r 2. j MORNING ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1913. ORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON CITYOREGON I E. BRODIE - Editor and Publisher Eatered as second-class matter January 9. 1911, at the post office at City, wider the Act of March 2, 1879. " TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION rtT ? mad. tWi W mail - . tke by mail . week, kf carrier MT MM .$3.00 . 1.50 .1.00 . .18 f f Morning Enterprise carrier boys are instructed to put the papers on the rch r in the mail box. If the carrier does not do this, misses you, or aeflectt getting the paper to you on time, kindly phone the office. This i the only way we can determine whether or not the carriers are following sn-tructi-ns. Phone Main 2 or B-10. CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER- been Without the support of the Clackamas delegation, it would have useless to introduce a bill. ' . ' This is weak argument, at best. All business concerns increase, the sal aries of their employees whenever justice demands it. The legislature should do the same. The following are some of the 825 men who signed a petition to the legislature asking that the salary be increased, to $1600.00 without any men tion being made of the plan to dispense with the services of one supervisor. These names are given because the assertion has been made that the signers of the petition were mill hands who did not pay heavy taxes: B. T. McBain, H. C. Stevens, Chas. H. Caufield, E. G. Caufield, D. C. Latourtete, C. D. Latpurette, R. Petzold, Joseph E. Tledges, M. D. Latour ette, John W. Loder, C. E. Spence, L. Adams, J. T. Apperson, W. P. Kir chem, Geo. H. Brown, John F Risley, C. W. Risley, H. G. Starkweather, John R. Cole, W. W. Everhart, Wm. Andresen,. Geo. A. Harding, W. A Huntley, Clyde Huntley, O. D. Eby, W. H. Bair. Two of the circulators of the petitions reported that out of more than a hundred persons approached only five declined to sign the petition. We hope that Clackamas county will put itself on record by giving this measure a large majority. HE LAST STAND The wets are making their last stand before 'the ,F THE WETS Tuesday election. It is a lost cause. They have sent t letters to the voters of the city using all of the old stand-by arguments fat have been worn through every prohibition campaign in recent years. Of the signers on that letter there is not a single bank. There are no nufacturing industries. There are no doctors, no lawyers, no department res, no educators, nor a single man or woman whose influence in his pro- Lssion tends to uplift and elevate the moral fiber of the community. Such a letter is worthless, ineffective, and utterly useless in expressing ybody's opinion about any of the issues that are to be brought before the ;ople at the forthcoming election. Te factors that have to do with the wn's development are not there- The elements that contribute to the oral and financial features of the city life are not represented. The hurry d bustle with which some of the signatures were secured brought none of pose names that deal with the business nor with the moral tone of the com- punity. In- addition, the arguments that are used are those that have been worn Jut by the experiences of other cities and that have lost their effectiveness y the proof that they were not true. The contention that the city would lose trade because of the tendency of lie man who drinks to go to Portland for his liquor and while there purchase Ither goods, is as false as the foundation upon which the saloon stands. It K weak, fragile, and a poor excuse. The wets are also afraid that the farm- Irs who come into the city for their trade will go to towns where they can ret their liquor at the same time and that Oregon City, will as a result, lose Jhe businesss that comes to it from the outside farming districts. It is a notorious fact that many of the farmers of the county now send heir boys to Canby and other dry towns to purchase goods rather than send I hem to a city where their every step is waylaid by the saloon and the evil influences that the saloon breeds and in which it flourishes. The wets are feaurful, too, that the man who goes into Portland will get drunk while he is there and that he will try to make up for lost time by tat Jing more than he would were the liquor right here at home. The consump tion of liquor in the city would not be lessened, they contend, and the condi tions under which it could be bought would be worse than under the saloon regime. " But of all of the arguments that the saloon produces, the funniest one is its fear that the prohibition law will breed hyprocrisy and the utter disre gard for all law. Coming from the saloon, this is really amusing. The Iterrible fear that has taken a firm grip on the throat of the saloon is not that Ithe people of the city will need booze and that they will violate the law, but rather than THEY WILL SEE THE LIGHT AND KICK OUT A DISEASE THAT HAS CURSED THE CITY FOR YEARS. The saloon has the right to be afraid of this. The people have come to the point where they see that there is no good whatever in the saloon. They know now, after years of experience, that no good thing ever did or ever can lome out of a saloon, that it curses the city in which it thrives, that its regard for law is not high enough to make it fear that law violation will occur, and that it taxes the people for something that gives no benefit in return. The saloons had better let this question of taxation alone. It has been yelling its head off for the past few weeks that the city would have to raise the levy in order to meet the loss of the revenue. But the taxes that drain a city, that take the incomes and earnings of thousands, that fatten the pocket books of men who do not have the slightest interests here and whose only am bition is to keep a still firmer grip on the neck of the people, total more than a dozen times what the loss in revenue could ever be or what the cost in an increased levy would entail. The saloons are a bluff. Theii .arguments have been nothing but bluff all of these years. The liquor trust is in the same list with all other "trusts that threaten all sorts of dire calamities that they are powerless to bring about. The National Liquor Dealers Journal admits through its editorials of a Tecent date that the cause is lost and that the liquor interests are merely fight ing for time. They realize better than do those who fight them that the people of the country have become aroused to the iniquity of the saloon and have been the curse as it really is. The arguments now are the same as they formerly were, but they fall short of their mark. They don't carry the conviction now that they once did, for the saloons themselves issue them in the half-hearted spirit that ad mits hpfnrp an plprfion that Jill is Insf Ttc intprpst in the rhnrnrtpr nf flip people or the community, its solicitude over the welfare of the boy whose (father it curses, its amusing fear that the prohibition law will make mollycod dles and law breakers are all sent out as the characteristic line of "bunk" for WilWlI U1C hctlUUIl! Ill ICt-CUL ycuis iiitvc ucuuic iuuuu:. THEIR CAUSE IS LOST AND THEY KNOW IT. O SERVICES ARE The county superintendency act will no doubt carry by POORLY PAID a good majority. It is conceded that the salary now -paid the county superintendent is out of all proportion to the service rendered 'and to the salaries paid by other counties of the state. : About the only argument against the measure is that an officer should not ask for an increase while in otiice. Mr. Uary informs the Lnterprice that he visited the delegates from Clackamas county during the 1911 session of the legislature to secure the passage of a bill. Hon. E. P. Carter had t-.il'pn a ct-snrl nn mnt-tpn: in a cpnprfll wav that would nnt nprmit Jii'c vntinrr . . to j i - - consistently for any salary bill. Hon. M. A. Magone had stated repeatedly during the campaign that if elected, he would not vote to increase any salary. ' WE ARE LARGE ENOUGH to carry your account, and not so large that you are In danger of being overlooked. The Bank of Oregon City OLIT BANK HM CLACKAMAS COUNTY FORUM OF THE PEOPLE WHO MRS. DUNIWAY IS. OREGON CITY, Ore., Nov. 1. (Ed itor of The Enterprise Mrs. Duniway is the sister of Harvey W. Scott, the late editor of the Oregonian. Mr. Scott was the bitter enemy of Union labor; he was the enemy of the initi ative and referendum; of statement No. 1 of Woman's Suffrage and of pro hibition. Mrs Duniway's mind practi cally runs in the same groove of her great brother's. She has never es poused any of the above principles ex cept woman's suffrage. Mrs. Duniway has never been a philanthropist like Frances Willard; she has not the broad view of Dr. Anna Shaw. She is a local character with a vigorous expression and a narrow conception. Her activities have been centered in the one thing woman's suffrage. Mrs. Duniway has never been a strong fact or in religious moral reforms. She is a mental aristocrat in her conserva tism. Should she organize a moral re form, she would have no following and her disappomtment would be heart breaking, for it would be founded on caste, not on class. CATHERINE R. SMITH. will hit all of us that is all of us ex cept the churches and their pastors, who don't pay any tax anyway and as closing them will not stop liquor consumption here, where is to be the profit?' Closing the saloons will stop ilO.OOO annual revenue. Closing the saloons will breed blind pigs, and will ad to police expenses. Closing saloons will indirectly drive trade to Portland. Closing saloons will add ten vacant store-buildings to those already yawn ing for tennants. And closing sa loons will not better moral conditions. Just from the dollars-and-cents view point, then, what are the citizens' to gain from closin? them? MAXWELL. VIETOR. P. S. The query has been raised, "who is this Maxwell Vietor?" He is a newspaperman who is trying to earn a living by publishing a weekly paper in the county in which he resides and is a voter. AMONG THE CHURCHES Official Censor Should See That Our Plays Are Clean By HENRY CLEWS, Banker, of New York 1 HEARTILY FAVOR THE APPOINTMENT OF AN OFFICIAL CEN SOR IN THIS COUNTRY WHO WOULD PREVENT THE PRESEN TATION ON THE STAGE OF PLAYS THAT OFFEND THE SENSE OF DECENCY WHICH IS INHERENT IN EVERY MAN AND WOMAN WHOSE MORAL SENSE IS NOT BLUNTED. As a person cannot touch pitch and not be defiled, in like manner our sons and daughters cannot witness a vulgar act on the stage without hav ing their sense of modesty soiled by contact with the unclean. I believe the stage could be and should be the great TEACHER OF MORALITY. Many a man and a woman, too, can look back and remem ber the good seed that yas planted in their 'minds years ago by some play that was written to INSTRUCT AND ELEVATE AND NOT TO DEGRADE. OREGON CITY, Ore., Nov. 1. (Ed itor of The Enterprise) I have read with much interest the letters that have appeared in this column and else where during the last several days, in which various local workers for the Anti-Saloon League have rewritten and revamped paid prohibtion adver tising that has appeared in the Salem papers. These letters have contained entertaining discourses upon Belling iiarn. Wash., Eugene, Albany and Rose burg, Oregon but have not hay any thing to say about conditions in Ore gon City. Permit me to suggest that possibly the thing for voters to con sider next Tuesday is what this so called "prohibition" will be apt to do to Oregon City. As this community is within easy reach of Portland, which will not be a "dry" city, and as local merchants are even now figh ing to keep trade at home, it seems to me that closing local saloons will only force more buyers to Portland, where they can get both liquor and general merchandise at the same time. Closing local saloons will also deprive this city of much-needed rev enue which local workers of the Anti- Saloon League do not deny and it will not produce any material bene fits. In the blunt language of another writer: "By what process of reason ing can one expect to establish a dry island amid a sea of booze, and the waves of the sea never lap the shores of the little island?" And,, quite incidentally, how will Oregon City people barbers, bakers, shoe-makers and other artisans like an "occupational tax," such as has been levied in Roseburg, to make up for the loss of saloon license money? Something will have to be done here to make up the extra city revenue, and the occupational tax seems the simplest. Closing the local saloons St. John's Catholic Church, corner of Water and Tenth streets. Rev. Father A. Hillebrand, residence 912 a. m., with sermon; vespers anl benediction at 7:30 p. m.; low mass Sunday 8:00 a. m., week days mass 8:15 a. m. First Presbyter-iii Church, Rev. J. R. Landsborough, minister Sabbath schol at 10:00 o'clock, Mrs. W. C. Green, superintendent; morning worship at 11:0Q o'clock, subject, "A Nation's Exhaltration" Y. P. S. C. E., 6:45, topic, study of - "China's New Day;" evening worship at 7:30, -subject, "Helpful Citizenship and the People at the Polls." First Methodist Episcopal Church, T. B. Ford, minister, residence 107 10th street, phone Main 96, church phone main 59. Services today as follows: 10 o'clock, Sunday school, J. R. Bowland, superintendent; 11 o'clock, public services, music by the chorus under direction of Mrs. Neita Barlow Lawrence, and sermon by the pastor; class meeting follows the service immediately, Moses Yoder, leader; devotional meeting "f the Epworth League; 7:30, even ing service, and sermon by the pas tor on "The Perils of Young Men." Congregational Church, Geo. Nelson Edwards, pastor, residence 602 Sev enth street, phone Main 395 Morn ing worship at 11:00 a. m., Sunday school at 9:50 a, m.; Christian En deavor meeting at 6:30 p. m.; even ing service at 7:30 p. m. First Baptist Church, William T. Milli ken, D. D., pastor Bible school at 30:00, H. E. Cross, Supt, Leo. S. Burdon, assistant Supt; morning worship at 11:00, sermon upon: "The Genesis of Happiness:" B. Y. P. U., at 6:30, Miss Ona Benner, leader, "The World Today;" even ing song service and worship, 7:30. The pastor will speak, upon - "The Life of Power." i German Evangelical Lutheran On j Sunday, October 5," the congregation -will hold its annual harvest Thanks- RIDER AGENTS WANTED IN EACH TOWN and distitcttorideandexhlbitasampleLatestMode! Ranger" bicycle furnished by us. Uur Kider Agents everywhere are makintrmoney fast. WriteforfuU particulars amispecial offer at ones. WO MOHcT kcQUIkcD until yon receive ana approve your bicycle. yve snip to anyone anywnere in tne u. s. mmmt a cent acposttm advance, prepojJfeifllt. and allow ten PAYS'FREBTRlALuunp.g II ,2 If you are then not perfectly satisfied or do not wish to keep the bi Ma'a! cycle ship It back to us atourexpense and wouwiM not be out one cent. a fiataov DBIfC6 e furnish the highest grade bicycles it is ffrairWalUnl rnliE possible to niakeatone small profit above Hs actual factory cost. You save $10 to 825 middlemen's profits by buy- inp rlirvt-. rf n nnd ha vfl t.hflmAniifa(.t.nrfti.'ROTinrftntft bfihind voiir bicycle. DO NOT BUY a bicycle or a pair ot tires from anyom at ,l Ja any vnce until you receive our catalogues and learn our unheara ot fQIfactory prices and remarkable xperial offers. lpJfiYGU VfLL BE ST0nSSn0 logue and study oursaperbmodeleat low prices we can maxe you ihie year, we sen meDigDesi grace bicycles for lees money than any other factory. We are satisfied with 81.00 prolit above factory cost. BICYCLE DEALERS, yon can 8ell our bicycle under your own name plate at double oor prices. Orders tilled the day received. SECONDHAND BICYCLES. We do not regularly handle second-hand bicycles. bat nsnlaly have a number on hand taken in trade by our Chicago retail stores. These we clear ont r-T-oTTvtiv at rrlcee ranging from 3 to&a or 10. Descriptive bargain lists mailed free. CAflCTEO B$Ct!iTC single wheels, imported roltor chains and pedais, parts, repairs UAalbll EruilitWi and e;mimsnt.ot all kmdaat notf regular reUui prices. II Ikigelhersi Psiisisre-Prosf MM a sample, haik ilCll-ilCdllUg 111 Ed; The regular retail price of these xuor jrr unit seu you a sample pair jor ,xisi vrithortit-r $4Jj5), EiOM5SETSDSieLFSGMP8SSTSSES Nails, Tacks or Class will not let the air out. A hundred thousand pairs sold last year. BESfZlS&StTifiie Made in all sizes. It &fa.b.ai,fftfflf. js lively and easy riding, very durable and lined Inside with a special quality of rubber, which never be comes porous and which closes ud small punctures without allowing air to escape. They weigh no more than an ordinary tire, the puncture resisting Qualities beinggivenby several layers ot thin, specially prepared fabric on the tread. The regular price of these tires is S10.00 per pair, but for advertising purposes we are making a special factory price to the rider of only $4.80 per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received. We will shin C. O. D. on approval. You do not need to pay a cent untU yon examine and find them strictly as represented. We will allow a cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price $4.55 per pair) if you send FULL CASH WITH ORDER and enclose this advertisement. You ruu no risk In sending us an order as the tires may be returned at OU R expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory on examination. We are perfectly reliable and money sent tons Is as safe as In a bank. If yon order analr of these tirnR. von will find that thev will ride easier, ran faster, wear better, last longer and look finer than any tire yon have ever nsed or seen at any price. We know that yon will be so well pleased that when yon want SDicycleyoawlMglve'; your order, we want you to Sena nss trial oraerat onoe.nencetniaremarKaoiewrooiier. iff lr"lf S&FEffi TIBF don't bay any kindatanypriee until youeendforapeir of Hedgetbora m mmm m i m mm i i rnnCTBre-rTOOl pres on approval ana trial at tne special msroanci price Quoted above; or write for oar big Tire and Sundry Catalogue which describee and quo Los all nuikiai Kinos on tires ana Dicycie equipment ana snnanes at aooac nan toe usual pneee. TO INTRODUCE, ONLY ssXSf-.sl wxil-i Prill Notlcs th thick rubber rd "A" and puncture strips B" and "D,,ralBorim strip H" to prevent rim cutting. This tire will outlast any other make-SOFT, ELASTIC and EASY RIDING. nn JS1T UilfV but write us a postiil today. mmwrny sswa wwnmm of Ores from r.yon -mm yi It costs only a postal to learn everything. Write K SOW. DO NOT THINK OP BUYING a bicycle or s pair of tires from Mr.yon -"til you know the new and wonderful off erB we are making. NEW ABSOLUTELY NEW Bunglalow 5-rooms plastered will be finished tomorrow; a Dutch kitchen for your wife; electric lights; bored well. Let us show you this fine home and you will want it at $1250.00 on easy terms. DULMAN & HOWLAND Avitomobileo for PHONES: MAIN 77; A 113 Miller-Far!cer giving Festival at the church There will be services at 10 a. m. in German and at 2:30 p. m. it, English and German. For the oc casion Rev. O. K. Salzmann, of Port- - land has kindly consented to preach both services. Rev. Salzmann, re cently from Madison, Mis., is one of the finest speakers on the coast. A large attendance is expected. Schubel Lutheran Church, Rev. H. Man, pastor Sunday school, 9:30 a. m.; 10 a. m ..confessional service; 10:30, services and Lord's Supper. St. Paul's Church Holy communion o a. m., ounaay scnool 10 a. m. Holy Communion 11 a. m. Evening prayer and sermon. 7-30 Water street High mass at 10:30 Seventh Day Adventists, located be tween seventh, and Eighth on Har rison St., (one block north of East ham school) Public cordially in vited. Services as follows: Satur day, sabbath school at 1:30 p. m.; preaching service at 2:30 p. m.; Sunday (special service), preaching service, 2:30 p. m. Christian Church, Gladstone Bible school, 10 a. m. ; preaching at 11 a. m.; Junior Endeavor, 6:30; song service and sermon, 7:30; baptism at the close of services. CUT FLOWERS AND POTTED PLANTS Also all kinds of Fruit Trees, Roses aid Shrubbery for sale at she new green bouses at Third and Center Streets. Funeral work -eat at lowest possible prices. Orde rs received over phone Main 2111. H. J. BIGGER -' L. G. ICE. DENTIST Beaver Bui '-lng Phones: Main 1221 er A-193 Wants, For !k!c, Etc LOST AND FOUND LOST English Setter dog, eight months old, white on body, black ticks, black spots above eyes. Re ward. Notify Enterprise. MISCELLANEOUS Pacific Tel. Home Main 420 A-145 t . Physician and Surgeon .3 Specialist in Children's Diseases and Obstebrics 1007 Main St. E. M. BOND, M. D. FOR TRADE Full blooded White Leghorn rooster for Plymouth Rock rooster. Address 13-1 Enterprise. L. AUSTIN, the tailor, for men and women. Suits made to your meas ure; alterations and refitting. Prices reasonable Room 8, Barclay Buildine. GUSTAV FLECHTNER 4 Teacher of Violin wishes to announce that he has resumed teaching at his studio, 612 Center Street. 4 Solo and Orchestra Work Phones: Main 1101 Home M-172 A CHANCE Ona acre suitable for chicken ranch; 6-room plastered house; chicken houses and barn; creek, well and hydrant. Price $1100 half cash. See G. Grossenbacher, Canemah. HELP WANTED FEMALE FOR SALE. FOR SALE, at a bargain S-eyllnder, 7-horse, late model Exeelsor motor cycle. Equipped; has tamden seat. Ask for E. Brown,. Enterprise off iee FOR SALE Gasoline . wood saw; good as new, and 2 sucking eolts, i months old. F. Steiner, Oregon City, Rt. No. 3. Tels. Bearar Creek. WOOD AND COAL OREGON CITY WOOD & FUEL C. Wood aat eea. 4--ft a&d Sft-ineh lengths, .delivered to all parts of city; sawing eayecialtr. Fhean your orders Tacifie 1371, Home A120. F. M. BLURM. WANTED A girl for general house work. Enquire 108 ' Twlefth and Main, call Main 3714. WANTED German girl for general housework. Apply, 610 Washington St. IN BANKRUPTCY. In the District Court of the United States, for the district of Oregon. In the Matter of I. Takao &j H. Takao, partners as brothers, .and as indi viduals, Bankrupt. To the creditors of the above named bankrupts of Bull Run, In he coun ty of Clackamas and - district afore said a bankrupt. " , Notice is hereby given that on the 30th day of October, 1913, the said, the above named bankrupts, were duly adjudicated bankrupt;, and that the first meeting of their creditors will be held at Court house in Oregon City, Oregon on the 14th day of November, 1913, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, at which time the said creditors may attend, prove their claims, appoint a trustee, ex amine the bankrupt and transact such other business as may proper ly come before said meeting. B. N. HICKS,. Referee in Bankruptcy. J.LL1EAD CYCLE SiiPAQY, CHICAGO, ILL. New Gladstone Cottage 4 rooms, front and rear porches, pantry, bath room, clothes closet, attic, stairway, city water in yard, two and a half blocks from Post Office. Ready for occupancy November 15,1913. Terms easy. A Snug H oine $3200.00 2 miles N. E. of Oregon City, 5 acres cleared, rich soil, no rocks; water piped to 5-room house; barn for 6 head of stock; 3 acres hog pasture and chicken park with water; wood for household purposes; store one-quarter mile, rural delivery by door, church and high school one-half mile, Portland car 1 mile, S. P. R. R. station three-quarter mile. Part of this belongs to an estate and must be sold. If you are in the market for a piece of land or city property within your means, call on me. Owne. JOHN W LODER, STEVENS BUILDING Phones: B-35 Main 79 and 1934 Oregon City, Oregon Pabst's Okay Specific $3.00 JONES DRUG COMPANY Does the worK. You ail knew It by reputatlo Price . FOR 8ALE BY D. C. LATOURETTE, President. p. j. METER, Cashier. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON CAWTAL $50000.00 Tranesete a nerl Banking Bualnaa a. Open from A. M. ta I . M