C20 MR HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILYAFFIRS HOI I wor Hipf it ilc c W PMTS ILL STa7 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 C. N. M 'ARTHUR C. N. McArthur, a well known attorney of Port FOR CONGRESS land; and twice speaker of the Oregon House of Repre sentatives, has announced his candidacy A. Walter Lafferty, of whom the people of Oregon have no especial reason to be proud. Lafferty is supposed to represent Oregon, but he was elected by the voters of Multnomah county, which is a congressional district in it self. The Enterprise has always been puzzled over the choice of Lafferty and hopes the people of Portland will displace him. Mr. McArthur has a good record in the Oregon legislature. He comes from a fine line of peo ple. He is a graduate of the University of Oregon and a bright, progressive young man with a very wide circle of personal friends throughout the stater - CHILD TRAINING Recent examples of children whose home training AT HOME has been 'more or less neglected, havef enforced the theories that educators have been pounding into the public ear for the past several years that education, like charity, begins at home. Of the criminals that an nually cost fortunes to the cities and states of the country in prosecutions and court trials, the large percentage are reported from homes where the early training has been neglected or has been of the kind that does not tend to im pove the standard of citizenship. There is no more potent factor in the development of those higher ideals in the American citizenry than the. influence of the home. Properly directed training developes in the embryo citizen those qualities that tend for greater civic and public usefulness and make of him the law abiding and law enforc ing unit in the community rather tha a member of that class, that, in later years, becomes a burden upon the general public and that entails numberless prosecutions and long drawn out trials through labyrinth of the courts in order that the public sense of justice may be satisfied and the man given in his mature and settled years that training as to the legal rights of others that should have been instilled into him by his parents during his years at home. What is true of the boy and man is also as fully and emphatically true of the' girl and woman. In most homes, the early educational training that every child should have is given to the girl and the boy is allowed the free dom that his sister does not have. Even in those families from which the criminal class so largely comes, the girls are taught more of the higher ideals than are the boys during that impressionable age when home training be comes such an important factor in the after life of the citizen of the commun ity. But a girl that does not have the advantages of this home training, who is allowed the freedom to exercise her own instincts and to realize her own am bitions, whose will is uncurbed and whose energies are misdirected or totally undirected becomes as much, if not more, of a factor in that criminal class that Is afterwards a burden upon society and that must, in her later life, take j.on itself the duty of curbing those instincts and directing that v ill that should Iwe been earlier trained and put by the parents into those useful and proper hsnnels tl.at would have nade of her a beneficial force in the development and improvement of the s-'-i-ety of the community in whih she lives.. Educators and cri "inoi ?'sts all over this country aiiu in foreign land, v.here imtidgirions of tin?, kind have been in progre t. for may years have long ago come to this o rdusion as a result of the deo ami thorough, invesi: . gattons that they have ac'e and the studies of thos- criminal classes that have ci.me vndrr their rServation and attention. li.it the public has heretofore been lulled to sleep by the belief that these men. in their studies v tu merely theorists, that the solutions vhi;h they ha''t offered v. ere not psvtical i or effective, that they, as theoiists, were not capa ble of effecting the cure for tjhe disease that their e.mi nations showed them exists ir. the body poi.t't. So long has this and o h r natons regarded the itftc.itij'ator as a student zn a theorist that his stud! :s have been taken rather Women Will Marry For Love When Economically Independent By Miss ESTHER DRESDEN, President of Chicago Young Women's Suffrage Alliance MANY of our women in the wealthy middle classes live in a state of SEX PARASITISM, dependent on man an.! kept by Mm in lux ury and comfort without doing an iota of mental or physical wdrk. ,With the other classes marriaage simply means MORE WOEK. WHEN WOMEN BECOME ECONOMICALLY INDEPENDENT THEY WILL MARRY ONLY FOR LOVE. e e it Under present conditions they enter the industrial field until they can procure a life job of domestic work via a husband. . . Today, NO MATTER WHAT WORK WOMEN DO BEFORE THEIR MARRIAGE! whether they are trained nurses, stenographers or other skilled workers upon marriage they are ALL REDUCED TO THE LOW LEVEL OF KITCHEN DRUDGES. HAPHAZARD METHODS IN USE IN THE HOME TODAY are detrimental both to the family and to the individual. - Editor said Publisher NEWSPAPER for congress to succeed the Honorable OREGON CITY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, in v!ie light of .the impracticable and have been passed over lightly and disr respectfully -.by. those who have not given the problem the same serious con sideration nor the same thorough study . - The child who runs away from home consistently and persistently shows to the community and to' those who watch his movements that his home train ing is not as it should be. The girl who, after she has yielded to her infatua tion .for some man and has disappeared with him, yet fears to return to her parents and her home in penitence,, exhibits the fact more clearly than even ihe words of the learned theorists that she has" not been properly cared for and trained in those impressionable years when the training would become a potent factor for the development of that sense of right and wrong that is a latent instinct in every member of the species. It is not only a duty that developes upon the parent but it is a demand that society makes upon that parent for better and higher ideals in early home training. Society has an issue at stake. It means that the percentage of criminals will be reduced. It entails fewer prosecutions, less court trials, smaller prisons, jails, and penitentiaries. of inmates of the penal istitutions of each and every governmental unit. Wrth it, is tied up the annual expenditures for prosecution for the maintenance of the prison and the prisoner. It means and entails a reduction and a minim ization of crime. " . , In all of these things, society has an interest. .. It is a vital interest that is involved. It does not mean that the parent may train or neglect to train his child as he, in his parental wisdom elects, that demand with the threat of after punishment more keen and severe in its lasting effects than conviction for crime, that the parental influence be ex tended over that child during its plastic age to such an extent that the higher ideals of citizenry and civic duty are developed and the impressionable mind is brought to realize its duty to that society in wheh it lives and which gives it the other material "benefts that it enjoys. .... " Climbing the bank exercise. The Bank of Oregon City ODDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY . YOUTH. ryHAT do they know of youth who still are young? . They but the singers of a golden song. Who may not guess Its worth or wonder flung Like largess to the throng. We only young no longer, old so Its harmonies stand marvel ing Oh, we who listen; never they who sing I "M'OT for Itself Is bnauty, but for us Who gaze upon it with all rever- ent eyes. And youth, which sheds Its glory luminous. Gives ever in this wise. Itself the Joy it may not realize. Only we know who linger overlong Youth that is made of beauty and of song. Theodosla Garrison. L. G. ICE. DENTIST $ Beaver Building Phones: Main 1221 or A-193 Wants, For Sale, Ett Notices under these classified headings will be Inserted at one cent a word, first Hons. One inch card, 12 .per month; halt Inch card, ( t lines), SI per menth. Cash must aoeompany order unless one insertion, half a cent additional inser has an open account .with the paper. No financial responsibility for erren; where errors occur free corrected notice will be printed for patron. Minimum charge 16c. Anyone that Is nt 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 po obligation of - any sort on you, we simply wish to be of a?8iBtance"to any worthy person. HOW would you like to talk with 1400 people about that bargain you have in real estate. Use the En terprise. - LOST AND FOUND LOST Pocket book with $5.00 gold piece and some silver, receipts, Bannon's stamps. Leave at Jones Drug Store. Mrs. S. Rtukes LOST Lady's coat near Greenpoint. Return to Enterprise office. LOST A brown and white, slm. built shepherd dog about one year old. Reward for information to Dan Sahl necker, at Elwood, Ore. HELP WANTED FEMALE WANTED Girl for general house work. Inquire Mrs. Geo. A. Hard ing, 1006 Main Street, City. WANTED Four or five young women to work in ioe cream stand and res taurant at the Canby Fair. Good wages and expenses paid. Apply to H. J. Bigger before 9:00 o'clock a. m and investigation. " It means a reduction in the number but society demands, and it enforces steps is excellent WANTED Girl for general house Apply at corner work; good wages. 5th and Jt Adams. HELP WANTED MALE WANTED Handy man to milk cow, take care of horse and do other light work on small place, good home for right party. Address O. L. Barrett, phone Main 3052. Box 173, Oregon City, Route No. 2, FOR RENT. FOR RENT Nicely furnished house keeping rooms. Te'ehone Alain 1292. FOR SALE. FOR SALE Fresh cows. Phone A-98. FOR SALE- Good horse, buggy and harness, cheap. ' Address Mrs. Wm. Edwards, Route No. 5, Oregon City, Oregon. .- . COW FOR SALE Good one, C. D. Bobeson, three miles out ou High land road. FOR SALE Six rooms of new furni ture, complete; will sell in separate pieces if so desired. House for rent. Owner leaving town. Inquire "J. G." care this office. WOOD AND COAL OREGON CITY WOOD A FUEL CO. Wood and eoal, 4-foot and 16-inch 'lengths, delivered to all parts of city; sawing especially. Phena your orders Pacific 1371, Home A420. F. M, BLUHM. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Two or three rooms fur, nished, light housekeeping. ' No chil dren. References. .. WANTED Piano pupils. Call at 311 .reari street, (jnanotte Martens, student of Chicago Conservatory of Music. ' WANTED Position in department store as clerk. Address "F. M, care this office, or phone Home 45. 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. NOTICE TO CPEOI fORS In the County Court for. the State of Oregon, for Clackamas County. -In the Matter of the Estate of Johan na Jackumsen, Deceased. The undersigned having been ap pointed by the county court of the state of Oregon, for Clackamas coun ty administrator of the estate of Johanna Jackumsen, deceased, and haviag qualified, notice is hereby given to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against said deceased, to present them verified as required by law, ., within . six SEPTEMBER 24, 1913. eri A GOOD HOME IN A GOOD LOCATION 9 room modern house, hot an I cold water, electric light, both, 2 toilets, basement, furnace; on corner ' of two improved strets; 2 lots , each ri6J05; fruit trees and gardsn, fine lawn. This is a bargain at $4500.00; part cash, balance on time. DILLMAN & HOWLAND months after the first publication of this notice to said Hans Jackum sen, at the office of Lida M. O'Bryan, attorney,- 406 Commercial block, 2nd and Washington streets, Port land .Oregon. HANS JACKUMSEN, Administrator of the Estate of Jo hanna Jackumsen, Deceased. -Dated, September 24th, 1913. Statement of the Ownership, Manage ment, Circulation, Etc' Of Morning Enterprise, published daily (except Monday ), at Oregon City, Oregon, required by the Act of August 24, 1912. Editor, managing editor, business manager, publisher, E E. Brodie, ' Oregon City, Oregon. Owners: (If a corporation, give ' names and addresses of stockhold ers holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of stock) E. E. Brodie Oregon City, Ore.; Geo. A. Harding, Oregon City, Ore.; E. A. Sommer, Portland, Ore. Known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders, holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other secur ities: None. Average number of copies of each issue of this publication sold or dis tributed, through the mails or oth erwise, to paid subscribers during the six months preceding the date of this statement (This informa tion is. required from daily newspa pers only) 1103. E. E. BRODIE, Sworn to and subscribed before me this 17th day of September, 1913. (SEAL) W. S. U'REN, - Notary Public for Oregon. (My commission expires Aug. 3, 1914). SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the county of Clack amas. Victor O. Fly, Plaintiff, vs. Jessie Fly, Defendant. To Jessie Fly, defendant: In the name of the Btate of Ore gon, you are hereby required to ap pear and answer the complaint of the plaintiff filed herein against you in the above entitled suit on or before the 8th day of November, 1913; said date being after the ex piration of six weeks from the date of the fir"at publication of this sum mons, and if you fail to so appear and answer said complaint, for want thereof, plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for in ' his complaint, to-wit: For a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony ' now existing between- the plaintiff and defendant, and for such other and further relief as to the court may seem meet and equitable. This summons is served upon you by publication In the Morning Enterprise, a newspaper, printed and published and having a general circulation in Clackamas county, Oregon, pursuant to an order of the Hon; J. U. Campbell, judge of the above entitled court, duly made and entered on the 12th day of Septem . ber, 1913. Said summons to be published for six successive and "con secutive weeks, and the date of the first publication is September 24th, 1913. C. R. THOMPSON, CHRISTOPH ERSON & MATTHEWS. - " " Attorneys for Plaintiff. 402 Northwest Bldg., or 416 Yeon Bldg, Portland, Oregon. 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 vember, 1913, 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 of 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 109, less W. 15 feet of Block 109; Frank K Andrews, owner of W J.5 feet of Lot 2. Block 109. GUARDIAN'S SALE Notice is hereby given that, pursuant to an Order in the County Court for Clackamas County, Orego, 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 By Gross - fcTTC' TC. ELECTRICAL WORK Contracts, Wiring and Fixtures , WE DOIT Miller-Parlcer Co. 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. F. and R. B. RILEY. Attorneys. Dated and first published Septem ber 10th, 1913. 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, 207 8th St, for a period of three months. GEO. MALOWSKI . . NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR NPOOL HALL LICENSE Notice is hereby given, that we will at t!ie 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, tor 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. 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. 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 fall 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 th plaintiff and the defendant This summons is published once a week for six successive weeks by order of Hon. J. TJ. Campbell, Judge of the above entitled court, dated September 2d, 1913, directing the first publication to be 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 Bldg., Portland-, Or. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Notice is hereby given that the under signed has been regularly appointed administrator of the estate of Geo Thomas Hoffman, deceased, by the County court of Clackamas county, Oregon. Any and all persons hav ing claims against said estate are requested to present the same, duly verified to me at room 1, Beaver Building, Oregon City, Oregon, with in 6 months from the date of the first publication of this notice. Date of first publication, August 27, 1913. EMELINE JANE HOFFMAN, Administratrix of the Estate of George Thomas Hoffman. CHAS. T. SIEVERS. Attorney for Administratrix. Summons. -'' In- the Circuit Court of the State of - Oregon for the County of Clacka- - ' mas. , Anna Stoffle, Paintift, y-vs. " . ' J. B. Stoffle, Defendant. Pabst's Okay-Specific Does 'tha worn. You all "$3-00 know It by reputation. Price -FOR SALE BY JONES DRUG COMPANY D. C. LATOURETTE, President THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON OTY, OREGON CAPITAL t5000 00 Transact a General Banking Business. Open from V A. M. to 9 . M HENRYJR.SAfS M NOW - M'A WISER MM A ft PaW 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 loth, 1913. C. J. MICHELET, Attorney for Plaintiff. Request for 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 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 $1,813.4. 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 Bard & Levitt at Corvallis, Oregon, said merchandise being of the laventor ied value of $17,623.71, and said fix tures being of the inventoried value of $2,010.06. -- 3. Stock of goods, wares an4 merchandise of the same character as above set forth, together with fixtures contained in the store room formerly occupied by Bard & Levitt at Hood River, Oregoa, said merchandise belnj of tke in ventoried value of $8,805.14. and said fixtures being of the inventor ied value of $254.00. 4. Stock of goods, wares and merchandise of the same character aa above set forth, together with fixtures contained In the storeroom formerly occupied by Barde k Levitt at Oregon City, Oregon, said mer handlse hfing 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 $5, 725.15. s Bids will be received upon said property up to and until Thursday, September 25, 1913, at lz:$t 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 tor the ap proval of the Court ..toft said narceia? but should the, highest bid for the whole be greater han the total of the highest bids for each cf 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 ""j owu Bcrcu &i my onice, anu the properties may be inspected at their respective locations. R. L. SABIN, TmntA No. 7-lst St, Room 8, Portland, F. J. MEYER, Cashier. CP