MORNING ENTERPRISE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1913. MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS By Gross HENRY JR.5AY5 'IJ, OT " U VSA." """V Kff I I -V" t - ' I m I '' rt 1 .1 f- miu I 1 1 X. V X 1 BKlm 7f 1 I ' " Jit 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 rrlail $3'00 Six months, by mail ' Four months, by mail Per week, by carrier." accept their defeat in silence. -O- The Morning Enterprise carrier boys are instructed to put the papers on the norch 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. EIN SPITE OF THE FACT that the city council has raised the tax levy to 10 mills over the eight and one-half mill levy of the year before, Ore gon City will be in a better condition without the saloons than it has been and the money that is spent will, at least, do the city some good rather than fatten the pocketbooks of the Portland liquor dealers. Through the campaign that was waged against the saloon evil, this paper has declared time and again that it believed, in the event of an increase in taxes, the people would be bettered by the absence of the saloon and the re moval of the curse from the city. It has always figured that it cost too much to collect that $10,000 that the saloons were paying into the city treas ury and that the people would be that much ahead even if it were necessary to raise the levy to meet the loss of this source of revenue. It takes that same stand now in face of the increase in the rate. It be lieves that it is much easier and better to pay $10,000 into the city treasury directly through taxes than it is to save $10,000 and pay $150,000 annually into the coffers of the saloon. As a mere matter of elementary arthimethic, the city will save $140,000 annually by the removal of the saloons and that money will be spent in the city through the regular channels of business. No business house would spend $150,000 in order to save $10,000. It isn't good business for a wholesaler or a retailer. Why should it be good business for a municipality? The campaign of the wets was made almost alone on this issue and yet it doesn't figure out from a point of dollars and cents. Oregon City is better off without the saloons. Though the taxes will have to be raised to meet this loss of revenue, the people will discover that they judged rightly when they overthrew the power that has held them in its clutches for many years and when they decided at the polls that the saloons must co. Even with a higher tax rate, the city is saving $140,000 a sum that will be spent at home hereafter and that will go into the pockets of home dealers. The saloons can derive very little pleasure" from their "I told you so" cry since the council made its decision. The city needs the money. It has lost the revenues of the saloons revenues that it can well afford to be without. It has raised the tax rate to meet this loss. AH of which is wise and proper. The city saves an annual sum of $140,000 that went into the pockets of the saloons before. It seems to the Enterprise that the people of the city have the right to gloat a little over the saving and that the saloons ought to THE ATTEMPT TO railroad the administration currency bill through the senate by the secretxaucus method appears to have failed . utterly. In the house, it was different. Notwithstanding the vig orous protests of Republican members and the manifest disapproval of some Democrats, the bill was treated as a purely partisan affair, and minority members of the committee were early given to understand that their party represented therein merely as a matter of traditional formality ; the real work on the measure being done by the Democrats in caucus. When the bill was finally licked into presentable shape, the disposition was to force -it at once to a vote, without affording any considerable opportunity for debate. The Democratic majority in the house was of sufficient proportions to head off serious resistance to such a scheme. In a way, perhaps this was well. Unrestricted debate would undoubted have resulted in the bill being actually talked to death, or at least in a process of haggling and filibustering which would have made impossible any progress whatever. So, there is something to be said in extenuation of the caucus method adopted in the house. But whatever excuse might be offered for the action of the Democratic majority in the house was based on a consciousness that the bill must later go to the senate, which, at least theoretically, serves as a check on the lower branch, and. in which the administration party has no such potent ana per emptory majority. Urgent as is the necessity for currency legislation, it is equally important that that legislation should be of the sate and sane order, which shall do good rather than harm. It is for the senate to make sure that proposed legislation answers this description before allowing it to pass. The attitude of Senator Hitchcock of Nebraska, in withstanding the pressure brought to bear on him by fellow-Democrats and refusing to reconcile his i i -f ii,. :J . , Trill Vkitfo n l,lrn1 .nflnpnpr in this views to tne oemanas oi uie picsiucnt, win i...... - direction. The senate committee on banking and currency has been granted re time "for consideration of the bill," and probably not a little or its time will be devoted to considering what is to be done next. The failure of the attempt to force the measure through by way of the Democratic caucus at this stage of its progress is on the side of safety. 1 he only remaining Ganger seems to lie in the possibility that Republican senators may yet talk the bill into innocuous desuetude. Certainly some such bill must be enacted, and that with the least possible delay consistent with the financial. stability of the countrv. - $750.00 Will purchase a 3-room house and lot 55x132 in good part of the city. You can pay some cash, and pay the rest at $7.00 per month without interest. Why pay rent when you can get a snap like this. DILLMAN & HOWLAND Automobiles for Fiire PHONES: MAIN 77; A 193 Miller-Parker Co. TASTE AND SMELL Closely Allied, They Are the Most Elusive of the Senses. RIDDLE OF FLAVOR AND ODOR. Smell Has Been Termed Taste at a Distance," and the Way In Which Anything Is Appreciated by the Cells of Taste and Smell Is Exactly Alike. CUT FLOWERS AND POTTED PLANTS Also all kinds of Fruit Trees, Roses and Shrubbery for sale af 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 DUE DILIGENCE is exercised by every employe and of ficer of this bank In the protection and promotion of its patrons' interests The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN .CLACKAMAS COUNTY Heart to Heart Talks The Prizes of the Panama Canal Are Not Going to Us Unless We Strive For Them by American Press Association. By JOHN BARRETT. Director General of the Pan- American Union THERE is a growing need that every manufacturing and productive citv and sect'on in the United States should be TJP AND DOING AND GETTING READY FOR THE PANAMA CANAL. It is equally important that cities and states should realize the present" and prospective value of. pan-American commerce. We have the enterprise, the men, the capital, the industries, the loca tion and, I hope, the ambition which can ENABLE US TO PROFIT ENORMOUSLY from the opening of the canal and from tne develop . ment of the exchange of trade with the twenty sister Latin-American - republics. We cannot, however, simply rest upon our present laurels and be sat isfied. We must REALIZE THE COMPETITION WHICH WE MUST MEET with the great manufacturing, exporting and importing centers of Europe and even Asia. THE PRIZES OF THE PANAMA CANAL ARE NOT GOING TO US UNLESS THEY ARE FOUGHT FOR WITH UNREMITTING EFFORT, IT WILL REQUIRE TIME FOR THE FULL GOOD OF THE CANAL TO BE REALIZED by any city or section of the United "States. Business must adapt itself to the new conditions, and the accom panying INFLUENCES OF DEMAND AND SUPPLY MUST BIS THOROUGHLY STUDIED AJNi MASTJiUUSJJ. " BARLOW. A SHORT CUT. If it is ever your good fortune to sail up the James river, in Virginia, from Its mouth to Richmond, or if you have already enjoyed that beautiful trip, you will learn or you already know something about the Dutch Gap canal. Near Richmond the canal has been cut to shorten the sailing distance. The canal is only 500 feet long, but it cuts off seven miles of navigation along the winding channel o1' the river. As you sail up and down the river you travel sou ieet to save seven miles. Seven miles amount to 36,960 feet, so you see there is a great saving in time and distance and money. General Butler began the Dutch Gap canal in the civil war days. Later It was completed, and it is now in daily use. The Dutch Gap canal, with its small amount of work that saved and is sav ing an enormous deal of traveling, sug gests a lesson applicable to our daily lives. Are there not short cuts that we can take that will save us labor? Not alone in the physical aspects of life, but in our daily mental and moral dealings? For instance, there is your new neighbor. He is a stranger in your community, and he may need help. As the daily windings of your life and his approach, can you not dig a canal through the intervening heights of ignorance of him and his family without waiting for the formal intro duction of pastor or physician or busi ness intermediary? He may be a right good fellow. Dig a canal to him. If you find him unworthy , later it will be an easy thing to block up the canal. Or you may have had a misunder standing with another neighbor or with your brother or sister or relative. As the rivers of your lives meet, cut through the land which blocks the way and straighten the channel. Perhaps who knows you may find him shovel in hand at the other end. digging his way through to you. S. M. Ormsby and son. Merle, were quite ill last week. . Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kiser, of New port, were visiAng Mr. Riser's sister, Mrs. Adamson on their honeymoon last week. Mrs. Adamson went to Oregon City last Thursday. The literary society met Friday night with a big attendance and many new members were added to the list Miss Hattie Irwin" went to Portland Wednesday. T. W. Irwin ,wife and son, visited Mr. Irwin's mother the first of the week. Mrs. S. M. Ormsby has entered the contest for the automobile given by the Evening Telegram. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bauer, of Aurora, were shopping and calling on friends here Tuesday. The sad accident of Louie Myers death was a great shock to his many friends here Tuesday evening, ine family have the sympathy of Barlow Senator Jones of Washington is Reoublican and not notedly 'progres sive, but be publicly commenas President Wilson's policy as to Mex ico. . (t L" The "Girl With Auburn Hair" Repre sents Parisian Sage, the Most Pleasant and Invigorat ing Hair Tonic Parisian Saee surely removes dan druff with one application makes the hair soft, wavy and abundant. cleanses, cools and invigorates the scalp. If you have dandruff, it is because the scaln is too dry and flakes on. Nourish the scalp with Parisian Sage and dandruff disappears. Get today from Huntley Bros. Co, a large 50 cent bottle it supplies hair and scalp needs. Parisian Sage quickly stops itching head, takes away the dryness, immediately . removes dandruff, makes the scalp healthy and gives the hair that enviable lus tre and beauty you desire. Look for the trade-mark the "girl with the Auburn Hair" it ig on ev ery bottle. We think we know all about tasting and smelling, but these are the most elusive senses and so closely allied that they have been called the "wedded senses." If you wish to be convinced of the closeness of their connection notice the next time you have a severe cold in the -head and ascertain how little taste you get from your food. even though it be the most "tasty. In fact, flavor and odor are great- puzzles to all of the physical investiga tors. The preponderance of evidence points to the suggestion that all taste and odor are brought about by chemical changes in the ends of the nerves hav ing to do with these sensations. Smell has been termed "taste at a distance," and the way in which anything is ap preciated by the cells of taste and smell is precisely alike. The infinitely small particle that reaches the nose must first be dissolv ed in the mucous covering of the olfac tory bulb before its odor can be caught and transferred to the end of the ol factory nerve. The same is the case with the thing that is to be tasted. It. too, is dissolved in the juices of the mouth and then makes its way to some one or more of the taste cells, when the chemical change takes place which sets up a sensation in the gus tatory nerve, arid we really taste the substance and announce to ourselves or others how it tastes. Most persons think that as the tongue is the chief organ of taste you could J taste anything placed anywhere on the tongue. But this is far from being true. There are three chief kinds of papillae of taste on the tougue, and anything touching it on these papillae is tasted, but if it touches any spot be tween these it is not tasted at all. The filiform papillae are at the tip of the tongue and at the sides, and each one contains special taste "buds," which dissolve something of the substance put on them and transfer the sensation to the underlying nerve of taste. Then there are the fungiform capil- lae. looking like little musnrooms (whence the name), with taste buds of their own, and there are also the cir cumvallate papillae, only seven or ten in number, lying toward the back or the tongue, forming a V, with the apex pointing toward the throat These are little mounds with moats arouna tnein and taste buds lying in the moats to catch whatever particles of food may reach thus far sufficiently dissolved to be tasted. The middle of the tongue and tne hard palate have no taste at all, and thfs is the reason that if we are to take a bitter powder and it is carefully placed at the center of the tongue it can be washed down quickly by a gulp of water, leaving no taste in the mouth. The taste bulbs have been carefully measured, and it is found that they are 1-300 of an inch long and 1-800 of an Inch broad, oval in shape, some thing like a small Florence flask. The proof that tasting is a chemical proc ess lies in the fact that anything that is to be tasted must be soluble, for the unchewed food or hard coated pill is not tasted. Tastes have been classi fied as sweet, bitter, acid and saline, and experiment has shown that we taste salty foods most rapidly in .17 of a second and that sweet acid and bitter take longer. -the last requiring .258 or a second ror perception. Another peculiarity of taste is that after a very strong taste of any kind we cannot so easily distinguish slight er flavors. The nerve energy has been exhausted for a time, and only after a little does it return. If you have eaten sweets for dessert yon must drink some water to clear the mouth of the sweet taste or your coffee will taste very bitter, no matter how much sugar you put into it The profes sional tea taster knows that the gusta tory nerve becomes exhausted, for aft er a series of tastings he stops to give his nerve of taste an opportunity to re turn to its normal condition. In taste and smell alike all Individ uals differ. The same food does not taste precisely the same to any two in dividuals, any more than the same per fume smells the same. There is a gen eral resemblance, but the expert who has trained his sense of smell or taste perceives finer distinctions than the person who has given little attention to these special senses and their de velopment. Arguments are of no avail. as. was recosrnized in the popular and ancient proverb. "There is no disput ing about tastes." There is no scien tific explanation of the fact that one person likes onions and another abhori them. Some persons are fond of olives only after they have cultivated the taste. The only suggestion of an explanation is that in some persons the chemical changes brought about by onions or olives are pleasing, while in others they are offensive. It is the gustatory nerve that tells the tale, but little is understood about it New York World. Wants, For Sale, Etc. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Work by the day by a woman that will hustle. Call 150S lGth street. WANTED Work of any kind by edu cated man of middle age. Address "S.," care Enterprise. WANTED School boy will work for hoard and room; references given. Call J. B. Welch, phone Black 735 Jennings Lodge. LESSON given in oil painting, also a few more orders taken for Chris mas. Mrs. VanWeel, 709 11th St., Main 342. Why should we call ourselves men unless it be to succeed in everythinp everywhere? Mirabeau. HELP WANTED FEMALE LADY SOLICITORS WANTED For fast selling articles. Call any time after-10 o'clock a. m. today at Elec--trie Annex, Room "E." Lady at tendant. x- MENWHOCAN AND WILL The world today is above all else a practical world, and it demands results. What it is looking for is men who can and will do things. It is recorded of Lord Kitchener that, when during the South Afri can campaign a subordinate officer reported to him a failure to obey orders and gave reasons therefor, he said to him : " Your reasons for not doing it are the best I ever heard. Now go and do It I" That is what the world demands today. George W. Goethals. WANTED Experienced housekeeper for small family. Must be good cook. Phone Main 36, or address Box C, Oregon City. WANTED German girl for general housework. Apply, 610 Washington St. FOR SALE. FOR SALE Dining table and chairs, bed, stove and three rockers. Call 1508 16th street. WOOD AND COAL OREGON CITY WOOD & FUEL CO. Wood and eoal, 4-foot and 16-inch lengths, delivered to all parts of city; sawing specialty. Phono your orders Pacific 1371, Home A128. F. M. BLTJHM Perpetual Motion, Perpetual motion is a very old dream. For this purpose machines have been constructed from time im memorial, but nothing has every come of it. Men have gone mad on the sub ject, but without any practical results It was demonstrated long ago by.Sil Isaac Newton and De la Hire that per petual motion is impossible of attain ment Even the solar system, the most wonderful machine of which we have any knowledge, will run down In the course of time, some say in about 11,000,000 of years from now. New York' American. i L. G. ICE. DENTIST Beaver Bui'ding S S .Phones: Main 1221 or A-193 S Spell This. Some of you who think you are well np in spelling Just try to spell the words in this little sentence: "It is agreeable to witness the un paralleled ecstasy of two harassed ped dlers endeavoring to gauge the sym metry of two peeled pears." Read it over to your friends and see how many of them can spell every word correctly. The sentence contains some of the real puzzlers of the spell ing book. Another Face Allures Him. "I hope you. watch your teacher, Johnnie, and remember what she shows you." "Naw. I don't" "What do you dor "I watch the clock." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Credit Is Due. A man believes he is a hero If lu amuses a baby for three minutes. Bui he never gives a mother credit foi amusing it twenty-four hours a day.- Cincinnati Enquirer. SUMMONS In the Circuit court of the state of .Oregon, for Clackamas county. Clyde .O. Garmire, Plaintiff, vs. Elizabeth M. Garmire, Defendant. To Elizabeth M. Garmire, above-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 entitled suit by the 2nd day of January, 1914, as prescribed by an order of court for publication of this sum mons, which said date is more than six weeks after the date of the first publication herein as ordered by the court in the above entitled suit, and if you fail to so appear and an swer the complaint filed herein in the above entitled suit on said date, plaintiff will apply to the court fojjrt the relief Draved for in said com-T plaint, which said relief is for a decree (ft the court forever dissolv ing and setting aside the marriage contract heretofore and now exist ing between ' plaintiff and said de fendant; and granting to plaintiff a divorce from defendant, and for such other and further relief as the honorable court may deem meet with equity. This summons is published by or der of the Honorable H. S. Ander son, judge of the county court, of Clackamas county, Oregon, said or der was duly made and entered in said court on the 20th day of No vember 1913. C. O. GARMIRE, Attorney ior Plaintiff. Date of first publication, Novem ber 21, 1913. Date of last publication, January 2, 1914. Turned Down. Kloseman Sorry to refuse yon, old man. ixit my money likes company Borrows- What do you mean? K'6s man - It i an't bear to be a loan." Bos ton Transcript - . Enterprise classified ads pay. Pabst's Okay Specific Does the worK. You sJI t r A A know It by reputation. .V"" Price T """ FOR SALE BY JONES DRUG COMPANY D. C. LATOTJRETTB, President F. J. METER, Cashier. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON CAPITAL 95OJ3O0 0O Transacts a General Banking Business. Opan from A. M. f 9 P. )