MORNING ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1913. MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS By Gross HENRY JR5AYS1 : . " "' " 1 "" " ' 1 SWT 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 1.50 TYnir mnntlic Iw 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. BONDS ISSUES NO LONGER rise into values that prevent the house houlder of the city from investing his money in city securities. All over the country the idea has grown that municipal improvements should be made with home capital. Bonds are now beine- sold in everv state to the people of that state over the counters of department stores or through some other channels where they will easily and readily reach the masses of the people. - That matter is to be presented to the voters at the forthcoming city elec tion. .The people will have the chance to decide whether or not they want their bonds issued in amounts that can be sold at home or whether they are willing to pay an annual tribute in the shape of interest to the eastern bond ing houses. ' . A :: : i . . i . 1 c . 11 1 i . 1 x niuuH-ipiuuy is uul a giant eiuei prise mat nas ior its siocicnoiuers uie men and women within its corporate boundaries. Its stockholders should be as much interested in the growth and development of that enterprise as those are who are financially connected with any other business undertaking. It is a matter of concern to them. The way that the city's funds are spent is of vital importance to the people within the city. It is interest to them how the money that is raised by a bond issue is handled and what the council does with the funds that are placed at its disposal. All of these things are important. It is not peculiar, then, that the man more of an interest in what the city is doing and how its affairs are being handled than he would were there no financial reasons involved in the trans actions. Stockholders are interested in the action of the board of directors. The heaviest stockholders are members of that board, usually. The city council is the board of directors of the city of Oregon City and the people are the stockholders. Thus far they have been so in name only and have taken very little stock in the concern of which they are a part. The idea that the people would become more generally interested in the welfare of the city and that they would take a more decided view of the actions of the city council is a good one. The vital issue, however, in the question is the way that the interest is to be paid. The eastern bonding houses make it a point to investigate thorough ly every issue that is sent out by the cities and counties of the country. Before they handle matters at all, they consider every legal step that has been taken by the authorities in placing the matter before the people. -When they ap prove bonds, they are usually past all possibility of flaw or question of legality. ' Keep Oregon money in Oregon City is a good slogan just at this juncture and the best way to accomplish this is for the people themselves, to invest what surplus money they may have to spend in securities on their own properties. The interest that these bonds draw will then go into the pockets of home aaaaa... - - - - - & . t D IT 1 . O' l e t-x . ill ray need to oignals or IJistress t I Coming From Our Decadent jfj to t Society of Today By the Rev. Dr. RANDOLPH H. M'KIM of the Church of the Epiphany of Washington, D. C . ofo o o i THERE was the same indecency in woman's dress, the same indecent dances in Eome during Nero's rule certain dances were almost worshiped by the people and there is the SAME EXTRAOR DINARY AND DEMORALIZING CULT IN THE UNITED STATES TODAY. -- Among other national sins are the gross corruption of our cities, the idle rich, the greed of employers, social injustice, anarchism and social ism, speculations in bread and meat, the tide of divorce, the depth of in famy into which the drama has sunk here in New York and in many other cities, intemperance and child slavery. These are the sins of the United States. They were the sins of Rome. It is well enough to hold mass meetings to consider and protest against such evils and to memorialize congress about them, but in my opinion the greatest force of all, the leaven which shall lift the entire nation, is personal example. . IF EVERY ONE OF THE THIRTY MILLIONS AFFILIATED WITH CHURCHES IN AMERICA BE AS GENUINE AS THEY PROFESS TO BE THE FORCE OF THEIR EXAMPLE WOULD BE THE BEST ; AN SWER TO THE SIGNAL OF DISTRESS THE "S O S" CALL WHICH HAS COME FROM THE SHIP OF SOCIETY. I believe that personal example, personal purity, personal honesty, are the only forces which can deal adequately with the situation. All that is necessary is for professed Christians to become real Christians and the leaven of their lives wiUlift tha world. - , , bond buyefs rather than into those of eastern firms. There is no reason why the people of the city cannot handle successfully this issue of $12,000, 'espe cially when it is cut into $50 amounts. v O ANDY'S ENTERPRISE in deciding to construct a hard surfaced highway through to the county line of Multnomah county is com mendable in any city and much more so when it is considered that the project is undertaken by a town with scarcely more than 300 souls. Good roads has come to be an epidemic through all of the counties of the state and has taken a firmer grip on most of the farmers than one would, at first blush, imagine. They have now come to realize the loss of revenues that are taxed against them in transportation costs and have undertaken spe cial road taxes and made special levies to keep their roads in passable con dition and to construct new and better highways. Such sentiments os those shown by the people of Sandy have been ex pressed by the farmers of many of the counties oi the state. In several of them bond issues have already been authorized and the people at the polls have instructed their several county courts to build better roads and to build them of the kind of material that will last. It is but a concrete example of the working out of the doctrine that the Enterprise has been preaching for sometime. This paper- has never yet real ized the value of a poor road nor could it ever figure out, as a matter of dol lars and cents, why the county should be taxed $240,000 every yeai for its mud. Clackamas county mud produces record breaking crops. It also produces wagon breaking, revenue breaking, transportation cost increasing roads. Mud is all right in its place and it brings in the fat harvests, but it is a poor com munity at best on a country road. The soil that produces the best -crops usually makes the worst roads and this county is one of the best examples of that fact that road boosters could produce in the West. There are few highways through the county that are even passable in the winter months and most of them have become notorious because of their bogs and ruts in the season when a good road is worst needed. The annual tax levy of the county amounts to $240,000. All of it is spent every year on the county roads. No lasting impression upon the highway shows where a cent of that money goes and what it was spent to accomplish. It seems to us that the county could much better afford to build a certain definite number of miles of trunk line. with a portion of that amount and get something that would be of lasting benefit for the distance that it traveled than to spend all of it promiscously on all of the county roads and get nothing in return. But this county can never accomplish anything definite for better roads until the people learn that bad roads cost money while good ones fatten the bank account and proceed at once to authorize the county court to issue bonds that will provide the cash for the construction of permenant hard surfaced highways. A road that doesn't last and that costs money to keep continually in repair isn't worth the time that it takes to plan it. What this county, along with every other county of the state, needs vitally, is a system of good roads of hard surface and the only way to get it is by saving some of that $240,000 annual mud tax and putting it into a bond issue that will enable the county court to do something worth while. . TRADE 17 1-2 acres of fine beaver dam land, 1 12 miles from Mc Minnville, - all improved. Price $4,000.00; will exchange r for equal value in Oregon City property or acreage near this city. This property is . free from incumbrance and title guaranteed. DULMAN & HOWLAND AT WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON, Nov. 25. Miss Jessie Wilson, second daughter of the President ,was wedded to Francis Bowes Sayre in the East Room of the White House this afternoon at 4:30. The room was a grand profusion of flowers, many of which were present ed by diplomats of other countries, and were entwined with the flags of the nations their doners represented. Everywhere throughout the capital a distinct holiday atmosphere pre vailed. ' The guests of the ceremony Includ ed beside the personal friends of the bride and bridegroom, distinguished officials of the government and the members of the diplomatic corps in their gorgeous uniforms. Payment by check makes it unneces sary -to wait for change, or to make frequent trips to the bank for money. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK M CLACKAMAS COUNTY Now that Manuel has married and settled down, perhaps the Portuguese will look more tolerantly on his stand ing application for a job. There is a report that another comet is beaded for the earth, which seems unnecessary in view of all the different kinds of excitement we are now enjoy ing. It is said that but 234 millionaires have been enumerated in Chicago. But who wants to be tagged as a mil lionaire In these parlous income tax times? The landlords have got their nine foot sheets just in time. A Philadel phia doctor has discovered a process by which be can greatly increase a man's stature. . : , Many persons will be surprised to learn that the government of Santo Domingo .has any gunboats. But it has; also a president who was alive at the last writing. An English police station provided its prisoners with a billiard room and a shooting gallery. And so proceeds the laudable effort to make nseful citi zens out of convicts. - . . . . The discussion as to whether women dress to please the men or to excite the envy of each other looks like a waste of time. Nobody knows but the wom en, and they won't tell. Lord Chancellor Haldane says that In fifty years the United States will be the leading nation.; He may be a bright light in his own line, but he is a trifle behind the times In his reckoning. THEORETICAL CLUB The Theoretical club will meet in Dr. Milliken's study, corner Ninth and Main streets, rear entrance, on Wed nesday evening, November 26. The topics for discussion will be, (1) "Would Reduced Cost of Living Bene fit the Working Man;" (2) "What Be comes of the Liquor Money?" (3) "Is Genesis a Historic Document?" Visitors are cordially welcomed at all meetings of the club. It is intended as a forum of discussion where men can meet to discuss men's questions. The present generation might termed the automobile race. be YIELDS TO HYOMEI Do not let this serious disease ex tend along the delicate mucous mem brane, gradually going from the nose to the throat .thence into the bron chial tubes and downward into the lungs. - There is no other treatment for ca tarrh that is like Hyomei or just as good.None can take its place, none give such quick, effective and sure re lief and at so little cost furthermore Huntley Bros. Co. will refund your money if you are not satisfied. Begin using Hyomei now today and see how quickly the droppings into the throat, the discharge from the nose, sniffing and all other symp toms of catarrh are overcome: and remember no stomach dragging you breathe it. The complete outfit containing inhaler and bottle ct liquid costs but $1.00. Extra bottles of liquid if alter needed, 60 cents. Read the Enterprise for the news. BIRTHS, MARRIAGES AND DEATHS BORN To Mr. and Mrs. Guy Gross, of Willamette, November 24, a daugh ter; to Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Garner, R. F. D. No. 2, Oregon City, a daughter, November 25. ZIMMERMAN - EISELE A mar riage license was issued to Miss Lena Zimmerman and Ora H. Eisele, of Sherwood. Both were minors and received consent. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS W. J. Giger and wife to Albert E. Peterson, 40 acres in same descrip tion; $2000. P. W. Howlett and others to Gust Backstrom and wife, 172,000 square feet of land in Minthorn addition to Portland; $3000. Man Corrects a Mistake He Made Year Ago "Over a year ago you sold me some clover seed and made a mistake of $10 in the price and I have come to settle up." With these words L. Grace, of Portland, walked into the store of the Oregon Commission com pany and handed the surprised mer chant 10 .big, round dollars. No one In the store remembered the transaction, but Grace was sure of his statement and the money was' ac cepted. SALTS IS RNE FOR KIDNEYS. QUIT MEAT Flush the Kidneys at once when Back harts or Bladder bothers Meat forma uric acid. man or woman who eats meat regu y can make a mistake by flushing 1 kidneys occasionally, says a well nvn authority. Meat forms uric acid . hich clogs the kidney pores so they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the waste and poisons from the blood, then you get sick. Nearly all rheuma tism, headaches, liver trouble, nervous iiess, constipation, dizziness, sleeplessness, bladder disorders come from sluggish kid neys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sedi ment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast ior a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com bined with lithia and has been used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activity, also to neu tralize the acids in urine so it no longer nuses irritation, thus ending bladder dis rders. ' , .Tad Salts is inexpensive and can not injure; makes a delightful effer vescent lithia-water drink which all reg ular meat eaters should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kid ney complications. For Sale bv Huntley Bros. ' v..-,;-.-...- , t: (AdV.) i WE REPAIR ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING MILLER-PARKER COMPANY Next Door to Bonk of Oregon City 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 TODAY Last Count of Green Votes of HUNTLEY'S POPULARITY CONTEST Votes will be accepted till 8 P. M. but all Green Votes will be void after this date. HUNLTEY BROS. CO THE REX ALL STORE MARKET QUOTATIONS Livestock, Meats BEEF (Live weight) steers 7c; cows 6c; bulls 4 to 6c. MUTTON Sheep 3 to 4c; lambs, 5 to 5Hc. POULTRY (buying) Hens llc; old roosters 9c; broilers 11c. SAUSAGE 15c lb. . PORK 10 to 10c. VEAL Calves 12 to 13c dressed, according to grade. DUCKS (Live) 13c; geese, 12c; turkeys, 20c. APPLES 50c and 1. DRIED FRUITS (Buying) Prunes on basis 4 for 35 to 40c. ONIONS $1 per sack. POTATOES 75 and 85c. BUTTER (Buying) Ordinary country butter 23c to 25c. EGGS Oregon ranch, 45c. Prevailing Oregon City prices are as follows: HIDES buying Green salted, 10c. OATS (buying) $23.50 and $24.50 wheat 77c and 78c; oil meal selling $38; Shady Brook feed $1.25 per cent. CORN Whole corn $36; cracked $37. SHEEP PELTS 75c to $1.50 each. FLOUR $4.30 to $5. HAY (buying) Clover at $9 and $10; timothy $13 and $14; ; at hay best $10 and $11; mixed $9 to $13; Idaho and eastern Oregon timothy selling $20; valley timothy $15 to $16. HELP WANTED FEMALE WANTED Girl going to school to help with children. Wages. Ap ply N. W. corner Madison and 11th. WANTED German girl for general housework. Apply, 610 Washington St, FOR RENT. FOR RENT Five room house on cor ner Molalla Ave. and Roosevelt St. M. Yoder. FOR RENT Six lots, 8-room house, good barn, chicken park and chick en houses, cement cellar, good well . water. Place lies nice, with two corner lots, nice fruit of all kinds. Call Home phone B-226. Wants, For Sale, Etc. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Furnished house by local business man; best of referance. Address "X" care Enterprise. WANTED Work by the day by a woman that will hustle. Call 150S 16th street. WANTED Work of any kind by edu cated man of middle age. Address "S.," care Enterprise. FOR SALE. FOR SALE Cordwood, red fir. quire the Enterprise office. In FOR SALE Wagon. August Erlckson. Phone Main 3051. FOR SALE Two valuable oil paint ings at a great bargain. Must sell this week.- Apply H. H. Finik, room 9, Barclay Bldg. Administrator's Notice to Creditors. Notice is hereby given that the under signed has been duly appointed by the county court of Clackamas coun? ty, Oregon, and has qaulified as ad ministrator of the estate of Jacob Spagla, deceased, late of said coun ty and state. Persons having claims against said estate are hereby no tified to file the same, duly veri fied according to law, with my at torney, C. H. Dye, at the southwest corner of 8th and Main streets, Ore gon City, Oregon, for adjustment and payment, within six months from the date of this notice. Dated November 12, 1913. . CHARLES F. SPAGLA, Administrator. C. H. DYE, Attorney for Estate. WOOD AND COAL OREGON CITY WOOD & FUEL CO. Wood and eoal, 4-foot and 16-incb - lengths, delivered to all parts of city; sawing specialty. Phone your orders Pacific 1371, Home A12. F. M. BLUHM. $&--.S.S,.$ L. G. ICE. DENTIST - S Beaver Bui'dinn A Phones: Main 1221 or A-193 PabsfsORay Specific Does the worx. You all (hn An know It by reputation. 4.UU Price ,jJJ- FOR SALE RV JONES DRUG COMPANY D. C, LATOURETTE, President. F. J. MEYER, C ashlar. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON CAPITAL $a000.00 Tranaaeta a General Banking Baatnaaa. Opm frtml A. M. to P. M