s s s $ - A THE WEATHER " "V. 3 OREGON CITY Probably show-'' $ers and cooler; southwesterly -S s winds. . . - - . ' s ' $ Oregon Showers and cooler Q 8 west, generally fair In east portion S southwesterly winds. - - $ Washington-r-Showers, cooler. CLACKAMAS COUNTY FAIR CAN BY, OR. SEPT. 24, 25, 26, 27. WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1868. VOL. VI. No. 45. OREGON CITY, OREGON, SATURDAY, AUGUST 23, 1913. Per Week, Ten Cents. CITY WANTS A NEW BUILDING MASHER MINISTER DAY FOR POLICE Vfery Human Side to the Gettysburg Encampment Shown In These Camera Studies of Feeding Time. IS BUSY CONVICTED COMMERCIAL CLUB BELIEVES GOVERNMENTS NEEDS NEW POSTOFF1CE TO ASK ATTORNEY FOR REPORT Conditions to be Investigated by Of ficial When he Arrives to At tend Session of Rural Letter Carriers When Paul E. Keyser, 'attorney for the TTnited States Postal service, gets into Oregon City to attend the state convention of Rural Letter Carriers here on the last of the month, he will be waylaid by members of the Com mercial club who want to explain to him why there ought to be a new post office building here. The members of the club - balieve that the city has outgrown its present postal facilities. They think that the time has now come when the govern ment should place its postoffice here in a new building and that an appro priation of several thousand dollars should be made to cover ' the cost of a new office. They argue that the fores is now crowded into quarters that are far too small to effeciently handle the business of a town of Ore gon City's population and that some thing should be done to provide bet ter facilities for the mail here. The club will take the matter up with the attorney when he comes to attend the annual convention of the crarisrs. He will then be asked to in vestigate the conditions here and to mske a report to the proper officials on what he finds. The club feels that his report will be such that something will result for the better ment of the government facilities in the community and that the town will, eventually, receive an appropriation for a larger and better equipped build ing. MOTHER SAVES GIRL FROM WATERY GRAVE EUGENE, Or., Aug. 22. Rushing intd the swift current of the Willam ette river to her armpits, Mrs. E. C. Welch fought for several minutes to rescue her 19-year-old daughter from the clutches of her drowning husband. Sitting on the bank, she saw her hus band suddenly begin to drag the daughter, Eva Welch, whom he was teaching to swim, out into the deep current. Three times she saw her sink. She pushed out a board, but the girl was unable to grasp it. Then she herself plunged in, and was suc cessful, just as she reached the last step she could have taken and still retained her feet. E. C. Welch probably died of heart failure rather than by drowning. He was teaching the daughter to swim near the milling district. Suddenly, without a cry or struggle, he began dragging the girl to the swift deep water. After the mother reached the girl she called for help. SEQUEL TO ARREST . IS HEARD IN COURT The justice court Friday heard an echo of the complaint brought by L. Vierhus against B. Goldberg, charging petty larcency and the conducting of a commission house without a state license, when Goldberg brought suit against Vierhus for J104.74 which he alleges is due. The two men were in the commis sion house together for a time with Goldberg as the owner and operator. Vierhus filed complaints against his former employer upon which the lat- . ter was arrested under the" new law that requires commission men to take out a license from the state before opening for business. The complaint of Goldberg against Vierhus Friday was a sequel to those that had already been filed. ATTENTION S Young Menl Young Women! Do you desire a positon in the classified civil service? Postof- Q fice cTerks, letter carriers, rail- 5 way mail clerks, etc., in demand. $ Ages 18 to 45. Salary $75.00 to S $1.50 monthly. Hundreds of ap- pointments to fill vacancies, ex- S tension of service and Parcel post. Mr. H. L. Carl will be at $ the Electric hotel in Oregon City Tuesday, August 26th inquiring $ for young-men and women who 3 desire to qualify for one of these S appointments. He will be there S one day only, Tuesday, the 26th, S until 9 p. m. Those interested 3 should call, and see him without fail. 3 Keep Cool! A nice shady place, where . you can get . the cool breezes fr.m the river. Ice cream and all kinds of soft drinks. : The Open Air Ice Cream Parlors At West End of Suspen sion 'Bridge JURY FINDS HIM GUILTY AFTER SHORT DELIBERATION SENTENCE HELD SPOKE TO WOMAN ON STREETS Claims he Was "Studying Local Con ditions But Plea Does Jot Make Appeal to Court " yMany Present PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 22. Three Clergymen, a church woman and two newspaper men sat in judgment In Municipal court yesterday upon Rev. Henry W. Kuhlman, a Tillamook min ister accused of violating the mashing ordinance and found - guilty. Then they counseled mercy, and the court acceded to their recommendation and sent the minister out of court under a suspended sentence. The defendant said he had been do ing social investigating in Tillamook, and arriving in Portland at 10 p. m. Thursday, set out to how conditions in a large city compared with those in a smaller one. He had not gone far when he was accosted by a woman of the streets and stopped to talk with her. He laid stress upon the fact that he had 65 cents in his pocket at the time. Going a little farther, he saw two men come out of a saloon under the influence of liquor and stopped to gef their, viewpoint. The next person he encountered was Dr. Etta Hill Shnauff ner, who resides" at 424 Williams ave nue. He addressed her, saying, ac cording to her testimony: "Is your name Mabel?" "It certainly is not, sirrah!" she re plied, and just then Detective Price and Patrolman McCarthy stepped up and made the arrest. "Telegram for You, Sir!" TELL , You open it and read "it atten tively. You know it costs money to send a telegram that the person who sent it had something to say to you or he would not have gone to the expense. Everv line of advertising in to . day's ENTERPRISE is a message to you. The merchant or manufacturer BELIEVES HE HAS SOME THING OF INTEREST TO- YOU - OR HE WOULD NOT SPEND GOOD MONEY TO SAY IT. HIS ONLY CHANCE OF MAK ING IT PAY HIM IS TO MAKE HIS ADVERTISING PAY YOU! He is not wasting unnecessary words. He is coming right to the point making it as interesting as possible. Make the advertising in to-day's ENTERPRISE put money in your own pocket. BOOSTER EOR GOOD IS Charles W. Thatcher, one of the strongest good roads experts in the country, will speak in the Commercial club rooms to every lover of better highways, "Wednesday August 27. Through Secretary Freytag, the club has arranged for the reception of the lecturer when he arrives and has planned the meeting with the idea that it will be the largest of the kind that has ever been held in this sec tion of the state. Though other routes have been sug gested, he favors the one that will pass through Oregon City when the Lincoln and Washington National Highway is constructed. He believes that the town which has played such an important part in the history of the early Oregon and which for many years was the end of the old Oregon trail should be touched by the great highways on their way to Portland and Seattle. Colonel T!!atcher is known all over the West a,i one of the most enthusi astic boosters for good roads in the country and he has spent about 20 years of hie life travelling from place to place In the interest of better road building. Every place that he has stopped has furnished him with a large crowd of " boosters for better highways and his lectures and lessons have always ien followed by an im petus in road building. All of the road supervisors, automo bilists, farmers, and every other per son or class of persons interested In the construction of highways that are examples of road building are invited to the lecture at 2:30 o'clock Wednes day afternoon. It is also probable that another meeting will be arranged for the same evening in order to give more persons the opportunity- to hear the noted speaker tell what a road ought to be. ' . Winona Bible Conference WARSAW, Ind., Aug. 22. The nine teenth annual Bible conference . at Lake Winona was inaugurated today under conditions that promise the most notable session in the history of the famous organization. The confer ence will continue until the end of the month. The list of speakers is head ed by Secretary of State William J. Bryan. Other persons of note on the programme are Dr. G. Campbell Mor gan, of London, '"Gypsy" Smith, Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman: Bishop Hughes of San Francisco, Bishop Bell of Los Angeles, Rev. Dan Crawford, of Africa and Rev. Robert J. ("Catch-My-Pal") Patterson of Ireland. Pik if --k .11 tr? wM.'-zrzrt Fhotos by American Press Association. The mera recorded many interesting sights when the army of vets met at Gettysburg for the greatest reunion of blue and gray since the civil war. The task of feeding the old soldiers had a very human side to it, as these pictures prove. r"i;c)e Sam's regulars acted as official cook and bottle washer fonthe visiting army, and no one went hungry. Tbe men were fed 1n regular army camp style. . The top picture shows a line of vets at the kitchen, while the low er one shows one of the individual tables, with the old meu having the tinif of their lives '-' REVIVALISTS SERIES James and Estella Crooks, evangel ists, will open a series of revival serv ices in the First Methodist church of Oregon City Sunday morning, begin ning the" week on Monday night in a tent tabernacle that has been erected on the hill. The lumber for the summer taber nacle had not arrived in time for the James Crooks opening of tne services mere Sunday and arrangements have been made to hold them in the Methodist church on the first day. On Sunday evening, the evangelists will conduct union services In the church and the follow ing day the regular program for the week will commence. The two ministers are well known MAYOR SELECTS MEN ' TO GATHER DATA F. J. Tooze, L. Stipp, F.' J. Myers, and William Stonsrhave been appoint ed by Mayor Jones to investigate the rates of the Portland Railway, Light & Power company and to report to the railroad commission of the state the result of their findings. : The "committee was appointed on the request of the confmSssion. A hearing will be held in Portland when the commission will investigate the charges that the company has been giving certain shippers better -. and more advantagous rates than are pro vided in its published tariff. Iinfor mation from all of the points through which the line runs and in which it owns properly is being sent to the commission" . for consideration on the day of the. hearing. The -company has bean called upon to furnish its balance sheets for "the year and to present a report of the condition of the ' rolling stock: and other equipment. All of the "data that affects Oregon City will be given to the commission ""by the committee. - If 'A lS;rK X TO BEGIN OF MEETINGS by the church people of. the commun ity and are regarded as highly sue- cessful in awakening the religious life of the towns that they have visited. Unusual preparation has been made for the weekly services and special programs have been worked out for each night that the visiting preachers are here. ' Many of the congregations Estella Crooks of all the churches of the city will unite in working for the successful conclusion of the services and in pro moting the welfare of the revival. The tent has been erected at Eighth and Jackson streets. Rey. T. B. Ford, pas tjr Df the church, returned last night from his racation with his wife and daughters, Misses Sadie and Ivy Ford. GLADSTONE WANTS ITS BRIDGE BIGGER Negotiations will be opened with the new electric company that is planning a line through this section of the state to assist in the construction of a bridge over the Clackamas river near Gladstone when that company reaches the point and decides to build a bridge for its own use. At a meeting of the Gladstone Com mercial club, the members decided to ask the company to build the bridge wide onough for wagons' while it was constructing one for its own cars. It is planned, in this way to do away with the necessity of building two bridges in the same neighborhood as the people of Gladstone feel that they will soon have to have a new wagou bridge over the river at that point. The club also elected the following officers for the year: ,'H. E. Williams, president; -F A. Burdon, - vice-president; Hugh Hall, secretary;-W., H. Miller, treasurer; Henry Sterbig, ser geant at arms. , BRINGS SUIT AGAINST FATHER The spectacle of the son bringing suit against the father was presented Friday when Edward Hughes filed his complaint against Ellis Hughes for $803.48 in sums ranging from $1.40 to 5544.45. ' The son claims that his father failed to support the family and that he had to advance the- money for family nec essi ies. He mentions through the complaint that the things for which he paid the money were actually neces- sir: for r.ae support of the family ana he asks for a judgment that will re pay him tbe money that he has ex pended. , The complaint states 16 causes of action and recites the incidents sur rounding the alleged expenditure of money for the family support. - Tl CALL EOR WARRANTS Ml D. Latourette, city treasurer, has issued a call for the warrants payable out of the general fund and endorsed prior to Dec. 18, 1912, and for those out of the water fund payable Nov. 10, 1910. The interest on these warrants will stop Saturday as the call for the pa per immediately stops the payment of interest by the city. 8ENATOR JAMES H. BRADY COPrRlOHT HARRIS AND CWINQ. WASH. New United States 'senator from Idaho, succeeding Kirtland " I. Perky. He is a republican. A department of labor is contemp lated in the new charter which is be-, ing drafted for Detroit. One of the chief duties of the department will be "to adjust the labor - market through co-operation - with large employers." PURSUES GIRL- IS CLIFFORD ANDERSON CAUGHT BY POLICE AFTER TORMENT ING MISS STEELE BELIEVES HE HAS "PEEPING TOM" Neighborhood on Hill Bothered by Men Looking Into Windows at -All Hours of Night Police Busy Clifford Anderson, 26 years old and from Australia, was arrested by Chief Ed Shaw, of the police department Friday, following his pursuit of a pret ty girl, Miss Steele, from the Sixteenth street neighborhood Jo the city until she had to run into the ice house for protection. According to the story that the girl told to the officer, he had followed her for-a number of blocks and that he. had tormented her all of the way up the street. She finally 'became frightened by his pursuit and ran into the ice house where she appealed to R. B. Cox for help. He immediately took her into the building, ordered Anderson away from the place, and sent in a hurry call for police protec tion. , Denies Charge Anderson, in the city jail Friday af ternoon, denied that he had ever fol lowed any girl or that he had annoyed her in any way.- He disclaims all knowledge of the affair and says that he cannot remember even the circum stances under which he was arrested. - The chief says, however, that when he arrived at the ice house, Anderson was standing on the curb looking into the window of the building where the girl had gone for help and that he never left the place when the officer approached. As the girl lived in the neighbor hood where the "window peepers" have been at work for the last few days, the chief thinks that he has found one of them in Anderson. The man claims to be a teamster and said that he had conae to the city looking for work,' that he had been in Portland for awhi'e and had been working around through ' various parts of the state for a number of weeks. "Window peepers" have been mak ing life miserable for the last few nights for the residents around Six teenth street on the hill. Several complaints have been coming into the station that the neighborhood has been aroused by the presence of the peepers and that -they have appeared at vari ous houses at ail hours of the night. Whether the man now under arrest is the one that has been giving this trouble to the people on the hill, is not yet certain. So numerous have been the complaints to the police, however, that the case promises to rival that of "Peeping Tom" who got into print years ago for his proclivit ies along that line. The chief proposes to keep a man on the watch until he finds out who is responsible for the disturbance in the neightborhood and to then prosecute him to the limit. PORTLAND WINS Portland 4, Los Angeles 2'. . Sacramento 2, Venice 0. Oakland 9, San Francisco 5. Pacific Coast Standings Portland 562 Sacramento .519 Venice .497 Los Angeles 486 San Francisco .-. .479 Oakland 464 The classified ad columns of The Enterprise -satisfy your- wants. BARGAIN ARRESTED 1 mm ANY SEAT TODAY RICHARD DARLING . ,:' ' AND THE C o l o tv i a. 1 P lay e rs - In the famous 4-act comedy . "A BACHELOR'S ROMANCE" NEW PICTURES NEW PLAY . x. ' " 2 SHOWS TONIGHT2 TODAY TONIGHT THRFAT IFTTFR IIIILTII L.&.I lft.ll SENT TO COPS WRITER 'DECLARES HE WILL KILL WATCHMAN ON DUTY IN RESIDENT SECTION POSTAL INSPECTORS GETTING BUSV Start Investigation at Once and Plan to Prosecute Violator of Gov ernment Laws Peepers Are Troublesome "I herd there was going to have a night watch in Cansas City. Well, I will let you no there will .be no night watchman. If you do, I will tell the truth. We will shoot the first man that is watch man. It will take 365 watch man a year for there will not be but one man - for ever night. One man will only last one night in Cansas City. We will git you, deafy," letter to Mr. Willeby. Theatening letters warning the of ficers that the first men who are placed on duty in Ihe Kansas City dis trict will be killed have been received by the chief of police, Ed Shaw. - Several men who are known to be applicants for the job of night police man in the district around Sixteenth street have been sent these letters and turned them over to the chief. The letters are unsigned and declare that the writer, with others of his ilk, will shoot the first men who are placed on duty there and that they will kill the others as rapidly as the chief as signs them to that beat. Written on Scratch Paper The letters are written on -scratch paper in an almost illegible scrawl and are not signed. They will be turned over by the chief to the postal inspect ors for investigation and, if possible, the sender will be arrested and prose cuted for using the mails for such pur poses. Under the federal laws, the sending of threatening letters through the mails is a penitentiary offense and the government officers will use ev ery means to discover the writer and to prosecute him to the limit of the law. j v Only the men who have been appli cants for the position in the Sixteenth street district have received the let ters, as far as is now known. The writer is evidently some one who knows these men personally for he has referred to one of them by name and has mailed the letters in the Ore gon City postoff ice. Within a few days, the government investigations into the case will begin and the postal inspectors will co-operate with the police department in un earthing the writer and arresting him for the violation of he federal postal laws. KneW Local Conditions The officers presume that the send er of the threatening letters knows lo cal conditions rather well and that he knew the chief had planned to place a man in the territory on the hill. Within the last few days, there have come to headquarters numerous com plaints about "window peepers" in festing the neighborhood. So far, the "peepers" have managed to get away before the residents could notify the police and have done nothing more than to frighten them by their pres ence in that section of the city. The police chief has been on the look-out for suspects and believes it possible that in the arrest of Clifford Anderson Friday he has one of the men who have been giving trouble in that por tidn of the city. 5 MATINEE 0