f 2 3 MORNING ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1913. WE K TiP TH WELL LL GC&r Hey eiH& the- ipitf VE12. UClE fcTfeVe" Art Pope oot Trio?- DEA OH fel MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS - By Gross jllRY JR. SAYSj ) see- HE" WdZ. 1 f I G&5 HE" WtJiTj 71 L0"' the: -baby vLlJ M V a&reeT"nr5 Xilu Vy MORNING OREGON CITY, OREGON E. E. BRODIE Eaterei as second-class Matter Orefom City, oader the Act f March 2, ' . TERM! OF SUBSCRIPTION One ysr kjr mail .'! $3.60 Si ft&s by msi" 1.5 low mwrjths by mail 1 ' 1.03 ISer week, kjr carrier , .19 - Tk Merning Enterprise carrier boys are instructed to put the papers on the perch n in the mail box. If the carrier does not do thi, miites you,. r , neglects getting the paper to you on time, kindly phone the office. This is the nly way we can determine whether or not the carriers are following ' . mtrvctiens. Phone Main 2 or B-10. CITY OFFICIAL , PROHIBITION Now that the election is over and the votes of the peo " IpR OREGON CITY pie have shown that they no longer believe in the - scare crows that were raised by the saloons, it is pleasant to look back upon - the campaign and notice the dignified way in which the fight- was conducted by both sides. Neither the wets nor the drys have engaged in personalities or undignified conduct throughout the campaign and have based the battle that has been waged upon the facts that have been at the command of their committees. The people have had the chance to weigh those facts and have determined for . themselves that the city would be better under prohibition than under the saloon regime. They have determined to give the plan a try, at any rate, and have figured that prohibition cannot hurt the city nearly as much as the wets have believed that it would. The campaign is a concrete example of the way that facts may be submit- - ted to the people without all of the mud slinging and falsifying that usually attends the political campaigns of this and other states. It is an indication of the time and thought that the people in general give to the issues that af- " fect them and that have to do with their common interests. It is, in fact, a sign that the old time political methods of warfare are a thing of the past and that no longer will the people be bull-dozed into voting or threatened into supporting measures that their minds cannot approve or their judgment de termine is right. The people themselves have reached the point where they propose to do . their own thinking for themselves and for their own interests. They have -. done that in this campaign. They have seen the facts that have been pre sented to them by the committees of the dry forces and have determined that the saloons are an evil .that should be driven from the city and they wisely de termined to take the step that would eliminate them from the machinery oi the city. The scare crow that was raised by the saloons that the city taxes would be higher did not frighten away the voters at the polls. They believed that the aloons raised that cry in their own interests and that it was merely used as a political veil to cover the sins for which the saloons and the saloon element have been responsible. The Enterprise is delighted with the result of this election. It shows that the saloons and the element that is tied to the saloons can no longer dom inate the city and that the people are awake to their own interests in a way that they have seldom shown before. The fact that the Enterprise has had some part in the battle and has assisted in the fight that has been so success fully carried through, is a matter of satisfaction. It is glad that it had a part in the fight to make this city one of the dry towns of the state and believes that it has fulfilled the functions of a newspaper when it calls the attention of Jthe people to things that are against their interests and urges them to down those things and take the stand that will lead to the city's betterment. A newspaper is a public institution. Its voice shoud be on the side of the people, continually pointing out those things that should be" done for civic betterment and standing for all things that are for the interests of the peo ple. Whenever there is'one thing that is a blight upon the city or county - through which that paper circulates, it is the duty of that newspaper to point out that evil to the people and to urge rem to correct it. Such a stand ths Enterprise has taken. It is, consequently, pleased that the people have risen and by their votes driven out the evil that this paper has seen and against ' which it has struck trip hammer blows for the past few weeks of the cam- paign. There is no danger that the city will be in such straights as the saloons have led us to believe. There is not the slightest doubt but that this city, as have all others that have voted as we have, will continue to progress. There r 'is less doubt but that the city, now that the curse of the saloon nas been re moved and the old man of the sea who has been hanging to our neck so long has been unloosened, will take those steps of progress much more rapidly - and that the growth of the city in the next few years will be more noticeable : than it has been in the past. O - WILSON AND President Wilson has taken the step that Americans gen- - HUERTA erally expected that he would be forced to take in spite of his announced policy of non-intervention and his declaration that he would not interefer in Mexican affairs, except to protect the lives ad property of Am ericans. His order to the provisional president of Mexico amounts to a declaration - of war, should those orders be' disobeyed. It means that this country has "taken a decided stand in the Mexican situation,. one that foreign nations have thought it should have taken some time ago. - The Monroe doctrine has 'been the wall that has kept out the interference of the foreign powers and has forced them to stand idly by while the United States dilly-dallied along with the irresponsible governments that have been dominating Mexican affairs for sometime in the past. Our policy of non-intervention has made us put up. with many things from the government of Mexico that other nations would have long ago demanded idemnities for and vet we have stood for the insults and other indignities without doing anything ENTERPRISE Editor said Publisher January 9, 1911, at' the postoffice at 1879. NEWSPAPER more violent to the revolutionrent country than to protest at the things that have happened. The country will. watch with interest the action that comes out of the decisions of the powers that hi at" Washington to'tplerate no-more foolish ness on the part of the Mexican president and to see that he gets out of office in short order and turns over the government of his people to one who, is ap-, proved by the people and; authorities of the United -States. Too long already have 'we suffered from the Mexicans that no other -n'a- tion would have endured ' . We have refused to intervene when our people were shot in their foolish quarrels over the border. We have even seen them take our citizens prisoners in their filthy jails arid have received reports of the way that those people have met their deaths at the hands of the opposition forces' that are continually at war in Mexico. But the climax came when the present official head of the Mexican people became the instigator of the plot to rid the country of Madero and turned traitor to the chief tan whose cause he formerly warmly supported. Such. man's principles are not what might be expected in the ruler of a sister-republic and certainly they are not conrucive to th esafety of the Americans who are living on the other side of the line. The president of the United States has taken the proper stand when he demanded that Huerta resign at once and get out. It is now a flat-footed proposition. Either Huerta must quit or the United States must intervene. The Mexican president must see the handwriting on the wall and know now that his official days are numbered. It is certain that the presidetit cannot even recede from th eposition he has assumed. It is reassurring to the people of the United States to know that they have in the chair of the chief executive a mariwho will give all of the time that may be needed for the adjustment of difficulties by diplomatic relations, but that when he sees they are no longer effective, takes the stand toward which he has been steadily driven all of the tinje. It will be with interest that the people of the county watch the outcome of this demand upon the part of one president toward another. WE ARE LARGE ENOUGH to carry your account, and not so large that you are in danger of being over looked. The Bank f Oregon City OLDEST BANK MM CLACKAMAS COUNTY Our Whole System of Society Is the Worst World Has Ever Seen By Dr. ALFRED RUSSEL English Scientist WE see a continuous advance of man's power to utilize the forces of nature to an extent which surpasses everything he had been able to do during all the preceding centuries of his recorded history. We also see that the result of this vast economic revolution has been ALMOST WHOLLY EVIL. We see that this hundredfold increase of wealth, amply sufficient to provide necessaries, comforts and all beneficial refinements and luxuries for our whole population, has been DISTRIBUTED WITH SUCH GROSS INJUSTICE that the actual condition of those who produce all this wealth has become worse and worse, no efficient arrangements having been made that from the overflowing abundance produced all should receive the mere essentials of a healthy and happy existence. We have seen huge cities grow up, everv one of them with their OVERCROWDED, INSANITARY SLUMS where men, women and children die prematurely as surely as though a body of secret poisoners was constantly at work to destroy them. And our administration of what we call "justice" (and of which we are so proud because our judges cannot be bribed) is utterly UNJUST, because it is BASED ON A SYSTEM OF MONEY FEES at every step; because it is so cumbrous and full of technicalities as to need the employment of attorneys and counsel at great cost, and because all petty offenses are punishable bv fine or imprisonment, which MAKES POV ERTY ITSELF A CRIME while it allows those with money to go practically free. TAKING ACCOUNT OF THESE VARIOUS GROUPS OF UNDOUBT ED FACTS, MANY OF WHICH ARE SO GROSS, SO TERRIBLE, THAT THEY CANNOT BE OVERSTATED, IT IS NOT TOO""MUCH TO SAY THAT OUR WHOLE SYSTEM OF SOCIETY IS ROTTEN FROM TOP TO BOTTOM AND THE SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT AS A WHOLE, IN RELATION TO OUR POSSIBILITIES AND OUR CLAIMS, IS THE WORST THAT THE WORLD HAS EVER SEEN. INNOVATION IN CARBURETORS Cadillac Introduces Electric Heating Device Some one has called the carburetor the lungs of the automobile. Certain ly there is no more vital mechanism in a motor car than the small device which breathes in the air and vapoP ized gasoline and feeds it to the en gine in properly mixed proportions. Consequently, a car's efficiency de pends very largely on the efficiency of the carburetor. WALLACE, The Cadillac company has paid es pecial attention to the subject of scientific carburetion and the carbure tors used on their motor cars are made by the company according to their own standards. On the 1914 Cadillac will be found a new feature that adds materially to the efficiency of the carburetor. This is an electri cal heating device wihch vaporizes the gasoline before the engine is started. This makes it possible to' start on lower grades of fuel than heretofore and will prove a great boon particularly in cold weather. Adv. HOUSE AND 4 LOTS - .' '3.-room- house, wood "she'd, "and ' chicken; house; 4 lots, each BOx ."100; good garden; young fruit - trees.- rYou can't live on view ." alone if ' you could your living; would 3e made from the viewl . from thjs -place. $1000.00 smalf payment down, balance on ' monthly payments of $10.00. , DELLMAN & HOWLAND WEST LINN HAS SOCIAL AFFAIR MANY FRIENDS ENJOY PLEASANT EVENING AT THE McLARTY HOME MEHR LIGHT CLUB HAS PROGRAM Mrs. George Woodward Entertains Number of Friends Surprise Parties Are Given Ladies' Aid (By Meta Finley Thayer) A large number of friends spent a delightful evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. K. McLarty, Portland Ave nue, West Linn, Monday evening, in honor of the eighteenth birthday of Miss Mary McLarty. The rooms were gaily decorated with nasturtiums, chrysanthemums and marigolds. Mu sic, games and refreshments contrib uted to the pleasant evening. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Cook, Mr. and Mrs. John Lowry, Mr. and Mrs. A. Scott, Miss Daisy Coulsen, Miss Verl Trimble, Miss Martha Mc Larty, Miss Mary McLarty, Miss Myrtle Henderson, Miss Effie Pool, Mesley Milliken, James McKillican, M. A. Magone, Charles Achilles, John Ross, Win. McLarty, Isa McLarty, Matthew McLarty and Kenneth Mc Larty. The Mehr Licht met Monday even ing at the home of Miss Gertrude Hamilton. The following program was given: Map study Miss Florence Morse Germany's capital , . . . . . . . . ; Miss Gertrude Hamilton Solo Mrs. Matheson The Reigning House of Germany... Miss Eleanor Williams The' club members were: Miss Myrtle Hamilton, Miss Daisy Larsen, Miss Alice Larsen, Miss Eleanor Wil liams, Miss Florence Moore, Mrs. Matheson, Miss Alma Moore and Miss Gertrude Hamilton. The guests were Mrs. Brightbill, Miss Johnson and Miss Hunstock. The club will be entertained at the home of Miss Alma Moore on Novem ber 17. Mrs. George Woodward, assisted by Miss Hilda Peterson and Miss Kate Ellenbecker, entertained a num ber of friends Saturday evening at the home of Mrs. Woodward on Center street. The guests came en masque in honor of Halloween and the decor ations and refreshments were also suggestive of this season. A number of games furnished amusement, the first prizes going to Mrs. Jones and Gilbert Thomas, while Miss Anna Jones and Miss Anna Thomas were awarded the consolation prizes. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Jones, Mr. , and Mrs. Roy Woodward, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Woodward, Mrs. Kath- erine Pursifull, Mrs. George Wood ward, Miss Glaydous Reese, Miss Bea trice Reese, Miss Kate Ellenbecker, Miss Hilda Peterson, Dudley Wood ward, Roos Clark and Leo Cannon. A most pleasant surprise party was given Miss Irene Hughes at her home on Eighteenth street, October 31, the occasion being her thirteenth birth day.. Cut flowers and jack-lanterns formed the effective decorations. Hal loween games and refreshments were fatures of the evening's pleasure. St. John's Young People's club held a pleasant social last evening in Mc- Loughlin. After a short musical pro gram, the guests enjoyed an im promptu dance. Refreshments were served. The Laides' Aid society of the Pres byterian church will meet this after noon in the church parlors toplan for their bazaar which will be held early in December. The Sunday school teachers of the Presbyterian church will be enter tained by Mrs. Allen Frost this even ing. Walter Hart and Thomas .'Bailey, students., of Portland Business college were- guest at the home of Mrs. Bailey, Sunday. - . " AndT5waxdice' makes 'liars of- us- all ot nearly- all. ' ELECTRICAL WORK Contracts, Wiring and Fixtures WE DOIT Miller-Farlcer Co, v - : CUT FLOWERS AND POTTED PLANTS Also all;kinds of Fruit Trs, Roses md Shrubbery for sal at the' new- greei fcouss at Tkird and Canter Streets. Funeral work at lowest possible prices. Orders received over phone Main 2S11 . ' H. J; 1 IGGIR ; t4 Pacific Tel. Home Main 420 A-145 S Physician and Surgeon . Specialist in Children's Diseases and Obstebrics 1007 Main St. t E. M. BOND, M. D. L. e. ICE. DENTIST Beaver Building ' Phenes: Main 1221 er A-193 Wants, For Sale, Etc MISCELLANEOUS WANTED I would like to have a job of work on the farm. I am a mar ried man;- was raised on the farm. If anyoiee wants a hand, address J. C. Eads, Walnet street, 1105 Ore gon tJity. WANTED Furnished room by young man. Ill Ninth St. WANTED Housekeeping rooms or apartments. Call Chenoweth, care wire chief, Pacific Telephone : com pany. 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 9, Barclay Buildinev A CHANCE One acre suitable for chicken ranch; 6-room plastered house; chicken houses and earn; creek, well and hydrant. Price $100 half cash. See G. Grossenbacher, Canemah. HELP WANTED FEMALE WANTED Lady to take invalid to ' her home. Moderate salary. Call at 712 Polk street, Oregon City. 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. FOR SALE. FOR SALE Fine team, four-year olds, weight 2G00 pounds. See A. O. Achilles, Box 149, R. F. D., Molalla road. FOR SALE, CHEAP TwY rooms of new furniture. Rent $5.00 per month; must sell this week some terms. Call this office. FOR SALE, at a bargain 2-eylinder, 7-horse, late model Excelsor motor cycle. Equipped; has tamden seat. Ask for E. Brown, Enterprise office D. C. LATOURETTE, President F. J. MEYER, Cashier. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON CAPITAL $50,00000 Transact a General Banking Bucineaa. Open from f A. M. to J P. M Ths Bs&$ F&sd-Drsnte ORIGINAL GENUINE Avoid Imitations Take No Substitute Rich Milk, malted grain, in powder form. More healthful than tea or coffee. Forinfants,inyalids and growing children. Agrees with the weakest digestion. Purenutrihoriupbinllingthevholebody. Keep it on your sideboard at home. Invigorates nursing mothers and the aged. ,A quick lunch DreDared in a minute, WftS DoTriE RI&-HT FOR SALE Gasoline woed saw; Sood a new, aad 2 sucking colti, i months old. F. Steiner, Oregon City, Rt. No. 3. Talis. Bearer Creek. FOR RENT. FOR RENT One 5-room house, $10 per month; one 6-room plastered . house, modern conveniences, 3 aqres of ground, good shape, $200 per year; 10 acres ground for gar dening and small house, $150 per year; two small houses and one 5- -room and one 7-room house at $7.00 and $8.00 per month; good 5-room. house and four lots at Fern Ridge, t $8.00 per month. Gladstone ReaJ ' Estate asociation. Percy Cross, telephone Main 1982. ' - WOOD AND COAL OREGON CITY WOOD & FUEL C Wood and eeaL 4-ft ad 26-incs lengths, delivered to all parts ef city; sawing asaeeialty. Saame your orders Pacific 1371, Name A126. F. M. BLVHM. 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 weeks, from the date pf 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, tcwit: 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. This summons is served upon you Jjy 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 data 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. Pabst's Okay Specific Does the worx. You all $3-og. know it by reputation. Price . -. FOR SALE BY JONES DRUG COMPANY Lunch at Fountains - ' f i f