Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, October 10, 1913, Image 2

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OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1913.
MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS
BVdOt?, IT LOCK'S MKET
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'
- By Gross
i i jj r- sB i ur---. i . . a. .xi- . i
L am'th wiv iEftR is Peck's fo vecu: 3es out with sweM " oT ahiW Tt butt"! but it's me PuTyY S Vrl Sllf
Pfc.- - KEePiNf' comPoivv ip 5o(vje swell VwomeN hewell piprfrpur I ibieu. t&u wat i He(jp Boor k . m j
HENRY JR. SAYS
MORNING ENTERPRISE
OREGON CITY, OREGON
E. E. BRODIE Editor and Publisher
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
I 'our months by mail i : 1.00
Per week, by carrier .10
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
DEPOT VENTILATION Just because a railroad has constructed a de
AND SANITATION pot for its passengers is no reason that it should
neglect the ventilation and sanitation features after it is completed. And yer,
, that is just what some railroads are doing all over the country day after day.
Educators study the question of ventilation in public schools until the
problem has become a science. The best systems for bringing in the right
amount of light and air into each school room in newly constructed buildings
are problems every time a new one is built. Architects sometimes specialize
on the question of ventilation and take long courses of study in that one par
ticular branch of their work.
In public buildings generally, we make it an important feature. Theaters
must be airy and light or must have a system that keeps the air in constant
motion or our city authorities at once begin to pufcthe machinery of the city
into action against them. We insist that all places where people congregate,
where crowds gather, where there is even a small probability that a number
of persons will collect into a given space be properly aired at frequent inter
vals. In those places, we demand that a constant stream of pure air be allowed
s Tn riTnilat-f thrniitrh th r(vm anA t-Knt fh norcnne fViA-o.n irofkiiraj
v ....xuugll HIV. IVUU ULUL lll pvuuil Llll-11.111 (ILIHICU SllUliLU
have the benefit of the most up-to-date results of the studies in ventilation and
sanitation.
But we are generally willing to stand for any old thing that the railroads
give us in the way of depot ventilation, and it makes no difference to us
whether the rooms in the stations are even aired or not. When we go into
- a waiting room, we complain to ourselves or to our friends of the stifling
atmosphere, the odor of the room, or the fact that the place has no signs of a
proper ventilating system.
, . But we seldom make the kick where it counts. Nobody seems to be espe
cially commissioned to take the problem up with the railroad authorities and
see that something is done about it. No one seems to have any interest in
the public welfare at this one particular but just as vital point.
- If it is endangering our health to sit in a stifling atmosphere at the
theater or pub!:-: meeting, it is just as endangering to put up with the dis
agreeable and stagnate odors of a waiting room of a railroad station. If it
means anything to t'e public lealth that the theater- at a gr;Mt e.Vjens: ol
time ir.d money, are forced to install proper ventilation plants, it mr.st i e:in
just as much to that public health in a station or depot waiting room.!'
It does not seem to us that there can be much difference in the main is
sues of the case. We make such requirements of public meeting placs as a
safeguard for the public health. We demand that the air be pure. We
don't like to breathe the same atmosphere over and over again. We are
taught that is is dangerous to our health and certainly it is not conducive to
quiet nerves or a peaceful disposition. '
Why, then, are we not more insistent when a railroad lets its passengers
breathe over and over again through the day and night the same air in a
crowded stuffy waiting room where all classes and conditions of people con
gregate? Largely because, probably, no one seems to have especial authority
to demand that the railroad, like other public institutions, keep its station in
Strengthen
Our
Army
By GEORGE E.
CHAMBERLAIN
'.Si1'
We Need
Trained
Men.
Senator From
Oregon
AS. LONG AS WE MAINTAIN -THE MONROE DOCTRINE, RETAIN
THE PHILIPPINES, CONTROL THE PANAMA CANAL AND
. DOMINATE THE PACIFIC. WHICH IS OUR MANIFEST DESTINY,
WE MUST HAVE AN ARMY ADEQUATE -TO CARE FOR THESE CON
DITIONS AND MEET EMERGENCIES.
No one advocates a large standing army in this country, but we ought
to have as a military organization an army of EFFICIENT OFFICERS
AND DRILLED MEN which can be AUGMENTED BY TRAIN
ED MEN from a reserve and supplemented by the national guard of
the states. .
There has been a great deal of general discussion as to the necessity
of better preparation for sudden war emergencies, and there seems to be
quit a unanimous opinion that at the present time our army is wholly
.INADEQUATE owing to the methods that have been employed.
WE OUGHT NOT TO LEAVE OURSELVES IN AN ATTITUDE
WHERE WE FEAR THE POSSIBILITY OF INVASION BY JAPAN. ON
THE PACIFIC COAST OR BY ANY OTHER FOREIGN COUNTRY ON
OUR ATLANTIC COAST NOR IN APPREHENSION AS TO WHAT.
MIGHT HAPPEN TO OUR TROOPS IN CASE OF , INTERVENTION IN
MEXICO BECAUSE THE ARMY IS INADEQUATE FOR EMERGENCIES.
At all events, it seems certain that the country is BECOMING
AWARE OF THE UNPREPARED CONDITION OF OUR 4RMY
and will sustain congress in making such changes as seem necessary to
place the army upon a footing to meet emergencies and secure the honor -and
integrity of the nation.
the same way that our theaters re kept and that its ventilation be solved in
the same way. ' ' ' '
As a result, we have stuffy waiting rooms. We have foul air. We
have the same atmosphere breathed over dozens of times a day. We have
closed windows and air shafts shut down.
There is no reason for it, no excuse. It is just as much a danger to pub
lic health any a badly ventilated theater. It means just aS much to the gen
eral public or that portion of t' that happens to be travelling over the road.
It is a feature of the health problem that somebody ought to take in hand and
some of our authorities ought to get results on it in short order.
PLAY GROUNDS A Public play grounds are almost as. much of a neces
PUBLIC NECESSITY' sity as a public water system. The one promotes
health while' the other" maintains life. There is nothing better in the admin
istration of any city than plenty of parks where the people, old and youn'T,
may gather to spend their few leisure hours and enjoy complete and thorough
lest. ' "
j In the busy marts of trade, most of -us have little time for rest at best.
We are part of the hustle and bustle of life. We are wheels in the machin
ery of progress. To maintain the lead that we now have in all features of
our industrial and business life, we are rushed from one pillar to post and
from one end of the country to the other. We have few leisure hours. Few
are the moments that we can spend enjoying the beauties of nature or the
green lawns and restful sports of our public parks. t -x .
4 It is wise, then, when a city makes those hours as pleasant as it possibly
can by the use of the most up to. date methods of equippment fo public
amusement. Wise, too, is that city that plans almost as much for its places of
rest and legitimate amusement as it does for the other forms of its city busi
ness. It is just as much a part of the business of the council to' provide for
the time that we can spend in rest as it is for it to take steps for other neces-1
sary improvements. A municipality whose voters are rested at the end of !
their day's work, whose children do not gather on the streets and wandei'i
from one show window to the other in search of pleasure that they cannot
find, is a municipality that has solved one of its greatest problems and has
taken a step toward public improvement that will find its echo in every other
public work that it undertakes. ' ' , .-
In those cities where play grounds are established institutions, they indi
cate just how much of a factor they can play in the question of public health.
They take the children from the streets, give them pleasure that is healthful
and legitimate, take them out of places where the amusement is doubtful and
of a kind that is not in the least educational. ' .
Day after day the children of Oregon City tramp the hard paved streets
of the city, pass from one show window to the other, look at samples of every
thing from clothes to candies in the vain search for amusement. Glittering
show windows are excellent advertisement of the displayed goods but they are
poor amusement parks for children. They show enterprise and business acu
men, but they do not teach the children of the city anything in particular ex
cept the high cost of living and do not develope their bodies nor their minds.
To send -the teams of the schools to another dty in order to allow them
the training that developes the bodies and quickens the mind is shortsighted
business policy for the city. If the voters will authorize the council to pur
chase the Englebrecht tract, they will give the city fathers the right to erect
and furnish a play grounds that will be of immense educational value, that
will provide a training ground for athletic work, that will keep tne children
off of the streets and, at the same time, improve their minds and bodies with
healthful, restful play.
Play is the panacea of all ills. It cures everything. It beats medicines
of all kinds. Oregon City needs a public play grounds and needs it badly.
The Enterprise sincerely hopes that when the people have the chance to give
their endorsement to the council's plan, that the endorsement will come al
most unanimously and that the vote will be so overwhelmingly in favor of
the proposition as to leave no doubt in the councilmanic mind as to what the
people of this city want done for civic betterment.
NEW BUNGALOW
1 story plastered house, full
basement, hot and cold water,
bath and toilet built in kitchen;
barn and chicken house; lot 100
xlOO; fruit of all kinds; good
lawn; 1 block from car line.
$2200.00, part cash, balance on
time.
DILLMAN & HOWLAND
se trie scenery of life as yon pass
through it If you keep your nose on
the steering wheel you miss the pleas
ant hills that lie between you and the
horizon." Yon cannot live your life as
yon should if you are too much .intent
on getting through with it as fast as
possible
Pause to iid mire the flowers of life
thnt bloom along the way.
Whatever your business in life may
be. it surely does not lie within your
duties to ignore everything save get
ting finished with it
Automobiles for Fiire
PHONES: MAIN 77; A 193
Miller-Parlcer Co.
ALMOST ANYBODY
can make money, but few know,how
to save it... A savings account with
this bank is an efficient helper
The Bank of Oregon City
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
UNCERTAINTY OF BOND IN
VESTMENTS. Our jurisprudence and our
business customs proceed on the
theory that -trustees for the
funds of widows and orphans
should, for the most part, avoid
investing these funds in stocks
because "dividends are . uncer
tain" and should investhem In
bonds because "interest Is cer
tain." But interest is not cer
tain when the dollar is uncer
tain. Interest insures a fixed
number of dollars, but it does
not insure any fixed value in
these dollars. Most widows and
orphans whose funds have been
invested in bonds during the last
decade and a half have suffered
from the high cost of living more
than they could possibly have
suffered from uncertainties in
the dividends from ordinary
standard investments in stocks.
No wonder the. world is full of
unrest from the rising cost of liv
ing. Professor Irving Fisher.
Driving a Bargain.
Old Mr. Beeman was decidedly penu
rious, but as his premises were becom
ing overrun with rats he decided to en
gage a professional rat catcher, when
the following conversation took place:
"There. Mr. Beeman." said the rat
catcher, Tve cleared your premises
of the varmints, and I take "em all
away with me. . You'll have no further
trouble with rats. I assure you. and
you won't , have to bother about the
dead ones either. I'll put 'em right in
this box. The bill is $5."
Mr. Beeman peered anxiously over
the rims of his silver rimmed specta
cles. "Don't I get anything foi the
rats?" he inquired. Denver Republican
FOR SALE
7-room modern ' bungalow, Vi
blocks from car line; on graded.
Little down, balance $17.50 per
month, this includes interest. Ad
dress, Box 369, Gladstone,t for in
terview. . " .
ea?t to Mead
Talks
By CHARLES N. LURIC
SAFETY FIRST !
. Whenever the big men of the rail
roads gather nowadays the men of
the keen, tlear cut faces and the
searching eyes and talk of the opera
tion of the roads one is very apt to
hear:
"Safety first! Speed afterward!"
The day of the eighteen hour train
between New York and Chicago has
passed away, perhaps forever. Too
mn.v trains derailed by. rails unable
to st;ind the terrible pressure of steei
trains passing over them at unsafe
need too many smashed cars In the
ditch:
Nowadays men talk of signals and
block systems and improved methods
of building cars nud locomotives rath
er than of sending trains at terrific
haste around curves and on the long
The death rate is still too high, but
men versed in such matters believe it
will go down. The margin of security
is widening with the precautions be
ing taken to insure safety on the rail.
Signs are not wanting that along the
road of life the same thing is happen
ing. Not many men speak as did the
young millionaire the other day when
he said:
"When 1 want to get anywhere I
want to get there in a nury. If the
express trains are not fast enough I
order specials. I want my automobffe
to be the fastest one that the builder
can supply. That's the way to live
speed up and get there!" -
While you skim along the road and
make the other fellow take your dust
speed is delectable. And it is pleasant
to "gat. there." to be the first on the
scene. . .
But suppose you never get there?
Suppose-your train of life is derailed
and wrecked and you are thrown, dy
ing or dead, into a ditch? Suppose the
wheel of your hundred horsepower car
skids and you are thrown out against
a telegraph pole, to have your name
added to the list of victims of speed?
Slow up a bit in the ride of life. The
goal is not so distant that you must
hnrn nn tha rimo tr aot- fltaro
S L. G. ICE. DENTIST 5
$ Beaver Building S
Phones: Main 1221 or A-193 $
3$S$$S$J$S5i(i$.$
GUSTAV FLECHTNER
S . Teacher of Violin -
3 wishes to announce that he has 3
S resumed teaching at his studio,
612 Center Street. 3
S Solo and Orchestra Work
$ Phones: Main 1101 Home M-172 $
$ $ 3$$38$3
Wants, For Sale, Etc
Notices under these classified heading!
will be inserted at one cent a word, first
tions. One inch card, $2 per montn; half
Inch card, ( 4 lines), $1 per month.
Cash must accompany order unless one
Insertion, half a cent additional lnser
bns an open account with the paper. No
financial responsibility for errors; where
errors ccur free corrected notice will be
printed for patron. Minimum change 16c.
Anyone that la ct of employment
and feels he cannot afford to ad
vertise far work, can have the use
of our want columns free of chargn.
This places ro 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 you
have in real estate. Use the Enterprise.
FOR RENT.
CUT FLOWERS AND POTTED PLANTS
Also all kinds of Fruit Trees, Roses and Shrubbery for sale at the
new green houses at Third and Center Streets. Funeral work done
at lowest possible prices. Orders received over phone Main 2511,
H. J. BIGGER
MISCELLANEOUS
TO EXCHANGE A beautiful country
home, five acres, good house, plen?
ty of fruit of al lkinds; on South
End road one and one-half miles
from city; for Oregon City or Port
land home. No agent. Phone own
er, Farmers 229.
A CHANCE One acre suitable for
chicken ranch ; 6-room plastered
house; chicken houses "and - barn;
creek, well and hydrant. Price $1800
half cash. See G. Grosseaibacher,
Canemah.
FOR SALE.
FOR SALE Ten-acre ranch in San
Joaquin Valley, two miles from
town; five acres in fine young or
chard; five in alfalfa. Will sell at
a sacrifice on easy terms. For fur
ther particulars address, Mrs. L. El
vert, Portersvill, Calif.
FOR SALE Good team of horses and
harness, farm wagon, buggy, ten
acres of potatoes in ground. Cheap
for cash. Henry Boege, Rt. No. 5,
Box 78, Oregon City.
FOR SALE Gasoline wood saw;
good as new, and 2 sucking colts, 4
months old. F. Steiner, Oregon
City, Rt. No. 3. Tele. Beaver Creek.
May Coulombe, Plaintiff,
vs.
Ovid Coulombe, Defendant.
To Ovid Coulombe, 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
cause on or before the 10th day of
October, 1913, and if you fail to so
appear and answer, for want there
of the plaintiff will apply to the
court for the relief prayed for in
her said complaint, to-wit:
For a decree of divorce setting
aside the marriage contract betwean
herself and the defendant and that
she be restored to her maiden name,
namely, which is May Eckert, and
that she have such other and further
relief as may be meet with equity.
"This summons is published by or
der of the Honorable J. A. Eakin,
judge of the Circuit court of the
ty, for the fifth judicial district,
made and entered on the 28th day
of August, 1913, and the time pre
scribed for the publication of this
summons is six weeks beginning
on the 29th of August, 1913, and end
ing with the issue of October 10th
1913.
W. B. GLEASON,
Attorney for Plaintiff. 1
2-3 Mulkey Bldg., Portland, Ore.
FOR SALE Fresh cow with calf. G.
Grossenbacher, "Canemah.
FOR SALE 30 acres good level land.
10 acres in cultivation; 10 slashed,
balance in timber; lhi miles north
of Mulino on good road. $150 down;
" balance 2 years, 7 per cent interest.
Address Mrs. ML E. Graves, Canby,
. Oregon Rt. No. 1.
WOOD AND COAL
OREGON CTTY WOOD & FUEL CO.
Wood and coal, 4-foot and 16-inch
lengths, delivered to all parts of
city; sawing especialty. Phon?
your orders Pacific 1371, Home
A120. F. M. BLHM.
, SUMMONS
In the Circuit Court for the State of
Oregon, for Clackamas County.
Sarah Elizabeth Sears, Plaintiff,
vs.
Harry B. Sears, Defendant.
To Harry B. Sears, The above named
defendant:
In the name of the State of Oregon:
You are hereby required to appear
and answer the complaint filed
against you in the above entitled
suit on or before the 17th day of
October, 1913, which is six weeks
after the 5th day of September,
1913, the date of the first publica
tion of this summons, and if you
fail to appear and answer the com-
plaint, for want thereof, the plain
tiff will apply to the Court for a
decree dissolving the bonds of mat
rimony existing between plaintiff,
Sarah Elizabeth Sears, and defen
dant, Harry B. Sears, and granting
to plaintiff the care and custody
of Frank Bates Sears and SanforJ
Chittenden Sears, minor children of
plaintiff and defendant, and for
such other"and further relief as the
Court may dee- meet in the prem
ises. This summons is published in pur
suance of an order of the Honorable
J. TJ: Campbell, Judge of the above
entitled Court, made on the 4th
day of September, 1913, and the
time ' "prescribed , for publication
thereof is six consecutive weeks.
BREWSTER & MAHAFFIE
Attorneys for Plaintiff, 410 Failing
Building, Portland, Ore.
Date of first publication September
5, 1913.
. SUMMONS
In the Circuit court of the state of
Oregon, for Clackamas county.
FOR RENT Furnished rooms at Farr
: Apartments. '
Pabst's Okay Specific
Does the worx. You aHAn AA
know it by reputation. X .UU
Price .
FOR SALE BY
JONES DRUG COMPANY
SUMMONS
In the Circuit court of the state of
Oregon, for Clackamas county. '
Amy Pye, Plaintiff,
vs.
Edmund Pye, Defendant.
To Edmund Pye, above named defend
ant: In the name ofthe state of Ore
gon, you are hereby required to ap
pear and answer the complaint filed
. against you in the above entitled
court . and cause, on or before the
10th day of October, 1913, and if
you fail so to appear or answer here-
in the plaintiff will apply to the
court for the relief prayed for in
the complaint, which is that the
marriage now existing between you
and the plaintiff be forever dis
solved and that plaintiff be permit
ted resume her maiden name of
Amy Buxton", and for such other and
further relief as to the court may
seem just and equitable. This sum
mons is served upon you by publi
cation by order of the Hon. J. A.
Eakin, judge of the above entitled
court, which order is dated August
28, 1913. . The date of the first pub
lication of this summons is August
29, 1913, and the date of the last
publication is October 10th, 1913.
. FRANK SCHLEGEL,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
In the County court of the State or
Oregon, for Clackamas county.
In the Matter of the Estate of Otto
Hanson, Deceased: '
Notice is hereby given that letters
testamentary have been issued by
the above entitled court in the
above entitled matter to the under
signed ; and all persons having
claims against said estate are here
by required to present same duly
verified as required by law within
six months from the date of the
first publication of this notice to
the undersigned at Oswego, Oregon.
Date of first publication, Sept. 19,
1913.
Date of last publication October 17,
1913..
MATT DIDZTJN.
FRANK SCHUGEL,
Executor of Above-Named Estate.
Administrator's Notice
Notice is hereby given that the under-
oi&ubu Tiao ju uuu oi.il ua; UL ucjj
tember. 1913. nnnnintp.-. niminiRt.rs.
tor of the esetate of Eskild Erent
son, deceased.
All persons having claims against
the said estate are requested to pre
sent them, duly verified, to me per
sonally, at Monitor, Oregon, or to
my attorney, E. P .Moreom, at hia
office at Woodburn, Oregon, within.
" six months from the date of this no
tice. "
Dated this 12th flay of September.
1913.
J. D. ERENTSON,
Administrator,
E. P. MORCOM,
Woodburn, Oregon, Attorney for
Administrator.
D. C. LATOTJRETTE, President.
F. J. MEYER, Cashier.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
CAPITAL $50,000 00
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