OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE i. i. PwblUhed Ivtry friHy. ROOIl, f filer and Publisher. Katrf at Ongo CUT. OrKa. Poaiefflce aa eroadclata matter. atecrlsi lA Riti Oa year ... I' S tit Meatas '1 Trial MubarriBtloa. Ta Month! flubaerlbera will ftaf tk dale of iplralloa (tamped ea their rPr fol Wwiag tklr him II Uil pa;aal li out credited, kindly aotlfy ua. and Ua ataiier til receive our atuatloa. Afvertltlng Ratt oa anpllraiUia TAXES SKILL AND GOOD WILL Claude Kitchin'i oppoiition to the conscription bill ahowrd that he wai unwilling to take any lrssoni from Great Britain in the art of creating an army. Yet he wai equally itrong in declaring that his plan to make busincM pay the coit of the war ii patterned on the example of England. Not o. Tl British tax on excett profits takes toll of profit in excess o those earned in peace times, while Kitchin'a tax is arbitrarily fixed to operate whenever the profits rise above eight per cent So that a corporation which used to earn 1 0 or 15 per cent in peace can earn no more than eight per cent now that we are at war. The Kitchin tax, also, is levied upon not only the "actual cash paid in" but also upon the "actual cash value, at .the time of payment, of assets other than cash paid in." There are many corporations in this country which do a prof itable business upon a small cash capital, to whom the good will and the skill of its management constitute assets which cannot be measured in cash and which enable earnings to be made at a high rate of percentage upon the face value of their stock. These companies are to be found in almost every town, and the burden of the Kitchin form of taxation would be very onerous to them if it became a law. POOR PICKINGS AT PORTS. Imports for the ten months of the current fiscal year end ed April 30 totaled $2,072,000,000, yielding a customs rev enue of $178,604,000, or an average rate of duty on all im ports of 8.6 per cent, which is pretty small pickings for your Uncle Sammy at the customs houses. On April 30th, 1913, a protective year, our imports for the ten month period totaled $1,548,000,000 which paid 274.000,000 into the U. S. Treas ury, or an average duty rate of 1 7.7 per cent. Imports for the 1917 period were 34 per cent greater than for the 1913 period, while revenues derived therefrom were 35 per cent less for the 1917 than for the 1913 period. Imports for the single month of April, 1917, totaled $254,000,000, the record month for the past six years, with the exception of March, 1917, and $108,000,000 greater than for April, 1913. yet the revenues for April, 1917. were $3,000,000 short of the reve nues for April, 1913 The Democratic party is quite willing to tax production and consumption in this country, estates, incomes everything but raw cotton and protective taxes on imports. It is a strange party in a very real predicament. STICK ON THE STARS. Fifty Years Ago Taaan from Oregon City tntsrprl June . 1BI7. Napoleon anj king William, of la, bars dgned a treaty at Latum burf. The Coatt Hurray baa published map v4 lluUn America. StrabrrlThta dellcloua (mil mala Ha appearance la eeveral plce about tn during tba pail eight da A good dlib could b bail, erved with cream and augar on taat Hunday night at Kelly A Pllthury's fr tha nominal urn of ln rent. Tha Oregonlan late that tha flrat In tba market of Portland vara aold al a vety frigid price at f I 00 per pound. Tha King of Italy, In pe'h el- coined tha treaty of Umdon. Never thele. he eald we muil Indulge In no lllutlone. Other compllcatlona may art. We ihall be fortunate If In Ihla period of peace tucceed In reor ganising our nanrlal condition. I ronOIN It CAPTONtD W. It. k)Ut, alia N. !'. Keiiuedl aim nude a aeUMtltiil rap limn liepuly HlirriJ rVd I I'" 'f taUUia, Idaho, by leaping from a tar window of H.niilurn Pucinc train alomUt niglil. taken lulo rutlody In Hip toulh end of Oregon t'liy a da initi uli-a before alt oVIo. k Tuedy night lie) waa taken In port'aud at I u'clotk and lodged In the munly Jail (here, prefatory tu being taken l Welter, Idaho, to antwer to a i turce of i he. k forgery. Young, attrac tive, ell dreated on I co'rteooe. Kennedy gate lllte of the Impretiinn of the "Udd, Ud ll!alir Ihal bla at'llona mould aem o prom Ue. The detailed count of Keune dv'a day apeut In t'lack.ima county rei.d Ilka a page from a dune noicl. Following Ihe eai to freedom, t hli h wa mad" Juat a the truin wa leaving llulibard, Kennedy made hl way alorig Ihe aldea of Hi" road anu along Ihe darkest pott Ihal he could find. t'pon leieral occaloit he a.vld th.it he taw auto coming toward bun mid on one ocotlon he crawled through! the fence to let an automobile pan wwen it hat alne been thown wa MONTHS BY SEVERS The Tribune s Constantinople letter j tnal f ,h,.nir ,,, )( u ,( of May 10th, aaya the aettlement of tha Luxemburg queatlon baa brought reforma and political achemea here to dead atand. Ruaalan plana and for eign Intervention In faror of Crete have failed. The Mohammedan every- here utter threata agalnat tha I'brle tiana. Tha ambaador to Washing ton haa not (one. Ilia great bulnea IU be prejudicial to an American al liance with HuMla and American In Turkey are denied redrea for the abue of tha Sultan'a office. A ru mor I current that Dlagne KfTendl, the' new arabaador to Wanhlngton. will' propoea to our gorernment to buy Crete. Baiaball At a regular meeting of1 to known poltlvpy ihal on aeterul iHcanlona during the alt night teen h Kennedy and the therllT were althlu a thort dittance of e.uh other. .Near Ihe Molalla brlilce, t harlt Thoma. an emploe uf the Southern I'ailflc company look Kennedy Into niMody on (utplclon thai he wai tlio ( Hi uH l prlaoner at I o'i Kh k Thonua took him to Marihal Kd IUman of Canly who after an Investigation t'Tiied him looae. It to the marah.il at t'anby that Kennedy told hla atory of having been attacked by highwaymen, who forced hi pardner to drive the tilth avium I toward Oregon City, after halng I duIUh Kennedy forellilv fr.itti ih.. Ill II. tha Clackamaa Daieball club held on the evening of June 4th. 8. D. Tope ii elected captain of tha aecond nine, llerabera of tha flrtt nine elect were S. D. Poiie. Ed J. Zeegler. P. T. Barclay. X. W. Randall. W. C. Salmon, 0. P. Bridge. George A. Harding. George A. Sheppard and W. C. Johnaon. A chal lenge from tha Pioneer club of Port land to play a match game at that city on Monday, June 17th, ha been re ceived by the aecrelary! New Trick C. W. Pope, our worthy friend Charley, baa been "subbing" for Putter John I). Hlle on the Portland teamer for aeveral day. Like John D., be la np to hli trick, the lateit nd neatest being In a puzxla formed by the Unking and unlinking of a pair of galvanized wire loops, without spring the clasp. It la all the go In town and puzzles everybody but the adept Considerable opposition is being met with in Congress to the appointment of army officers with the ranks of genera, and lieutenant general. It is high time such picayune ideas were brushed aside. At a time when our regular army num bered but a very few thousand and we had the example ol European military aristocracy fresh before us, there was some excuse for opposing the appointment of men to so high a rank, but that day has long since passed. When Chaffee was in command of the United States troops in China, he had to take the last seat, and was the last to be called upon when the generals of the Allied Powers gath ered around the council table to discuss the China campaign. It is some consolation to remember that after each general had presented his views swathed in diplomacy and indirect ness, and Chaffee was finally called upon, he tersely announc ed that his troops would receive orders to march on Peking at once. We are about to raise an army of 2,000,000 men, enough in itself to merit the dignity of an officer or two with the rank of general. America must have full and complete representa tion in the military councils of Europe, and our representa tives should have rank befitting the dignity of this great coun' try. There is no militarism in this. It is common sense. PROTECTION THE KEYSTONE OF TAXATION The senate's proposal for the taxation of motor cars is sen sible and just. It is based upon the correct theory of war-time taxation, namely, upon the theory that burdens should be lightly laid upon the essentials of life, while they bear more heavily upon the things that one may readily do without. Hence, the senate proposes to measure the tax upon motor cars by the price which is paid for such vehicles. The man with a fliwer will contribute $7.50 a year to keep the war going. The man with a limousine will pay $25. One result of this war, with its necessity for broadended tax levies, will be a saner legislative view of the sources of revenue which this country possesses. As this view becomes more general among law makers, they cannot over look a protective tariff as a source of income to the treasury and of prosperity to the nation. The entire revenue from the automobile tax, as out lined by the senate, will be about $45,000,000 and it will di rectly tap the pockets of about 3,500,000 owners of cars. This sum is about the same as that which the last Republican tariff law produced from the custom houses every six weeks with out directly affecting the purse of anybody. IS IN 0. S. LIBERTY LOAN SALEM. Or., June 12. Liberty bonds aggregating J400 -re pur chased by G. Achembrenner, a Ger man prisoner at the penitentiary, yes terday afternoon. The money repre sented savings made by Aschembren ner since bis Incarceration. Practically all of the money was earned by him as a trusty on the asy lum farm where be baa been in charge of the hog department for several years. He banked hlB monthly wages with Warden Murphy, and yesterday be appeared at the prison and asked for the money, stating that he had de elded to buy Liberty bonds. He Is from Morrow county and has served five years of his sentence Since his Imprisonment he hB always been a model prisoner. m ii - MOONEY JURY HELD AS CLOSE AS PRISONERS It is curious, perhaps significant, that, just as the German reichstag is proposing amendments to the constitution and other legistlation which will limit the power of the kaiser and exalt the prerogative of the people's representatives, the American congress is lending ear to proposals from the White House to increase the powers of the president through the abrogation of some of the powers of the legislative body. SAN FRANCISCO, June 12. The jurymen sitting- in the case of Mrs. Rena Mooney, charged with murder in connection with tho death of Mrs. Myrtle Van Loo in the preparedness day b'mb explosion, came to court today after their first night of In ternment In a downtown hotel. They have been given a suite of 16 rooms, to which a couple of baliffs hold the keys. The trial Judge occupies near by apartments. No telephone calls, no visitors, no printed accounts of the trial and no temporary absences of Jurors are permitted. These meas ures were adopted, . said Superior Judge Emmett Seawall, to free the urymen rrom any suspicion of o it- slde Influence during the trial. chine. Ilowman la upoi'd lo have In pcled Kennedy'a arm and wrist for evidences of the handcuff, and al though the bracelet were still on Kennedy, to cleverly did he hide them that they could not be teen. After having convinced the mariliul that he wa really the vlctlme of a 'hitrhunv rnhhiirv k'.nti..,l v t a.1.,, .1. ....... I to the sheriff of Cla. kain.i county urging him to stop the machine. A a mutter of fact the machine wa the creation of Kennedy' bruin, but the nmrthul t;ave Kennedy tome udvice a to where he would probably meet Ihe therlff und alarted him on hla way. Breakfast was aecured at a farm home neur Pulp Siding, and from here Kennedy telephoned to Cnnby to In quire of the marshal If he had cap tured the escaped criminal a yet. The Inst report received here of the where abouts of Kennedy before his arrest, waa the information given by Jumes McNeil, who cave tho man a ride from New Era to the point on the road above the Ilawley Paper mills. Here the passenger alighted and made hit way toward town. McNeil auspectlnx that he was the escaped man, notified the posse, which by this time was working with the aid of blood hounds from Salem. The posse at the time of Kennedy's capture was made np of Sheriff W. J. Wilson. ConstuMe I). E- Frost. Deputy Sheriff A. E. Joyner. Deputy Sheriff Fred L. Hen, of Uwlston, Idaho; J. F. Keller, state patrol officer, E. D. Cas per, In charge of (ho dogs. A. J. Need ham, sheriff of Marlon county. Kennedy Is wanted in Idaho on a charge of cashing bad checks and It Is said thnt a Jail sentence awaits him in Washington and Montana when he Is released In Idaho. Kennedy took his arrest more or lesu phllosophlca'y. "I played my game and you played yours better thnn I did" was all he said. I'len left last night for Portland with his prisoner. Tbeta at buy day for August Kr- li kon, vrtlahlle proprietor of Ih llaikama lvrn, near Mllaaukle Hit Thursday morning, In tha circuit court, be pleaded gullly lo a charge of maintaining a nuUanca In the form of the above named tavern, rlenlence I lo be linixwrd Moudtv on Ihla charge Friday hit wife. Maila lirlckton filed complaint with Ih county clerk king for divorce, and In tba aft ernoon, Juitlce of tha Peace John X never, teuienieu mill 10 teven month In Ih Clackamaa county jail on Ihree eeparale rhargea. In Juttlce court, Krlikton pleaded guilty to rhargea of having 1 1. 1 nor In hi pMeaiion on which be wa cent encod to three month; of operating alot machine, on which be wa tent need lu 0 day, and for manufactur ing ll'iuor, on which be wa (enlenced lo three month' Imprisonment. Mr. Lrlckton, In her complaint, al legea that her hutband abuaed her and treated her bulb cruelly and In humanly. Hhe alto claim that her hutband wa the poiaettor of a rrav Ing for liquor which, when aatltfled. left hint In a condition that waa far from conducive to her peace of mind May 10, Mr. Krlckion bad her bua band arretted for attacking her with a thoigun and attempting, the clalint to take her life. An Interlocutory decree wa handed down by Judge J. I'. Campbell here Friday In tha rae of Clenmorrle com pany vertut E. D. Elliott and 8. F. Hbiulalr. lly tha terma of the order. unlet tha defendania pay, on or be fore December T. tba utn of f 3125 01. wlih Intereat on tha um of fl2S01 and on $1500 from October, 1913. tha plaintiff haa been promised abtolut title to block one, of Clenmorrle addl Hon, contlttlng of about three and one- fourth acre. An order waa Utued by Judge Camp bell restraining C. II. Lawle. wboe wife la auing blin for a divorce, from ellng any of hi pertontl property during the trial. He la alio to pay f 50 for ult money and f 30 month tem porary alimony. A petition ba been filed asking that the will of William llargan, dereaaed. ba probated. The ealata la valued al 11900. to be divided among II heir. J. Dean Duller I executor. Kate Angel wa appointed guardian of Foreat and Florence Turner, aged 11 and 13 year, and LUtle Iderhoff, wa appointed guardian of Mabel, Ela. Ida, Thomaa and Herbert Turner, mi nor. Will Weir la auing V. E. Cooper to collect on a $500 note, with Intereat and $S0 attorney' foea. IllOTON COUNTY HAD EVES OPEN i'orialM liaietle 1 luirt Aualu liai w il'-iiiolnlial' d lb iiprrloiily of Ihe people over Ihe Irgii'lature and allowed to Ihe world Ihal Hellion lountv at !! It Wide aoake and nol In l liniiloi.g. d We prmed In a ratio of Ian lo one Hint nobody can bund anything and that when wa paat, wltdoiu will mi dotiM.stlr die with ii Wa had a hum a til ttt the Inleretl. the a lug Irutt and Portland al one fell i, tp, and )ou bet we Improted our opportunity. To I tore, lea ttiall half of ll turned out, Willi h left only 3i per cent of ti t punch I'ort'nud. I"l we puui lied her all right. eW eien tried lo tuta her from her own foil), at bant nearly I '") of u refund to lei her have the right In t u hertelf lo ln print her harbor If the wanted to The pour fool lown' If It haaii t flue enough lii look after Jtu If, It ran trual food old lontertatlv lu nlon lo help luke care of her l.'veii though II wu none of our huainca und wouldn't rml u a rent eien, )! we fell Ihal II wai our d"ly lo cure for defe lliet, and to. in the Interealt of humanity we re fined to let Mu'lnointh "Put Ihe Purl In Portland." We dulu'l know why. but you bet your life we even led our Inalienable right and demoiial rated Ihe g'orl. a of Ihe referendum' Alpine voted for Ihe port, but we are In- formed thai It waa only on condition Ihal ocean llnera come tu Alpine for mppllc and freight. Hut the thing we awaited oftenetl mi l hurdrit wa the bill In Ir create the pny of leislalntnr. We knm ked l million had decided lo build It nny her teu'll til one. A IrgU'alor gel!wav. The know n,,w Ihmi.li Dim! I) will vol Ilia other war tomorrow I If wa ihiuita and II nobodr's tii. tiff, either. Una Ihlng on Ihe ballot mt didn't ill, and that waa Ih bidding of tula tud illy election in III earn ilty. And neither would li t Urn ml of Ilia tlalo tllp any good r.M.li mi at If ae inuld help II. w I"U I wind good roadi IohhI rouilt ralne llm prli e of lend and Ihe higher land la lined the hli.her lava will be. 'I her iun'1 fool ill, we refined In be torrupled t llier roiiullea may waul food rood, but nol u. Our father und grind father dldll I hale good romli and tin got a'ong Our roada nrn like llm old lime ri lli.li'ii. Iln)'( good eiioiii.li fo. father aud they're good enough for ut Of rourte, they are going In Im forced onto ut, became of itat ma jority uf aoino 20.000 poor beulKhted fool who aren't aallifled with lb mud till who want In put on air like Waahlnrtoli and California, Hut the ronuplrutor dldn I fool ut. Not a whit! We could tuii'll aaphall and corrup tion a over Ihe ballot, and If lin y try lo bring Ihelr old patrd road acra Ihe border of our county wo muy n Join them. In fuel we would, rtiept 'hut iiium lawyer might make tome. thing out of It, and we ore dead un In an body making an) thing. Hut tin re I one cumulation, lly voting nguliitl Ihe bondt In Ihl coun ty wa have at leuat mint likely aur ceeded In preventing a paved rd be tween Corvalll and Albany. Tim roud I not coiupultory there, but tho com- more than he earn now and w, the people, know It! Why I a legltlalure, uii ay l.el the pi-ople make the luwt :y We' Didn't we ilrmotiilr.ite on ability tblt very week? We ay to. Another thliiK we lilt strong wa the umemlmi'iit to prevent ilng'a later from tllpplnr: one over on ut at every eliH iinn. To bo mre. we hit altigto tax good nnd bard lutt full, but we buvv right lo change our iiilndt. haient weT And you bet we i Id It. too And we don't wuut it, to they will prob bly build only -.nut road the law compel Ihein lo build. Tho coinml t'on a I mi had Intended a traveled r,md from Corvalll through Philomath to Newport via lUodkett, but after op. Inc Ihe return from theae preclncla (hey won't dure defy public oplul in, but will leave ut alone In our glorlua Mud and lolltiiilw. Hie temper pavlMt, Kink tho Kulter und alio Vita la lief, erendum. APPEAL 10 SCHOOL IS MADE BY KEET CASE MAY HAVE LINK IN L SPY PLO I A I HEN MAKES RECORD RIDDLE, Or., June 11. Hen R-0744 property of I. P. Gardner, of this place, has Just completed a laying record of 111 eggs In as many days. The owner says that he believes his hen exceeded the world's record for continuous lay ing. LIMITED TO STOP AT CAN BY SALEM, Or., June 11. The public service commission today Issued an order requiring the Southern Pacific to stop what is known as the Coos Ray limited train at Canby. The stopping of this train will vastly Improve the service between Portland and Canby, it is said. With the organization on a perman ent basis of the Painter's and Paper Hanger's union, local No. 220, A. F. L., an announcement was made by the painters that, effective July 1, the scale of wages for painters outside of the mills would be $4 a day Instead of $3.50 as at prcsont- Tho officers of the new union who were enrolled Installed at Thursday nights meeting are: President, C. Os borne; v!ce-presljmt A. J. Roll; flnan clal secretary, C. G. Green; recording secretary, R. S. Ilrumley; treasurer, R. L. Colebank; board of trustees, E. French, W. G. Campbell, W, W, Ham ilton, and warden, Clarence M. Fair- brother. MAIL CLERK EXAMINATIONS The U. S. Civil Service commission announces that a male clerk-carrier examination will be held at Oregon City, Oregon, on July 14, 1917, to nil vacancies as they may occur In the position of clerk or carrier at tho Ore gon City postofflco. Men only will be admitted. Age limits are 18 to 45 years. Application blank and Information for applicants may be obtained from the local secretary, Board of Civil Service Examiners, at Oregon City postofflce, or the secretary, 11th Civil Service district, 303 Post Office build ing, 8cattle, Wash. KANSAS. CITV. Mo.. June 12. A wide range of developments, linked with the possible uncovering of a na tlon-wide plot engineered by German agents, was promised here today by federal authorities who have Just re turned from Springfield, Mo.,' where they Investigated tho Kent case and other alleged abduction plots. Samuel Hsrgus, assistant United Slates district attorney, announced to day that numorous arrests probably would be revealod soon, although re fraining from mentioning names or giving indications of the cities In which they might be expected. The federal authorities began their Investigations Into the alleged plots after Springfield officials announced that Claude Plersol, who Is jnlled here as a suspect, had told of having been approached by Gorman agents to aid them In abducting a St. Louis muni lions maker as part of a plot to thwart the. traffic In munitions to the entente allies. Plersol at the county Jail today de nied that be had confessed to any ab duction plots or that he had been ap proached at any time by agents of the German government. He said be was at the Keet borne the day before the disappearance of little Lloyd, de livering a package there. MILWAUKIE MAN DROPS DEAD ON PORTLAND VISIT Mrs. Jessie Allen, of this city, was notified late Monday afternoon of the sudden death of her father, Mr. Hunt ley, of Mllwaukle, In Portland Monday afternoon. Mr. Huntley bad gone to Portland to visit with another daugh ter, when be was stricken with heart failure and died almost Instantly. Besides Mr. Allen, Mr. Huntley Is survived by a son Charles Huntley, of Mllwaukle, a daughter at Raymond, Wash., and another daughter at Yam hill, Or. Mr. Huntley wai 78 years of age. BAPTISTS IN ANNUAL MEETING INDEPENDENCE, Or., Jnne 12. The 16th annual session of the Wil lamette Baptist association will meet at the Baptist church In this city June 19, 20 and 21. Rev. W. S. Stewart, pas tor of tbe Baptist church here, la mod erator of the association and Miss Hope Scully la the clerk. T. v. Sullivan, cumpulKn manager of the Red Croau campaign for Cluck iimua county, Oregon, tent to the school clerk of every achool dlttrict In the county, with other printed In formation on the campaign, a pertou ni tenor oi wmcn i lie luiiownig la a copy : "Cliukuma county I nuked for $lv Out). 00 for the great an noble work of tho Red Croat In It efforts in getting ready to relieve aufferlng during Ihe war Imposed on thla country. Tula amount! tu priictlcully fifty reutu for every man, woman and child In our county. The president of our beloved country aaks thla amull tacrine from us now nnd wo must not full In thla, our sar rod duly to our boys who lire going to tho front. "Cull your people together at onco. Orgunlze and elect omi or more cap tains to take rhargo of the campaign In your district. Euch captain can ap point four or five assistant to help him. Divide your district Into smaller districts and muko a personul con tact campaign. See everybody and get everyono to suliMcrlbo according to his or her means. A subscription of $1.00 entitles the subscriber to one year's membership in the Red Cross society. Send tho names of your cap tains and assistants to T. W, Sullivan, campaign manager for Clackamas county, Oregon City, Oregon. Cam paign weak Is June lKth to 2fth In clusive. Send tho monoy collected. with complete lists of the subscribers and tbe amounts subscribed by them, to E. 0. Cuufleld, truusurcr, Oregon City, Oregon. "Make an effort to send an amount eriunl to at least fifty cents for every man, woman and child In your district. Your district will bo glvon credit for Its returns In tho rocords. Make your returns Immediately after the close of the campaign. Prlntod Information la enclosed herewith. (Signed) T. W. SULLIVAN, Campaign manager for Clackamas county. ALL NOW LIABLE 10 ARREST IF ELIGIBLE AND STILL SHIRKING Deputy Dlttrict Attorney Thomaa llurke announced Tueiduy night that beginning early Wednetdny morning a regu'ar campaign will bo Initullod Jutl to check up on tha numlx'r hav ing fulled to register. Arretta may bo expected at any time, he say. WASHINGTON. June 12 Ordera for the arreil of every man between the ugea of 21 and 30, Inclusive, who cannot how a certificate of regis tration for war service have been Is sued by the provost marthul general. Arrest and possibly a yeur'a Im prisonment toduy threatened men of registration ago who huve fulled to enroll for army ronacrlptlon. Gov. ernnra bad ordera from the war de partment to reuno extending leniency to thoae who did not register on the single legal registration day, Inst TueHtliiy, and to prosecute violators vigorously. The eurly pubMcntlnn of lists of registered men Is expected to Bid In the detection of thlrker. Provost Marshal General Crowder today awaited registration roirt from 15 stutes so that the nation's total can be figured, each atnto's run acrlptlon quota determined and riles announced for tho second step In the process, the summoning hnforo local exemption hoards of a proportion of tho mon registered. ThcBe states had not reported up to last midnight: Arizona, Idaho, Indi ana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Michi gan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, Now Mexico, Now Jersey, Pennsylvania, South Dakota and Wyoming. MARRIAGE LICEN8E8 ISSUED. Marrlngo licenses were Issued here Tuesdny to Engnlbrot Ilertllsen' and I'etrlna Hornqulst, of thin city, Ieonu Manilla Torrence and Everett Ormnn Cross, of 400 llluff streot, Oregon City, and Amelia Slants nnd Charles W. Nichols, of 115 Sevontoenth mreet, Oregon City. CEDAR ISLAND PARK at Jennings Lodge (Undor Now Management) Iw., . f TaJ .1 at"",'"" I- An attractive place to apend your evening and Sunday. Dancing and bathing. The finest bathing beach on tha Willamette River.