jr..- . $8$SS$8I&S 8 THE WEATHER , S $ OREGON CITY Showers Tues-S day; variable winds, mostly soutji-' westerly. N : ' Oregon and Washington Snow- era Tuesday ; variable - winds, mostly southerly. . ? Idaho Fair Tuesday. S 5 S8 S CLACKAMAS COUNTY S - FAIR CANBY, OR. SEPT. 24, 25, 26, 27. WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1866. VOL. V. No. 122. OREGON CITy, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY. 27, 1913 Per Week, Ten Cents. "TAKING A DARE" IS NEARLY FATAL LLOYD BAXTER HAS CLOSE CALL WITH DEATH WHEN SWIM MING WITH HIS CHUMS YOUTH GOES DOWN FOR SEW TIME Crew of Goverment Dredge Hasten to Rescue of Lad and Pull Him From River Just as Cur rent Seizes Body ."Taking a dare" nearly cost Lloyd Baxter his Jife Friday evening of last week, when in order to show his "bravery" before his playmates hs waded out into deep water in the Wil lamette, near the mouth of Abernathy Creek, and was only saved from drowning by the quick work of mem bers of the crew of the government dredge Mathloma. Baxter and several of his compan ions were cooling off in the river af ter the hot day Friday, andrgot to doing "stunts." One thing led to an other, and finally the yoftngsters got to daring each other to go out to a certain point in the river. It was while this was being done that some body dared young Baxter to "go two steps further." The boy took the dare, but his sec ond step carried him off the sharply shelving bank, where the current had cut it away, and precipitated him in to deep water. The lad plunged un der water with a gasp, and when he next rose to the surface he was sev eral feet out in the current. He screamed for help,and sank again still screaming. His companions on the bank and in the shallow water were powerless to go to his aid, so joined their cries with his. The government dredge Mathloma was lying a littile way down stream, and several of her crew were whiling away time on deck. They heard the cries of the boys, and knowing at once what was wrong, sprang into a uuttu ituu puimu lux tuts sput wiicr t young Baxter had disappeared for the second time. As the youth's head came above the water again, one of the dredges grasped his hair, and holding him until he could get a firm grip upon his wriggling body, pulled the lad to safety. The boy was taken ashore and rolled in blankets, and Dr. Strickland caKed. It took the physician some moments to restore the boy to con sciousness, and after that he was hurriedly dressed and taken to his home. The other boys lost all inter est in bathing, following the accident, and hastily left the dredge crew in possession of the water. March of Progress Seals Doom of the Famous Old Astor House, Shelter of Celebrities Since 1337. i 1 i ! S $&tr tr 2- n v ; im .K t IS -J.5 - v - !r-,w Jn i 1:1. P V.-'- V.'t s ARCHBISHOP PRAISES CIVIL WAR'S HEROES AT MEMORIAL SERVICES OF MEADE POST PhuLos by Amencaii Press Absociation. The hotel which hns sheltered more notable persons thtiu any other in America will pass out of existence May 29, when the doors of the famous old Astor House In New York city are closed for good. The cornerstone of the ho tel was laid In 1834 on ground once occupied by the colonial homestead of Rufus King, at one time minister to Eng land. The building was finished three years later. On the steps of the AstoP House Louis Kossuth bade farewell to America, and from there the Grand Duke Alexis and the late King Edward, then Prince of Wales, bowed to the crowds. Nathaniel Hawthorne, Charles Dickens and Washington Irving were guests there, and Edgar Allan Poe used to drop in at the Astor House office in search of news when he was editing Graham's Magazine in 1841. An drew JncKson. P. T. Barnum, Jenny Lind, James Fenimore Cooper, John Burroughs and Walt WThitman were other celebrities who iived at or occasionally frequented the Astor House. With the pussing of the old hotel will go Head Waller Kauffuian. who has been tlre forty-four years aDd knew many of the celebrated guests. In this Illustration is shown ii photograph of the Astor House as it is today. In the insert Is a photograph of .Kauffman. Declaring that while warfare was a, shocking waste of human life and energy, some wars were necessary to advance the scheme of the world, the Most Reverend Alexander Christie, archbishop of the diocese of Oregon City, delivered a stirring address bo members of Meade Post, G. A. R., and the Meade Relief Corps, who attended St. John's Catholic church in a body Sunday for memorial service. The post turned out for ' the ceremony about 50 strong, and was escorted to the church by children of the Mc Loughlin Institute and a detachment of the Catholic Knights of America. High mass was sung for the mem orial service, and special music was fendered by the choir under the di rection of B. T. McBain. The church was fittingly decorated, and through out the service the honored battle flags of Meade Post were held b7 the color bearers. Archbishop Christie's discourse was spoken of by those present as one of the finest eulogies of the soldier ever pronounced in this city. Deploring war in the abstract, the Archbishop nevertheless cited cer tain wars that had been justified by their "noble purpose, and spoke of the Civil War as such a conflict) a war that had apparently been the only means of preserving the union intact, and which, in its later results, had cemented still more firmly the bonds of brotherhood and patriotism be tween the north and the south. Fol lowing this opening His Reverence spoke of the heroic deeds of the war, The classified ad columns of The Enterprise satisfy your wants. Wanted! Girls and Women To operate sewing machines in garment factory. OREGON CITY WOOLEN MILL "Blame the Wife" (Biograph) "Fighting Chance" (Vitagraph) SCHOOL YEAR ENDS III MUCH ACTIVITY 'The closing of the school year is to be marked by much activity the lat ter part of this week, and throughout all of next. week. Starting Friday and Saturday will be the city school exhibit, held in the gymnasium build ing at the Barclay school grounds, at which will be displayed the regular work of the manual training and do mestic science classes. This exhibit will be open Friday from 1 to 5 and. from 7 to 9 p. m., and on Saturday from 9 to 12 in the morning, and for the same periods as Friday in the af ternoon and evening. Saturday night the high school seniors will present their play, "The Merchant of Venice Up-to-datp," in Shively's opera house. Sunday even ing the baccalaureate sermon for the graduating class at the high school will be preached in the Presbyterian church by F. J. S. Tooze. Wednesday the high school seniors will observe the annual ceremony of planting a class tree in the high school grounds. Friday morning, in the high school auditorium, the grad uating exercises of tjb.e 8th grade, Barclay school, will be held. In the afternoon the graduation of the 8th grade Eastham school class will be ho'.d in the same hall. Friday evening the commencement exercises of the high school will be held in Shively's theatre, the ' pupils having charge of the entire program, with the exception of the presentation of diplomas, which will bs made bv school board. M TEACHERS ARE RE-ELECTED ONLY SEVEN INSTRUCTORS OUT, MOST OF THESE TAKE HIGH ER SALARIED PLACES HIGH SCHOOL FORCE LEFT INTACT Remaining Vacancies ' to be Filled Later in Week From Host of Applicants Who Seek Positions Here HONOR MOLALLA STUDENTS "An Innocent Informer" (Edison) 'Daylight Burglar' (Biograph) Personal merit and fitness for of fice in the student body at the Ora- gon Agricultural College ruled the i spring election, barring politics. The ! officers am President, C. A. Dick-sy, ; Molalla; Barometer editor, A. F. Ma- ager, L. J. Allen, Cove; president of oratory and d abate, C. L. Hill, Berea, Ky.; secretary of oratory and debate, O. B. Haynes, Pasadena, Cal.; 1st. vice-president, R. M. Howard, Cor vallie; 2nd, Otto Ballhorn, Ham mond ; 3rd, F. McCabe, Portland ; sec retary, Katherine Warner, Portland; athletic auditor, Everett May, Salem; senior on buard of athletic control, James Evendon, Warrenfon, and treasurer, L. 'P. Gambee, Corvallis. Entsrprise classified pds pay. Seven grade teachers in the Ore gon City public schools will retire with the end of the year in June. Some of them have already been elected to higher salaried positions, others will permanently retire from the- w6rk. Those who did not apply for re-election in the city schools are. Mrs. Eslalla Salisbury,' Miss Beulah Hess, Miss Margaret Gilman, Miss Bessie Vick, Miss Harriet Bamber, Miss Marjorie Caufield and Miss Agnes Harris. The latter was given one year's leave of absence at her own request. The beard of education Monday night re-elected all of the teachers in the grades and in the high school that applied for positions for next: year. All of the" members of the faculty of the high school were re elected, and there are still to - be chosen six teachers to fill grade va cancies, and instructors in domestic science and art, drawing and music. Peter D. FOrbes, the manual training instructor, was re-elected and Miss Anna Smith, who has been away on a year's leave of absence, was elected (Continued on Page 4.) SUNDAY BASEBALL GAMES Portland 2-6, Venice 3-1. Los Angeles 2-22, Oakland 1-7. Sacramenti, 6, San Francisco 4. Standings. Los Angeles 596 Oakland 538 Venice 500 San Francisco '. 463 Sacramento 457 Portland .438 FLOOD THREATENS ALONG WILLAMETTE Phophecies. of a' sharp rise in the Willamette have been made by Unit ed States weather bureau officials, and as a results preparations are be ing made all along the banks of the stream below the Oregon City dam to protect property. In a bulletin is sued late Monday afternoon it was stated that the river would reach a stjage of 18.5 feet by Friday at Port land. What will happen after that date ha3 not as yet been figured out. The river is expected to rise at least a- foot a day, however, until further warnings are issued. While tihis first main rise of the river will not effect Oregon City greatly, . the increase of the stream is being closely watched here. The present freshet is caused by backwa ter from the Columbia, which has been greatly swelled the past week by the melting of snows along the banks of itjs tributaries on the east ern slope of the Cascades. The warm weather of the past four days has al so started a great deal of snow from the western slope of the mountains, and this is making its presence shown in the rapid rise of the Clackamas and other rivers. Since Saturday the Clackamas has come up over a foot, and is still rising. RUMOR SEEMS UNFOUNDED Persistent rumors were in circula tion Monday that the police Saturday night, had made arrests for two viola tions of the saloon laws, and that as a result two mora of Oregon City's fast-disappearing 'thirst parlors" would probably be closed, - by the council. How the rumors started is not known, but all city officials were unanimous Monday in declaring that no violations had been reported to them. Members of the night police force say they noted no irregularities Saturday night. WOODMEN ELECT LEADERS Members of Willamette Falls Camp No. 184, Woodmen of the World, have elected officers for the coming years as follows: Consul commander, J. G. Banke; advisor lieutenant, M. R. Snidow; escort, Frank Oliver; watchman, C. A. Andrus; sentry, L. D. Garmine; manager, Otto Erickson and musi cian, Leo Burdon. of the self-sacrifice of the men and women who heard their country's call and who fought and strove for what they believed to be the right. Tuesday afternoon members of Meade Post will visit McLoughlin In stitute, where Comrade Cline will be the chief speaker of the day, recount ing for the children the story of the great battle of Vicksburg, and tellmg them the lessons of patriotism tought by the war. The other features of the school visit will be the recitation of war-time poems by members of the post, and stirring martial music by the drum corps. Owing to the remodelling of St. John's church, masses will be held this week every morning except Tues day at 6:30 a. m., so that workmen may have a chance to commence their activities on time. SURPRISE PARTY GIVEN Mr. and Mrs. Henry Henningsen were surprised Friday evening by members of the Knights and Ladies of Security, the occasion being a fare well to them preliminary to Mr. Hen ningsen's departure for Floriston, Cal., where he goes to accept the su perintendcy of the Crown-Columbia mill there. Mrs. Ross and Miss Hat tie Wilson were also honored guests of the occasion. Following refresh ments and a social hour, the depart ing guests were presented with souv enir spoons as a token of the esteem in which they have been held by their inenas in this community. GRASSHOPPERS COVER 90 MILES AMARILLO, Tex., May 26. Travel ing northeastward, a column of grass-' hoppers five miles wide and 18 miles long is reported in Northeastern New Mexico today. Reports that the mil lions of grasshoppers seem to spread as they travel and also the appear ance of smaller bodies of grasshop pers in sections of West Texas have caused fear of a general grasshopper pest in the Sout,hwest, especially in Texas, Western Oklahoma and New Mexico. The New Mexico column today is between Elida and Texline. It is reported they are entirely de nuding the land of grass, as well as destroying all kinds of foliage. Stock, especially sheep, have been left in a starving condition by lack of pastur age after the grasshoppers passed. Government, state and railroad ex perts have combined to fight the grasshoppers. SMITH BOUND OVER W. S- Smith, an employee on the waterfront, who was arrested last week for committing an unnatural crime, was Monday bound over to the grand jury in $500 bail. A boy, a ward of the juvenile court, who was arrested at the same time, was sent to the state corrective school by Juvenile Judge Beatie. ams ireDartmen t More On account of the backward season we have put on sale Hart Schaffner 8c Marx All Wool, High-Grade Men's Suits, regular $22.50, $25.00 $27.50 and $30.00 Suits at Special Sale Price Also 200 Suits regular $15.00, $16.50 and 551 a an Suits The classified ad columns of The Enterprise satisfy your wants. M ams DeDartmen Oregon City's Busy Store t Store "Secret Marriage" (Kalem) 5 ACRES TO EXCHANGE All level and in high state of cultivation; fine loam; good 6 room house, wood-shed, chicken house, bearing fruit and berries, good well water. This is IV2 miles south of Oregon City on the Pacific Highway, a fine ma cadam road and sidewalk to town. We will trade this beau tiful home for a nice house and lot in Oregon City even up. Price $3,000. E. P. ELLIOTT & SON Andresen Building, Oregon City Oregon. npu.,1,1 .mmmwmuimm .u.-n i, ..liili,.,.J1 , ., miU.,wJI n . u Ii-.ii..u.iim ii..mii . mi.nn i. . .. uu! iw .'iCTy ; " uniiinmmnn 1 ri m ' 1 """j" "' ' "" Mnn"! . mmlTi i i trmwin urtn irfimi -iwMrriin mil m 1 ni 11 mni "r- "fiinw ti- rf !. .r -nrrri iw 1 1 .. m 1 nxw J L- -. AT THE STAR THEATRE FOUR DAYS, COMMENCING THURSDAY MAY 29. v