DIP The only daily newspaper be- $ tween Portland and Salem; clr- s culates in every section of Clack $ amas County, with a population 8 8 of 30,000. Are you an advertiser? S WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED IS 66 VOL IV. No. 82. OREGON CITY, OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1912. Per "Week, 10 Cents PLEADS GUILTY TO SINGLE TAX FOE PLEA FOR SUFFRAGE' IN WORLD SERIES E PERPETRATED BY WALT MFDOUGALLv II EVLRTM1NC IS YESTERDAY OR TOMORROW! THE WEATHER " S Oregon City Tuesday fair, eas terly winds. - Oregon Tuesday fair with ris ing temperature. Easterly winds. BROWNELL MAKES RED SOX FAVORED DYNAMITE CHARG CONVINCES SCORES LAWYER'S ADDRESS AT METHO- DIST CHURCH; CONVINCING J AND ELOQUENT I LARGE AUDITORIUM IS THRONGED Speaker Asserts that Best Way to Hotel Lobbies Thronged With Nota Improve Morals of Country is bles From All Parts of Coun- to Let Women ' try Fair Weather Is Vote i v Forecast Declaring that equal suffrage is nc- essary to give women an equalchane6 in the battle of life, and that it would be adopted by every state in the Un- ion eventually, George C. Brown- elj made an eloquent and forceful address in the Open Forum of the Methodist church Sunday night. "Ev ery seat in the edifice was occupied, and there was no question that the audience was in sympathy with the arguments presented. Mr. Brown ell's subject was "Should Women Participate in Politics?" Mr. Brownell declared that the chuch, standing for the betterment of society was the best place to dis cuss equal suffrage for its adoption would mean the betterment of socie- the white slave dealer, and men who engaged in other lines of vice were allowed to vote there certainly should be no reason why the women who would help put down vice if they had the opportunity should ootl be enfran- chised. "Men who are battling to destroy by their doubie responsibility. The the social fabric are voting," said the working woman carries a double speaker, " and yet the. women have burden, that of the home, and that no means of putting down this traf- cf the factory or wherever she may fic. The right of suffrage to women be employed. These new duties can would check the growth of gambling not be -delegated to the men but must and the saloons. It has in states be shared with them or the wage where it has been adopted checked earning women and the " future the white slave traffic and raised the homes of the nation will suffer, age of consent. It seems strange "There are 145,000 children that there is an organization for the working in cigar and cigarette fact purpose of capturing girls against ories and cotton mills in the United their will and imprisoning them, but States. This, of itself, has been per tnere is a remedy. If women could mitted by the carelessness of the men be given the power the direct inter- voters, and is one of the strongest reasons why women should have the right to vote. They always take a higher moral view of politics than -v- X ' If 1 George C. Brownell, who made con- vincinq and eloquent argument for ,i . portant factor for morality and bet " ter government. It is a conceded st they would take would right fact that the greatest intellects of this wrong which the men with their the human race, have, from the be votes have failed to do." ginning of civilation to the present Mr. Brownell scouted the idea time acknowledged that naturally that the women would not apperciate wmen are intellectually the equal the responsibility of the ballot, tmen andu morally their superiors, and said they would take even great- They have been depnved of the bal er interest in voting and vote more lot ,throuSh prejudice, bias and the intelligently than the men. He drew working of small m.nds that have v,v,M n.VfurP nf W men rnmP here from other countries because of n Koffor Annirti mitiT on1 o frffr TrT ernment, but said opportunity would be greater and the country would be freer if the women were placed on an equality politically with the men. The greatest benefit arising from reckoned with at the polls. The equal suffrage would be to the work- vote w;u be her protection against ing girls,"" continued the speaker. the industrial wrongs, her protection They; would have something to say against the constant tendency to re then regarding their employment, juce her wages, because of helpless hours of work and renumeration and ness whoever believes in the Dec best of all the conditions under laration of Independence must be- which thousands ot tnem exist would i;eve ;n the right of women to vote, be "improved. Women, it has been As an instance of what women can demonstrated, vote more independ- j0 whcn enfranchised in Massachu ently than men, and the result of settes for more than ,fty-five years equal suffrage would be the election a fight was carried on to make moth of a better quality of officials. Vot- ers equai w;th fathers as guardians ing gives dignity to citizenship, and 0f their children. Thewomen of Col the women exercise the best qualty ora passed that bill in less than of dignity. fifty-five days." "In Germany are 9,000,000 The speaker declared that in Col women making their own way in fac- orado the child labor laws and other tories, stores, -fields, etc. Should they laws for the protection of children not have a voice in making the laws are much better enforced and in a and in electing the officials? In much more advanced state than in this country there are 8,000,000 any other state, because the women girls and women wage-earners, have the power to punish those who These facts must suggest to any disregard the laws, thoughtful person that women have ' "Women will obtain the ballot in come into a new time and have to this state," continued the speaker, deal with a new condition, and that "because they should have it. There these conditions demand a new view is no use to try to defeat this mbve- BETTING 10 EO 8 ON BOSTON EVE OF GREAT BASEBALL SRUGGLE THOUSANDS WAIT AT POLO GROUNDS NEW YORK, Oct. 7. This ev- ;n;ng the day before the opening of tne world's champion baseball series, found thousands of men and boys at tne p0l0 grounds At the sale of seats today only one ticket will be sold to a person. This is an eleventh-hour ruling, designed to defeat speculators. Betting odds remain at approxi mately the same as three weeks ago, with the American League club's supporters willing to give odds to 10 to' 8. The weather bureau hopes to provide "errorless" weather for the opening game. Its official forecast for Tutsday is "fair and cooler, mod erate, variable winds." It could bef several degrees colder, however, wit'' .u s'501 . e Same- 0 ay was clear and crisp with promise oi moderately warm afternoon. In the hotel lobbies here are gath ered hundreds of men notable in the baseball world. men. "As Lincoln gave the negroes the right to vote in order that they might protect themselves, women should be given the same right for the same reason. It is incomprehen sible that women working in factor ies where machinery is dangerous for lack of safeguards should not have a voice in passing laws that would result in obtaining the safe guards. In many of the eastern cit ies the populations are so great that many of the children are kept out of schools. Schools are not built fast enough to provide for all. With the women voting the schools would be provided. "In Colorado there is not a child but what has a seat in school and is guarded by law compelling its par ents to allow it to go to school. Equal suffrage in Colorado, Wyoming, Ida- hn and Wahinirtnn has nrndured , B , , , better nominees and has been an tm- always ucbperateiy opposcu iu any m- vance of womanhood. "I am in favor of equal suffrage s - ' um. juu . bread w,nmnf Portlon f the female ex Wlth the hlht as a boon she will be a power that must be respected and like her brother she must be ? J I BE-UT PflWE (bllWlii) )THfltf CIGARS ARE "-I WEEKOTTO.' ON SATURDAY ONLY. FIVE CENTS ONLY! j-? V-sJ li " ON SATURDAY'S ) f &ZK?J hh? Ne could a'beenE.LJ; (SSJ r O' THEM BBERNE)rtMjpV ment, for there has never been a time when truth will not win. A woman was killed a few days ago in one of our large cities b an elevator. Don't you think that woman's mother should have a right to say through her ballot that only capable and care ful men shall be employed to operate elevators. The men have not done it. The women if they had the pow er would. I "Many men oppose enfranchising women because they declare women ; are not practical, hut this is a mere ! subterfuge. I never saw a business : woman but she was shrewder than j men. With intellects the equal . of j men, and morality far superior, why j should not women make the best vot-1 ers. Machinery has usurped the1 functions of the home and the wom en have to go out to work. The j clothing made years ago by the wife j and mother is made in the mills now. j The bread is bought from the baker, j And then the high price of living has driven many women to work. See what the meat and other trusts ; are doing. The daughters and sons ' as soon as they are able must go to work now to help support the fam ily." i Mr. Brownell read a letter from President Lincoln to a mother who had lost five boys in-the Civil War, and asked if that woman should not have had a right to vote. The men, who had killed her sons wewe voters before and after the war and yet she the mother of five brave soldiers was deprived of the right. He read ex tracts from letters by Andrew Jack son and Chief Justice Chase in which the enfranchisement of women was predicted and advocated. j "We men have made a failure of ; civil " government," declared Mr. ' Brownell, and we have got a long way to go before we become civiliz ed. Think of Morgan and Perkins testifying as to hundreds of thous ands of dollars being given by them to elect a man to office, and the wom en having no say in depriving the men from buying and owning governments. It needs a stick of dy namite under two-thirds of the men to get them started in the right di rection, but it must be conceded that if for no other reason women ought to be given the ballot because of the moral force they would lend the gov-' ernment. ". The speaker was "applauded through his address and at its conclu sion Dr. Ford, pastor of the church asked the men who favored equal suffrage to stand. Almost all did. Dr. Ford complimented Mr. Brown ell and declared he was confident the address had converted many persons in the audience. Boost your city by boosting your daily paper. The Enterprise should be in every home. AT Mrs. John Kraxberger, one of the well known residents of Clackamas County, whose home was at Marks burg, died at the family home Octo ber 5, and the interment was in the Zion cemetery at Canby Saturday. Funeral at the hose was . conducted at 12 o'clock, after which the re mains were taken to the German Lutheran church at Macksburg, where many friends of the deceased had gathered. The services were conducted by Rev. Dr. Morenz Oeser, of Marksburg. Mrs. Kraxburger was bornj Jan uary 7, 1840, near Vienna, Austria, and was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs Mathew Hamader, her maiden name being Raso Hamader. She was mar ried near Vienna to John Kraxberger in 1861. They located in Portland in 1892, and in the spring of the next year moved to Macksburg where Mr. Kraxberger purchased a farm. . Mrs. Kraxberger was the mother of eighteen children, nine of whom died in infancy. Those living are Mrs. Rosa Kummer, Franz Krax berger, of Macksburg, and Rev. W. berger, of Marksburg, and Rev. W. R. Kraxberger, pastor of the Ger man Lutheran church, of Oregon City. Mrs Kraxberger is survived by hen husband and about forty grandchildren. CANBY MAY HAVE VOTE ON LOCAL OPTION A petition that local option be vot ed' at the coming election in Canby has been filed with County Clerk Mulvey. It has about fifty signatures Canby is now "dry" but it is under stood that) men formerly interested in the liquor business there have tak en the lead in urging that the ques tion be voted upon again. The peti tion was filed by Frank Astman. E SENT TO OFFICERS County Clerk Mulvey Monday mailed notices of election to the clerks and judges throughout the county. The noticesKwhich are pub lished on linen, contains the names of all offices to be filled at the Nov ember election, the polls to be open from 8 o'clock in the morninguntil 7 o'clock in the evening. Two no tices must be posted in conspicuous places in each precinct. T STIES STEAMBOAT Charles Spanigal, employed on the Steamer Ruth, had a narrow escape from being killed Saturday when a large rock hurled by a blast where excavating is being done for a mill wall on' the West side, crashed through the roof of the craft. The stone, which was thrown 800 feet fell on the engine room floor where Spanigal was at work and did not miss him three feet. It lodged in the floor and is being kept by the crew as a souvenir. SUES FOR $25,000 John Bertschinger, who lost his left leg as the result of being injured by a stump-puller Monday filed suit for $2j,000 against Edgar Horple, who owns a farm near Currinsville. The plaintiff alleges that he was driving a team February 24, 1912, which was attached to a stump-pul-lerler when a double-tree broke and he was struck by the "sweep." His leg was so badly crushed that ampu tation was necessary and he says he was otherwise injured. E WILSONVILLE RALLY George C. Brownell was the prin ciple speaker at the meeting conduct ed by the Republican nominees for county offices at Wilsonville Mon day evening. Mr. Brownell did not criticise the Democratic incumbents, but said Republicans usually gave more efficient service than Demo crats. Those who spoke were E. C. Hackett, candidate for sheriff ; Gus tav Schnoerr, and Chris Schuebel, candidates for representative" in the legislature; J. F. Nelson, candidate for assessor and E. P. Dedman, can didate for recorder. The attendance was large. COLONEL MILLER TO BE E Equal Suffrage sympathizers will be glad to learn that the speaker for Fridey evening at Shiveley's Thea ter will be Colonel Robert Miller, of Portland. All who have heard Colonel Miller speak know -,what a treat awaits them. DEFENSE GIVEN SEVERE SET BACK IN TRIAL OF IRONWORKERS EDWARD CLARK GIVES UP FIGHT Accused Man Charged with Being at Head of Several Dynamiting Crimes in Cleve land INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 7. Ed ward Clark, of Cincinnati, pleaded guilty today to the government's charges in the dynamite conspiracy. As soon as court opened District Attorney Charles W .Miller addres sed Federal Judge A. B. Anderson: "If it .pleases the court, the defend ant, Clark, of Cincinnati, wishes to plead guilty." "Do you plead guilty?" asked Judge Anderson. "I plead guilty, said Clark. The prisoner was separated from the other forty-five defendants and taken to jail to await the imposing of his sentence. Clark pleaded guilty to all the charges five counts of conspiracy near Cleveland, and fifty counts of being a principal to the actual illegal interstate shipment of dynamite and nitro-glycerine. Clark was business agent and pres ident of Local Union 44 of the In ternational Association of Bridge and Structural Ironworkers fron January 1908, to July 1911. BROTHERHOODS TO HAVE ONION BANQUET Members of the church brother hoods of the city at a meeting .in the Commercial Club Monday evening decided to have a union banquet at the Baptist church on the evening of October 25. Han. H. E. Cross will be toastmaster, and Dr. Sheldon, the famous author, will be the guest of honor and principle speaker. F. J. Tooze and Rev. G. N. Edwards were appointed a committee to form ulate a plan for having union meet ings of the brotherhoods. Joe Denuff Will give exhibition of his strength at the Grand Theatre Today and Tomorrow Pictures same yesterday mi1' CHARLES H. SHIELDS ANSWERS ALL QUESTIONS CONVINCINGLY STRONG ARGUMENT MADE BY HIM Meeting Exciting Throughout an" Propaganda of Fels and U'Ren Is Given Hard ' . Blow Although heckled and interrupted repeatedly by Single Taxers, Charles H. Shields, secretary of the Oregon Equal Taxation League, and who is given much of the credit for the vot ers of Washington having defeated single tax, in an address at Willam ette Hall Monday night made a fine impression. He addressed an audi ence of, between 200 and 300, and it is safe to say that when he had fin ished not more than eight or ten per sons still adhered to the Henry George and Joseph Fels theory. Mr. Shields answered all the ques tions asked him in a straightforward and convincing manner. He was never at a loss, although it was evi dent that at least three of the men who quizzed him had gone to the hall for the purpose and had select ed questions they believed would be most puzzling. In reply to a puestion why he had not invited Mr. U'Ren to divide the time with, Mr. Shields said that he had paid for the hall, arranged for the meeting, and that Mr. U'Ren, being a resident of this city, had am ple opportunity to address the voters of this city. "I am not trying to evade Mr. U'Ren," declared the speaker, "and after the appointments I have made have been kept I shall be delighted to meet him anywhere he desires and as often as he wishes on the platform and I shall give him all he is looking for too." Mr. Shields scored a telling point and was applauded afterward for more than a minute when he explain ed the so-called "Single. Tax" of British Columbia. This was in an swer to a question if single tax had been a success there, why should it not be a success in Oregon. The reason is," shouted the speak er, "that there is no single tax in British Columbia." Mr. Shields then read the tax laws of British Columbia, which include personal property tax, poll tax, tax . on canneries, and taxes on various other kinds of property. The only property exempted there is buildings. S. McDonald, and C. S. Noble asked most of the questions, and re vealed their unfairness several times by, refusing to accept the answers of the speaker which were to the point and were convincing. They were urged by others in the audience repeatedly t6 keep their seats, but Mr. Shields insisted that they con tinue, declaring he was eager to an swer all questions. Mr. Shields' denunciations of sin- ' gle tax was neither vicious nor ill timed. It was logical. -He proved his statements invariably. As an introduction he . explained why it was that he was acting as sec retary of the Oregon Equal Taxa tion League, under whose auspices his speech here was given. Secretary Shields said that he was vice presi dent of the Spokane Grain Com pany, of Seattle and that when the single tax agitation came up in that city he decided to work against it, feeling from ten years' study of the subject that it was vicious. "And no one can say," said Mr. Shields, "that I was consulting my own personal interests. The smgle tax measure offered in Seattle would have resulted in my concern saving $2,000 a year in taxes. Instead of paying that sum we would pay noth ing." Mr. Shields added that out of his own pocket he raised $3,000 as a preliminary in the Seattle fight. SCHOOL VOUCHERS ARE SENT TO CLERKS County School Superintendent Gary Monday apportioned the school fund for the first half of the year and will send the vouchers to the clerks of the various districts today. The pro rata of the state tax is six cents less for each pupil than it was last year the amount for .each pupil this year being $1.86. The county fund, however, is larger making a larger total. The law provides that the ap portionment of the first half shall be made the first Monday iri October and the last one in April.