... MORNING ENTERPRISE, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1913. MR. HENRY PECK AND MIS FAMILY .AFFAIRS By Gross poc he(2e corte v pLftSe vou pumjjU-. ApsE gf mice(&o C ") . pruese o- r. Piece of I i ... - -i - i i I i.n I fin. ' Ii ii i i- 1 ' ' ' 1 " HENRY JR. SAYS S3 J 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 $3.0'J 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. AMERICA WILL GET its first practical experiments in the govern ment ownership of railroads if the bill now pending before the house committee on postoffices and post roads passes through congress. In thakbill, the department has asked the legislature of the country for $100,000 to try the experiment for one year and to determine whether it would be cheaper for the government to own its cars or to lease them and pay the trans portation costs for the mail as it has been doing. As the life of the average steel car is 15 years and the average cost of maintenance from $1700 to $3000 per year, the government officials believe they can save something out of the present charge of $16,000 for each car annually. The test is worth making, at any rate. Though the postmaster general sometime ago favored the government ownership of all rail and telephone and telegraph lines, the country is not yet prepared to take that much of a step along those lines. It is, however, willing that the officials should spend a little money in making tests if they believe that the country can ultimately save something in the annual expense that is incurred by the postoffice depart ment and place that office on a self supporting basis. If the costs of the transportation of mail over the main lines of the roads is so great every year and the department heads believe that they can cut down this expense by the ownership of the steel cars that carry this mail, the experiment is worth the money that the bill provides should be spend whether it sustains this content tion or not. Experiments', in general, cost money but if they lead to the collection of data that will afterwards prove of benefit to the government and that enables the heads of the departments to afterwards save money for the people of the country, they are worth the first cost and the time expended. It would be interesting to the people to learn whether or not governrrfent wnership of this kind would pay. It would also be interesting to the depart ment to learn just how much of a profit the railroads have been making off of the transportation of mail for the past 20 years. Such data is worth any ' costs that the government sees fit to make, within reason, for whether it ends fri the government control of its steel mail cars or not it will show the officials the actual cost of operation of such cars and may enable them to later cut down the charges that the roads have been making when they have bid for the federal contracts. Sometime ago the transcontinental lines threatened to cut out their fast Politics Needs the Young Man, but He Must Play the Game Honestly By Governor LEON R. TAYLOR of New Jersey, Youngest Governor In the United States Photo by American Press Association. POLITICS NEEDS THE YOUNG MAN. ONE OF HIS PRIME QUALIFICATIONS IS HIS FREE DOM FROM ENTANGLING ALLIANCES. HE HAS A CLEAN SLATE; HE ISN'T MIXED UP WITH A LOT OF THINGS AND PEOPLE LIKELY TO IN TERFERE WITH HIS SERVICE TO THE STATE. THEN HE IS IN THE MOVEMENT. HE HAS THE NEWER IDEALS, THE LESS SORDID AMBITIONS. HE HAS RASH IMPLUSES, BUT HE USUALLY STOPS TO THINK BEFORE HE ACTS. Thefe's such a thing as being so conservative that you're afraid to move in any direction. You just stand still. That's the weakness of some of the safe and sane candidates. - I advise no young man to enter politics unless he is BURNING UP WITH PATRIOTISM OR HAS AN ASSURED INCOME. It costs too much to be a politician; not in money, but in time. After the end fit this year I quit. I'm going back to the law, and for about ten years I'm going to work just as hard as I can. Then maybe I'll have another , look at politics. Once you're in politics you have NO TIME FOR ANYTHING ELSE. You haven't inclination, either. IF A.YOUNG MAN CAN'T AFFORD TO STAY HONEST IN POLI TICS HE CAN'T AFFORD TO STAY AT ALL. " The bosses will be good to him for awhile if he is obedient and asks no questions. But unless he has independence he will acquire such a malodorous reputation that -the bosses will never dare to use him as a candidate for a big office. The people wake up once in awhile, you know. And the BOSSES HAVE TO DECLARE FOR THE HONEST MAN not because they want him, but because they need tea. mail trains from San Francisco to New York because of the talk that was going the rounds of federal plans to pay for mail by the foot instead of by the ounce or pound. The lines have placed through trains between the Pacific and the Atlantic coasts and have shortened the time between New York and San Francisco by one day. To the business man to whom time means money, this is an important feature. It means that the hurried business man can transact a greater amount of business between the points if he can save even one day on his mail time. The threat that the roads have made is one that the government has to take into consideration and which it, properly, did consider when it was made. Though there is no apparent reason why the people of the country should pay for the transportation of mail by the pound when it may occupy but a small part of the space in the car, the government J id not at that time take any steps to straighten out the tangle. With the power in the hands of the roads to cut out this fast trans continental service, something ought to be done by the government that would give it a more complete control over its own mail lines and that would enable the officials to handle the roads with the view to getting the best re sults in the way of mail service for the whole people. If this scheme of the department will do it or will show how it can be done, it is a good one. Ffp HE PROPOSED CHARTER for our baby sister city across the river is a work of art as charters go. ' One of the best charter author ities Of Oregon had charge of the drawing of it and it any city ever had a charter where the people rule West Linn will have one after December 29, 1913. . The usual idea of politicians is "the people be damned" with enough wool pulled over the statement so the people will vote on and pass what they want, but West Linn's city charter committee's one idea seems to have been "the people must rule" and almost every page of the document gives the peo ple power which very few cities enjoy. -' West Linn will likely vote YES strong enough to insure its passage. PITY THE POOR RAILROAD. It is the real sufferer in the in creased cost of living. With its vast amount of business and its tre mendous working force, it has to face the prospects of increased wage scales and higher salaried employes. President Bush of the Missouri Pacific railroad sounds the weird wail of his brethren in the business when he tells to the society of which he is a' member the dire calamities that are about to befall the helpless corporations. About every so often, some distinguished member of the railroad fra ternity comes before the public with his little wail of trouble that is threaten ing the corporations. He tells the people just how much, down to the frac tion of a mill, that it costs him to run his own road, for instance, and the other proportionately. He goes into lengthy details. He complains of the high cost of living and the increase in wages. He says that little advances in the freight rates or the charge for passenger traffic will not be felt by the public but that they will save the poor old road from absolute ruin and complete bankruptcy. He explains this on the theory that the business the roads do is so great that the little increase which he says cannot be noticed by the travelling public brings in great revenues for the lines and guides them safe ly around the shoals and bars in the waters of bankruptcy. It is a pitiful wail that the roads have the habit of distressing the people with about once in six or eight months. The cry of the corporations usually comes about the time that the various railroad commissions of the several states awake to the fact that the companies have been grafting from the peo ple for the past 10 years or longer and proceed with measures that will shake them down on the exhorbitant charges that they have been making. The commissions never make these cuts without fully going into the business of the company and determining from the books and records just how much such a cut would influence the business. The authorities never yet have cut rates when those rates would ruin the business of any corporation. There are cases on record where roads are charging exorbitant rates for transporta tion both of freight and passengers and the cpmmission never objects because the condition of the line would not permit the reduction of the rates. There are cases of that kind in this state. The commission has taken the correct view when it does not lower rates to such an extent that the lines would go into bankruptcy but it also takes the correct view when a road is charging rates that are exorbitant when the amount of business and the ac tual transportation cost are taken into consideration. But, the people are annually given this line of bunk from the corporation managers in order to pull the wool over the eyes of the masses and arouse public opinion against the reduction of charges, on the lines. SELL OR TRADE 2 acres all improved, 6-room house, good well, cemented; good family orchard; all fenced with woven wire fencing. $3000 part cash, balance on long time or will trade for equal value in Oregon City property. DILLMAN & HOWLAND east and section 30, township 2 south, range 2 east; $1. Temple E. Door and wife to John J. Rupp, S. W. section 8, all of S S. W. section 9, township 2 south, range 4 east; $10. Charles A.'Priesing and wife to Em ma D. Tscharner tract of land near Milwaukie; $150. The Molalla Land & Improvement company to L. W. Robbins and wife, lot 1, block 2 in Metzler & Hart's ad dition to Molla; $10. Joseph Anderegg to John Anderegg. S. S. E. , section 1, township 2 south, range 3 east; $3000. Herman A. Lee and wife to Aliza beth Munder, lots 5 and 6, block 1, in Lee's addition to Canby; $343. - Temple E. Dorr and wife to John J. Rupp, N. S. E. section 13, township 2 south, range 3 east and other tracts; $10. JURY CONVICTS POSTAL ROBBERS (Continued from Page 1). Morgen as a former prisoner in that institution. He said that Morgen had spent a year in the penitentiary un der the name of Robinson on a charge of paSSing "bad" checks. The two men expressed utmost con tempt for the Oregon City police who arrested them. Morgen remarked during the course of the trial, "Bliss told me that he was sore because he walked into the arms of some boob cops in a bum town.1' - Bliss and Morgen were arrested early on the morning of October 14 by Officers Cook and -Woodward on a charge of vagrancy. It was not until the next day that they were connect ed with the crime. All through the course of the trial and during the time preceeding it, the two men stoutly maintained their innocence. Chief of Police Ed Shaw, Officers Cook and Woodward, of Oregon City, and Ewald Leisman, of Willamette, were witnesses. Robert M. Rankin, United States deputy district attor ney, prosecuted the case and Elton Watkins and Colonel Leis C. Gar- rigus represented the defendant. CITY STATISTICS FLECHTNER Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Gustav Plechtner, (512 Center street, a daughter. ANDERSON Born, to Mr. and Mrs. T. is. Anderson, K. F. D. No. 2, a daughter. Read the Enterprise for the news. Money is one of the greatest money, makers. Bank your savings; they will make money for you. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Real estate transfers filed with the county recorder Tuesday are as fol tract of land in section 6, township 3 Arson S. Cove to Sarah A. Cove, south, range 1 east, near the Pudding river; $1. Alfred P. Sneider and wife-to Em ma Johnson, lot 3 and 4, block 28, Bol ton; $100. George M. B. Jones to Corfix Soren sen and wife, 1 acres in N. E. corner N. W. 4 N. W. section 24, township 2 south, range 2 east; $800. . Eugene Cumins and wife to B. F. Pond, N. W. V N. W. section 17, and N. E. V N E. 1-4 section 18, township 4 south, range 3 east; $1. George Gersey to Alonza Gersey, one-third interest in S. W. N. E. section 6. township 6 south, range 3 east; $1. W. A. Aloorn and wife to Elizabeth Grumm lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 16, 17, , 18, and 20 in block 5, Brightwood; ! $10. . ! ' East Side Mill and Lumber ; com-1 pany to W. F. Douglas, E. N. W. Vz i S. E. V of section 2, township 2 south, i range 4 east; $800. j , Elmer Jones to Jonathan G. Idd--j ings and wife, S. E. corner S. S. E. I section 22, township 5 south, range j 1 east; $467.50. - - , " : Frances A. Atwood and wife " to Rowland F. Walters, tract of land in Daniel Hathaways D. L. C; $10. George E. Waggoner and wife to Thomas Prince, tract of land In Dam iel D. Thompkins D. L. C, in sections 23, 34, 25, township 2 south, range 1 "He Gave Me That For Christmas" OFTEN YOU HAVE HEARD that expression, and you will al ways notice that the gift is one that combines beauty and . useful ness. ; ' ' For. a good substantial Christ mas present, there is nothing that beats an American Beauty Electric Percolator. The easiest and best way of making coffee.. Makes coffee quicker and better. A fine thing for the breakfast table. You will make . your wife, mother or sweetheart happy by giving her an American Beauty Electric Toaster. MILLER-PARKER CO. . : 609 Main Street 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 Heart to Heart Talks "THIS HOUSE WHICH I HAVE BUILDED." Stands your house of life firmly founded on a .rock, .or is it builded oa .the shifting sands of fortune? Have you buttressed it with truth and honor, with the love of family and of friends, strengthening the walls where they need re-enforcement with the doing of kindly offices that are so often forgotten? Is your house of life firm? - When Henry Winstanley, famous English engineer, brought to comple tion what he thought was his best work, the Eddystone lighthouse, he stood aside and rejoiced in the labor of his brains. "It is a worthy structure,'' he said aloud. "It will stand for ages. Oh, how I should like to be here in the fiercest storm that ever blew and see how the wind and sea should beat In vain against my work!" The fierce storm came. Winstanley stood in his house of pride and watch ed the strife outside. ' "It holds fast! It holds fast!" he cried. But the winds and the rain and the storm proved too much for the Eddy stone lighthouse, and in its wreck it bore down to death the man who built it. . We build ourselves lighthouses of pride and ,power. We rear them In wealth and honor. They will last for the ages, we believe ; How we pride ourselves on our position, our riches, our standing in our communities! But we fail to found our lighthouses on the eternal verities of truth and hon or and love. And the storm comes the "fiercest storm that ever blew" to all of us, and down come our lighthouses. We go down with them, often to death and ruin. Other builders of other lighthouses follow us. Their structures rear themselves against the heavens and totter and fall. Finally comes one man with the secret of laying a proper foundation. The Eddystone lighthouse not Win stanley's still lights the coast of Eng land for the mariner. " Its powerful warning light tells of concealed rocks and shoals. By its beacon the sailor steers his vessel aright. But no material warning it carries across the waters is stronger than the moral lesson it teaches of Winstanley, the builder who longed for "the fiercest storm that ever blew," that he might see how well his lighthouse should withstand it Bringing the Store Windows To Your House It used to be when you wanted to know what the stores were showing, you at least had to go down town and look at the win dows. - Nowadays the merchants dress new show windows for you each day in their advertisments in your favorite daily newspaper like the ENTERPRISE. Their advertisements represent the newest and most attractive merchandizing thoughts they can find. ' They are up to the minute live inviting. Is it any wonder that the adver tisements are often more interest ing news than you will find else where in your newspapers? Wants, For Sale, Etc FRR SALE. DIAMONDS FOR SALE I have three . cluster diamond rings for sale, Jf cheap. Nice Xmas present for lady. Phone Main 1S02. LOST AND FOUND LOST Elk's pin, between postoffice and 13th and Main. Return to cashier Huntley Bros. Reward. LOST Brown fox fur collar with two tails between Eleventh and Center and postoffice. Return to Miss Marie E. Libkur, care Dr. Ice, 1101 Center street. Sought After, "A'fter you became wealthy," said the biographer, "you found yourself much sought after?" "Yes." replied Dustin Stax, "by an investigating committee." Washington Star. Especially. Moralist The outsider who buys stocks is a gambler, pure and simple. Ticker Especially simple. Judge. The Glass Snake. The slowworm is the snake which country people tell you has the pecu liar property of breaking itself into bits, each piece afterward surviving. The truth differs slightly from the leg end. The slowworm is a timid crea ture and when first captured tightens all its muscles, thus reducing itself to a remarkably rigid state, in which con dition it will no doubt snap like a dry twigf but, needless to say, only the upper and vital portions survive the or deal. London-Globe. : Get the news read the Enterprise. FOR RENT. A. L. A R MINE supplies wood at J5.00 per cord, green or dry. Address 1403 Seventh street, city, or tele phone Main 124. L. AUSTIN, the tailor, for men and women. Suits made to your meas ure, alterations and refitting. Prices reasonable, Room 9, Barclay building. 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 monf&s 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 eoa, 4-foot and 16-inch, lengths, delivered t all parts of city; saving especially. Phono your orders Pacific 1371, Home A128'. F. M. BLTJHM L. G. ICE. DENTIST S Beaver Bui'ding ; S Phones: Main 1221 or A-193 S Pabst's Okay Specific Does the worK. You all fyry (f know It by reputation. UU : Price YU FOR SALE BY JONES DRUG COMPANY D. C. LATOURETTB, Preidnt. F. J. MEYER, Cashier. THE FIRST (NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON CAPfTAL $50300 00 4 ' Trnaact SJiral BmWa Bwl.m. Oii trm 1 A. M. to S P. M .'(- y