Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, October 22, 1913, Image 2

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    OREGON CITY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1913.
MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS
By Gross
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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 ' 1.00
Per week, by carrier .10
The Morning Enterprise carrier boys are instructed to put the papers on the
porch or in the mail box. If the carrier does not do this, misses you, or
neglects getting the paper to you on time, kindly phone the office. This
is the only way we can determine whether or not the carriers are following
instructions. Phone Main 2 or B-10.
CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
FREE BOOKS So 'generally has the education of the child come to be
FOR SCHOOLS regarded through the country as a matter of genuine im
portance to the state that everywhere libraries are being placed within reach
even in the. smallest and most remote districts of the several states.
There is now hardly any excuse for the child who really wants an educa
tion to grow up illiterate. There is no reason for him to have to travel for
miles to return a book as old Abe Lincoln did in the days when books were
few and far between. Now every child has a library within his reach.' Even
most families have small libraries of their own that the child has access to
daily. The schools of the country have come to regard it as a necessary part
of the course and a feature of the regular school work.
Superintendent Gary's apportionment of the funds that the authorities
oi the county and state place in his hands under the provisions of the school
laws and his setting aside of 10 cents per capita for the education of a li
brary fund is another step in the same general direction. The books that are
placed within the reach of every child of the county give that child an edu
cation that would be beneficial to him in his after life were no other form
of training given to him in his school work. The library is a great factor
in the education of the child as it is in the education and broadening of the
man more developed and matured.
Free books are to be expected within a few years in every school district
of the state. The growth of the libraries that are fostered by the state and
county and the development of" the other education advantages that are given
to the children will show what can be done when once the authorities take
the matter in hand and place the educational opportunities that they offer
within the reach of all.
Within a few years, the text books for which the head of the family now
nearly bankrupts himself to buy every year will be bought by the people of
the school district or the county in which he lives. The man who does not
have children, who has contributed nothing to posterity and has done no
good for his state, will be forced to contribute his share of the expense of
the education of the children of the man who has. A child is a contribution
to the posterity, it is an offering to the state. We have grown back to that
old idea that prevailed in the days of the ancient Greeks and Romans that
Navy Should Be a Great
University, With
Every Ship a
School :: :: ::
By JOSEPHUS DANIELS,
Secretary of the Navy
A
1913. by American
Press Association.
a -man belongs to the state and his life is the property of that power to do
with as it wills. . " -
- To make that life of the most value to the state that it serves, the people
have pushed their system of education forward by rapid stages and have given
it freely to every child who has the ambition to take its opportunities and
every parent who has the realization of its importance to- that child.
Following this, the free text book is another step in the same direction
and merely another move in the principle that the state must have its citizens
trained and the better trained they are, the better will be the condition of
that state. Where knowledge rules are the people of any country really free.
There only do they know how to use the freedom that has been given to them
by the centuries of history through which their nation or their race has passed.
In Oregon City, the free text book has already become a popular move.
The man who owns his home, pays his taxes, sends his children to school and
meets the other attendant expenses of a household feels that the man who does
not do these things and who has contributed less to society than he has is hav
ing the better of the bargain. He believes that it is only right that the man
who has no children should be made to pay for the education of the man
who has. - -
In this way, a tax would be placed upon bachelors and upon all men with
out families. If a man regards it as a priviledge that he has to be without
the worries of the head of a household, he should be made to pay for that
priviledge and contribute something, in that way, to the state to which he
contributes nothing else.
On instance of the tax that the purchase of text books places upon the
man with a family happened during the first days of school when a house
holder of Oregon City dug down in his pockets for $20 for school books alone
for the children of his house.' It was worse to him than the same amount
voud have been paid in taxes directly, for it came at a time when he felt the
books had been unnecessarily changed and when he saw how other men were
relieved of the necessity for this unusual expenditure.
. Free books, free education, free training all tend to a better citizenship.
The higher that citizenship is, the greater is its ability to realize and appro
priate the blessings of science and history that have been given to it and the
wiser and more beneficient will be its laws and the happier in general its peo
ple. -
CHRISTIANITY Press dispatches "a few days ago announced from Se
AND SUICIDE attle that a highly educated and talented Japanese woman
who had begun the study of the Christian religion had, shortly afterwards,
cut the throat of her 18-rhonths-old baby daughter and attempted to take her
own life.
Back of that story there is a mystery of. some kind, that has not yet been
solved. There was evidently, some other story behind the motive that led to
the act. There was another reason that has not yet been revealed and which
the husband of the woman has not yet discovered. Just what it was may
always remain a mystery. "
Surely no study of the Christian religion would ever lead a woman to
commit the crime that she committed shortly after she began its study. There
is certainly nothing in the Bible that has blessed Christianity that could ever
lead to the commission of any crime or that could so pervert the mind of a
mother as to take the life of her own child simply because of its study.
On the other hand, the very principle's that were taught to that woman
in the Book that she read were diametrically opposite to the act that followed
from it. "Thou shalt not kill," is as old as the ancient hyroglyphics of
Egypt and come down to us through the vista of years with that same em
phatic command and impressive strength that it carried to the people of
Israel, when it was first thundered from the mount in' the wilderness in the
days when Moses was leading his people out of the bondage and into the
Promised Land.
All of the way through the Book that she read in he, hunt for the
principles of the Christianity that she studied is that teaching which she con
sistently violated when she took the life of her child and of herself. Only in
the old Mosaic law is there the principle of an eye for an eye and a tooth
for a tooth that comes dolvn to us in the relic of those days when ' capital
punishment was one of the features of the age, but its other teachings do not
even suggest the commission of a crime unless that crime follows one that is
committed1 in the face of law.
It is useless to contend that she acted as she did through any thing that
she may have studied in her search for the truth of the new teaching. It
is more useless to argue that the new teaching she studied gave her the mo
tive for the crime. There is back of that crime some other motive that hasj
not yet appeared, something that has not come to the surface even with the
investigations that have been conducted and the information that her husband
may be able to furnish.
It would be intertesting to learn just what that motive was. Her state
ments in the hospital "My new God, have mercy on me and let me die for
my baby," contain a certain significance, but yet shed no' light upon the
mystery that surrounds the act. -
CITY HOMES
7-room house ... .'. . . . .$7500.00
2 houses on 1 lot ...... 5500.00
9-room house, 2 lots . . . 4500.00
9-room house, 1 13 lots. 3500.00
6- room house 2700.00
7- room bungalow, new . 2200.00
5-room bungalow 1500.00
5- room bungalow, new.. 1500.00
6- room house ... 1000.00
5-room house . 800.00
DILLMAN & HOWLAND
ELECTRICAL WORK
Contracts, Wiring and Fixtures
WE DO IT
Miller-Parlcer Ca
THE NAVY SHOULD BE A GREAT UNIVERSITY, WITH COLLEGE
EXTENSION, HIGH SCHOOL EXTENSION AND PRIMARY EX
TENSION ALL ON BOARD SHIP. EVERY SHIP SHOULD BE A
SCHOOL, AND EVERY OFFICER SHOULD BE A SCHOOLMASTER. IN
THIS WAY WE CAN GIVE THE YOUNG MAN HIS RIGHTFUL CHANCE
TO BETTER HIS POSITION AND AT THE SAME TIME BENEFIT THE
NAVY BY INCREASING THE KNOWLEDGE AND USEFULNESS OF
ITS PERSONNEL.
It is not easy to secure the full complement of young men of character
needed each year to man our ships. To stimulate enlistments it has been
necessary to restort to recruiting stations, traveling recruiting parties and
advertisements.
Only in exceptional cases has the navy been making good its promises.
I found that it was only the young man of EXCEPTIONAL MERIT
AND ABILITY or with unusual determination to learn a useful trade
who wa.s really getting the kind of instruction which all who enlisted had
been led to believe would be afforded them. I decided then that either
the navy must stop publishing such advertisements or else IT MUST
GIVE THE YOUNG MAN ALL-THAT THE ADVERTISEMENTS
PROMISE." " . - - '
TO ESTABLISH ON EACH SHIP A SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION
FOR THE ENLISTED MAN IS MY AIM AT PRESENT. THESE SHIP
SCHOOLS SHOULD BE OPEN NOT EXCLUSIVELY TO THE EXCEP
TIONAL MAN, BUT TO EACH YOUNG MAN ON BOARD. "
I purpose that every young man who enlists shall be given at the
outset an opportunity to CHOOSE FOR HIMSELF WHAT LINE
OF TRAINING HE WISHES TO PURSUE.
. . x ...... . .. ' :. ,.
x -
- A
The officers or employes of the bank will be glad to
explain any of the details of the banking business tj
you whenever y ou call upon them.
The Bank of Oregon City
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
Faraighted.
He Why do you force me to wait
for an answer? She (who is up in po
litical economy) Because 1 don't want
to give you a monopoly until 1 find out
whether there's any competition. Ex
i-liaugp.
One Law Against It.
"There ought to be a law against
aviation," said the humane 'citizen.
. "There is one." replied the cold
blooded man. "The law of gravita
tion is continually interfering with it"
Washington Star.' '
A Stickler For Propriety.
"Waiter, waiter, call the manager! j
Here Is a fly bathing without a cos
tume." London Punch.
' Japanese Needle Men.
Japanese men are among the best
needleworkers in the world, their only
equals being the women of Russia.
She Saw Him Passing By.
That the aged are not easily roused
to enthusiasm or excitement is well
known, but tbey are not often as calm
as the old lady that the Windsor Maga
zine tells about.
An old man fell from a second story
window into the "street where an
anxious crowd immediately gathered
to see whether he' was seriously In
jured. One of his daughters rushed
frantically into the first floor room,
where his wife sat knitting, and cried:
"Oh. mother, mother, father's fallen
from the top of the house into the
road: Oh, dear: Oh. deiiri."
"Yes, my child." answered the .old
lady placidly, looking up from' her
work: "1 saw him pass the window."
CUT FLOWERS AND POTTED PLANTS .
Also all kinds of Fruit Trees, Roses and Shrubbery for sale at the
new green houses aj Third and Center Streets. Funeral work done
at lowest possible prices. Orders received over phone Main 2511
H. J. BIGGER "
MISCELLANEOUS
ROOM AND BOARD WANTED-Room
with board in private family, by
young man of good habits, having
office position. Address B. T .Mc
Bain, Oregon City.
His Apprenticeship.
"Yes." said Mr. Pater, with Hi con
cealed pride, "my youngest boy makes
some smart remarks at times. Only
recently he asked me what it meant to
be an apprentice. I told him that it
meant the binding of one person to an
other by agreement and that one per
son so bound had to teach the other all
he could of bis. trade or profession,
while the other had to watch and learn
how things were done and had to make
himself useful in every way possible."
-"What did he say to that?" asked
one of the audience.
"Why. after a few minutes the young
rascal looked up at me and said. Then
I suppose you're apprenticed to moth
er. aren't you. dad?' "London Mail.
L. AUSTIN, the tailor, for men and
women. Suits made to your meas
. ure; alterations and refitting.
Prices reasonable Room 9, Barclay
Building. .f,..
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. Grossenbacher,
Canemah.
FOR SALE.
FOR SALE OR TRADE House and
lot in Eugene for Clackamas county
property.' Address Wm. Moehnke,
Oregon City, Rt. 4.
Most cases of asthma are the result
of a bad atmosphere. The catarrh has
extended down from the nose and
throat into the bronchial tubes and set
up n spasm, which is the source of this
distressing malady. No asthmatic can
afford to keep his windows closed.
Whether by day or night, be needs a
liberal supply of fresh air. From
"Nervous Breakdowns."
It has been said of Abraham Lincoln
that as a boy tie read less than a half
dozen books and that they were such
books as "Pilgrim's Progress." Weems'
"Life of Washington" and a popular
history of the United States written in
almost primary language. Yet Lin
voln whs able to express himself more
clearly than almost any public or liter
ary, man of his time. Such is the pow-.
er of desire.
$ Pacific Tel. Home
$ Main 420 A-145 S
s E. M. BOND, M. D.
$ Physician and Surgeon
Specialist in Children's Diseases
$ and Obstebrics
8 1007 Main St. S
?S'SSSfSSJSSS3?$
S GUSTAV FLECHTNER
S Teacher of Violin $
$ wishes to announce that he has
S resumed teaching at his studio,
S 612 Center Street. . 4
5 Solo and Orchestra Work $
? Phones: Main 1101 Home M-172
S$$$,$,3S'SSsi?i'
S S "S- $
L. G. ICE. DENTIST S
Beaver Building
S Phones: Main 1221 or A-1S3 $
$$ 3 $$ $ S
Wants, For Sale, Etc
Notices under these classified heading!
will De Inserted at one cent a word, fir&t
tions. One inch card, $2 per month; bait
Inch card ( 4 lines), $1 per month.
Cash must accompany order unless one
Insertion, half a cent additional inser
has an open account with the paper. No
financial responsibility for errors; where
errors occur free corrected notice will be
printed for EAtron. Minimum charge 15c
Anyone tiu is o-u of employmeui
and feels he cannot afford to ad
vertise for work, can have tluse
of our want columns free of chargn.
This places vo obligation of any
sort on you, -v simply wish to.be
of assistance to any worthy person.
HOW would you like to talk with
1400 people about that barfain you
hava in real estate. Use the En
terprise. '
FOR SALE 8-room house and lot, on
Main street, modern improvements,
good investment. Reason of saie,
heirs want to settle estate. Inquire
at this office.
FOR SALE At "Orchard Egg Farm
Apples," Northern Spies and Bald
wins. Also 5 Indian Runner drakes.
Address J. Lr. Hendry, Rt. 6, Box
117 or phone Home 1513 after 6 p.
m. . -
FOR SALE House and lot on Mon
roe street lot 62xl05 feet; house
has five large rooms, bathroom,
pantry, three closets, a large wood
house and wash room; street im
, provements all in and paid. Apply
811 Monroe street.
FOR SALE Progress Automoatio Ad
justable dress form. Iquire Mrs.
Carrie Paetz, R. F. D. No. 5, Box 2S,
phone Main 1891.
FOR SALE, at a bargain 2-cylinder,
7-horse, late model Excelsor motor
cycle. Equipped; as tamden seat.
Ask for E. Brown, Enterprise office.
FOR SALE Gasoline wood saw;
good as new, and 2 sucking, colts, i
months old. F. Steiner, Oregon
City, Rt. .No. 3. Tele. Beaver Creek.
FOR SALE Fresh cow with calf. G.
Grdssenbacher, Canemah.
WOOD AND COAL
OREGON CITY WOOD & FUEL CO.
Wood and coal, 4-foot and 16-inch
lengths, delivered to all parts of
city; sawing especialty. Phone
your orders Pacific 1371, Home
A120. F. M. BLTJHM
LEON DAILY, Lathing and Plastering
Contractor. Lowest "price possible.
HELP WANTED FEMALE
WANTED German girl for general
housework. Call Main 1501.
WANTED German girl for general
housework. Apply 610 Seventh St.
NOTICE TO CPEOI TOR3 .
In the County Court for the S'ate of
Oregon, for Clackamas Count7.
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
having qualified, notice is hereby
given to 'the creditors of, and all
persons having claims against satd
deceased, to present tham verified
as required by law, within six
months after the first publication of
this notice to said Hans Jackuin1
sen, at the office of Lida M. O'Bryan,
attornsy, 406 Commercial block,
2nd and Washington strsets, PorC
- land .Oregon.
HANS JACKUMSEN,
Administrator of the Estate of Jo
hanna Jackumsen, Deceased.
Dated, September 24th -1913.
Enterprise advertising pays.
Pabst's Okay Specific
Does the worK. You all Jr An
know it by reputation. '.UU
Price jw
FOR SALE BY
JONES DRUG COMPANY
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 or 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 first publication of this sum
mons, and if you fail to so appear
and answer said complaint, for want
thereof, plaintiff will apply to th9
court for the relief prayed for in
aaio wiuyjaiuL, Ltrwii. ror a. uecree
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.
SHERIFF'S SALE
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon, for the county of Clack
amas. Edward F. Brackstrand and Sigrid
Backstrand, Plaintiffs,
vs.
B. F. Hart and E .R. Hart, "hus
band and wife, Defendants.
State of Oregon, County of Clackamas,
ss.: , v
By virtue of a judgment order, de
cree and an execution, duly issued
out of and under the seal of the
above entitled court, in the above
entitled cause, to me duly directed
and dated the 10th day of October,
1913, upon a judgment rendered and
entered in said court on the 10th
day of October, 1913, in favor of Ed
ward Backstrand and Sigrid Back
strand, plaintiffs, and against B. F.
Hart and E. R. Hart, husband and
wife, defendants, for the sum of
$800.00, with interest thereon at the
rate of 7 per cent per annum from
the 23rd day of February, 1911, and
the further sum of $150.00 as attor
ney's fees, and the costs and dis
bursements, and the cost of and up
on this writ, commanding me to
make sale of the following described
real property, situate in the county
of Clackamas, state of Oregon, to
wit: The west half of the soutnwest
quarter, of the northeast quarter of
section six, township three south of
' range five east of the Willamette
Meridian, Clackamas county, Ore
gon. Now, Therefore, by virtue of said exe
cution, judgment order and decree,
and in compliance with the com
mands of said writ, I will, on Thurs
day, the 13th day of November, 1913,
at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m., at
the front door of the county court
house in the city of Oregon City, in
said county and state, sell at public
auction, subject to redemption, to
the highest bidder for U. S.' gold
coin cash in hand, all the right,
title and interest which the within
named defendants or either of them,
had on the date of the mortgage
herein or since had in or to the
above described real property or
any part thereof, to satisfy said ex
ecution, judgment order, decree, in
terest, costs and all accruing costs.
E. T. MASS,
Sheriff of Clackamas County, Ore.
By B." J. STAATS, Deputy.
Dated, Oregon City, Ore., October
11, 1913.
The classified id columns, of The
Enterprise satisfy your wants.
D. C. LATOURETTE, President.
F. J. MEYER. Cashier.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
CAPITAL $50,000 00
Transacts General Banking Buaines. Ooen from 9 A M. u I M.