4 THE WEATHER $ . Oregon City Rain today; south- S Serly winds. " S S Oregon Rain or enow today; S $ southerly winds. $ Washington Rain west, snowS 4 east portion. Variable winds, 3 $ mostly southerly. ' $ 83-4.e33$$4$ $ 3 S 3Your wife needs a cook book. We$ S offer a fine cook book, bound in 3 leather, for each yearly subscrip-8 S tio,i to -the Morning Enterprise. 3 ? This offer is good one day only,'- Friday, February 28. On that day 3 we give 10,000 votes on the tour-8 $ ing car with a yearly subscription: WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1866. VOL. V. No. 48. OREGON OITY, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1913. Per Week, 10 Cents ONE BATTLESHIP VOTED BY HOUSE AMENDMENT REQUIRES CRAFT SHALL BE CONSTRUCTED BY GOVERNMENT NAVAL APPROPRIATION. IS REDUCED Lea" er Underwood Makes Successful Fight for One Dreadnaught R-' publican Majority Opposes Amendment WASHINGTON, Feb. 26. After four days of debate, accompanied at times by scenes of disorder seldom witness ed at the Capitol, the House passed tonight the naval appropriation bill, carrying approximately $138,000,000 and authorizing the construction of one battleship, six torpedo boat de stroyers and four submarines. An amendment to provide for one battle ship, instead of two, as recommended by the committee, was carried by a vote cf 174 to 156. An amendment offered by Repre sentative Calder, of New York, and adopted, requires that the battleship shall be constructed in a Government Navy-yard. As reported by the committee the bill carried appropriations aggregat ing $146,000,000 and providing for two battleships, a transport and a supply ship. Points of order by Representa tive Sisson, in the committee of the whole, struck out the transport and supply ship appropriation, Represen tative Alexander, of Missouri, the chairman, holding there is no author ity for the appropriation because no vessels of this type ever have been authorized. Until today the "big navy" men headed by Representative Hobson, of Alabama, and Representative Ayres, of New York, had been confident that the two-battleship program would go through and the result was -by no means certain until the final rollcall on the amendment. Democratic Leader Undervood spoks for one battleship and when the vote on the amendment came, 140 Democrats voted for the amend ment and 54 against it. Of the Re publicans 102 voted against the amendment and 28 for it. ALLEGED FORGER IS HELD OVER TO JURY W. M. Allen, of Molalla, accused of passing a forged check and trying to pass another, was bound over to the grand jury at his preliminary hear ing before Justice of the Peace Sam son Wednesday. Allen, through coun sel, denied his guilt. It is charged that he passed a forged check on C. I. Stafford and tried to pass one on Peter Kloostra, the butcher and an other on the Hub Grocery. Allen's son-in-law, C. G. Kerr, also of Molalla, has been bound over to the grand jury on a charge of trying to pass forged checks . The men were arrested by Chief of Police Shaw. ' ,r- . '..V V ST"- - I V .r,. if a X if At-----'-1 ' . " : : 3 ' THE HEBREW WITH "BLACK and GOLD" COMMENCING TODAY At Time HIGHWAY MEASURE TE COMPROMISE BILL, CARRYING MILL TAX, HAS LITTLE , OPPOSITION STATE COMMISSION IS CREATED Engineer to be Appointed to Super intend Work Convicts to be Used In Road Con struction SALEM, Feb. 26. (Special.) The compromise highway commission bill passed the Senate tnAav , a. ficulty, carrying provision of a one- nuaiuei- oi a mm tax. Yesterday the substitute bill of the roads and hiehwavs a proposal of Senator Barrett seem- eu 10 come in conflict, so that Bar rett objected to the substitute bill, although they were nearly identical. After the Senate roads and high way ccmmittpo v'ti. .o..,.j...5.i.. lantey and two Representatives from me House had wrestled with the ques tion until a late hour last night the bill came out in the form that it passed the Senate today. The bill creates a state highway commission and also the office of state highway engineer. The com mission is not what could be 'termed a new commission, inasmuch as it is to consist of the a tary of state and state treasurer. The engineer is to be aDnointen hv tho commission, to be a resident of the er' at least two years and to receive a salary of $3000 a year. He shall act in the advisorv nananitir in the county courts of the different coun ties as to road construction or main tenance when requested to do so and alSO furnish SDecificfltintlH fni- nionaa of proposed road construction, to be iurnisneu tree of cost. The engineer is also to collect statistics and pre pare data as to road work. The hill also provides for the use of convicts, in tact being largely an extension of the provision voted by the people. It restricts the expenditure for- admin istration of the road fund to no mors than $10,000 a year. t EDWARDS SPEAKS AT THE DALLES Rev. George Nelson Edwards, pas tor of the First Congregational Church, was one of a number of min isters who went to The Dalles Wed nesday to welcome the new pastor there, Rev. James Elvin, formerly of Seattle, and to hold a fellowship meet ing with the membere of the Congre gational Church at that place. The other members of the party were Rev. Schroek, of Salem; Mrs. Kantner, of Portland; Rev. Paddack, of Portland and Rev. Harris, of Hood River. They were given a delightful entertainment by the residents of The Dalles, a lunchson and a dinner being served. Rev. Mr. Edwards addressed the High school and the guests were taken on a trip through the city. A club of forty boys attended the dinner. Oraracl PASSED BY SENA v-JHE RUN-DOWN FINANCIER ! -vAlV (jS. f( HERE COMES A SUBPOENA ) ILLRUN ' S (this 1(Wv; (I) jjlE ,. ' " " You can se:e he HAS L . iMT OF THIS ROUGH W flrIZoHARPAT ) (SSS fiTOrf.. GUESS IU. CO HOME AW) 'SZl"J lT'It I GET THE DOCTORS TO FIX r- I tIt-r W AKIEROlDSj ) 5f 'rs,(5t Brig. Gen. John J. Pershing, U.' S. A., commanding Dept. of Minanao, Phil ippine Islands. E DOES NOT WIFE IS WASHINGTON, Feb. 26 The long rumored break in the Bourne family is said to have occurred. Senator Bourne's office declines to comment on the New York story that Mrs. Bourne closed her apartment in Stoneleigh Court yesterday and left for Portland. Senator Bourne is quoted as saying that "mention of an employe of the Senate in connec tion with any act of his was ridcu- lous.', also that he has no notice of action for divorce being instituted, that he has no knowledge where his wife now is and must decline to dis cuss his private affairs. Estrangement between ' Senator Bourne and his wife has been rumor ed for a year or more. A prominent Oregonian recently here, who de clined, to have his name mentioned, said divorce proceedings, had already been brought , in Portland. Mrs. Bourne was Miss Wyatt of , Harris burg, Linn County, Or. Her brother, J. R. Wyatt, was assistant United States district attorney for Oregon for a short time. Wanted! Girls and Women To operate sewing machines In garment factory. Oregon City Woolen Mills. TEE WtHIT PERPETRATED BY WALT McDOUGALL STRANGE NAME HAN . CALLEDlllKE DOE" Justice of the Peace Samson faced the hardest proposition of his life Wednesday afternoon when Consta ble Frost brought a man before him on a charge of assault and battery. "What is your name?" asked the Justice of the 'Peace. The prisoner mumbled something. The name was a Russian one of five syllables, but one one in the court room could understand what it was. "Spell it," ordered the court. "I cannot," was the reply. A second attempt by the prisoner to make his name understood was as futile as the first and the court, real izing that there was but one alterna tive, said: "Well, we will call you Mike Doe." J. Castadin alleged that the prison er had struck him on the head with a club, and produced as evidence a bad ly battered head. The man was held, in bail of $215 to appear for hear ing at 10 o'clock this morning. "I have met many . persons with strange names," said . Justice of the Peace Samson, "but this fellow has the strangest one of them all. It would be impossible to learn just what it is without an interpreter and in that, in stance the' interpreter would have to be an expert in the use of the En glish as well as the Russian lan gauge." .. HURRICANE SWEEPS OVER GOLDEN GATE SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 26. Hurri cane weather prevails today off the Golden Gate, a condition- almost un precedented at this season of the year. Inside the heads of the bay, it was bright and calm. The wind had i reached a velocity of 70 miles and hour oft Point Reyes at 9 o'clock, sweeping down from the Northwest and driving huge seas before it. The Farrallones reported a 48-mile blow and in-bound shipping was thrown out schedule by the fight with wind and ' seas. The Steamer Lurline, from Honulu, labored into the harbor this morning with rails smashed, ventilators car ried away and lifeboats tumbled about her decks. The "banana deck" was flooded and for 24 hours the ship was awash with the seas that boarded her at every roll. She encountered the blow early yesterday and fought her way into port against heavy odds. The Steamer Harvard, from the South, was posted three hours late this morning, because of the blow and the City of Sidney, from San Pe dro, also was behind her schedule. Captain Henry F. Weeden, of the Lurline, characterized the storm as the worst he had encountered in 30 years of seafaring. The wind at times traveled 100 miles an hour, he said, and his 30 passengers were in a state bordering on panic f or hour. Dam age to the cargo was heavy, as waves washed the ship from stem to stern time and again. Coasters from the North made bet ter time for the blow. The Saginaw was hustled down from Willapa Har bor in 55 hours, her usual. time for the trip being 66 hours. The Adeline Smith, from Coos Bay, and the Da venport, from Port Ludlow, each made a gain of 10 hours ort their schedules. g it ' Atterson W. Rucker, Representative from Colorado. Probable next U. S. Minister to Cuba. FATHER THANKS CHIEF FOR AIDING WAYWARD SON Chief of Police Shaw has received a letter from Maurice P. Cutnel, whose son was found by the Chief wander ing about the city several weeks ago. The father thanked Mr. Shaw for the interest he took in the hoy and also sent him a check to cover a telegram that was sent to the father by the Chief. The Cissel home is in Mary land. - Five Acres Nothing Down All in a high state of cultiva tion, lays level, fine berry land or a dandy chicken ranch. 60 bearing fruit trees, 1-4 mile of the Clackamas Southern R. R. which will be in operation in 8 months, then this land will double In value. 3 1-4 miles of. Oregon City on the Beaver Creek road. I don't ask one dollar down for one year, but the purchaser must put up a small house and barn of some kind to show that he means business, or I will take a good Bankable note as part or first ' payment. Here is your chance to get a dandy home on the car line where you can work in town and live in the Coun try. Price $1200. I own the land, see me at once. M. A. ELLIOTT At E. P. Elliott & Son Real Estate Office BILL FOR COUNTIES KILLED MEASURE, WHICH GOVERNOR PRESENTS, LOSES BY OVER WHELMING MAJORITY II SENATORS OUT OF 30 ARE FOR IT JWalarkey Denounces Act as Blanket Salary Measure and Urges That it be Defeat ed SALEM, Or., Feb. 26. After a de bate lasting 30 minutes, House bill 184, by Gill, fixing the salaries of all county officers in the state, was kill ed by the Senate this morning. Only 11 members voted for the measure. This bill was prepared by Governor West, and it has been one of the measures he has been most eager to have passed. While the Senate was a unit on the proposition that such a measure is most desirable in order to stop the importunate demands of county officials for increases in salar ies at every session of the Legisla ture, the majority declared that this bill will be inequible. Almost every Representative from Eastern Oregon was opposed to the bill; and it was said to have been pre pared on a most scientific basis. Sev eral Senators opposed it because it lowered salaries, and others because it raised them. In answering Kella her's rb.'ection that it raised the sal aries of a few officials, Smith of Coos and Curry accused the Multnomah man of inconsistency. "It raises the salaries in Curry County 50 per cent," he said. "Sen ator Kellaher refused to accept an amendment permitting these salaries to be lowered. He is responsible for my voting against this bill." Malarkey, who had yielded the chair to Miller, of Linn, denounced the measure as "a blanket salary bill." He" expressed surprise that it should come from the Governor. While it did not affect Multnomah County he believed, so he asserted, that "common justice" to other counties, which were deprived of regulating salaries by legislative act and also of invoking the referendum, demanded its defeat. The -death . of the blanket county salary bill means that In all proba bility the Legislature will pass all county salary bills vetoed by the Gov ernor over his veto. . The lineup on the measure this (Continued on Page 2.) . SALARY Here Ate Some Snaps 75 ACRES OAK LAND 2 MILES FROM COXNESS, ONLY $65.00 PER ACRE. 100 x 120 CORNER ON MAIN STREET, 1 BLOCK FROM CORNER, ONLY $600.00 200 x 385, 3 BLOCKS FROM SCHOOL, ONLY $350.00. W. A. Beck & EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR . Gregory Add., Kayler Add. and Harless Add., to Molalla SAYS THAW IS "LOW BROW" ALBANY, N. Y. Feb. 26 Unqual ified d3nial of allegations that he had offered Dr. John Russell, superinten dent of the Matteawan State Asylum for the criminal insane, $25,000 to aid in the release of Harry K. Thaw from that institution, was voiced to day by Attorney John Anhut, of New York before the commission appoint ed by Governor William Sulzer to investigate the Thaw - case. Anhut admitted having an intimate person al acquaintance with Dr. Russell, but declared he had offered the latter ho money. , . Dr. Russell told me Anhut testi fied, "that he would be glad to throw any business he could my way. Later Thaw retained me as counsel, paying me a fee of $25,000, which was re turnable unless I gained his release. "On December 16, last, I saw. Dr. Russell and we discussed my efforts to free Thaw. I told Dr. Russell of my agreement whereby half of the retaining fee was returnable January 1, and the remainder July 1, unless Thaw secured his freedom." "Dr. Russell then asked me: 'Where do I come in?' I asked him what he meant, and he replied, 'Why, I rec ommend you and you get the job. 1 would not do anything for Thaw un less I got money for it.' " Anhut then testified that he told Dr. Eussell he could not give him any thing, as he had signed receipts for all the money, and that it was re turnable, unless Thaw was released. "Dr. Russell told me,"Anhut said, "That Thaw was not insane. He call ed Harry a 'lowbrow' saying he was constitutionally inferior." Andre8en Is Guardian. William Andresen was Wednesday appointed guardian of Mabel Preston, Cora Preston and Maud Preston. The estate is valued at several thousand dollars. WATER PROBE IS " URGED BY COUNCIL COMjMITTEE ANNOUNCES THAT DIECK, NOTED ENGINEER, IS EMPLOYED MAIN STREET IMPROVEMENT ASKED Sale of Mountain View Fire House Ordered and Bids Will be Asked in Few Days After much discussion and some dissentinn thA pnnnpil Wadnncfiai, j night voted to continue its commit-j-tee to investigate a water supply for Oregon City. Councilman Tooze, the ! chairman of the committee, stated that Robert C. Dieck had heen em ; ployed to make an investigation for the committee and that the work would now proceed. Councilman Al bright asked that the committee give reports to the people telling them whether the water was fit to be us ed and Mr. Beard asked that the re ports be given to the public in lan guage that the ordinary person might understand instead of using techni- . cal words. Mr. Albright said that there was some misunderstanding as. to whether the water is pure. Coun cilman Tooze moved that the commit tee be discharged, but the motion was lost. A delegation of property owners along upper Main Street was pres ent and presented the views of the Tuesday evening meeting of the same persons to the council. The report was that the street should be improv ed with a new surface, but not until a deeper and larger sewer had been placed along the street and also water mains be lowered. H. C. Stevens said that he was ready to pay his part to pave the street when the sew ers were down, but he believed that the street should be paved with brick as it had the best wearing qualities. Frank Jaggar said that he believed the new surface should have a con crete base under it so that it would wear better. Upon suggestion, of the property owners, Councilman Tooze j moved that the city engineer make surveys of the street to learn wheth j er it would be better to have the new - sewer or sewers along Main Street j rnn North and South or East and j West. He will make a report at the next meeting of the council. The acceptance of Monroe Street (Continued on Page 3.) AT THE GRAND CLEVER LITTLE SOUBRETTE WITH "Gold&Black" COMMENCING TODAY AT THE GRAND lA " . " . f