THE WEATHER OREGON CITY Wednesday fair ?and warmer; westerly winds. S 8 Oregon and Washington Wed- S Tuesday fajr, warmer, except near j the coast; westerly winds. $ Idaho Fair Wednesday, except 4 showers southeast' portion. $ CLACKAMAS COUNTY FAIR CAN BY, OR. SEPT. 24, 25, 26, 27. WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1866. 3 3 VOL. V. No. 135. MORNING ENTERPE1SE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1913. Per Week, Ten Cents. Long Walk From New York to Minneapolis to Be Last For Edward P. Weston, Veteran Pedestrian. ALLS IN MAD " ''S'j SALMON ROMP OVER RUSH LABOR AGITATORS FROM PORTLAND, TO THE NUMBER OF ABOUT 30, APPEARED IN OREGON CITY IN A BODY AT MIDNIGHT LAST NIGHT, AND GOING TO THE DIFFERENT PAPER AND PULP MILLS, CALLED UPON THE EMPLOYEES TO QUIT WORK AND GO ON STRIKE. WHENEVER RESISTANCE 'WAS OFFERED VIOLENCE WAS THREATENED, AND THE LOCAL EMPLOYEES, TOO DAZED TO KNOW WHAT WAS ACTUALLY GOING ON, FOR THE MOST PART LEFT THEIR MACHINES AND QUIT; AFTER CLOSING THE CROWN AND HAWLEY MILLS THE GANG STARTED FOR THE WILLAMETTE FILLS, AND At LAST REPORTS WERE THREATENING TO DO SERI OUS DAMAGE TO THAT PLANT IF THE HANDS DID NOT QUIT. WHAT IS BACK OF THE STRIKE, "WALK OUT" OR WHATEVER IT MAY BE CALLED, OR WHETHER OR NOT PREMEDITATED, IS'NOT KNOWN. THE ONLY CERTAIN FACT IS THAT WHERE THE MEN HAVE NOT QUIT OF. THEIR OWN VIOLATION SUPERINTEND ENTS HAVE ORDERED THE MEN OUT, AND HAVE CLOSED THE PLANTS DOWN TO MAKE FURTHER TROUBLE IMPOSSIBLE UNTIL MORNING. SHERIFF MASS AND DEPUTIES HAVE GONE TO THE WILLAM ETTE MILL. TWENTY-EIGHT OF THE BRIDGE. PRISONERS FIVE CENTFARE UNITED STATES SUPREME TRI BUNAL CONCURS IN RULING OF OREGON COMMISSION OAK GROVE STATIONS ALSO AIDED Over $15,000 in Rebate Checks to Be Redeemed as Result of Pro - test Long Contested By Interburban Line That noise Tuesday night had noth ing to do with the Portland Rose Festival. Far be it from such. It was just the people at Milwaukie and other points in the Oak Grove group telling each other how happy they were over the decision of the United States supreme court, upholding the order of the Oregon Railroad Com mission that a five-cent fare to Mil waukie was "reasonable,1"' and that a ten-cent fare to Oak Grove was ditto. Transfer privileges will also be tacked on to the reduced fares, and some $15,000 worth of rebate checks that have been guarded faithfully by commuters in the two towns will now be cashed in. Following the cashing in people in the districts effected will probably buy automobiles and quit riding on the cars altogether. As soon a3 telegraphic advice of the supreme court's decision had been re ceived, officials of the Portland Rail way, Light & Power company stated that they would put the new rate in to effect at once, and would not wait the 60 days allowed them by law. "The order for reducing - the fare from Portland to Milwaukie and Oak Grove, is based upon the allege dis crimination arising from the charge of 5 cents to Lents," said B. S. Josse . lyn, president of the Portland Rail . way, Light & Power company. ' "Un der the law of the state, we are com pelled to charge not more than ! .cents' for the transportation of a pass enger, for a trip in one continuous di rection within the city limits. Mil . waukie is outside of the city limits and Lents s also. Under the decis ion we receive no compensation for carrying passengers beyond the city limits. The character of the service to these two points, Lents and Mil waukie, is vastly different. From Milwaukie, we run high-speed interur ban trains, which are more costly to operate than the streetcar service from Lents. We did not think that proper considerations was given by the authorities to the different char acter of service rendered, and we still think so, but we are law-abiding cit izens and we shall proceed at once to publish a tariff, effective June 11, which will comply with the orders of ! the commission, without awaiting the arrival of a mandate from the court, which would probably delay the tak ing effect of a new tariff 60 days." Open Air ICE CREAM Parlors West End Suspension Bridge ' . OPEN UNTIL 1:00 A. ,M. - Fine View of the River W. M. HENTJREN, Propr. 4- 5 ACRES FOR EXCHANGE All level and in high state of cultivation. Good 6-room house, woodshed, chicken house; good well water; nice young orchard, also bearing orchard, strawber ries and garden. Located 1 miles south of Oregon City on the Pacific Highway; sidewalk to the place from town. Hera is your chance to trade your house and lot even up for this beautiful 5 acres. Don't Miss This Opportunity. E. P. ELLIOTT & SON Oregon City. - MLWAUKIE WINS WERE TAKEN AT THE WEST END POPULAR FUNDS FOR WELL ASKED LIVE WIRES BACKING PLAN TO RAISE COST OF LOCATING " PURE WATER SYSTEM TESTS WILL COST BUT $300 ' EACH Idea Now is to Seek Source at Points of Less Elevation Than Mt. Pleasant Tract and to t Limit Depth Members of the Live Wires, at their weekly luncheon, held Tuesday noon in the Commercial club rooms, listened to a report by Councilman Tooze upon the water supply situa tion, and at the conclusion of the re marks determined to take a hand in the matter themselves. The special water committee of the council of which Mr. Tooze' is chairman, was commended for its action and inter est in the matter of seeking a new; clear and adequate supply of water for the city, and its work in connec tion with the test well driven on the Ladd tract at Mt. Pleasant was en dorsed. In talking of the work, Mr. Tooze said that the council had appropriated in all $1,885 for the various phases of the water inquiry that has led so far to a thorough investigation of the ter ritory surrounding Oregon City, to the securing of a report upon the mat ter by Robert Dieck, of Portland, and to the drilling of a test well at Mt. Pleasant. In regard to this well, Mr. Tooze said that the bore had been driven 315 feet without the anticipat ed result, and that the special water committee had decided not to seek a supply at any greater depth. Mr. Tooze then told of the offer of Mr. Scott, who has done, the drilling at the Ladd tract, to drill other wells elsewhere for one dollar a foot, the city to pay for the cost of piping. This is a considerable reduction from the price charged for the Ladd work, which was, $5 a foot for much of it, and $ 2.50 per foot, with the city buy ing the piping, for the balance. Mr. Scott is making this offer, Mr. Tooze said, because he was interested in lo cating a water supply, believing that if one was found he would also get the work of drilling the permanent wells. The rate of a dollar a foot, Mr. Tooze said, was hardly suff icieat to cover actual cost of operation. As it is proposed to limit all further test wells to a depth of 159 feet, it is believed that the cost can be easily cared for. The Live . Wires, after hearing the report from Mr. Tooze, decided to circulate petitions calling for offerings to be applied in raising a fund to carry on the search of pure water. As each well will cost but $300 to drill, and as it is not expect ed that more than two will have to be sunk before water is found, it is believed that the funds will be readily raised. In paying for the pipe the city will be standing a good share ot the expense, as piping costs 65 cents a foot. The Live Wires will start seeking funds for the work Wednes day. ELKS TO HONOR FLAG A call has been issued for the at tendance of all members of Els' lodge to meet in the order's home at eight in the evening, June 14, to par ticipate in the exercises celebrating the birth of the national ensign. Spe cial ceremonies have been arranged for the meeting. Sunday School Experts Speak. GRAND FORKS, N. D., June 10. Several noted experts on Sunday School management are scheduled to deliver addresses before the annual convention of the North Dakota Sun day School association, which opened here today. Iowa Grand Lodge Meets COUNCIL BLUFFS, la., June 10. The annual session of the Iowa Grand Lodge of Masons opened here this morning with more than one thousand delegates and members in attendance. - . JUDGMENT IS AWARDED Judgment of $164.73 was awarded Andrew Robertson Tuesday for a grocery bill run by John Montgomery. The bill has been standing . some years. iggr sc.; - r s v- -Jus i . W fes QM KrJiii &f - aWtf C4VV f e el - U5 X -.4 , 0 v it i yv'l Photoa by American Press Association. ;, ' " Edward Payson Weston, the veteran pedestrian, who has scores of walking records to his credit, surprised those who had put him in the "down and out" class when he announced that he would walk from New York city. to Min neapolis, starting at noon June 2. But Weston, now in his seventy-fifth year, said the 1,500 mile hike would be his" last long trip on foot. He figured that the tripy would take sixty days, as he never walks on Sundays. In this illus tration are shown the start of Weston's last walking trip from Philadelphia to New York, when he covered the nine ty miles in twenty-three hours, and in the Insert Weston ia walkinc costume. - - ' RIVER GIVES BACK J. F. ARKIN'S BODY Ths body of James Arkin, who fell from the suspension ' bridge at midnight on June 3, was recovered' Tuesday morning at five o'clock by members of the crew of the steamer Ruth, of the Willamette Navigation company. The corpse came to the surface at practically the same place where it went down, just north of the west tower of the high span. Arkin, who was a member of the i Masonic and Odd Fellow lodges of Manistee, Michigan, will be buried Wednesday morning in the I. O. O. F. cemetery, the local lodge holding services over the body. As far as is known he has no relatives in this sec tion. On the night that Arkin disappear ed he had been drinking heavily earlier in the evening, and shortly be fore midnight wandered out onto tae suspension bridge. There pedestrains saw him pursuing his hat, as inebriat ed folk sometimes will; and it is pre sumed that in his efforts to "stalk" his headgear he knocked it over the. bridge railing, and then went over af ter it. People on the west bank of the stream heard a splansh in the wa ter, and on going down to the bank found his hat lying on the rocks near the water's edge. Arkin came to Oregon City about two years ago, and invested a part of his money in a rooming house. Later he quit this business, and since then has not been identified with any par ticular line of activity. At times he was employed in the local mills. Cor oner Wilson held an inquest Tuesday morning, but found no grounds to suppose that death had been other than accidental. Veterans at Waterloo. WATERLOO, la., June 10. The city is gaily decorated with flags in honor of the Spanish-American war veterans who opened their annual state convention here today. The meeting will last two .days. Fine Points in Advertising A reader of THE ENTER PRISE the other day was plan ning a fortnight's fishing trip in the mountains and in running through the advertising . pages chanced upon an advertisement of a sporting goods house. .Being entranced by the "out-o'-door" atmosphere and sports manlike tone of the announce ment he was soon deeply en grossed. Toward the end, to his astonishment, he found complete detailed information about the very stream on which he expect ed to spend his vacation. He learned all about the fis'i and their habits, and the kind of tackle to use and a number of other useful and informing points all as if written for his special benefit by a true lover of the sport! Crystallized in this one adver tisement was all of the informa tion, and more, that he needed to complete the arrangements for his trip. This is only one instance of the splendid help that present day advertising offers to the , readers of THE ENTERPRISE. BLUNT MAN OF ACTION GOVERNS FRENCH ARMY Eugene Etlenne, new Secretary of war iu cabinet of greatest of Euro pean Republics, is forceful character. POLICE CHIVALRY LEADS TO MURDER NEW YORK, June 10 There is a strong dramatic element which would undoubtedly appeal to a French play wright in the circustances surround ing the death, a few days ago, of Pat rick Considine, a simple village po liceman in Cliffside, one of the subur ban places on the Jersey side of the Hudson. About the facts which led to the shooting of the policeman noth ing definite is known and the truth will probably never become known, which would give the widest scope to the imagination of a playwright in building up the preliminary plot lea-ling up to the critical po'int. It seems that Considine, a stray ping big fellow, more than six fest tall and proportionately developed, on the fatal night visited his neighbor, Mjrs. Devlin, a vaudeville actress mar ried to a littteC insignificant shrimp of ah actor,, darned James Devlin. When Devlin" came home that night and found Considine .with Mrs. Dev lin he became' furious, presuming that everything was not as it should be between his wife and the visitor. He ranted inthe most melodramatic fash ion but wisely refrained from attack ing the unwelcome visitor, for whose Herculean strength he was no match. He acted the role of the outraged husband-, and incidentally asserted that he would shoot Considine if he had ii gun. The big policeman, being Irish and evidently filled with a thoroughly un modern spirit of chivalry, obligingly pulled his own revolver out of his pocket and, with the words, "All right, if you feel that way about it, my lad, here's my gun. Take a" shot," he handed the weapon to Devlin who, without hesitating, shot . Considine down. The big policeman was mor tally wounded and died a few days lat er at the hospital. Devlin is now in jail awaiting the action of the author ities. " ORONO, Me., June 10. The forty- second annual commencement of the University of Maine ended this morn ing with the graduation exercises tn the university chapeL ELEVATOR HATTER ' TALKED OF AGAIN Members of the elevator committee of the city council met Tuesday after noon to consider the subject of pro viding some form of a mechanical lift for the use of the public, at the foot of the Seventh street bluff, 'but ow ing to the fact that the time for the opening of the last bids has not yet arrived, but little was done. Officially the committee heard of the inability of the Beckwith people to submit plans for an inclined rail way; to await which the last delay in the matter of bids was brought about. No comment was made on Mr. Beck with's withdrawal from the matter, because most of the committee knew about it sometime before. One set of plans, already submitted was generally favored by the mem bers of the committee ,but fee bid heretofore accompanying them is be yond the bond issue for the purpose. Informal discussion was had as to whether or not the city could legally appropriate money from the general fund to make up the difference be tween any bid over $12,00 and the sum of the bond issue. No legal opin ion on the matter was received. BEAVERS ARE BINGOED At Portland Los Angeles 3, Port land 0. At San Francisco San . Francisco 15, Oakland 5. At Los Angeles Venice 6, Sacra mento 5. - Coast League Standings. Los Angeles 618 Oakland .523 San Francisco . 483 Venico , .478 Portland -. 452 Sacramento ........ .... .426 Four Features a Week Mondays Wednesdays Thursdays Fridays Don't An ENTIRE ME DAYS OF Water has reached the right stage in the fish ladder over the falls of the Willamette for the particular tastes of the salmon, and since Satur day last the royal fish have been hurdling through the ladder at the rate, of several hundred an hour. The run through the ladder is particularly heavy in the late afternoon and even ing, but at other times is sufficiently strong to show that the big swimmers and leapers are pleased with things. For this happy state of affairs the fish have to thank the efforts of An gus Gore, deputy fish warden in charge of the ladder. Mr. Gore ha3 been troubled of late by the apparent inability of- the big salmon to negoti ate the ladder, and after considerable experimentation discovered that it was because too great a volume of water was pouring down through tie several pools. -This has been rem edied by the placing of sluice-boards, which partly cut down the flow, and the fish are now going through like a flock of sheep. Owing to high wa ter below the falls, the fish swim over the first several stages of the ladder, and do not begin their spectac ular leaping until well above the ususal water line. Much Concern Felt. Failure of the fish to negotiate the ladder before this has' caused consid erable worry to the state autorities, and to local sportsmen interested in preserving the salmon, and has also hurt commercial fishing in the river to a considerable degree, and brought about the catching and shipping out of a large number of salmon that were not exactly fit for food. It is now believed that salmon ready to spawn will get out of the lower river more readily, and that those caught by the gill-netters will be of a better grade. - Previous to the alterations made in the fish ladder, many of the salmon were dashing themselves against the rocks in their efforts to find their own way over the falls, and were mutillating and wounding themselves in their fruitless leaps. Hundreds of pounds of fish have been picked up by the nets that have killed them selves against the rocks, and their torn and crushed bodies have present ed anything but a pretty sight. These' fish that have been thusly killed are not fit for food, and while efforts have been made to eliminate them from outgoing shipments, in the iur ry of boxing and sending away, a number of them have got in consign ments. Tampering Charge Made. - Failure of the fish to use the ladder, before the difficulty with the flow of water was discovered, led to the charge being openly made that en emies of the state game code-were de liberately tampering with the fish ladder, and were driving the fish out of it. The most careful guarding and watching by the fish wardens, how ever, has failed to reveal any at tempts at such work. In past years stones have been hurled in the lad der to frighten the salmon back, and To My Old Friends and the Motoring Public in General: I wish to announce that I have taken over the business of C. A. ELLIOTT. If reas onable prices and first-class workmanship will win your continued patronage I am sure to receive at least a part of your business F. A. SCHMIDT TIRES BUICKS SUPPLIES saw TODAY At THE GRAND TWO GREAT WAR REELS A MAGNIFICENT PHOTOPLAY OF THE GREAT STRUGGLE BE-' TWEEN THE NORTH AND THE SOUTH. The greatest interest in all histories is the personal experiences of some of those concerned. Here we have the great tragedy of the Civil . War, while through it like a beam of light there threads a story of such poignant interest that the spectator is transferred instantly from the present humdrum of life, to the thrilling, pulsating, 'gripping sequence .of events in the lives of two families bound by love and divided by war, around whom this story is built Miss the Big One Tomorrow "THE WEB" Don't Miss the Big One Friday 'THE LITTLE TEASE" CHARGE of PICTURES DAILY it is said that at other times eels have been cut up and thrown in the water with the same idea in view. Be fore the present laws were establish ed, restricting netting salmon within 600 feet of the falls, floating barriers also kept the fish from reaching the -ladder. President Tom J. Myers, of the . Clackamas County Rod & Gun club, with a small party, viisted the falls and fish ladder in a launch Tuesday afternoon, and watched the fish gor ing through. They were well satis fied with the work of the wardens, and gave unstinted praise to Deputy Gore for solving the mystery sur rounding the failure of the royal fish to use the ladder in reaching the up per river. Had not the trouble been located, Mr. Myers, with the assist ance of Dr. Ice and others interested was going to endeavor to get - em ployees of the state hatchery sent down to scoop the fish from the pools and have them transported to guard ed spawning grounds, where . they could deposit their eggs in safety. The fact that the fish are now using the ladder, however, makes any such ef--fort unnecessary. ' ' Rigid Watch Kept. "The fish are going through "stead ily," said Mr. Myers, after his inspec tion of conditions at the falls, "and. I believe the greater part of the late (Continued on page 4) IN JAIL FOR BIGAMY; IS NOT MARRIED AT'ALL NEW YORK, June 10. Judge Swann of the court of general ses sions is somewhat puzzled over the case of Jonathan Webb, who pela"ded guilty to bigamy the other day. Webb was indicted) for bigamy, although at at the time he had no wife. He mar ried Miss Theresa Phillips in April, 1907. In September, 1911, while he was still living with his wife, Webb married Miss Marion Jones. When his second wife learned of his first marriage she Obtained an anullment of her marriage, while his first wife obtained a divorce. Not satisfied with the mere divorce Webb's first wife had him arrested for bigamy and . he wajs duly indicted, although at that time he was not married at all. Wanted! Girls and Women - To operate sewing machine! In garment factory. OREGON CITY WOOLEN MILL FOR AUTO HiRE PHONE A-8 OR MAIN 3192 Prices Reasonable E. P. ELLIOTT & SON Seventh and Main - The Only House Running Licensed Films THE GRAND