C2--; MORNING ENTERPRISE .SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1913. MR HENRY PECK AND Hl FAMILY AFFAIRS By Gross HENRYJR.5AYS wow cecss Trie dRE'5S Hlf TH WA V- ' ' ' ' " ' ' ; irt To "it tV&HE QiSGesf STIFF That EnEE. WAUtEp or! TWO ?E&5 f f -raar&A ('BAey looks ffocp WTHee Fev , its a voHpeTKe' OFF TH5 HIS ?RvlpM4 MORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON CITY, OREGON E. E. BRODIE Editor and Publisher t Entered as second-class natter January 9, 1911, at the postoffice Oregon City, under the Act of March 2, 1879. at TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION One year, by mail $3.00 Six months, by mail 1.50 Four 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. THE PRESIDENT'S Some newspapers have recently gone into hysteria MEXICAN POLICY over the stand that President Wilson has taken in the Mexican situation. They fall back upon the old moss backed attitude of precedent and yell because the president has no other incident in American history to sustain him in the position that he has assumed. It is regretable that this country has a presidential back bone. It is piti able that the chief executive of this land now has the nerve to back up some of the threats that have been made for the past several presidential adminis trations and that he can ACT as well as talk. On account of this old song that "it has never happened before and why should it happen now?" this country will never get anywhere if it does not have officers who are able to meet the crises that appear from time to time and that do not happen to have similar historical incidents upon which to base further action. Precedent is a general nuisance. The man who' is guided by it, who allows his actions to be controlled and his thought hampered by moss covered histories and mouldy law books will never branch out into the fields where original thought is necessary to meet the crucial tests that come. But, casting aside this question, the history of this country will show that other presidents have pointed the way to the path that Wilson has taken.-In the days when Monroe was president, his message to the congress of the United States in which he announced that doctrine that has since guided the political affairs of this country relative to the southern nations, his language was the opening wedge in the protectorate that the United States has estab lished. Following conclusively to its logical ending, there can be no other way out but for the United States to guide the affairs of the south and for it to take a stand on matters that effect the general welfare of all of the nations on our other border, especially when those affairs concerns us as deeply as do the sit uations in Mexico. "We can view in no other light," says the presidential message in the early days of American history, "any interferance on the part of any European power than as an affront at the United States" or words to that effect. The message could not have been stronger. It pointed the way. It lighted the rath that all future presidents of this country have followed, whether they be of the republican or the democratic fold. There is precedent for you. It is the light that has blazed down the pathway of our political relations with our southern neighbors. It guided the hand of Wilson as it has guided the hand of every other president. In the days of the Civil War, when the storm clouds were breaking over these United States and when the country was torn from one end of the land to the other by factions and by parties, Abraham Lincoln took several steps that broke the law of precedent and that verged out into the field where others had not yet gone. Almost every president that we have had has. at some time or other, taken a step that broke the law of precedent and that met the crisis that came before him. Guided by precedent, hemmed in by old moss back theories of government, locked by notions that would have held us in chains to the British lion and that would still leave us the original thir teen colonies scattered along a rock bound coast, this country would have Is Football Worth What It Costs? By Colonel C P. TOWNSLEY Inju Photo by American Press Association. I nes and Deaths Big Price to Pay Superintendent of West Point EXPERIENCE seems to indicate that football is likely to produce more lasting injuries than riding or gymnastics. IN VIEW OF THE COMPARATIVELY SMALL NUMBER OF CADETS WHO PLAY FOOTBALL AND THE VERY HIGH PERCENT AGE OF DAYS LOST IN THE HOSPITAL FROM FOOTBALL INJURIES TO DAYS LOST IN THE HOSPITAL FROM ALL OTHER CAUSES DURING THE FOOTBALL SEASON, FORTY-SIX PER CENT, ALMOST ONE HALF, REGARD IT AS QUESTIONABLE WHETHER THE VALUE RECEIVED FROM FOOTBALL JUSTIFIED THE RESULTANT IN JURIES. The man who has been trained to BOX, WEESTtLE, FENCE WITH GUN OR SABER, RUN, JUMP, VAULT AND SWIM and knows that his muscles are trained in these and that he has physical en durance in them, CANNOT FAIL TO BE A GOOD SOLDIER IN THE FIELD OF ACTION. never amounted to a toothpick upon the sea of time. . The man who breaks precedential laws, who thinks for himself, who stands by himself and bursts out into his own fields is the man Who dees things. The man who follows' the" line of thought that has been laid dowii by others, who'is guided by the accumulations of the past and who cannot get away from those notions that were probably appropriate in their day but which have been outgrown is the man who will always remain the rut and who will never get out long enough to get the advtantages given by the ad vancement of ideas throughout the country. . ; -. : Wilson has taken the only stand that he could take. He has seen the sit uation in Mexico. He has been patient, long suffering. He has seen Am ericans made prisoners in filthy jails. He has watched them shot down be fore a stone wall by Mexican bullets. He has seen the distress and suffer ing, the factions and war that have spread from one end of that country to" the other and has watched the storm clouds as they have brough destruction end devastation worse than the typhoons of the-east or the hurricanes of the Mexican Gulf, - It is time that something were done. No longer can the American peo ple be patient. Not only their interests but the interests of the nations of the world are at stake. The people of the other first rank countries look upon the United States, because of that doctrine ennunciated by President Mon roe, to handle the situation there. It remains for .American statesmanship, American brains and ingenuity to solve the problems. o . THE TULSA In view of the protracted and disastraous drought in CONGRESS Missouri, Illinois, and other sections this year where natural rainfall is ample, and often more than ample, for crops in all but abnormal -seasons, there should be unusual interest in the proceedings cf the Dry Farming Congress and Exposition at Tulsa, Ok. If the principle of dry farming had been applied this year, the corn crop would not have been so generally a failure. It is the general impression among both farmers and laymen, that dry farming is a method of cultivation of utility only in the semi-arid regions lying along the base of the Rocky Mountains, and uf no interestst whatever to the farms of other states. This idea is founded upon ignorance of its character and underlying qrinciples, and is a natural result of the fact that it was first developed in eastern Colorado and western Kansas, where the rainfall is ordinarily deficient under the old methods of cultivation. Dry farming ts not a method of growing crops without water. There is no such method. Crops must have water, either through natural rain or snow, or by irrigation. Dry farming is only conservation of water al ready in the soil as the result of rains and snows, so that the store of moisture in the ground when the crops are planted may be fully utiltzed, and the rops be able to grow in spite of the absence of additional water trom rains. Except in the fully arid regions, enough rain and snow fall during the winter and spring to make an ample store of moisture, if taken into the ground and kept there, instead of being permitted to run off the surface. Deep plowing makes a reservoir for this water,, the ground becoming saturated with mois ture as far down as the soil is loose enough to absorb it. This water,.how ever, rapidly evaporates from the surface whenever the top soil becomes hard, because of little ducts that form, through which the moisture rises to the sur face. Constant cultivation of the surface breaks up these ducts and stops evaporation, thus conserving the moisture for the use of the growing plants. Preserving a dust mulch on the surface is the simple principle of dry farming, added to the deep plowing. Had the corn farmers . of western states in this way conserved the moisture which was in the ground when the corn was planted, it would have been ample to mature a good crop. This is a question which interests consumers as well as farmers. Con sumers pay the bill for improper or careless agriculture, just as they do for wastefulness in lumbering, expensive handling of coal, inefficient manufact uring of any of the things for which they must pay an added price because of poor methods. This is why the spread of agricultural knowledge at govern ment expense is a work beneficial to all the people, and not alone to the farm ers. Dry farming knowledge, therefore, something we have been accustomed to consider as of interest and value only to the residents of the Rocky Moun tain littoral, from Wyoming to the Texas Panhandle, becomes of equal in terest to both the farmers and the people of other sections, when they under stand what it is and what it means. You need never pay a bill twice if you' pay by check. The check is positive proof that you have paid the money. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Lewis C. Dunton and wife to Jane Newton, 44.10 acres in D. L. C. of Thomas Jackson; $1. H. F. Jones and wife to C. T. Belch er .tract in S. E. section S3, T. 1 S., R. 2 E.; $5500. - Willis Mayfield and others to Sands Hayden Lumber company, S. W. N. E. 14 section 27, T. 3 S., R. 3 E.; $1. TJra S. Crewell to A. B. Combs, lots three, four? five in block 12, Mount view addition to Oregon City; flO. . Frank W. Beard and wife to A. B. Combs, lots six, seven, block one, in Kingston; $10. Fred Clark and wife to William M. Smith and wife, lots four and five, in block 34; $1. - Michael McCormick to Charles G. Martin, one acre in section 17, T. 2 S., R. 5 E.; $150. E. Grace Sailor and husband to Laura M. Blair, lots 11, 12, in block eight, Canby; $450. Ellen Maria Rockwood to Bronte S. Gravat lot 12 in block 11, Ardenwald; $400. ' . CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our many friends and acquantances for the many kind nesses extended us during our recent bereavement in the death and burial of our husband and father "G. W. Big ham, also for the beautiful floral of ferings. We wish to thank the B. P. Os E. No. 1189 especially. MRS. G. W. BIGHAM, MRS. G.-L. DURELL, MRS. G. M. CANSEY, JACOB BIGHAM. SUIT IS FILED Suit for divorce was filed in the cir cuit court Saturday by Louis Roth against Mercedes , LaMonte Roth on the ground of desertion. He mentions charges of intoxication against his wife and says they were married Aug ust 5, 1906. - . 4-ROOM HOUSE AND LOT ; For $525.00 ' 4-room house, clothed and pa- pered. - Lot 50x100. $200.00 cash balance on. small monthly, payments. This is a snap. DILLMAN & HOWLAND ' eart to fieart Talks By CHARLES N. LURIE ELECTRICAL WORK Contracts, Wiring and Fixtures .WE DO IT Miller-Parker Co. 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 MAKING -A MAN. Many a man "makes" himself; still more are made. Not all are endowed by nature with the initiative, the push which sends a man to the top. Most of us have 'to get the shove from outside.. . There are official shovers. Of such' are the teachers of youth, the preach ers who address themselves mainly to adults, the writers who try to inculcate the lessons of thrift, study and effort. But of all the factors in the advance ment of a man his womankind are the greatest. , - Hats off. then, to the ambitious man's wife! In nine cases in ten his success may be traced back to her. ' Or it may be his mother to whom the praise is due. In either case the prin ciple is the same. The French say "Cherchez la femme." which means "Look for the woman," when they want to fix the blame for a man's misdeeds. Let us, with more charitableness, use the same words with a worthier implica tion and seek the woman when we de sire to apportion praise for a man's achievements. - - Kipling wrote: Down to Gehenna err ap to the throne. He travels the fastest who travels alone. But not all of us agree with Kip ling's rugged philosophy. We would rather behold man aDd woman going hand in band up the mountain of suc cess. Let us think of Andrew Johnson, later president of the United States, taught to read by his wife. Let us think of his immortal predecessor, Lincoln, who said. "All that I am. all that I hope to be, I owe to my angel mother." We hear much nowadays of women leaving the home to take care of itself while they make careers for them selves The fear for the future of the home is largely imaginary. . Women who are wise know that they can serve their own Interests best by standing stanchly behind their hus bands, encouraging them in the hour of trial and desponderv-y. shilling with gladness in the success when won. " Behind the two and enveloping them is the home, the greatest of human Institutions. Beyond 'Words. When Senator James Hamilton Lew is was practicing law in Seattle he had for a client an old lady who was af flicted; with asthma. She came four times a year to have the colonel make out her pension papers. The colonel never failed to ' show a tender solici tude in her welfare and always re ceived a wheezy but pleased response. One morning when the colonel asked his question about her health the old lady turned to her granddaughter, who accompanied her, and motioned. The girl stood and stared. The old lady wigwagged frantically. The girl look ed stolidly at her. The old lady w,heez ed and coughed and panted. . The girl stared straight before her. Finally the old lady burst out furl ously: 'Drat you. Mary Louise! Didn't I tell you you would have to. talk for me? Can't you see J can't say a word to save my life?" Saturday Evening Post '.,.... ' A Collector's Bequest. "My wish Is that my drawings, my prints, my curiosities, my books in a word, these things of art which have been the joy of my life shall not be consigned to .the cold tomb of a mu seum . and subjected to the stupid glance of the careless passerby. But I require that they shall all be dispers ed under the hammer of the auction eer, so that the pleasure which the ac quiring of each one of them has given me shall be given again in each, case to some inheritor of my own tastes." From the Will of Edmond de Gon-court Reasonable Suspicion. . "I don't know what to think of my husband." "Why?" "He seems almost too good lately to be true. When I got him to help me rearrange some of the furniture yes terday he sKinned his knuckles and didn't blame it on me." Chicago Record-Herald. To Remove a Splinter. Wash with soap and water. Dip the member in diluted alcohol or pour this over it Sterilize in alcohol a needle and the fingers of the hand that ts to hold the needle: then pick out the splinter and pour diluted alcohol Into the wound. Mothers' Pensions. . . The idea of . granting pensions to mothers in recognition' of the service fhey rendered the state originated in Australia, where women vote. Brown's Son. The ending "ing" to a surname sim ply means "son of." ' Thus Browning means "son of Brown," and Dunning "Pimui'x son." , Wants, For Sale, Ett MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Lady roomer, use of piano light cooking. $2.25 per week. Inquire this office. : 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 anyone wants a hand, address ( J. C. Eads, Washington stret, 1105 Oregon City. L. AUSTIN, the tailor, for men and women. Suits made to your meas ure; alterations and refitting. Prices reasonable Room 9, Barclay ' Building. , 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. Ugly Buckingham Palace. Buckingham palace provoked charao teristic expressions of contempt from Mr. Creevy. - "The new palace still re mains the devil's own," he wrote In 1828. And in 1835, after he had been orer it, he wrote: "Never was there such a specimen of wicked, vulgar pro fusion. It has cost a million of money, and there is not a fault that has not been committed in it You may be sure there are rooms enough and large enough for the money, but for stair cases, passages, etc., I observed that instead of being called Buckingham palace It should be the Brunswick ho tel. The costly ornaments of the state rooms exceed all belief In their bad taste and every species of infirmity. Raspberry colored pillars without end that quite turn you sick to look at, but the queen's papers for her own apart ments far exceed everything else in their ugliness and vulgarity." London Spectator. Where Cato Was Remembered. In' 1798 the little settlement around Font Schuyler, New York, aspired to the dignity of a village charter and the question of a new name arose. A number of the citizens met in Bagg's tavern to discuss the matter, and it was decided to draw lots for the name, each person present to deposit in a hat a slip of paper with his choice written thereon. The first name drawn out was to be the one accepted. Thir teen slips were deposited, and the first one drawn forth chanced to be that written by Erastus Clark, a man of scholarly interests, as was illustrated by his choice. He had done honor to his favorite Roman, Cato, by inscrib ing on his slip the home of Cato's adop tion in Africa. Thus was Utica, N. 1 .. named. Ladies' Home Journal. HELP WANTED FEMALE WANTED Lady to take invalid to her home. Moderate salary.. Call ' at 712 Polk street, Oregon City. WANTED German girl for general housework. Apply, 610 Washington St. FOR SALE. FOR SALE Some close in, well im proved income property. This will bear the strongest investigation. I am leaving town. Call at 304 4th St., or call Home phone A-98. FOR SALE. Fine team, four-year olds, weight . 2600 pounds. See A. O. Achilles, Box 149, R. F. D., Molalla road. Notice of Acceptance of Street Im provement Notice is hereby given that the city engineer of Oregon City, Oregon, has filed his certificate of the com pletion and approval of the work done by the Oregon Engineer & Construction company, contractors for the improvement of Sixteenth street, Oregon City, Oregon, from the west side of Jackson street to the west side of Division street, and the city council will consider the ac ceptance thereof and all the objec tions to the acceptance to the said improvement at the council cham ber of Oregon City, on the 26th day of November, 1913, at 7:30 o'clock p. m. Any owner of any roperty within the .assessment district or any agent of such owner, may at such time or any time prior thereto, ap pear and file objections to the ac ceptance of said improvement, and such objections will be considered and the merits determined by the council at the above named time and place. This notice is published in the Morning Enterprise and the time and place "were fixed by the City council of Oregon City, Oregon. L. STIPP; Recorder. ! FOR SALE, CHEAP Two rooms of new furniture. Rent $5.00 per month; must sell this week some terms. Call this office. FOR SALE, at a bargain 2-cylinder, 7-horse, late model Excelsor motor cycle. Equipped; has tamden seat. Ask for E. Brown. Enterorise office. LOST AND FOUND LOST Spectacles in case, on Main street bteween Third and Fifth. Re turn to Oregon City Shoe store. Re FOR RENT. FOR RENT Furnished room in priv ate family. 315 Cor. 5th and Center. FOR RENT Five-room furnished cot tage for rent. Inquire at 1002 7t'u ' St., phone Main 2312. L. G. ICE. DENTIST . Beaver Bui'ding Phones: Main 1221 or A-193 Pacific Tel. Home $ Main 420 A-145 S Physician and Surgeo .4! S Specialist in Children's Diseases and Obstebrics 4 1007 Main St. E. M. BOND, M. D. WOOD AND COAL OREGON CITY WOOD & FUEL Gf wood and eoal, 4-foot and 16-iach lengths, delivered to all parts of city; sawing especially. Poma your orders Pacific 13-71, Home A120. F. M. BLUHM. . Pabst's Okay Specific Does the worK. You all Atty nn know it by reputation. .UU Price T FOR SALE BY Z JONES DRUG COMPANY D. C. . LATOTJRETTE, President. . . -. ---r - F.- J. MBYBR, Cashier. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGbN -'capital' mnt ' "v--15"". Transact General Banking Buslnes s. 'Open from 1 A. M. to M .