Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, November 08, 1912, Page 3, Image 3

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    MORNING ENTERPRISE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1912.
3
Boys
Winter
Overcoats
The convertible collar
on our mannish over
coat for boys are mak
ing quite a hit with the
boys. The new Scotch
tweeds in greys,browns
and other mixtures are
found only at this store
Boys, ask your parents
to buy you an ovarcoat
that has style as well
as service to it THAT
COAT IS HERE
J. Levitt
Oregon City's Leading Clothier
Free to Boys
A football, watch
pair of skates or a
air gun with every
suit oro'coat of $5
and up.
Next In Command.
'I'm looking for the man who runs
this office.''
"He is out just now."
"Hut I have a big deal I want to pat
over."
"Yon might see the office boy."
LOCAIL 6RIEFS
Dr. van Brakle, Osteopath, Mason
ic Building, Phone Main 399.
For that graceful figure, wear the
Spirella Corset, Room 4, Willamette
Bldg. Phone Main 3552.
Miss Mabel Tooze, who has been
ill several weeks of nervous prostra
tion, is improving, and will soon be
able to leave the hospital at Gladstone
and return to her home in this city.
George Simmons, manager of the
Star Moving Picture Show, who has
been seriously ill with abcess of the
throat, is improving, and will soon
be able to resume his work.
(After Supper Sale) this, evening
at Bannons. See first page.
Born, Tuesday evening, November
5, to the wife of John Etcheson, a son.
Mr. Etcheson is one of the mail car
riers employed by Uncle Sam in this
city.
The Gladstone X. L. Club will hold
a meeting at the schoolhouse at Glad
stone Friday afternoon at 2:30
o'clock.
Mr. Poultryman: If you are not get
ting eggs, don't blame the chickens:
Help them along by feeding Conkey's
Laying Tonic. Oregon Commission
Company has it.
Mrs. Frank Moore, accompanied by
her sister, Mrs. A. Wadsworth Good,
of The Dalles, who is visiting the
former in this city, went to Canby
Thursday, where they attended the
Sunday School Convention, which
convened at that place.
Mrs. W. A. White went to Canby
Thursday, where she attended the
Sunday School Convention.
Edward Closner, of Springwateri,
was in this city on business Thurs
day. J. C. Chalupski, of Macksburg, was
among the Oregon City visitors Thurs
day. Charles Karnett, of Marquam, was
among the Oregon City visitors Wed
nesday and Thursday.
Mrs. Helen E. Wilcox, of this city
left Thursday afternoon for Portland
where she will visit with her niece,
Mrs. W. D. B. Dodson, and will also
visit with other relatives, spending
(After Supper Sale) this evening
at Bannons. See first page,
the week-end in Portland..
John May, of Aberdeen, Wash., ar
rived in Oregon City Thursday, com
ing here to attend the funeral services
of his mother, the late Mrs. Ann May
Molloy. who died at the Patton Home
In Portland, the services being held
in this city Thursday afternoon at 2
o clock.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Barrenn and
little son and Miss Mahala Gill, of
Logan, were in this city Thursday on
business.
Mrs. D. M. Klemsen will today for
Dilley, Oregon, where she was called
by the illness of his father, N. Pet
erson. Mrs. Helen Smith, of this city, spent
Thursday in Portland, the guest of
her sister, Mrs. Edward Mayor.
Earl Lutz was taken ill Wednesday;
and is now at the home of his moth
er, Mrs. A. Johnson, of Portland.
Miss M. I. Walker, of Portland, has
arrived in this city, and is visiting
her sister, Mrs. Charles Reynolds,
who resides near Maple Lane.
Most disease cornea from germs.
Kill the germs and you kill the dis
ease. Conkey's Nox-i-cide mixes with
water and kills the germs. For Poul
trymen, Stockmen and Housekeepers.
Guaranteed by Oregon Commission
Co.
Mrs. Edward Stewart of Portland,
is visiting her parents and Mrs. Thom
aa Warner, of Eighth and Madison
Streets.
Miss Kirchem of Logan, was in this
city Thursday.
N. R. Graham, of Woodburn, is in
this city on business.
H. Babler, of Logan, M. Nicholson
of Wilhoit, and L. C. Nightingale of
Molalla are in this city, and are reg
istered at the Electric hotel. They
are serving on the grand jury.
George Oglesby, one of the well
known residents of Marquam, was in
this city Thursday, having brought in
the returns of the election from his
precinct.
Fred Schafer, who has been in this
city on business, returned to his home
at Molalla Thursday.
Marion Smith, who has been very
ill of typhoid fever for the past
four weeks, and who is making his
home with his grandfather, John
Clear, of Canemah, is improving. His
sister Winnie Smith, is now ill with
typhoid fever, but her condition lis
not serious.
M. Robbins, one of the prominent
farmers of Clackamas County, whose
home is at Beaver Creek, was trans
acting business in this city Thursday.
Mr. Robbins is also noe of the well
known horse men of the county.
Harry Kellogg, Henry Steiner and
Pat O'Connor, who are employed by
the Major Creek Lumber Company
in building a fiume at White Salmon
Washington, have been in this
city, coming here to cast their
votes in the election held Tues
day. Mr. Kellogg will return to
White Salmon the latter part of the
week. Henry Steiner and Pat O'Con
nor returned Thursday morning.
Great headway is being made by the
12 men employed by the company.
J. B. Carter who has resided in this
city for several years, and who has
been connected with the C. C. Store
left Thursday evening for San Fran
cisco, Ca' where he will visit for sev
eral days before proceeding to Los
Angeles, where he will remain for the
winter, visiting with his grandson at
that place.
A. Newell, one of the well known
nurserymen of Clackamas County,
whose home is at Clackamas, was in
this city on business Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Dillman, who
are making their home at Powell Riv
er, B. C, have arrived in this city
and are visiting with the latter's par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. W: W. Myers.
Miss Sedonia Shaw, who has been
verv ill with- inflammatory rheuma
tism, is slowly improving, but wiU
several weeks.
J. R. Roots, one of the prominent
residents of Clackamas County whose
home is at Boring, was in this city
on business Thursday.
George Roesser and son, of Maple
Lane, were in this city Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Olbert Schoenborn, of
Carus, were in this city Wednesday.
Charles Mueller of Clarkes, was
in this city Wednesday.
Fred Moehnke, of the well
known farmers of Clarkes, was in
this city Wednesday.
Edward Howard and son, of Car
us, were in Oregon City Thursday.
Mr. Frederick, of Molalla, was
among the Oregon City visitors on
Thursday.
Ely Stark and Fred Wallace, of
Clarkes, well known farmers of that
place, were in this city Thursday.
Arthur Millin, of this city, went to
Milwaukie on business Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Todd and little
child left Tuesday evening for Oak
land, Cal., where they will make their
future home. Mrs. Todd formerly
resided at Oakland.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Charles and Olive A. Albright to
J. U. Campbell, 79.79 acres of sections
9, 10, 15, 16, township 3 south, range
2 east; $1.
Catherine Goucher and Jennie Nob
litt to Harry Porter, 63 acres of sec
tion 17, township 4 south, range 2
east; $1700.
Frank M. and Angie Forman to
George Forman, land in section 23,
township 2 south, range 3 east; $25.
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS
EXTINGUISH EIRE
While several pupils of the Oregon
City High School were enjoying re
cess Wednesday they were attracted
to the basement by the odor of smoke
and found that a small quantity of
excelsior, which was in the wood
room near a brick wall had caught
fire. Professor Pfingsten, with the
assistance of several of the boys, soon
extinguished the blaze. No damage
was done, as the excelsior was about
ten feet from the furnace. The origin
of the fire is not known.
The Result of the Presidential Elec
tion in a Nutshell.
Yes, Chafin and Debs were defeated, ,
And Billy Taft was not repeated,
And the Bull Moose was left in the
woods
While Wilson got away with the
goods.
GEO. FREY.
"Labby's" Bearded Friend.
Labotichere had n friend who spent
a good deal of time and money In order
to shirk the bestowal of tips. "He had
a conscientious objection against tip
ping barlers ;ind could not shave him
self. He told me once that, according
to careful conclusion, he had been
forced to travel considerably over a
hundred miles in one year to find new
barbers' shops where his unbending
attitude on the tip question was un
known, and he spent rather more than
$25 on bus and cab fares In doing so.
Finally, bavin? exhausted the whole
of Inner London and most of the sub
urbs, he had to give op the struggle
and grow a beard." London Chronicle,
TO HAVE BIG BALL
Fountain Hose Company No. 1
Thursday night decided to hold its
next annual ball on Christmas eve,
at Busch's Hall. The following mem
brs were appointed a committee on
arrangements: Al C. Cox, chairman;
Harry Woodward, Frank McGahney,
G. Woodward and Joe Beauliau.
Chief Hanaford informed the boys
that the chances were excellent for
the installation of the automatic fire
alarm system by the first of the com
ing year.
SOCIALIST AND MOOSE
HAVE VOTE MIX-OP
An irate Bull Mooser and a near
sighter Socialist, voting in adjoining
booths Tuesday at Gladstone, com
mitted hari-kari to all election ethics
and otherwise desecrated the sanctity
of the polls, when the admirer of Teddy
discovered that part of his ballot had
already been given the necessary "X"
and straight Socialist at that.
The election judges had been forced
to improvise two extra booths to meet
the demands of a slow and heavy
vote. A partition was arranged above
the center of an office desk, but un
fortunately a space of half an inch
remained between the table and the
partition. Teddy's man, probably feel
ing that Roosevelt's returns might be
a little late in materializing this year
anyhow, had decided to vote the ini
tiative measures first, and was so in
terested in his task that he failed to
observe that about half an inch of
his ballot had slipped into the sacred
dominions of his neighbor. About
this time the advocate of Eugene B.
Debs began his march down the So
cialist calendar, and had delivered
about six telling uppercuts against
capitalism, little dreaming that he
was marking the wrong ballot. A
Bull Mooser and a Socialist are not
the best of friends in the world, even
under ordinary circumstances and
environments, so of course in a few
minutes things were doing.
"What's wrong with this ballot?"
angrily thundered the Bull Mooser in
a tone that fairly shook the ballot
box.
"The interests 'Big Business' "
they re robbing me of my very vote,"
said the Debs man at the same
instant, feeling a sort of slipping
sensation, as the ballot disappeared
from beneath his fingers.
'Ah-ah," quoted the Progressive:
Thou shalt not steal."
Only prompt action of the election
clerks in locating the trouble and re
adjusting the situation to, suit the
! wounded voters prevented further
altercation.
To assuage the wounded feelings
of the Mooser, he was given a nice
clean white ballot and instructions to
try it all over again. The dignity of
the precinct hall was upset for some
little time afterward and eventually
all parties had a good laugh.
MERVIN CALIFF IS
APPENDICITIS VICTIM
Mervin Califf, formerly of Oregon
liarly known among his friends and
schoolmates as "Bud", was taken to
schoolmate as "Bud", was taken to
the Good Samaritan Hospital in Port
land last week, where he underwent
an operation for appendicitis. Mr.
Cnliff is getting along nicely, and will
be able to be taken to his home with
in a week. He is an employee of th
Portland Railway, Light & Power
Company.
Fit
-Bm MB
CLEARING LAND
In many sections of Clackamas
County farmers are busily engaged
in plowing when the weather permits.
Most of the crops have been harvest
ed, and many of the farmers in the
County will have large crops in 1913.
as there will be more land cleared
and put into condition for the sow
ing of grain. Many have already com
menced blasting and burning stumps
and logs that are on some of the best
land. With the exception of a few
losing grain by the heavy rains of
September and October the crops
were a success. The fruit yield was
the largest for years.
Prevailing Oregon City prices are as
follows:
HIDES (Buying), Green hides 6c
to 7c; salters 7c; dry hides 12 c to
14c; sheep pelts 30c to 85c each.
EGGS Oregon ranch eggs 35 and
38 cents ease count.
FEED (Selling), Shorts $27;
$25; process barley $38 per ton.
FLOUR $4.60 to 6.50.
HAY (Buying) .Clover at $9
$10; oat hay best $11 and $12;
bran
and
mix-
ed $10 to $12; alfalfa $15 to $16.50;
Idaho timothy $20; whole corn $40;
OATS $26; wheat $1.05 bushel;
oil meal selling about $55; Shay
Brook dairy feed $1.30 per hundred
pounds.
Livestock, Meats.
BEEF (Live weight) Steers 6 and
6 l-2c; cows 5 and 5 l-2c; bull's 4 12c,
3 l-2c.
MUTTON Sheep 3c to 5c.
CHICKENS 11 l-2c.
PORK 10 and 10 l-2c.
VEAL Calves 12c to 13c dressed,
according to grade.
WEINIES 15c lb; sausage, 15c lb.
POULTRY (Buying) Hens 11c;
spring 13c, an droosters 8c.
MOHAIR 33c to 35c.
Fruits
APPLES 70c and $1; peaches 50c
and 65c; crab apples 2c lb.
DRIED FRUITS (Baying), Prunes
on basis 6 to 8 cents.
.VEGETABLES
ONIONS lc lb; peppers 7c lb; toma
toes, 50c; corn 8c and 10c a doz.
cracked $41.
POTATOES New, about 50c to 80c
per hundred.
Butter, Poultry, Eggs.
BUTTER (Buying), Ordinary coun
try butter 30c and 35c; fancy dairy
80c roll.
MONEY MAD PUGS
HURTING GAME
Big Purses Demanded by Box
ers Have Queered Good Bouts.
WOLGAST'S LUST FOR GOLD,
Lightweight Champion Wanted For
tune to Battle McFarland Mike Gib
bons Latest One to Want Bags of
Money to Meet Good Man.
A matter of dollars has queered two
of the biggest boxing matches that
eWld have been arranged in this coun
try. It was Wolgast's lust for gold
eagles that turned official disapproval
npon the champion's proposed conflict
with Packey McFarland. The public
ity attached to Ad's numerous demands
killed his own game.
Mike Gibbons and Eddie McGoorty
have been matched and rematched of
late, and on sundry occasions, the
sporting hoi polloi has anticipated with
pleasure a joust between the two best
middleweights in the world only to
hear that each match has fallen
through. Gibboas now reports a strain
ed shoulder as an obstacle to the carry
ing out of the latest agreement to box
McGoorty, but that is not the only
drawback.
Eddie Reddy, who is Gibbons' man
ager, wants the fancy figure of $10,000
for ten rounds of jabs, uppercuts and
sidesteps by Mike. He will not be
given such an amount. Promoters
have lost heavily of late, and their
losses are understood to have been due
to the exorbitant prices demanded by
fighters who are cutting off their own
noses by their anxiety to attract the
increment their way.
Gibbons ought to jump to get $8,000
for ten rounds with McGoorty. That
is more by considerable than he has
ever earned since he quit his job as
Y. M. C. A. boxing instructor at St.
Paul. McGoorty is a few pounds heav
ier. But what of it? Gibbons is clev
er. He would lose little by a defeat.
Possibly he might not cut the big mon
ey for a time, but that's the chance he
takes. What's he making by refusing
the McGoorty battle? If he doesn't
take it be will have to go back to the
$1,000 and the $1,500 guarantees. Oc
casionally he will make a trifle more
than that. He will have difficulty,
though, in keeping busy, for the boobs
are playing out.
What's the use of being a tin horn
champion when one can just as well
be a mighty one? Gibbons, many ex
perts figure, has an even chance of
whipping McGoorty. But while he is
deciding whether he will fight the au
thorities again may step in and de
clare that the contest is too close to a
championship affair, the same as In
the Wolgast-McFarlaud case, and bar
it out of New York.
McGoorty's recent record has been
both stunning and otherwise, but on
the whole his fighting indicates cham
pionship material. His knockouts-of
Jack Harrison and Dave Smith were
highly sensational, and his fight, too,
against Jack Denning, he making
Denning quit in a few rounds, put a
few extra streaks of light in the Mc
Goorty halo. He outpointed Barney
Williams easily in six rounds and
stopped Jimmy Howard suddenly.
His bad fights were with Johnny
Thompson and Leo Ilouck. Phila
delphia papers gave Houck credit for
beating the Oshkosh man recently. At
Cincinnati McGoorty wont ten rounds
Thompson. This
W
:-
against him, how-
for any one to make
Thompson.
Sizing up the McGoorty campaign
begun two months ago. it cannot be
gainsaid that Eddie Is a serious con
tends for the middleweight garland.
His weight won't hinder him either.
For the Denning fight he scaled 157
pounds at ringside. Maybe that's why
Gibbons is doing so much reconnoiter
ing. McGoorty can make the middle
limit without loss of strength.
The fruits of success are now being
plucked by McGoorty. who has a few
weeks of vaudeville time in the west
at $1,000 per week. He also has had
two big offers from Paris and London.
LONG TERM FOR LYNCH.
National League Magnates May Re
elect Him For Five Years.
That Tom Lynch will be re-elected
president of the National league seems
to be a foregone conclusion. The mag
nates may even make his term foui
or five years this time, for it has been
demonstrated that the very short term
Is impracticable.
While Lynch was criticised for per
mitting Murphy and Fogel to go as
far as they did during the past year
his honesty and integrity have never
been questioned, and his personal con
duct is a credit to the game.
One or two instances might be pick
ed out where the head of the National
league failed to display the drastic ef
ficiency of a Ban Johnson, but on the
run of the season he earned himself
another term, and the National league
cannot afford to abandon him now In
the face of the Fogel fuss.
Sullivan May Become Magnate.
Billy Sullivan, the veteran White
Sox catcher, may become a magnate.
He is negotiating for the purchase of
the Tacoma franchise In the Nrth
western league.
I ne lempieoT uiana.
The most noted fire which involved
the burning of a single edifice was the
destruction of the great temple of Di
ana at Ephesus In B. C. 356 on the
night Alexander the Great was born
The fire was kindled by Herostratus,
who when apprehended confessed that
his only desire was to transmit bit
name to further ages. He was put to
death with exquisite and prolonged
tortures, and the Epbesian senate com
manded that on pain of death his name
should never be pronounced, hoping
thus to disappoint his expectation.
NOTED LECTURER IS
W.C.T.U. SPEAKER
The Women's Christian Temperance
Union held; an interesting meeting
in the parlors of the Presbyterian
Church Wednesday afternoon, when
Miss Tinling, who is a lecturer, and
who has taught in several normal
schools, was in attendance and gave
an excellent talk. Through the cour
tesy of City Superintendent Tooze,
the schools were closed at 3 o'clock
this giving the teachers of the schools
an opportunityof hearing one of the
best lectures that has been given in
this city. The members of the Wom
en's Christian Temperance Union
acted as a reception committee and
served refreshments. The meeting
was presided over by Mrs. E. B. An
drews, president of the Women's
Christian Temperance Union. Mrs.
Olmstead gave an appropriate vocal
selection and was followed by Miss
Tinling, who spoke on "Temperance."
She was followed by Mrs. van Brakle
who gave a piano selection. The
church parlors were prettily decorat
ed with potted plants and ferns.
It was decided to hold a meeting
in the Presbyterian Church parlors
this afternoon for the school children,
a Loyal Temperance Legion will be
organized.
Miss Tinling visited the Oregon
City High School at 9 o'clock Wed
nesday and made an interesting talk
on temperance.
THANKSGIVING CALL
IS ISSUED BY TAFT
WASHINGTON Nov. 7 President
Taft issued his Thanksgiving procla
mation. One paragraph reads:
"The year now drawing to a close
has been notably favorable to our
fortunate land. At peace within and
without, free of purturbations and
calamaties afflicting other peoples,
rich in harvests so abundant that the
overflow of our prosperity has ad
vantaged the whole world; strong in
the steadfast conservation of the her
itage of self government bequeathed
us by the wisdom of our fathers, and
firm in the resolve to transmit that
heritage unimpared, but rather im
proved by good use, to our children
and our children's children for . all
time to come, the people of the Unit
ed States have abounding cause for
contented gratitude."
HAWLEY PULP & PAPER CO.
WINS $15,000 SUIT
A jury returned a verdict for the
defendant Thursday ini the damage
suit of G. W. Conkling against the
Hawley Pulp & Paper Company. The
plaintiff sued for $15,000 damages al
leging that he was seriously injured
while in the employ of the defendant
at the Milwaukie plant Decembr 23,
1910.
The Kiss.
An American humorist once said that
"the only way to define a kiss is to
take one." Oliver Wendell Holmes
called a kiss the twenty-seventh letter
of the alpha bet-"the love labial which
It takes two to speak plainly."
The Best Light at
the Lowest Cost
ELECTRIC LIGHT is the most suitable for homes,
offices, shops and other places needing light.
Electricity can be used in any quantity, large or
small, thereby furnishing any required amount of light.
Furthermore, electric lamps can be located in any place
thus affording any desired distribution of light.
No other lamps possess these qualifications, there
fore it is not surprising that electric lamps are rapidly
replacing all others in modern establishments.
The Portland Railway Light &
Power Co.
MAIN STREET in the BEAVER BLDG.
LAWRENCE IS
E CLUB HOSTESS
Mrs. Nietaj Barlow Lawrence was
the hostesss of the Wednesday after
noon Bridge Club at her home on
Twelfth and Washington Streets Wed
nesday afternoon. The afternoon was
devoted to bridge, the prize being
awarded to Mrs. H. E. Straight. Re
freshments were served. The rooms
were prettily decorated for the occa
sion. Mrs. Lawrence's guests were Mrs.
R. R. McAlpin, Mrs. H. E. Straight,
Mrs. E. A. Chapman, Mrs. George A.
Harding, Mrs. C. G. Huntley, Mrs. M.
D. Latourette, Mrs. L. A. Morris, Mrs.
John Lewthwaite, Mrs. H. S. Mount,
Mrs. L. L. Pickens, Mrs. L. L. Port
er, Mrs. W. S. U'Ren, Mrs. C. H. Meiss
ner, Mrs. E. P. Rands, Mrs. A. A.
Price, Mrs. Theodore W. Clark, Mrs
J. R. Humphreys, Mrs. J. J. Tobin,
Mrs. William Logus.
A Japanese Proverb.
A Japanese proverb worth remember
ing: "He who knows not and knows not
that he knows riot is a fool. Shun him.
"He who knows not and knows that
he knows not is humble. Teach him.
"He who knows and knows not that
he knows is asleep. Wake him.
"He who knows and knows that he
knows is a wise man. Follow him."
Southern Pacific Railroad of Mexico
traversing the states of
SONOROA SINALOA TEPIC - JALISCO.
Gives Access to
OPPORTUNITIES FOR WEALTH
in
Cattle, Farming, Mining, Timber
Let us list you for a copy of our new booklet soon to be pub
lished.
H. LAWTON, G. P. A., Guaymas, Sonora, Mexico.
"Say Bill, we're not very good at puzzles;
You'll have to give it to us in plain English."
"I m disappointed, ain't you Fritzy; it started out like
it was goin' to be something with the word 'good' in it."
MRS. M ALLOY BURIED
IN MOUNTAIN VIEW
The funeral of the late Mrs. Ann
May Malloy, wife of the Rev. Malloy.
who died at the Patton home in Port
land Nevember 5, was held Thursday
afternoon at 2 o'clock in the Presby
terian Church of this city. Rev. Ben
nett, pastor of the First Methodist
Church South, of Portland, officiating.
The services were largely attended,
and many beautiful flowers covered
the casket. The interment was in
the Masonic plat in Mountain View
cemetery.
Mrs. Malloy, who was familiarly
known as 'Aunt Ann", resided in this
city for several years before going to
Portland. She was well known here,
and has been a devout member of the
Methodist Church South for , many
years. She was 84 years of age and
is survived by two sons, John May,
of Aberdeen, Wash., ; and William
May, of Oregon City, also by her hus
band, Rev Malloy, of Portland.
YOUNG MEN
For Gonorrhoea and Gleet get Pabst's Okay Specific.
It is the ONLY medicine which -will cure each and
every case. NO CASE known it has ever failed to
cure, no matter how serious or of how long standing.
Jesuits irom its ue will astcniyn you-
It is absolutely safe, prevents stricture
and can be taken without inconvenience
and detention from business. PXICE
$305
FTe mm mm mm&m
3v
THE