Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, October 18, 1913, Image 2

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MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS
ILL Gcftr WMSED'
YT The THWSr.-F,NEi
V " yT TSL V-U5 CLASS J r I SOpgiSG FQzl M VjlJ- T
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
i'our months by mail 1.00
Per week, by carrier . .10
The Morning Enterprise carrier boys
porch or in the rriail box. If the
neglects getting the paper to you on
is the only way we can determine whether or not the carriers are following
instructions. Phone Alain 2 or B-10.
CITY OFFICIAL
CONVICTION The greatest judicial outrage that has ever besmirched
OF SULZER the records of our courts was Sulzer's impeachment. It
was the dirty work of a dirty gang of political cut throats. It was inspired
by a ring of political grafters who have no sense of public decency, no regard
for honesty in the administration of public affairs.
Hatched in the back room of a gambling den, inspired by criminals, and
worked out by law violators, it was the most cunning invention and the most
'levilish plot that the mind of an ingenius and misdirected hireling of a ward
boss could devise.
Any public official is subject to criticism. Every public official must
expect to have the people of the state or some of them continually on the
opposite side of the fence. But he expects them and. he has that right to
expect it to play the game fair. If they oppose him, they should use al!
of the tactics that the tangled skein of American politics can give them to
beat him in an open conflict. He may then be able to beat them at their
own game. He has the same chance to fight that have his enemies. He fights
like a man. He meets men with the weapons of a man. He matches his
wits against the wits of his enemies. When he goes down to defeat, he does
so with the conviction that he has been fairly beaten in an open fight and
that he has merely lost the game. He can again enter the arena and fight
over again the battles which brought him to the end of his" career in the first
instance. .
But when an honest man goes against a bunch of crooks from Tammany
hall, when(he has to meet the political thugs that infest the capital of the
state of New York like flies in summer time, the chances are ten to one
against him and he has lost the game from the start. It is a pecliar comment
ary upon trie politics of this republic that the offices of the state are crowded
with thugs of the kind that now populate the capital at Albany.
It is time that something were done to oust them from the offices that
they hold. With but one idea. in their minds, with but the thought during
.their political careers that of private gain they maneuver the political af
fairs of the state in such a way that the honest man who happens, by the
merest accident, to get into a position where he can be of real benefit to his
people is up against it from every standpoint and can only fight against the
rime when he knows they will use the mistakes that "all flesh is heir to"
in bringing about his downfall. - . .
Such thuggery arouses the indignation of all right thinking people the
country over. It stirs the passions of the most impassionate. It is a bldt
upon the history of New York state, a state that has several blots to her
credit already. Worse even tkan the Rosenthal murder and the attendant
police scandal that grew out of it, is this lasting defamation of the name of
the greatest of the American states.
No more decided blow could be given to the honest voters of that state
than the one Tammany has now dealt. It was a clever bit of work. It re
quired disregard for law, prostitution of the sense of justice, the overriding
oi the courts, the raw and coarse tactics that were resorted to in the effort
to "put one over" to the credit of the hall. Though probably Tammany men,
judging from some of their acts, the court of appeals of that state did not
Manners, Decency and Propriety
Are No Longer the Rule,
but the Exception
By WILLIAM C E. NEWBOLT, Canon and Chancellor of St Paul'i
Cathedral, London
t
THERE IS A GENERAL LAXITY OF MANNERS. OF DECENCY AND
OF PROPRIETY OVER THE WORLD.
Books are sometimes gravely reprehensible. The modesty of
town life has been BREAKING DOWN FOR MANY YEARS. It is
not necessary that there should be a great religious upheaval. If people
will only return to the ordinary OLD FASHIONED LAWS of conduct
and demeanor things will come right again.
We sigh for another Isaiah to denounce the INDECENCIES AND
EXTRAVAGANCES OF DRESS. Warning voices are heard about the
MODERN DANCE and the lack of refinement, good manners and Chris
tian courtesy. '
Vice is common, virtue rare.. To follow vice a man has only to let
himself go. A man may be a libertine in his private life, but the world
asks no questions. He is smart; he is wealthy; he is amusing. If he has
powerful friends his misdeeds are concealed.
A MAN RUSHES HERE AND THERE IN A MAD GLUT OF WHAT
HE THINKS IS PLEASURE TH EATERS, MUSIC HALLS, RACES AND
WORSE. HE IS DRIFTING ON TO THE MIDNIGHT LEAP, THE PIS
TOL ORTHE FATAL DRAFT. '
An age which is shocked at the marriage service welcomes for its sons
. and daughters the sex problem dressed up in all the nauseous unreserve
"of a society novel.
y pipe&sTMR, wwriA " I YVQJ? ,TH TH'5 I - x'l'yv ff rtoTtei&T Z
, . V lnc nwu rZ . 'i .113 CrONm LOOK. i ctM uiu I IIMII IIT F.tJrJ I f WW.I I
Editor-and Publisher
are instructed to put the papers on the
carrier does not do this, misses you, or
time, kindly phone the office. This
NEWSPAPER
OllEGON CITY; OREGON, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1913.
have the nerve to so far forget the position that it holds in the eyes of the
people of that state to absolutely and at all times utterly, disregard the rights
of the defendant governor. The Lord knows that they did it often enough,
even at that.
Such an act as this is enough to add the public clamor for the recall of
judges and judicial deceisions, even as some of the murders that are committed
in the country almost justify lynching. The delays in the administration of
justice and the perverted use to which the courts of some of the states in the
East are put is enough grounds for the' arousing of the righteous indignation
of a public that suffers such outrages too long in silence and that would
rather "bear the ills we have than flee to others that we know not of."
While radical in the extreme and often the grounds for the gaining of
mere political advantage, the cry of "Throw the grafters out" would be a
good one for New York just now. Certainly, the people should put down
in their calendars the names of every one of those thugs that voted against
Sulzer in this crisis and should remember them to their dying day. They
have shown their allignment to the policies and principles of Tammany. They
have plainly written in undying letters the character of their associations, the
side of the fence on which they stand. They have left a lasting trace upon
the legal history of that state that will be an unwashed blot in its escutcheon
for years to come and that will die only
tion has passed away. "
Well have some of the learned jurists of the country declared that for
a hundred years the people and courts of this country will look back upon thi
trial and the evidence and decisions on proceedure-that it produced. Well
have they declared that it will remain a part of the legal annals of the coun
try for many years to come and will stand as a lasting smirch upon the honor
of a state that has grown callous to legal outrages and that has become ac
customed to violations of law and records of thuggery and political crockery.
CHARITY ALWAYS Driven from pillar to post by the lack of work and
BEGINS AT HOME forced to walk down the. railroad track in the
search of employment that will feed and clothe his starving family, the case
of C. W. Wilson is, perhaps, unusual only in that it is more extreme than
many others that have not been called to the attention of the public generally.
Strange it is that with all of the millions that the people of the United
States annually send to the far east to feed, clothe, and educate the heathen,
that such a condition could1 arise. Strange, that in a country like ours the
price of a baby's life must be given before the sentiment of the people is
aroused enough to care for those who are temporarily in need of care and
attention. -
The lack of work in this, instance was merely temporary. The man was
willing to work. He was looking for a place. The sufferings of his wife
and baby had its effect upon his mind as it would have an effect upon "the
mind of every husband and father. A little care for the wife and child at
that time until the father could have found work would have saved that baby's
life and would have protected its mother's health. Isn't it better that we
should first care for our own than send the money that we annually raise to
educate and clothe the people of the far east people whom we do not know,
for whom we have not the slightest sympathy, and in- whom we have not
and cannot have the smallest bit of interest.
Would it not be better for us to help those who are willing to work but
for the moment cannot find it than send the millions that are now given to
"the heathen Chinese," or the African in the wildest of the forests of the
"Dark Continent?" We are primarily interested in our own people. Self
preservation is the first law of nature. The protection of our own has been
the law of the race.since there was a race. The money that we spend annual
ly for the benefit of the other countries of the world were better spent in
the protection of our own and the caring for our own mothers and children.
Though the influence that this country has had on the civilization of the
darkest corners of the world is a fact of which we are justly proud, we should
never let that ambition cause us to overlook those who are right at our own
doors and who have a better right to our sympathy and help at a time when
that sympathy and help is badly needed. The blow that that father suffered
when his child died on that long trip is enough to leave its marlt on his life
for many years to come. To see a wife and mother with her babe in her arms
dependent upon him and unable to help her or to provide her even with the
necessities of life is more than the average man can stand. It makes it doubly
hard upon him when she bravely bares her shoulders to the winds of misfor
tune and the storms of nature's elements and takes her place beside him in the
fight for a bare chance to live in the world.
Charity toward all men, but charity toward those at home first, is the
best possible remedy for some of. the evils of our industrial life. After we
have first cared for our own, then we are in a better position to send our
money to those in other lands and countries who badly need our aid.
"The man who does not and cannot,
save money cannot and will not da '
anything else worth while." Andrew
Carnegie.
The Bank of Oregon City
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
Heart to Heart
Talks
By CHARLES N. LURIE
THE BLESSING OF THE SNOW.
As the whiteness of the snow covers
the decaying brown of the year, so
oes the whiteness of the hair lighten
and glorify the closing years of human
Under the honien coverlnz at thp
when the last of the present genera
.
snow lies the promise or me spring
Under the whitening thatch of the
human habitation inheres, perhaps, the
certainty of a spring in another exist
ence. The earth is resurrected. The spiril
shall live. '
As you count the whitening hairs,
consider each one as a snowflake, sent
to cover with the beauty jf the snow
the decaying remains of the years that
have passed. Wear them not with re
gret but with the calm acceptance of
the years that have passed and prom
ise of the ages to come.
To all who live comes in time the
whitening of the hair. . If you would
live lonsr von must face the fact tint
HOUSE AND FURNITURE
2-story, 8-room plastered
house. Can be used by two
families. Toilet and bath; cor
ner lot 66x105. large enough to
build another house. Consider
' able furniture with the property.
Will sell all for $2500.00, or
take out the furniture.
DILLMAN & HOWLAND
witn 'tne addition of years you enter
old age. Regard it not as a burden or
a source of regret.
Be notas those of whom the German
proverb says: "
"All would live long, but no one
wishes to be ojd."
The infirmities of age are many, it Is
true, but are they not compensated by
the gift of the added years in which
to live, to think, to feel ? The ardor of
youth and its vigor are replaced by the
experience of age and its wisdom. , All
of these qualities have their places and
their values. Each in its own way is
best" Each has Its own time for use.
"Age is opportunity no less than
youth itself, though In another dress."
It is pleasant to note that white hair
amona women is no longer considered
a'disfigurement Indeed, the pendulum
has swung to the other extreme, and
fashionable women are vying with one
another- in assuming the virtue of
white hair "if they have it not nat
urally.. Even young women with crowns of
glory radiant in the colors of youth,
blond, brunette and auburn, are imi
tating the whiteness of the hair of
their grand mothers. They powder the
hair to make it white.
A passing fancy, of course, but it
teaches in. some degree the lesson that
thire are hunor mid glory in the whit
oniny f tht tvir.
ssse-sseeesss'S'$
$ GUSTAV FLECHTNER
$ Teacher of Violin $
$ wishes to announce that he has $
S resumed teaching at his studio,
8 612 Center Street. . ?
Solo and Orchestra Work ' S
? Phones: Main 1101 Home M-172
?SSS8-!! ?? -S38 i- v
S L. G. ICE. DENTIST ?
Beaver Building $
S Phones: Main 1221 or A-193
8S$SSSSSSSS!i!'SS
Wants, For Sale, Etc
Notices under these classified heading!
will De inserted at one cent a word, first
Hons. One inch card, $2 per month: kalf
Inch card. ( t lines), JV-per month.
Cash must accompany order unless one
Insertion, half a eent additional inser
his an open account with the paper. No
financial responsibility tor errors; where
errors occur free corrected notice will be
printed for patron. Minimum charge 15c.
Anyone th-ui 13 r-t of employment
and feels he cannot afford to ad
vertise for work, can have the use
of our want columns tree of charg.
This places o obligation of any
sort on you, simply wish to be
of assistance to any worthy person.
LEON DAILY, Lathing and Plastering
Contractor. Lowest price possible.
HELP WANTED FEMALE
WANTED Middle-aged woman for
general housework; good home,
.good wages. Call on or address,
Mrs. J. J. Tyrrell, Gladstone, Ore.
WANTED German girl for general
housework. Apply 610 Seventh St.
MISCELLANEOUS
L. AUSTIN, the tailor, for men and
women. Suits made to your meas
ure: alterations and refitting.
Prices reasonable. Room A, Barclay
Building.
A CHANCE One acre suitable for
chicken ranch; 6-room . plastered
house; chicken houses and barn;
creek, well and hydrant. Price $180Q.
half cash. See G. Grossenbacher,
Canemah.
FOR SALE.
FOR SALE, at a bargain 2-cylinder.
7-horse, late model Excelsor motor
cycle. Equipped; has tamden seat.
Ask for E. Brown, Enterprise office.
FOR SALE Gasoline wood saw;
good tis new, and 2 sucking colts, 4
." months old. F. Steiner, Oregon
City, Rt. No. 3. Tele. Beaver Creek.
FOR SALE Fresh cow with calf.
Grossenbacher, Canemah.
G.
WOOD AND COAL
OREGON CITY WOOD & FUEL CO.
Wood and coal, 4-foot and 16-inch
. lengths, delivered to all parts of
city; sawing especially. Phono
your orders Pacific 1371, Home
A120. F. M. BLUHM.
By Gross
WE REPAIR ANYTHING
AND EVERYTHING
MILLER-PARKER COMPANY
Next Door to Bonk of Oregon City
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
NOTICES
Summons
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon for the County of Clacka
mas. Lucien' A. Thomas, Plaintiff,
vs.
Nellie P. Powers, Defendant
To Nellie P. Powers, abod 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 named
suit, on or before, the 8th day of.
November, 1913, said data being
the expiration of si weeks from
the first publication of this sum
mons, and if you fail to appear or
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 decree dissolving the bonds
of matrimony now existing between
the plaintiff and defendant. " This
summons is published by order of
Hon. J. TI. Campbell, Judge of the
above entitled Court, which order
was made on the 12th day of Sep
tember, 1913, .and the time "prescrib
ed for publication thereof is six
weeks, beginning with the issue dat
ed September 13th, 1913, and contin
uing each week thereafter t and
including Friday, October 25th. 1913.
P. J. BANNON,
613-614 Ch. of Com. Bldg. Port
land, Oregon. Attorneys for Plaintiff.
SUMMONS
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon, for the County of Clack
amas. Lora A. Chiles, Plaintiff
vs.
O. R. Chiles, Defendant.
To O. R. Chiles:
"In the name of the state of Ore
gon, you are hereby required to ap
pear and answer to the complaint
filed against you in the above named
suit, on or before the 24th day of
November, 1913, said date being the
date fixed by the court, being six
weeks from the first publication oC
this summons, and if you fail to
appear and answer said complaint
for want thereof, plaintiff will apply
- to the court for the relief prayed
for in her complaint, to-wit: A de
cree of divorce, dissolving the bonds
of matrimony now existing between
plaintiff and defendant, on the
ground of cruel and inhuman treat
ment; and for the sum of seventy
five ($75.00) dollars, attorney's fees,
and twenty-five ($25.00) dollars
court costs, and for the care, cus
tody, and control of Harold E.
Chiles, for such other and further
relief as the court may deem equit
able and just. This summons is
published by the order of the Hon
orable J. V. Campbell, judge of the
circuit court for the county of
Clackamas, state of Oregon, which
order was made and entered on the
10th day of October, 1913, and the
time prescribed for publication i3
six weeks beginning with the issue
dated October 11th, 1913, and con
tinuing each wek thereafter, and in
. eluding the issue of November 22,
1913.
- W. A. BURKE,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
SUMMONS
In the Circuit Court of Oregon for the
County of Clackamas.
Mary G. Zink, Plaintiff,
vs.
Gottlibe Zink (or Gottlieb Zink),
Defendant.
In the Name o the State of Oregon,
Greetings:
You, Gottlibe Zink, are hereby re
quired to appear and answer the
complaint filed against you in the
above entitled suit, on or before the
first day of December, A. D., 1913,
said date being after the expiration
of six weeks from the first publica-
Pabst's Okay Specific
Does the worx. You all
s:$3.oo
know it by reputatio
Price
FOR SALE BY
JONES DRUG COMPANY
D. C. LATOTJRETTE, President.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
CAPITAL $50,000 00
Transact a General Banking Business. Open from A. M. u ) P. M
HHRY JR. SAYS'
TNfcT
owe
tion of this summons, and if you
fail to appear or answer said com
plaint on or before said date, for
want thereof the plaintiff will apply
to the court for the relief demanded
in her complaint, to-wit:
For a decree of this honorable
court dissolving the bonds of matri
mony now existing between the
plaintiff and the defendant, and
that the custody of their minor
child, Lizzie Julie Carrie Zink, be
awarded to the plaintiff, and that
she. have such other and further re
lief as may be just and meet in the
premises.
This summons is published by or
der of the Hon. J. U. Campbell,
judge of the above entitled court for
six successive weeks in the Morn
ing Enterprise, a daily newspaper of
general circulation published in
Oregon City, Clackamas county,
Oregon, said order being dated Oct
ober 9th, 1913, and the time for the
first publication is October. 11th,
1913, and the last publication is No
vember 22nd, 1913.
' E. C. DYE,
Attorney for Plaintirr,
-- Office, south of court house, over
Harris' Grocery, Oregon City, Ore.
SUMMONS
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon.yfor Clackamas county.
xVnnie Millor, Plaintiff,
vs.
William Millar, Defendant.
To William Millar, above named de
fendant: In the name of the state of Ore
gon you are hereby required to ap
pear and answer the comp'.aint filed
against you in the above named suit,
on or before the 10th day of No
vember, 1913, said date being the
expiration of six weeks from the
first publication of this summons,
and if you fail to appear or answer
said complaint, for want thereof,
the plaintiff will apply to the court
for the relief prayed for in her com-
plaint, to-wit :
For a decree dissolving the bonds
of matrimony now existing between
the plaintiff and defendant. This
summons is published by order of
Hon. H. S- Anderson, judge of the.
county court, which order was made
on the 26th day of September, 1913,
and the time prescribed for publica
tion thereof is six weeks, beginning
with the issue dated, September
27th 1913, and continuing each weeit
thereafter to and including October
17th, 1913.
JOHN N. SIEVERS,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Summons
In the Circuit Court for the State of
Oregon, for Clackamas County.
Max Wecksler, Plaintiff,
vs.
Annie Wecksler, Defendant.
To Annie Wecksler, the above
named Defendant: m
In the name of the State of Ore
gon: You are hereby required to
appear and answer the comp'.aint
. filed against you in the above en
titled court and cause within six
weeks from the date of the first
publication of this summons, to-wit,
on or before the 3rd day of Novem
ber. 1913, and if you fail to so ap
pear and answer said complaint, the
above named plaintiff, will apply
to the court for the relief 'prayed
for in his complaint herein, to-wit:
for a decree forever dissolving the
bonds of matrimony now and here
tofore existing between plaintiff and
defendant, and for such other, fur
ther and different relief as to the
court may seem meet and equita
ble. -This summons is published in
pursuance of an order of Hon. J.
U. Campbell, Judge of said Court,
. made and entered on the 12th day of
September, 1913, and the time pre
scribed in said order for the publi-
- cation of this summons is ' once
each week for six consecutive
weeks, and the date of the first pub
lication of this summons is the
13th day of September, 1913.
- MOSER & McCUE and
WM. A. WILLIAMS,
Attorneys for Plaintiff, 152129
Yeon Bldg., Portland, Oregon.
F. J. MEYER, Cashier.
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