J MR. HEN -x ... Cc Bo stoop oHTHe fsoME fceugpj ' "WeN, ewtyes. W "ThT" 1172- MORNING ENTERPRISE 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 . 1.50 lour months by mail ' 1.00 Per week, by carrier .10 CITY OFFICIAL FEEDING THE Owing to the drought of the present season in a large WORLD'S MILLIONS part of the United States, especially that portion depended upon for production of cereal crops, there have been more than the usual number of pessimistic prophecies of talamity impending to the human lace from shortage of food. Pessimists of this sort are wont to say that we have about reached the limit of grain cultivation, and that the population is increasing so rapidly that the problem of feeding it will be acute in a few gen erations. It is acute already, so far as the high cost of living is concerned, but that is not because of having reached the limit of the world's productive ness. The usual answer fo this prophecy of impending starvation is that sci ence will find a way. It is predicted that science will in time take the life giving elements from earth and air and transmute them into food direct, without putting them through the chemistry of grain growing, beef raising, egg producng and milk secreting. Wonderful achievements of science in finding substitutes ,for exhausted natural resources are pointed to as proof of the reasonableness of this expectation. Statistics do not show any need to place our reliance for food for the enhanced millions of the earth in future centuries upon any necromancy of science. From a productive standpoint it can be said that we have but begun to scratch the earth's surface in the matter of food production. There are approximately 2,000,000,000 acres of land under cultivation, of the 30,000, 000,000 of the total land area of the earth. Making due allowance for un cultivable deserts and mountains there are at least 15,000,000,000 of acres of cultivable land still unproductive or five times as much as is now producing. This alone would seem to be sufficient for five times our present population, a state of things r.ot likely to be reached for many centuries. Here, in the United States it is an admitted fact that on the average we are not getting from our cultivation more than one-third the food value we should per acre. This is less true in some parts of Europe, but more true in Asia, Africa and South America, so much that so that it might be safe to say that, taken as a whole, the 2,000,000,000 acres now under cultivation are producing but a quarter of what they might, and at some future time will produce. This fact would permit another multiplication of the world's population by four before starvation became acute. Clearly scientific discovery is not to be our last resort for a long time to come, though our ever-presenf help in the matter of better agriculture and economy of use of what we produce. Our first problem in the matter of in creasing the food supply is to get better farming done right here in this country and in this state. Development of unused areas will come gradual ly as civilization advances, but we shall have to stir ourselves fo rour own im provement. Oregon, for example, could send to market twice as much food products as she now does, with no addition but better methods to her equip ment. That is the practical problem of the food supply as it affects the pres ent generation. SEEKING While watching a stream of immigrants land at Ellis Island, IMMIGRANTS Senator Randall and a number of other Southerners or ganized tentatively the Mississippi Valley Immigration Association, with ths purpose of dverting some of the immigrants now landing a-tthe rate of 1000 to 2000 a day at New York to New Orleans and other gulf ports. The ob ject is a good one, and the association is just what is needed, if it is made to represent the entire Missssippi Valley in its membership, and not merely a few individuals. If the people of the lower Miesissipp states will get behind such an association and give it actual life and vigor, it might do a great work for those states in developing their agricultural resources and supplying needed farm labor. There is much more needed to divert immigrants from the New York gateway to those on the gulf coast than mere invitation or actual provision of steamer lines for their passage. Immigrants now enter the port of New Y ork almost exclusively. Some enter at Boston, some at Philadelphia and a few at other ports, but the great bulk land at Ellis Island. There are three leasons for this. In the first place, most immigrants remain the northern , tier of states, and New York is the most convenient port of entry for that sec- Present Styles a Victory For Satan Many Drunkards Good Men By the Rev. Dr. LEN G. BROUGHTON of London IF I were the devil, certainly I would not enjoy anything so much as a walk up Broadway or Fifth avenue, New York, looking at the slit skirts and other new styles of women's dress. Until very recently I never knew a woman who was not interested in jewels and clothes. But now they have lost their interest in clothing and are going around the streets with as few clothes as possible arid making those few as short and transparent as possible. THESE THINGS LEAD ONLY TO THE DEVIL. THEY TEMPT MEN, AND NO WOMAN EVER FELL WITHOUT THE AID OF A MAN There are a lot of good men, just as good as you can show me, who get drank. What you Christians ought to do is to go to them and sit up with them and pray with them. Then they would quit drinking. Editor and Publisher January 9, 1911, at the postoffice at 1879. NEWSPAPER OREGON CITY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1913. tiori. In the second place! those who do not know where they want to go naturally keep with the crowd. In the third place, those who have no settled plans can always find a colony of their own countrymen in New York, among whom they may live for a time while learning to speak English, and from whom they may also learn the best way to begin making a living. Any new port seeking to become a gateway for immigrants must in a measure provide all these three requisites. The Mississippi Valley needs good, industrious and intelligent immi grants, particularly from Missouri south to the gulf. Also it is a fact that this section has more to offer immigrants in the matter of agricultural oppor tunities than that farther north or anywhere around New York. While this is a fact, it is also true that the practical machinery for getting the immigrants and these opportunities together does not exist. A mere immigration asso ciaton will not supply it, if it gives its sole attention to efforts to induce immi grants to go to other ports than New York, or even provides proper transport ation facilities for so doing. Practicable plans for enabling immigrants who do not speak English to get into and actually live in those agricultural dis tricts must be made. . The handicap of ignorance of our language and un familiarity with our customs must be overcome. It can not be doubted that when we have evolved a practical plan for absorbing the immigrant and giv ing him a good chance for success in the region served by the gulf ports, it will be possible to divert him there from New York, but not otherwise. Money in bank dispels melancholy. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY eart to Heart Talks By CHARLES N. LURIE MAKING OF A CHAMPION. Maurice E. MeLoughlin of California, a young man, is the lawn tennis cham pion of the United States and one of the Ues't players in the world. His re cent playing has aroused the players and followers of the game, many thou sands in number, to enthusiasm. Winning the championship after three months of the hardest lawn ten nis that an American ever attenipted, MeLoughlin proved that his condition was perfect, that he could have under gone greater stress if need were. The reason? It is found in the statement of a sporting writer that the pcrwers of en durance fought and won for MeLough lin. He "stood up" under the strain. Whei the time came for the supreme effort he had the stamina to meet the call upon him. If he had been content with the bril liance of play which Is naturally his, if he had relied upon his service and his stroke, his power of outguessing the other fellow. MeLoughlin in all probability would not have won the championship. The long strain of the campaigns in England and America would have told, and at the end he would have gone to pieces. It Is stamina that tells in lawn ten nis, in baseball, in football, in all the affaire of life When athletes wish to praise a man highly they say he "has the stuff In him." That means he Is fit for a long siege if necessary. It means that he does not rely altogether on his brains, his nerve and his knowledge of the game. It means tb.t he can last. Stamina, "the stuff.', does not come to a man naturally. It must be devel oped. It must be acquired by degrees. It cannot be gained in an hour, a day or a week. In h sense men and women are all engaged in a sort of championship game The prizes go most often to those who train faithfully and patient ly and wait their time. True, sometimes the man or woman of genius arises who needs no training. It is the exceptional case. Most of us are not geniuses. ' The rest of us. in whatever walk of life we find ourselves or in whatever fields we pursue our ends and ideals, need the sort of stamina that Is devel oped by long preparation, by careful training, by observance of the rules of physical, mental and moral health. The wisest and most successful ath lete is the one who knows the rales and follows them closely. The winner in thp game of life likewise follows the L rules. They are not numerous. They are simple and e-islly learned. But they ninst be observed if success Is to be wnn '.- "I believe in calling a spade a spade," declared the stranger. V- ." ' ' . . "It is -mighty dangerous to call one card of any other suit -if you sit In a game around here," warned the native. Buffalo, ibku " EGYPTIAN MAXIMS. Thou shalt not forget thy mother and whar she hath done for thee. Drink not beer to excess! That which cometh forth from thy mouth thou canst no longer speak. Thou fallest down, thou breakest thy limbs, and none stretuheth out a hand to thee. Clamor is abhorrent to the " sanctuary of God Let thy pray - ers for trlyself come forth out of a loving heart, whose words remain secret, that he may grant " thee thy needs, may hear thy prayer and accept thine offering Be diligent Let thine eye be open that thou mayest not go forth as a beggar, for the man who is idle compth not to honor. Speak not 'over much, for men are deaf to him who maketb many words, but if thou art si lent thou art pleasing: therefore speak not. Above all. be cau tious in speech, for the ruin of a man is on his tongue. The body of a man is a storehouse, which is full of all manner of answers. Wherefore choose thou the good, while the evil reanain eth shut iip in thy body. Behave with propriety at ta ble and be not greedy to fill thy body, and eat not bread while another standeth by and thou : placest not thy hand on the bread for him The one is rich and the other is poor, and bread re maineth with him who is open-banded. Wanted Another Victim. - One day -during the reign of terror an agent of Fouqnier Tinville came to the Luxembourg with a list of victims, drawn up by the accusateur. which contained eighteen names. He collect ed seventeen of these unfortunates, but could not find the eighteenth. . A suspect was passing by, and the agent asked his name. The prisoner declined to give It. and the agent at once hand ed him over to the gendarmes. Next day the man was guillotined. Another day an agent summoned a prisoner of fifty, but the ron did not answer fo his name, and a lad of seventeen who was playing at ball was seized, taken to the conciergerie and put to death. - "Try One of My Betels." . In Slam they don't offer you a cigar or a cigarette, but a betel nut There every one carries a supply of nuts In a neat little ivory -box. not unlike the snuffboxes of our ancestors. - The betel nut is a narcotic. In its effects not un like tobacco, but it Is much more harm ful. Those who chew it suffer from inflamed gums, and they generally lose their teeth. The betel is a species of climbing plant, with a leaf not unlike Ivy. It yields a crop of nuts, which are ground to a powder. - This is mixed with a "similar powder derived from the areca nut and made into a paste, which is wrapped in pieces of betel leaf. . " V ' ' 1 - - - ... An Optimist's Opinion. -Ambrose .Crosslots, says. ..."Defeat stares more fellers In the back than la the face."-Judze. - A GOOD HOME CLOSE IN - q room 2story plastered house, hot and" cold water, elec trict lights, bath and toilet, sta tionary wash tubs. On in. proved street; lot 77x105; good garden, fruit tees, apples, cher ries,, plums- and grapes. Good lawn. $3500.00, part cash, balance on time. DILLMAN & HOWLAND NEW ILLINOIS ROADS. State to Spend $1,000,000 For Construc tion and -Repairs. The old highway commission of the state of Illinois passed out of existence with the appointment of the good roads commisf-ion, which, has assumed its functions. The state has $1,000,000 Immediately available, and there is $1, 500,000 more which will be ready for use as soon as the sum now on hand has been expended. Illinois was behind some other states in "respect to roads, the statistics of the department of agriculture showing about 10 per cent oj the 95,000 miles improved permanently, whereas other "states iu the west have 20 to 50 per cent in good condition. Wisconsin, far ahead in this matter, will build 1,000 miles of new road this year, making, 1,800 miles constructed under the supervision of the present commission. In Missouri and Kansas 1,000 miles of road are to be macadamized at once. still Worse. . Bluff I understand old Grimley cut his son off with a shilling. Gruff Worse than that. Bluff How so? Gruff He cut him off with a shilling and the family motorcar. Cleveland Plain Dealer. L. G. ICE. DENTIST ? S Beaver Building s $ Phones: Main 1221 or A-193 8 Wants, For Sale, Etc Notices under these classified heading will oe inserted "at one cent a word, first tions. One inch card, $2 per month; l.alf Inch card, ( 4 lines), $1 per month. Cash must acconmany order unless one Insertion, half a cent additional inser his 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 thai is nt of employment and feels he cannot afford to ad vertise for work, can have the use of our want columns free of charg. This places "o obligation of any sort on you, -vr simply wish to be of a?8istance 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. HELP WANTED FEMALE WANTED Lady cashier with experi ence. Apply at once to Mr. Karo, at the J. Levitt store. Reference required. . WANTED A girl for general house work and care of children. En quire, Mrs. Berray at Gladstone, two blocks from drug store. WANTED Girl for general house work. 702 Water street. WANTED Girl for general house work. Telephone Main 2513. 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 Large front room, fur nished for sleeping- Inquire of Farr Apartments, 903 Seventh St, room 2 or B. ; . . FOR SALE. FOR SALE 5 acres and 4-room bun galow adjoining fair grounds at Canby. $3000. Terms, E. E. Flohr, Canby. COW FOR SALE Good one, C. D. Robeson, three miles out on High land road. WOOD AND COAL OREGON CITY WOOD & FUEL CO. Wood and eoa, 4-foot and 16-inch lengths, delivered to all parts of city; sawing especially. Phono your orders Pacific 1371, Home A-120. F. M. BLBHM , MISCELLANEOUS FOR TRADE As first payment on a small house in Gladstone, or near by, any part of eleven lots in Crook WE REPAIR ANYTHING . AND EVERYTHING MILLER-PARKER COMPANY Next Door to Bank of Oregon City county, Ore. W. J. Wheaton, Sixth and Water Sts , Oregon City. FIRE WOOD WANTED 5 cords, good, sound, first-growth cordwood delivered at Gladstone. Telephone Main 26. I WILL TRADE my brand new 7-room bungalow in Portland, strictly mod ern, never been occupied; lot 50x82, ideal location, close to store and school, 5-cent car fare, for good resi dence property in Oregon City. Call Main 3581 or A-9 for further particu lars. ... 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. 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 5ta 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 E. Andrews, owner of W .15 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. Oregon, on the 11th day of August, 1913, the under- i signed, as guardian of the person and estate of Frieda Braunschwei-! ger, an inSane person, will, on and I after the 9th day of October, 1913, J 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, j an ui uue nguu, una ami 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. F. and R. B. RILEY, . Attorneys. Dated and first published Septem ber 10th, 1913. 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 Hol!and,rthe 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, theJ . ioi.il uay oi ucioDer, laid, saia 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 Pabst's Okay Specific Does the worK. You all Jr ft know it by reputation. V A.UU Price . FOR. SALE BY "... ..;"". JONES DRUG COMPANY D. C. LATOURETTE, President. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK Vr WlCUUn X f KJCKCAjKJri . ":' '' CAPITAL $Mj0.00 -'.I " ":-.""'--", ,,--Tranwteta General Banking Business. Open from 1 A. M. te P. M HENRY JR. SAYS Tut school. 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. CampbeM, 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. 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 state 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 wee'-ts from the date of the first 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. V This summons is served upon you by publication in the Mbrning 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 TO CCErJI i"OR3 In the County Court for the S'ate of Oregon, for Clackamas Countv. 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 naving quaiuiea, 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 . 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 folding 1 per cant 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). . F. J. MEYER, Cashier.