ll Center St.. FOR SALE. FOR SALE Full-blooded Spitz pups. Address Paul Ellings, R. F. D. 6. Box 47-A, Oregon Cityi 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 coal, 4-foot and 16-inch lengths, delivered to all parts of city; sawing especialty. Phone your orders Pacific 1371, Home A120. F. M. BLUHM Pabst's Okay Specific Does the worx. You all know It by reputation. Price FOR SALE BY $3-oo JONES DRUG COMPANY D. C. LATOURETTE, President THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON : 1 CAPITAL $50,000 00 Transact a General Banking Business. Opan from f A. M. U ft . HENRY JR SAY5 3 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 board and go to school. Main 2574. NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR POOL HALL LICENSE Notice is hereb given that I will at tho nsvf rpinilnr mutinir ff C'ttr Council, apply for a license to run and regulate a Pool Room at my place of business at Mountain View, for a period of three months. F. F. CURRAN. 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, 528 M)kin street, for a period of six months. WM. TRUDELL. Request for Bids In the District Court of the United States, for the District of Oregon. In the matter of Barde & Leavitt, - bankrupt - As trustee in bankruptcy of the above - entitled, estate, I will receive' seal- . ea 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 nxtures 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, 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, md 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 $66,582.81. 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 pn 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 b7 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. F. J. METER, Cashier.