Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, February 11, 1913, Image 1

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    THE WEATHER S
-S Oregon City Fair today; con-
8tinued cold; easterly winds. $
-S Oregon Fair today; colder east, s
continued cold west portion; S
north to east winds. - 3
$ Washington Fair today; con-f3
3tinued cold; easterly winds. V
SAre you in need of a position? 3
SThe Morning Enterprise will run
an advertisement 'u its classified $
$ columns free of charge. Since we $
S announced this offer a number of-S
unemployed men ard women have
found situations through tt.e col-&
$umns of the Morning Enterprise.-
$ $ 4 3 $$ j
WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1866.
OREGON CITY, OREGON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY il, 1913.
VOL. V. No. 34.
Per Week, 10 Cents
SCOTT GAINS POLE
ONLY TO PERISH
2 BOYS THOUGHT
THIEVES ARE SHOT
NOT SO SICK AS HE WILL BE IF THIS KEEPS UP.
BILL TO REGULATE
LOBBYING PASSES
COMMITTEES
ISiftfi
CLUB
fSh ' ' Iff
ARE
APPOINTED
DARING EXPLORER AND FOUR
COMRADES VICTIMS OF
BLIZZARD
AMUNDSEN'S ACHIEVEMENT PROVED
Men Returning from Goal When They
Die in Storm One
Killed by
Fall
DEPUTY SHERIFF WHEELER
FIRES ON LADS HE FINDS
IN BARN
ONE SERIOUSLY WOUNDED IN BREAST
LONDON, Feb. 10. At a meeting
of the Royal Geographical Society
tonight announcement was made of
a disaster which has overtaken Cap
tain Robert F. Scott's Antartic expe
dition,' resulting In the death of Cap
tain Scott, Dr. E. A. Wilson, Lieuten
ant H. R. Bowers, Captain I. F. G.
Gates and Petty Officer E. Evans.
Captain Scott's party, said Doug
las W. Freshfield, vice-president of
the Geoarauhical Society, in making
J.I.- lr,r.fr,4
1112 ilUiiUUliCCllieilL, 1UUUU v;apiaiu
Roald Amundsen's tent and records
at the South Pole. On the return trip
about March 29, 1912, 11 miles from
One Ten Depot, a blizzard overwhelm
ed them. They had suffered greatly
from hunger and exposure and the
death of Scott, Bowers and Wilson !
virtually was due to that. They died
soon after the blizzard swept down on
the party.
Gate3 died from exposure a few
days later. The death of Evans re
sulted from a fall. The other mem
bers of the expedition arex reported
to be in good health. A searching
party discovered the bodies of those
who perished some time later.
The news of the apalling disaster
which befell Captain Scott and his
comrades was received by a signal
message from the Terra Nova, the
vessel which had carried the explorr
er and his pxpedition to the Antar
tic, and which late last year went
once again to the South to bring him
and his companions back.
Captain Scott's main traveling party
was to consist of 16 men besides
himself, while groups of four men
each were to return at different stag
es of the journey, leaving Scott and
four others to complete the final
dash to the Pole.
Captain Scott's party reached the
exact point where Roald Amundsen
planted the Norwegian flag at the
South Pole. They found there the hut
constructed and left behind by Amund
sen's party.
These facts were recorded in the
documents found on the bodies of the
explorers when they were recovered.
Portland Young Men, on Way to
- Eastern Oregon, Stop in
Stable to Get
Feed
Mistaking them for horsethieves,
M. J. Wheeler, deputy sheriff, living
near Poring, shot and seriously
wounded Donald Cooper and Kenneth
Specht, both of Portland, early Mon
day morning. Mr. Wheeler was awak
ened by a noise in his barn about 1
o'clock, and made an investigation.
He found Specht, who is 17 years of
age, and Cooper, who is 20 years of
age, in the barn.
Wheeler says he shouted to the
young men to throw up their arms,
and that Specht held up one but that
Cooper refused to comply with the
command and drew a pistol. Wheeler,
who had a rifle, fired, the ball enter
ing Cooper's breast. Specht was shot
twice in the left hand. Wheeler at
once telephoned for a physician at
Gresham and the wounds of the young
men were dressed". Cooper was so
seriously wounded that the physician
advised that he be kept at the Wheel
er home. Specht accompanied . his
mother, who was summoned soon af
ter the shooting, to Oregon City.
Both young men denied they had any
intention of stealing horses, but en
tered the bar to obtain feed for a
horse they were driving.
Specht, who had been working at
a meat market on East Burnside
Street, and Cooper had been chums
for several months. They obtained
a horse and buggy at the meat mar
ket Sunday afternoon with the inten
tion of going to Eastern Oregon to
obtain work. Specht said that he
had no reason for leaving home, but
was influenced to do so by his com
panion. Mrs. Specht soon missed
her son and began a search for him
soon after the young men departed
in the buggy. The Specht home it at
467 East Couch Street and Cooper
lived at 11 1-2 Twelfth Street.
Announcement was made that the
men probably will be prosecuted in
Mulnomah County 'for taking the
horse and buggy without obtaining
permission of the proprietor. Wheeler
has not been arrested.
Boost your city by boosting your
daily paper. The Enterprise should
be in every home.
fax x t - v..
Er-"' 'jV.'A ' K
f " if- I h hw '
' X 4 I " -:
f i ,
. ill
MARGARET ROSA and BOB BURKE
Are considered one of the best Comedy Teams in the show
business.
MISS ROSA not only possesses a fine voice, but is a com
medienne as well and wears several costly gowns.
'MR. BURKE is a clever Comedian- keeping the Audience
laughing from start to finish. His dance is one of the fun
niest things seen on the Vaudeville Stage. We are fortunate
in securing this act, so if you want to forget your troubles,
don't fail to see them. They are ANOTHER one of those good
ACTS shown at the STAR. They close Wednesday night.
AND TONIGHT
10 More Steins Given Away
5 DRAWINGS AFTER EACH SHOW
Photo Plays
GAUMONT WEEKLY
ABSOLUTELY FIRST RUN
SHOWING THE GREAT EVENTS OF THE DAY
A 2-REEL FEATURE , "
HIS SENSE OF DUTY
A fine story of love and duty, showing vividly both
characters, Indian and American. Fine War display, mingled
with true and realistic heroism.
CHANGE OF PICTURES WEDNESDAY
NEW VAUDEVILLE THURSDAY
COME AND ENJOY YOURSELF AT .THE
STAR THEATRE
SCHUEBEL MEASURE PROVIDES
THAT OUTSIDE WORKERS
MUST REGISTER
T. W. SULUVAN MADE CHAIRMAN
OF PROMOTION DEPARTMENT
MEN ALSO ARE TO STATE SALARY1 ANNUAL BALL TO BE HELD MARCH 25
County Road Bonding Act Practically
Same as Grange Measure,
Wins in the
House
LINCOLN TO BE THEME OF
BROTHERHOOD BANQUET
The addresses at the Presbyterian
Brotherhood tonight will be devoted
to Abraham Lincoln. Rev. H. H.
Pratt, of Portland, will deliver the
principal oration. Miss Clarence
Grace will render several selections
on the piano. Each member has been
requested to bring one boy with him.
If you saw it In the fclnterprisfl it's
SHORT STORIES
PICTURED AT
THE GRAND
TODAY
Fooling Their Wives
Brown, Jones and Smith go
camping and leave their wives
very lonely. When the men
return, the wives to- get square
take a turn at camping. The
husbands disguise themselves
as tramps and attempt to break
up the camp, but the women
chase them into the lake and
the men argee to return home.
Quarantined
Lieutenant Mason is engaged
to Ruth Wilson, the Colonel's
daughter. His father, a grouchy
old banker, objects and when
he hears that the couple are
going to get married and go
to the Phillipines he goes to
the Colonel to protest. There
is a small pox scare and the
doctor of the regiment to help
young Mason seizes the father
and confines him in the hos
pital until after the wedding is
over.
"Off The Road"
Just think of it A young
man discovers he is in love
with the daughter of a man
who killed his' father. When
the guilty man learns who his
expected son-in-law is, he dies
of remorse. He leaves a con
fession of his guilt, which the
young man finds in time to
keep a knowledge of it from
his wife-to-be. He comforts
her in her bereavement and
marries her. A greater test of
love can scarcely 1).e imagined,
but he endures and he is bless
ed. The conveyance by this
picture of the .thoughts involv
ed can be better seen in its
showing at THE GRAND to
day. Her Faithful Yuma Servant
Senorita Garcia, the daugh
ter of wealthy parents, refuses
to marry a man her family has
selected. She accepted the only
alternative, leaving with her
Indian servant to join the In
dian tribe. The beautiful girl,
lonely and sick at heart, earns
her livelihood by selling Indian
wicker baskets and earthen
ware. After several years of
this unsatisfactory existence
she meets with a gentleman
whose curiosity is aroused by
the presence of a white woman
among the Indians. He asks
her why and she unfolds the
story of the sacrifice she has
made to true love. In reply he
paints a picture of a lonely,
father and mother waiting and
anxious to welcome their lost
daughter back home. The Sen
orita nods her head, a tear
starts and the story ends.
Tripp and Linton
Burlesque Boxing
Another one of their Knock
out acts introducing lessons in
physical torture. A Comedy
Oddity.
MRS. WARNER,83,
DIESSUDDENLY
OREGON CITY PIONEER PASSES
AT HOME IN MOUNT
PLEASANT !
DECEASED CROSSED PLAINS IN 1852
Funeral to be Tomorrow Afternoon
at Congregational Church,
Rev. Edwards Officiating
Mrs. Elizabeth Keiser Warner, wid
ow of the late Arthur Warner, died
at 7 o'clock Monday morning ia
Mount Pleasant, after a brief illness.
She had been a sufferer of facial
neuralgia for a long while, but was
confined to her bed only one day.
Mrs. Warner was born in Troy, N.
Y., April 16, 1830, and came across
the plains with her parents in 1852,
settling at Eola, near Salem, Marion
County. There she met Mr. Warner
and in 1854 they were married and
came to Oregon City, where hev 'en
gaged in business. Several years lat
er Mr. Warner s health began to fail
and in 1.865 he bought a farm at
Mount Pleasant and they moved
there. Mr. Warner died August 13,
1S89.
Deceased is survived by one son.
Arthur C. Warner, and two daughters,
Mrs. A. E. King and Mrs. Ward B.
Lawton, all of whom live on the old
homestead at Mount Pleasant.
The funeral will be held at two
o'clock Wednesday afternoon at the
Congregational Church, Rev. George
Nelson Edwards officiating. The
pall bearers will be J. T. Apperson,
George A. Harding, J. E. Hedges,
James Partlow, D. C. Latourette and
T. L. Charman.
Samuel fiea, new President of the
Pennsylvania Railroad, succeeding
James McCrea.
SALEM, Feb. 10 (Special.) Rep
resentative Schuebel's bill which pro
vides that every person who is at
the Legislature for the purpose of
lobbying for or against any bill won
an easy victory Monday morning.
The lobbyists shall place their name
on a public record together with the
amount of compensation received - by
them and from whom it is received.
The name of the person or firm by
whom the lobbyist is employed must
also appear on the public record. The
bill also provides that lobbyists may
only appear before committees and
shall state their arguments before
i them as such. They shall not lobby
i any other place than committees ex
j cept . upon the inviation of either
( house, and then the lobbyist shall
I talk before the whole house. For the
violation of the bill a penalty of from
! $200 to '$5,000 is provided for the
I employer and a fine of from $100 to
$1,000 for the employee.
This bill passed the House by aL
most a unanimous vote, their being
but one dissenting vote, that of J.
N. Nolta, of Multnomah County. The
bill is considered a victory for Rep
resentative Schuebel and a lively
fight is promised in the Senate.
Schuebel made no , effort to fight
for the recall of judicial decisions
resolution he introduced in the
House several days ago at the request
of some Progressives. The commit
tee recommended that it be postpon
ed and the Oregon City man raised no
strong protest. Beyond those two
measures, the Clackamas County del
egation in both houses was out of the
public gaze all day.
The passage in the house of the
county road bonding act was the
most important feature of today's
session. The bill as passed is a com
promise between the Senate bill by
Barrett and the Houe bill by Hurd.
Its provisions are practically the same
as those in the Grange bill which was
defeated at the general election ex
(Continued on page 4)
SCHNOERR CHEERED
WHEN JILL PASSES
SALEM, Or. Feb. 10. (Special.)
Repesentative Schnoerr of Clacka
mas got his bill for a restriction on
the number of voters to be register
ed in a precinct through the House
after making his maiden speech as a
member, of the Legislature. Besides
being the only man here in the House
who wears whiskers, Schnoerr hast
the further distinction of being the
first member to be cheered when his
bill passed. The members saw how
proud Schnoerr was to get his bill
through and they clapped their hands
loudly over it. Three hundred voters
is the number permitted in his bill.
In Multnomah County, is was said,
some precincts contain as high as
600.
Proposition to Move Club Headquar
ters to Weinhard Building
Given Consideration
B. T. McBain, recently re-elected
president of the Commercial Club, at
a meeting of the Board of Govern- '
ors Monday evening announced the
standing committees for the fiscal
year. T. W. Sullivan was named
chairman of the Publicity Committee,
probably he most important one. M.
D. Latourette heads the Entertain
ment Committee and R. L. Holman
the House Committee. It was decid
ed to hold the annual ball on the
evening of Tuesday, March 25, at
Busch's Hall. It is probable that it
will be a masquerade ball. The fol
lowing were named a committee to
mage arrangements for the dance:
M. D. Latourette, B. T. McBain, Dr.
Clyde Mount, C. W. Evans and F. A
Olmsted. Invitations will be issued.
The board considered a proposition
to move the headquarters to the
Weinhard Building,, the proprietors
having agreed to give a five year lease
and add another floor for the exclu
sive use of the club. It was an
nounced that the Masonic Lodge had
been made a handsome offer for the
quarters now occupied by the Com
mercial Club.
The leading standing committees t
are as follows:
Publicity T. W. Sullivan, M. D.
Latourette, L. Adams, T. L. Charman t
and B. T. McBain.
House R. L. Holman, Dr. L. A.
Morris and T. B. Fairclough.
Transportation L. Adams, B. T.
McBain, W. A. Huntley, E. Schwab'
and A. A. Price.
Entertainment M. D. Latourette,
B. T. McBain, C. W. Evans, Dr. Clyde
Mount and F. A. Olmsted.
Auditing Leo S. Burdon, Irvin Rau,
Bothwell Avison, H. A. Swafford and
Ralph Parker.
The following members of the
Board of Governors attended the
meeting: T. W. Sullivan, Gilbert L.
Hedges, R. L. Holman, M. D. Latour
ette and BB. T. McBain.
Watch
Tints
Space'
"D1CKED" MEANS
SOLON DISSENTS
SALEM, Or., Feb. 10. (Special.)
Senate debates at this Legislative
session have led to members acquir
ing rare sobriquets by having the
same phraseology used in reference
t6 them day after day. Some of these
titles probably will stick long after
the 27th session has gone on the his
torial page. For instance, Dimick is
known as "My friend from Eel Is
land". Moser is given the appelation
of "My fat Teutonic friend." Joseph
is constantly referred to as "My Irish
friend from Jerusalem." Kellaher is
famed as "Common User Dan" and
"Kangaroo Danf Thompson is known
as "My Swamp Angel Friend." Smith
of Coos and Curry goes on the josh
page as "Unconstitutional Ira," while
Butler responds to the title "Consti
tutional Defender."
A new word also has been coined
"dimick" conjugated regularly, the
past tense being "dimicked." To say
in the Senate today that a man "dim
icks'' from a proposition, means that
he resents?
Silverware Cleaned Free
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1913
BRING IN A FEW PIECES of TARNISHED SILVERWARE TO BE CLEANED NO CHARGE
ONLY A PLEASURE TO SHOW YOU THERE IS NOTHING TOO HARD FOR US TO CLEAN..
IS
GYPSY CLUB HOSTESS
Miss Marjorie Caufield entertained
the Gypsy Club and a number of her
friends at her home Saturday even
ing. The evening was enjoy ably
spent at 500 and the prize was award
ed to Mrs. Linn E. Jones. Four tables
were used. Delicious refreshments
were served. The next meeting of
the club will be held at the home of
Miss Bessie Daulton.
SAFE
Absolutely harmless no poison.
CLEAN
No powder to get on hands or clothes.
EASY
No rubbing Just washing.
ANTISEPTIC
Steniizes and polishes.
INEXPENSIVE
. No costly powder used.
DURABLE
Will last for years.
DIRECTIONS FOLLOWED
Results guaranteed.
SALT
One spoonful.
BAKING SODA
One spoonful.
WARM WATER
One quart and the
SILVER CLEAN PAN
Will clean all your silverware in
three minutes. It is an electro-magnetic
process :that removes all ox
ides aud sulphides, and does not at
tack the silver. Leaves the silver
bright' as a dollar, ' including every
recess or beading.
THIS MAGIC PLAN HAS BEEN ADOPTED BY LEADING HOTELS, RESTAURANTS AND
SILVERWARE MANUFACTURERS ALL OVER THE WORLD, INCLUDING THE COMMUNITY
AND 1847 ROGER BROS. FACTORIES.
Oregon City Jewelers
Suspension Bridge Corner