MO WEATHER INDICATIONS. Oregon City Rain Friday; $ 8 southerly winds. S Oregon Friday fair east, rain west portion; southerly winds. - The only daily newspaper be 4" tween Portland and Salem; circu- ? 3 les in every section of Clacka S mas County, with a population of S 30,000. Are you an advertiser? $ WEEKLY ENTER PRI S VOL. Ill No. 33. OREGON- CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1912. Peb Week, 10 Cents E ESTABLISHED I 366 OR EGON CITY TO 2 POLICE CHIEFS TODAV Burns Becomes Shaw's Rival As Chief Today CHARLES E. BURNS. ALDERMAN TO SPEAK State Superintendent of Public In struction Alderman will deliver an address at the High School at 11 o'clock this morning. While the ad dress is primarily for the benefit of the pupils, Superintendent of City Schools Tooze invites the general public to attend. The lecture is the second of a series arranged by Superintendent Tooze. Mayor Dimick will be the speaker next week, and .others who have promised to deliver addresses are O. D. Eby, Governor West and J. E. Hedges. Four sacKs of De merit's Bros. Best (Purchased of F. T. t Barlow the grocer.) 4 Separate prizes 1 sack for each lucky number. to be given away F fee odayl 1 SACK AT 1 O'CLOCK P. M. 3 SACKS AT 8:15 O'CLOCK Every 10c ticket purchased between 12 and 1 o'clock p. m. entitles holder to a chance in the afternoon. Every 10c ticket purchased be tween 7 and 8:15 o'clock p. m. entitles holder to a chance in the evening. . .Holder of tickets must be. pre sent at the drawing. THE WILL GIVE PRIZES EVERY FRIDAY. . . -cs - ' 4y - Iks :! .r,.ni.ia .r-minii iirn i riinmil . E. L. SHAW. V I Fl HAVE TO BE BY MAYOR SHAW WILL CONTINUE HIS DUTIES ALBRIGHT SAYS POLICEMAN COOKE WAS NOT INCLUDED IN CHARGE OF MEN SLEEP ING DURING WORK ING HOURS. Although the city council, by vote of eight to one, has refused to con firm his appointment, Charles E. Burns today will start to work as chief of police, under Mayor Dimick's instructions. E. L. Shaw, whom the council insists upon retaining also will be on duty, and, consequently the city will have two chiefs, or one chief and one alleged chief. It is thought the courts eventually will be called upon to decide who is the rightful occupant of the office. May or Dimick gave out the following statement Thursday night: "That whereas the charter of Ore gon City provides that the Mayor has the power and it Is bis duty to organize, govern and conduct the po lice force within the limits of said city, and whereas the city is without a chief of police, and the Mayor is responsible for all unlawful conduct in said city, and to that end it is nec essary to have a chief of police who will follow the instructions of the Mayor and see that every ordinance is strictly enforced, therefore the un dersigned hereby appoints Charles E. Burns as chef of police until the next regular meeting- of the city council." Mr. Burns has provided himself with a" badge, Chief of Police Shaw having refused to turn over his badge at the time of his dismissal by the Mayor. Shaw ha3 the backing of the council, and despite the Mayor's re fusal to sign his salary warrants his friends say be will have no trouble getting his money. The council, on the other hand, will decline to ap prove the warrants issued in the fa vor of Burns. Although both are fighting for the place of chief, Shaw and Burns are friends personally, and there is no likelihood of a conflict between them. It is predicted that each will attend to the duties of chief according to h's own ideas. Just what would be the result in case of an arrest by Burns is hard to say, Shaw having the keys to the jail. , Despite the charges that they take turns about going home and sleep ing when they should be on duty made at the council mteting Wednes-. day night, Night Policemen Green and Frost were on duty Thursday. Mayor Dimick said that he had made a futile attempt to find out the names of the men who made the investiga tion." Green and Frost deny emphati cally that they have not worked faithfully, and declare the charges were made by enemies of themselves and the Mayor for the purpose of in juring the latter. The councilmen who are opposing the Mayor say they want "Shaw or a better man." It is conceded that Shaw has made an excellent officer. Although the councilmen who made the charges that policemen were shirking at the meeting Wednesday night used the words "the night po licemen," Councilmen Albright and Tooze, who declared they were certain the charges were true, said Thursday that Policeman Cooke was not in cluded. They declared the men they had reference to when they said "the night -policemen" were taking turns about going home and sleeping when they should be at work were Police men Green and Frost. Councilman Albright said he was ready to tell the Mayor who made the investigation, to give all tht iacts and the dates of the alleged derelictions, when the proper hearing was asked. CITIZENS ASK THAT CEMETERY BE PLATTED The cemetery committee of the City Council and Mayor Dimick will meet with a committee of citizens in a few days regarding the platting of the addition to Mountain Vitw Ceme tery. A committee of citizens, head ed by E. G. Caufield, urged the coun cil at the meeting Wednesday night to provide a plan whereby the entire tract could be platted at once. The other members of the committee were John Cooke, William Andresen and J. E. Jack. Attention was called to the fact that the platting , of certain sections at a time was not advisable. SUNDAY SCHOOL EXPERT TO LECTURE THIS EVENING. Rev.- J. D. Springston, of Portland, a Sunday school expert lecturer, will address the people of Oregon City to night at the First Baptist church on "Trained Teachers for Sunday Schools." All persons interested In the promotion of Bible schools, are invited to attend. Patronize our advertisers. ARE UNITED STATES READY TO MAKE PUBLIC GRAVITY OF SITUATION. MADfRO READY TO ASK ASSISTANCE More Than 6,000 American Troops In Texas Are To Cross Border When Order -Is G'ven. WASHINGTON, Feb.' 8. -Preparation to warn Americans to leave Mex ico, in the belief that their live3 are endangered there, is being made to day by the state department. This announcement, coming from a high official, is a public admission by the American government of the gravity of the Mexican situation. Diplomats here today believe that the announcement means that President-Madero is to ask the assistance of the United States in restoring or der in the republic by intervention, and that President Taft will comply with the request. This is believed to be the underlying cause of the warn ing as it was pointed out that if the United States does attempt interven tion no opportunity to destroy Am erican lives or property would be ov erlooked by the rebel forces. There are today -6,000 American troops stationed in Texas ready to cross the border the moment the or der is given. In addition, 34,000 men, practically the entire mobile army of the United States, have been ordered to prepare to leave for the border on an instant's notice. Advices received by th State and War Departments from military posts throughout the country say that the troops are in readiness. The gunboat Wheeling, according to a dispatch received here today has arrived in New Orleans, "for the Mardi Gras celebration." LIKE TURKEY EGG A curio just placed in the R. Schoen. born's confectionery store window on Seventh street is attracting much at tention. It is a granite rock, repre senting a turkey egg and measures four inches in length and seven inches in circumference. Those who are familiar with curios of this kind are puzzled as to how it was made so perfectly It was found by Mrs. Herman Fisher, of Logan, at a place where there are no other rocks, The curio is valued highly by the owner. TEAM IS ORGANIZED The High School track team was organized . Thursday with Edward Busch, manager and Joseph Sheahan, captain. There are already, thirteen members of the team with a probab ility that more will join. Mr. Shea han, who was captain last year, says the new material is equally as good a3 the old, and predicts even better success. The team has invitations to compete with the Columbia Univers ity team early in April and later on with the teams of the University of Oregon, the Oregon Agricultural Col lege, and Stanford University. It Is erpected that the business men of the city will make donations to the ex pense fund of the team. Oregon City High last year made an enviable repu tation in competition with teams of some of the biggest colleges on the -Coast. AMERICANS LEAVING MEXICO NOW WILL YOU BE GOOD? Popular Official Is Out For Re-Election W. H. MATTOON. W. H. Mattoon Thursday announc ed his candidacy for re-election as a member of the county court. So far he is the only candidate for the Re publican nomination at the primary to be held in April. Mr. Mattoon s term does not expire until next Jan uary. He has been a conscientious and efficient official and his friends say he will be re-elected, and that the chances are he will have no opposi tion. "Uncle Billy," as he is familiar ly known, lives in Estacada, but is well known throughout the county. He ha3 served four years as a mem ber of the court. ROOSEVELT TO WORK WITH PROGRESSIVES NEW 'YORK, Feb. 8 Theodore Roosevelt through Alexander Moore, publisher of the Pittsburg Leader, announecd today that he will take an active part in the coming presiden tial campaign, in the following mes sage sent to the progressives of the country: "I don't believe my bitterest enemy will say that I ever was a deserter. You can say to the progressives that I will not desert the cause, and that they will find me fighting side by side with them in the finish." E WAV TO NEW VORK WASHINGTON, Feb. 8. Charles W. Morse, the New York banker, who was pardoned by President Taft after serv'ng two years of a fifteen year sentence for wrecking the Trust Com pany of America, passed through Washington today en route to New York. Mrs. Morse refused to allow the reporters to interview her hus band. Morse, apparently, is a much im proved man. As the train entered Washington the former banker was fully dressed, seated at a window. Dr. Fowler, however, says that ' Morse's improvement is only temporary and that his death 13 only a matter of time. The sudden announcement of pardon, says Dr. Fowler, caused swift improvement. K '. Morse will remain in New York a week and will then sail for Bad Nau helm, where he hopes to be perman ently benefited by the baths. 4 COUPLES GET LICENSES. Marriage licenses were issued to the following, Thursday: Josephine Neygren and Henry O.' Meyer; Mabel Martin and Roy Thom as; Ethel Edwards and John Frank lin Makespease, and Helen Eversole and Frank Van Hoomissen. ... :t MINERS ENTOMBED 24 BREAD, HAM AND BACON ARE BLOWN TO THEM BY AIR PUMP. CAPTIVES HAVE TELEPHONE SERVICE Men, Confident They Would Be Res cued, Says They Were Not Alarmed While' In ' Deep Prison. AMADOR CITY, Cal., Feb. 8 The sixty-two miners who were entombed in the Bunker Hill mine were rescued today. The men were taken out through the main shaft, all alive and well. Not a single man was hurt or even hungry. . There were emotional scenes as begrimed miners, who had been heldl prisoners for nearly twenty-four hours were brought to the top of the shaft in an improvised skip. As they step ped from the mouth of the mine wives and mothers clasped them and cried for joy. The miners, most of them Austrians and Italians, took the situation coolly. Assured that relief was near, they said they slept ,well on the 200-foot level last night They were not even worried. The telephone lines were not sev ered and the men were told how the rescue work was progressing. This morning loaves of bread and ham and bacon were thrown into the large 16-inch blower used for pump ing air into the mine. The air cur rent was so strong that it caught up the loaves like mere straws and whisked them . to the miners, whose appetites had begun to grow keen. The mouth of the shaft is in bad condition, but Superintendent Hos kins announced repairs would be started at once, and that the mine will resume . operations within ten days. The Bunker Hill cave-in occurred shortly before 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon. A skip loaded with rock was being hoisted to the top of the mine. On top -of the load rode Shift Boss Hoskins. He stepped from the cage when the collar of the shaft was reached and the skip started on up to the dumping place. When near the top of the gallows frame, the cable parted and the skip, heavily loaded with rock shot down the incl'ne track and jumped from the regular course. The skip struck the edge of the collar of the shaft, smash ing timbers and causing the collar to collapse. The debris filled up the shaft to a depth of from 40 to 60 feet, shutting off the escape of the men in the mine. In a few minutes the wildest ex citement prevailed and soon hundreds of people, including the wives and families of the entombed workmen, had collected near the mouth of the shaft. Sheriff J. S. Davis was present and quickly stretched a rope around the shaft so that those engaged in rescue work might not be hindered. It is still probable tha some men have been killed at the bottom of the shaft by falling debris. WIFE, SUING, ALLEGES HUSBAND CHOKED HER. Alleging cruelty Lena Rua filed suit Thursday for divorce, against Charles Rua. They were married October 6, 1910, in Vancouver, Wash. The plain tiff charges that her husband struck and choked her November 3; 1911. She asks that her maiden name, Lena Martinez, be restored. X. L. CLUB TO MEET. The X. L. Club, of Gladstone, will meet at the school house at 2 o'clock this afternoon. A prominent Port land woman will lecture, after which refreshments will be served. HOURS SAVED ION'S ADVICE OUICKLYREJECTED PROGRESSIVES IN OHIO WIN POINT iN FIGHT FOR REFERENDUM. GOVERNOR SAYS THERE IS NO HURRY Constitutional Convention Committee Will Report Favorably On ' ' - v Plan For Equal Suffrage. COLUMBUS, O., Feb. 8. after hearing an address at noon today by Governor Harmon-, in which he took strong ground against incorporating a clause providing for a state-wide initiative and referendum in the new constitution, supporters of the pro posed initiative and referendum plan won a decisive victory in the consti tutional convention a few hours later. The Governor in his address said the idea of direct legislation still was in an experimental stage and that Ohio would do well to wait until it had had a thorough trial in other states. He defined his own position on the subject as being the attitude of "the man from Missouri." The- declaration of the Governor came in the nature of a sensation to the supporters of the initiative and referendum among delegates in the convention, coming as it did at a time -when that body was about to take up for consideration a resolution which had been introduced by Dele gates Halfhill, of Allen county. The Halfhill resolution, backed by opponents of the initiative and refer endum, proposed to censure President Bigelow for having secured pledges from many members to abide by cau cus action on that subject. The res olution declared that the action of the president of the convention in secur ing pledges for caucus support of the initiative and referendum was unfair. Following the address of Governor Harmon' and at the close of an acri monious debate the convention late today tabled the resolution, the vote standing CO to 45. That a clause providing for equal suffrage would be reported favorably by the committee on woman's suf frage of the convention, was conceded tonight, after a hearing at which lead ing advocates of suffrage for women had made addresses. - Chairman Kilpatrick said that 18 of the 21 members of the committee fav ored the franchise for women. RUEF GOES HOME! TO SEE AGED MOTHER SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 8. Con vict Abraham Ruef "came back from Europe"' today to his aged mother. In view of general' public condem nation of his order forbidding Ruef the privilege of visiting his aged par ents, Judge Lawlor relented this morning and issued' an order enabling Sheriff Eggers to convey Ruel to the Pierce street home, where the mother, bed-ridden, has waited his "return from Europe" for these .eleven months. She does not know the truth. To herT her "boy," as she has always called him, was traveling, recuperat ing from ' his long siege during his trlal3. Eighty-three years old, sne has lain on her bed of pain awaiting his return. It came this afternoon. Shortly before 2 o'clock Ruef, his eyes moist after his first embrace with hi3 sister on the steps of their home, passed on through the familiar doorway, up the carpeted stairs, to enter his mother's room. He went in alone. None of the fam ily, not even hisaged father, or his sister, or his niece, went with him. What passed between Abraham Ruef and' his aged mother is theirs alone to know. OREGOH CITY RIVER LINE INCORPORATES SALEM, Or., Feb. 8. The Willa mette Navigation Company of Port land filed articles of incorporation with the Secretary of State today to operate steamboats on the Willamette and Columbia rivers and the Pacific Ocean. The incorporators are B. T. McBain, R. A. Leiter and Frank T. Griffith. The capital stock is placed at $25,000. The new company has - purchased the steamer Ruth from the O.-W. R. & N. Company and will use it in the transportation of freight from the pa per mills at Oregon City. Later, if conditions warrant, another steamer will be placed on the run. TO RAISE CANEMAH TRACK F. C. Burk, chairman of the street committee of the City. Council, an nounced Thursday that - Vice-President Fuller, of the O. W. P., had promised that the tracks of the streetcar line between this city and Canemah would be raised to prevent an interruption of service during high water. After the citizens of Cane mah asked the Oregon City Council to use its influence in . having the tracks raised Mr. Burk called upon Mr. Fuller, and was told that the com pany had arranged to appropriate $19,000 for making the improvement. Mr. Burk said it would be at least a month before the work was started. HAR HILL CRIME PROBE WILL START TODAY GRAND JURY TO HEAR CHARGES MADE AGAINST NATHAN B. HARVEY. HIS LAWYER HAS NO FEAR OF RESULT Rich Nurseryman at Preliminary Hearing Before Justice of Peace Samson Dismissed. The grand jury today will hear evi dence in the case of Nathan B. Har vey, the wealthy Milwaukie nursery man, relating to the slaying of the Hill family at Ardenwald Station. Subpoenas were served Thursday by Sheriff Mass and Deputy Sheriff Miles, and all the witnesses who testi fied at the preliminary hearing before Justice of the Peace Samson, and others are expected to be present. Mr. Harvey was exonerated in the Justice of the Peace's court, and his attorney, George C. Brownell, has no fear that the grand jury will return an indictment. Mr. Brownell is con vinced that his client knows abso lutely nothing of the crime, which shocked the entire state. - Sheriff Mass says more evidence will be submitted to the grand jury than was given at the preliminary hearing. He says he did not intro duce all his witnesses at the hearing because he did not think it would be pecessary in order to have the pris oner bound over to the grand jury. Evidence was introduced at the preliminary hearing tending to show that Mr. Harvey before he had been accused of the crime contracted with a law firm in Portland to defend him in case of his arrest, agreeing to give the lawyers $20,000. The defendant admitted that he made an agreement with the lawyers, but said he did so while frightened by reports that "the woods were full of detectives and deputy sheriffs" who were seeking him. - Several days before Harvey's ar rest T. F- Cowing, Jr., a brother of Mrs. Hill, one of the slayer's victims, called at the Harvey nursery. Cow ing asked Harvey to go to the Hill home with him and show him how the bodies lay. , This Harvey refused to do, and Cowing produced a pistol, and fired two shots at the floor he said. Harvey thinks Cowing tried to shoot him.- . ... COURT DECLARES WILLAMETTE CITY Willamette is again a city. The county court has -canvassed the votes cast at the recent election and issued a certificate that the proposition to incorporate carried by a vote of thirty-seven to thirty-five. T. J. Gary was declared Mayor. Mr. Gary was the Mayor under the old incor poration which was declared void, because there was no record that the county court had canvassed the vote cast in 1908 declaring the place a city. - - . --,...: , - CHIEF SHAW MAKES REPORT TO COUNCIL Chief of Police Shaw's report, which was submitted to the city can cil Wednesday night, shows that 377 tramps were arrested in January; 12 city cises were prosecuted and $55 in fines was received by the city treas urer. Two men who were ill were cared for by the city and Health Of ficer Norris attended two others who were ill. Five prisoners were held over to the grand jury in Justice of the Peace Samson s court The chief arrested one man on a charge of stealing tools and a fugutive from Washington on a charge of obtaining money through false pretenses. HOWELL FUNERAL LARGELY ATTENDED Many friends and acquaintances of the late Josiah Howell, who died at the family home at Canemah of heart failure Monday afternoon attended the funeral services, which were held from the-1. O. O. F. hall Thursday afternoon. The services were con ducted by I. O. O. F- No. 1, which the deceased was a charter member. The remains were taken to the hall at 10 o'clock and many friends view ed the remains during the day pre ceding the services The casket was banked with floral offerings and the platform, where rested the remains was a bower of flowers, which was an evidence of the high esteem Mr. How ell was held by his associates and ac quaintances. . Many of the old soldier were in attendance, and the pallbear- . rA 4-1ty,a Manila r9 tVlA H - ceased. They were Captain J. T. Ap prson, George R. A. Miller, A. F. Stokes, David McArthur, R. G. Por ter and David Caufield. Among the beautiful floral offerings were those from the Order of Elks, I. O. O. F, and Vrf I ITT 1 II O I 1 UVUVV A ,.uai.u v-ua The interment was in the Vance lot," Mrs. Howell's parents, at Moun tain View cemetery, and the impres sive burial service of the I. O. O. F. was used. 4utcrlbe for the Dun Bntenrta