4 MORNING ENTERPRISE THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1913. CARTY'S REAL LUCK STORY Heavyweight Filter's Manager Tells of Tlieir Woes. LIVED MAINLY ON TOUCHES Held Bat Nelson Up For $50 Paid Him Back After Palzer Fight Once Had No Place to Sleep Ate Himself Out of Boarding House. When Lutber McCarty's manager mailed a fifty dollar check to Bat Nel son recently it was the end of the hardest luck story that has adorned the record of any world's champion. "When I borrowed those fifty bones from Nelson," said McCarney recently, "Luther and I were at the lowest ebb. c I J '-1 111 Photo by American Press Association. LUTHER M'CAKTY, CLAIMANT OF WHITE HEAVYWEIGHT TITLE. In fact, the tide may be said to have gone out and left us stranded. We had pretty nearly taken the count. "We had been hanging around Springfield, Mo., where I had horned into a fight club and was trying to get the cowboy started. We were literally down and out. We had stayed at the hotel on credit until the pro prietor sadly notified us to brush along. "I then fanned Luther out to various boarding bouses, but he ate himself out of a welcome in one after anoth er. His appetite didn't make him a good boarding house risk. "We had to get along mainly on touches. It wasn't safe to wish me a pleasant good morniug in those days. "Luther never made a whimper. He would come around and make a touch from me, and I would let himhave whatever I could. Sometimes I slipped him a dollar; sometimes it was only a quarter. I remember that once he asked me for money when 1 only had a quarter in the world. I split with him and gave him a dime. I will al ways remember the way he gr'ir.aecl and said: 'Bill, you ought to give me a little fatherly advice before you send me away with this. 1 am liable to go out and raise the dickens with this dime.' "At last it got down to the place where we were dead broke. That was just a year ago. Bat Nelson had come to Springfield to fight a boy named O'Rourke for my club, and we were hoping that that would rehabilitate our fortunes. "When night came Luther, who had used up his last boarding house, hadn't a place to sleep and nothing to eat. He sat down in the hotel office. I found a club, sandwich that somebody had left and fairly poked this into his face. '"Where am I going to sleep, Bill?' he asked. "I thought a moment, then told him to sneak upstairs and crawl into Bat Nelson's bed. He disappeared, and aft er awhile there came a roar over the phone. Bat was demanding to know who the big bum was iu his tied. At this demand I went upstairs, and tp gether we surveyed the slumbering form of the eowpnncher. "'I've batted him around for ten minutes, but I can't wake him,' said Bat. 'Who is the big tramp, anyhow?" " 'Why,' 1 said, with all the surprise I could muster, 'that must be Lutber McCnrty. He must have gone to the wrong room by mistake.' "I politely pounded Luther awhile and told him to wake up and get out of Bat's bed. but Luther slumbered on. All he did was to curl up his legs. "Finally I told Bat he had better give it up for a bad job and crawl iu beside Luther. He did this, and Luther got a good bed for the night. "We had expected to make a lot of money out of Bat's fight, but he suc ceeded in offending most of the white population of the town, and his fight was h frost. AYe didn't get enough money to pay Bat's $800 guarantee. We had to pty him his money, but I fol lowed him to the-trnin and begged him to-give me me money back. He final ly wrenched himself away from 50, giving me a check just as the train StarleJ." Huxley's Larger View. James Hauuay, once a member of the staff of the Pall Mall Gazette, was a typical man of letters. And HuxJey, us everybody knows, was a typical scientific man. Hannay bad been a iilJi;Jriman when H'uSiC y c S surgeon. Years after the two met eaeh other on the steps of the British museum. "Huxley," said Hannay, "I care nothing for man except as a crea ture of historical tradition." "Nor I," answered Huxley, "for him except as a compound of gas and wa ter. - "But," he added, "if we were each of us better educated men than 'we are we should know how to respect ' each other's studies more." GOVERNOR URGED TO HONOR EXPLORER .SAI EM, Or., Feb. 12. That the beautiful floral smybolism adopted by the English people out o respect tn th memory of Captain tfobert F. Scott and party, who perished in ihe Antarlic regions, which is u in car ried out in Portland next Fri day, may be state-wide in application, Senator Milton A. Miller, of Linn, in trouueed a joint resolution in the Senate this morning, requesting Gov ernor West to issue a proclamation. The text of the resolution follows: "Whereas, Captain Robert F. Scott and party, a body of courageous men who braved the hardships and dan gers of the icy Antartic regiou in search of data to add to the sum of scientific - knowledge and advance ment, achieved the South Pole only to meet with death in a blizzard which swept the barren, snow-covered steppes of the South Frigid Zone while they were returning to civiliza tion; and. "Whereas, In token of the wave of profound sorrow which has submerg ed the civilized world because of this disaster, memorial services will be held in St. Paul's Cathedral, Lon don, England, Friday, February -14, 1913, at which white flowers will be worn as the emblem of the universal grief felt, by reason of the untoward fate met by these intrepid explorers in the land of the white death; and "Whereas, The citizens of Oregon's metropolis, on the initiative of Dr. David F. Walker, an officer of the McClintock party which learned the fate of Sir John Franklin and also gathered much Arctic lore, are advo cating the wearing of white flowers on that day as symbolic of the man ner in which Captain Scott and party met death; and Whereas, The names of these men', striving to gain knowledge that would have benefited the people of all na tions and all climes, should be inscrib ed on the memorial tablets of the world, therefore be it "Resolved, By the Senate, the House concurring, that His Excellency, the Governor of Oregon, is hereby direct ed to issue a proclamation, calling on the citizens of Oregon to show their respect for the memory of Captain Scott and party on Friday, February 14, by wearing a white flower." U. 8. AMY READY TO GO TO MEXICO '(Continued from page 1) the scheme of Army reorganization and its responsiveness to the call for foreign service may be regarded as a first practical test of the value of the new system. The First Brigade will entrain for Newport News, Va., only in the event the preparatory or ders issued this morning are follow ed by others setting the troops in motion. Within 24 hours after such order it is expected that the most distant organizations within the bri gade wiP be at Newport News . Mapor-General Aleshire, quarter-master-general, today followed up the orders to commission the army trans ports at Newport News by directing the immediate assembly of food sup plieSj wagon transportation and other equipment for troops on" foreign ser vice. MEXICO CITY, Feb. 12. The Unit ed States Ambassador Henry Lane Wilson and the German Minister went to the National Palace this af ternoon to demand from President Madero that the battle cease immed iately. Plans for a conference between the leaders of the rebels and the repre sentatives of the Government were under discussion at the National Pal ace shortly after noon. Hopes of a conference soon dim inished. There was a cessation of firing, but this appeared to be due to a change in the federal positions and was regarded by the rebels as a trick to draw them out. The bulk of the government troops are station ed in the Northwestern part of the city. The British legation is under fire from the rebel position, and a bat tery of federal artillery has been plac ed close by as a protection. The federal troops reopened the battle in the streets of the Mexican capital at 6:35 this morning. The action soon became general, all the artillery on both sides being brought into play. The cannon fire was augmented by sweeping salvos from the machine guns, while the .infantry came into action with vol leys and individual shooting. The rebels under Felix Diaz start ed to advance toward the national nalace at 8:45. They seemingly are employing heavier canon than they did yesterday. They directed their fire toward the national palace and on the higher buildings in the cen- FOR Col'shs.CglssIaGwSfpe OOOt) ASS ES..T-. m si mmim PIKE TAR KOilEY Is a guaranteed remedy for Coughs, Colds, Grip, Asthma, Whooping Cough and Soreness of the Throat, Chest and Lungs. Mo Opiates I See carton for ingre- disnts tastes good 2 iL. L U , E Ult) UlllUieil llrVG Hi 31.00, 50c and 2Sc a sottn- j JONES DRUG COMPANY ter of the business district, on many of which federal machine guns are mounted and federal riflemen are posted. VANCOUVER, Wash., Feb. 12. General Maus this forenoon stated that no orders hal been received in ne Department of the Columbia uv er for the mobilization of troops and their transportation to the Mexican border and that he did not believe the conditnons were as serious as reported, adding, that the govern ment was at all times ready to pro tect its interests and the interests of American citizens on the border of Mexico, and if the conditions there became serious enough, would doubt less take the necessary steps to give needed protection. The spuadron of the First Cavalry now at Boise Barracks, Idaho, has been ordered to the Presidio of Mon terey, Cal., where the four troops will take station. This is part of the gen eral scheme of shifting troops, and at the department headquarters it is stated that it has no significance in connection with the talk of troui.ie in Mexico. The horses and freight I of the four troops will pass through Portland some time the latter part of this week, while the men of the command are expected to go via Og den, Utah, and over the Central Pacif ic 1n iheir new station in California. A great majority of persons afflict ed with eczema have no other ail ment, which is accepted as positive proof that eczema is purely a skin disease. Meritol Eczema Remedy is made especially for eczema and all diseases of the skin. - If you are -afflicted with this terrible disease, do not delay using Meritol Eczema Rem edy, as it can always be relied upon. Jones Drug Co., Sole Agents. CITY IS BEING CLEANED RAPIDLY Councilman Albright announced Wednesday that three teams had been engaged to collect the garbage of Oregon City. The Council in the first place engaged only one team, but the amount of garbage placed in front of the various homes rendered it nec essary to engage more teams. Mr. Albright said that the people had re sponded promptly to the call to have garbage placed where it could be reached and that the city could be cleaned in a short time. WILSON THREATENED WITH R. R. STRIKE NEW YORK, Feb. 12. W. S. Car ter, president of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, amplified today his statement of yes terday that the railroads were deter mined to "put fear into the heart of Woodrow Wilson," by a great strike as a means of securing higher freight rates, and added that, in his opinion, Wall Street was responsible for the situation. The firemen's leader gave this as his analysis of the deadlock now ex isting between 54 eastern railroads and their 34,000 firemen immediately after he had concluded a conference with Judge Martin A. Knapp, of the United States Commerce Court, and G. W. W. Hanger, Acting Commission er of Labor, before whom both sides are to explain their contentions. BONUS VOTESOAFMTORDAY SOp Votes WitH Every 25c Purchase "Clean-Up" is the slogan of the day! Of course, we want to help in this splendid movement, hence this splendid opportunity to every contestant to "clean-up" thousands of bonus votes. Saturday only we will give 500 bonus votes with each 25c purchase of soap. Our entire soap stock of over 10,000 cakes, of 130 different kinds goes on sale. Laundry soap, bath soap, face soap, complexion soap, any kind you want, and all the best known brands as Colgate's, Munyons, Pears, Harmony, Maxine, Elliott or Ma ck's, Jerqeus, Palm Olive, etc. Soap from 5c the bar to $1.00 a cake. We have what you want! Supply your needs for months to come and help your favorite candidate. UNTLEY The tore CO, SATURDAY IS ALSO COUPON BOOK DAY! WE GIVES VOTES Huntley Bros. Co. V. Harris J. Levitt The Star Theatre The Morning Enterprise ship of public utilities, but if the commissions which are named by the people cannot regulate such utiltites 1 I will be in favor of such owership." Barrett, Gean, Carson, Day, Far-1 rell, Hollis, Kiddle, Miller, Moser, j Ragsdals, Thompson, Von der. Hellen, Wood and Malarkey voted against the bill. MRS. HUNTLEY TO BE DERTHSCK HOSTESS AT At the meeting of the Derthick Club which will be held on Friday af ternoon at the home of Mrs. W. A. Huntley, a program will be given by" Miss Marjory Housman, of Portland. Friday being Valentine's day, cupid will have a prominent part in the after noon's entertainment. Mrs. Huntley will be assisted by Mrs. Louis Adams in entertaining. BILL HITTING LOCAL RAILWAY FAILS SALEM, Or., Feb. 12; (Special.) A forensic gale in the Senate blew around the bill of Smith of Coos and Curry to prohibit the merging of rail roads and public utilities and the bill was defeated when it came to a vote, only ten favoring it with 14 against it and six absent. The bill would have hindered seriously the Clacka mas Southern Railway. The bill was said to be designated primarily to prevent a merger of the Pacific States Telephone & Telegraph Company and the Northwestern Long Distance Telephone Company, which it is said has been threatened in event the former could gobble up the bonds of the latter company. Senator Day gave some objections to the bill similar to those he offered yesterday, following which he was at tacked by Smith of Coos and Curry, who declared that perhaps Day was a better lawyer than the Attorney General and intimated that Day may have some personal intertsts which induced him in the matter. '"This is ungentlemanly, uncalled for, unparliamentary and unevery thing," declared Senator Thompson, jumping to the floor, with face flush ing. "I ebject to the allowing of members to be subjected to such statements." Smith retreated and said that he would confine himself to remarks on the bill. President Malarkey, taking the floor resented the imputations that had been made relative to a "lineup" among the Senators. "When -Senator Smith spoke he talked about a 'lineup', " said the President. -" I deprecate this contin ual impugning of motives of fellow Senators. I believe that honest men can disagree. And I do not believe Senator Smith has introduced the legislation that he proposes that he could be impugned for having a polit ical motive "I have not quite reached the point where I fully believe in public ower- J. H. Ackermann, principal of the Normal Training School at Mon mouth, lectured at the High school Wednesday morning. Mr. Ackermann urged the children to be more pro- grevssive in their work and to make the most of their opportunities? He likened persons to a railroad train and urged his hearers not to be ca booses. He declared that Lincoln had done a great work but insisted that it took as much courage today to accomplish great deeds as it did in the time of the Great Emancipa tor. Miss Louise Huntley rendered several solos on the piano and recita tions were given by Miss Irene Han ny, Miss Ada Mass and Miss Grace Spiger. Superintendent of City Schools Tooze made a short address and the students rendered several songs. TEMPER. . Nobody keeps a runaway horse, but lots of people keep a runaway temper and, curiously enough, think nothing qf it. Anon. CARDUI WORKED LIKEA CHARM After Operation Failed to Help, Cardui Worked L&e a Charm. Jonesville, S. C. "I suffered with womanly trouble," writes Mrs. J. S. Kendrick," in a letter from this place, "and at times, I could not bear to stand on my feet. The doctor said I would never be any better, and that I would have to have an operation, or I would have a cancer. I went to the hospital, and they oper ated on me, hut I got no better. They said medicines would do me no good, and I thought I would have to die. At last I tried Cardui, and began to improve, so I continued using It. Now, I am well, and can do my own work. I don't feel any pains. Cardui worked like a charm." There must be merit in this purely vegetable, tonic remedy, for women Cardui for it has been , in successful use for more than 50 years, for the treatment of womanly weakness and disease. Please try it, for your troubles. N.B. Write to: Ladies' Advisory Dept. Chatta nooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.. for Sperial Imtrurtions, and M-pag-e hook, "Home Treatment for Women," sent in plain wrapper, on request. FOR SALE BY THE JONES DRUG COMPANY 1 The highest tower eve built by man is to be ejected at the J 9 15 Exposition. Aange with San Francisco Tot Co. fo yotir passage on easy payment plan. Don't delay this matte come to 0o ELLIOTT For further information 5th St. nea Main - Oregon City, Oregon E RULE BILL : KILLED IN HOUSE SALEM, Feb. 12. (Special.) The home rule amendment was not brought up in the House for recon sideration and the time has now pass ed for such action. The temperance forces were unable to line up suffi cient votes to have the question sub mitted to the people and decided not to attempt it. CORRESPONDENCE . EAGLE CREEK. This Is fine weayier, though slight ly cool, which we have been enjoying of late. Misses Echo Githens and Murphy and Mrs. R. B. Gibson dined and spent last Tuesday evening with Mrs. Huntington and Miss Alice Dris coll. A small number of people met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Howlett last Thursday evening and spent the time in spelling and singing. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Douglass made a return trip to Molalla last week. They found some rather rough roads. . H. G. Huntington made a business visit to Portland last week. H. S. Gibson went to Portland on business Monday. " Ed Douglass butchered some hogs and shipped them to Portland the first of the week. j A. G. Dix, an Advent minister, was the guest, of Mr. and Mrs. Howlett ov er Sunday. He held services at tho school house. ! J. P. Woodle was visiting relatives '. over this way Sunday. - j Mrs. Fred Hoffmeister and Mrs. R. 1 j B. Gibson . were school visitors last Meda j Friday afternoon, i White Ribbon Remedy is an honest attempt to aid friends of drinking men to rem edy what is really a dreadful evil. This remedy is ODORLESS, COLORLESS, TASTELESS And may be given secretly. JONES DRUG CO. Oregon City