' THE WEATHER 8 OREGON - CITY Fair; north $ westerly winds - CLACKAMAS COUNTY FAtR . . CAN BY, OR. ... 8EPT. 24, 25, 26, 27. - ; SSSSSS.&S$j Oregon Generally fair; nortn- $ westerly winds. - 3 "3 Washington Generally fair; nraorarlv nHnrla 2s S Idaho Generally fair. S WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1866. . VOL. VI. No. 51. OREGON CITY, OREGON, SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 1913. Per Week, Ten Cents. OKD: DAIRY MDE OF 'TYPHOID B Four times Ellen Deering Cangrov, tried to get rid of her ninth husband and not until Friday was she success ful. Worth $30,000 in her own name, she gave, under the terms of the set tlement, $2000 to her last soul mate, Grant Nicholas Grangrow, as "ali mony." Five of her husbands have died. Four have been divorced. 1 Intimations than an attempt at poisoning had been mad came out during the trial as did also a latter from J. S. Woods in which it was sug gested that an offer of money had been made for the testimony of a wit- -ness in rhe case. The fumily are Indians and have lived at Pendleton for a number of years. The complaint uponr which the woman brought the action againsi; her husband was that of desertion. Twice the case was brough in Multno mah county, once in Clackamas, and once in Marion. Not until it appeared in the circuit court of Clackamas county and the case had been turned over to Brow nell & Stone did the woman win her point and get the divorce decree for which she prayed. According to the testimony that was introduced, the husband took lunch with, her on June 14, 1912 and the next day was ill. According to a sum mary of the case made by the physi cians, he had taken strychnine. He believed that he had received it in the food that he ate at her table that day, and that she had made an effort to rid herself of him by other. mean3 than the divorce courts. This feature of the case was not gone into, how ever, and no attempt was made to prove the statement. Mrs. Grangrow married her ninth husband at Walla Walla, Octobter 1, 1908. They have lived at Pendleton a greater part of that time since. Sho is now a resident of Gladstone. The case was tried before Judge Eakin Friday. McNary, Shield & Smith, of Salem, represented the ds fense. The woman was G3 years of age and her husband 59. Husband Flirts.. Because he flirted with other wo men, Ida E. Simpson brought a di vorce action in the circuit court Fri day against her husband, Walter F. Simpson. She alleges that he went with other women over her protests and remonstrances, that he was cruel and inhuman to her, and that for days he would pout around the place and would not speak to her. Once, he whipped their nine-months-old child and left bruises and marks all over his body in spite of the moth er's objections to the punishment. He made her care for the child, she says, do a man's work around the house and garden, keep the place in order and do what repair work was necessary. She asks for $50 attorney fees, $25 a month alimony, and the custody of the minor child, George Edward. THE REAPER. CLASSMATES ATTEND FUNERAL 0F1EWS1E" William F. Skeen, aged 48 years, died at his home at Liberal Thursday night of tubercular trouble. He is survived by his widow and two chil dren. The funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon, inter ment in the Canby cemetery. His mother, Mrs. Sarah Skeen, is one of the old settlers of the state and was one of the first white children born . in Oregon. i Many of the classmates of Victor Justin, the 12-year-old newsboy who died Tuesday from typhoid fever, ac tended the funeral services Thursday at St. John's church. Requim High Mass was celebrated. The floral of ferings from the boy's classmates and friends were beautiful. Interment was made in the Catholic cemetery at Mountain View. The following were pall-bearers, all classmates: Otto Smith, Philip Soreghan, Bruno Weber, and August Reisbsrger. PLANS TO BE LAID FOR JUVENILE FAIR Mlrs. E. W. Scott, superintendent of the Oregon City division of the juven ile fair, will have a conference with her assistants and members of the committee at the office of the county Superintendent Gary in the court house at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon. At that time, they will lay plans for the character of the exhibit that this city will have at the fair when the samplss are collected. HEALTH PROBE RESULTS IN POSITIVE STATE MENT OF CAUSE Anderson in Philadelphia Press. FIRE CHIEFS TO COME Taft to Address Judges MONTREAL, Aug. 29. A confer ence of. judges of the United States and Canada is to be held in this city tomorrow as a preliminary to the an nual meeting next week of the Ameri can Bar association. The conference will be held under the auspices of the judiciary committee of the association. William H. Taft, former president of the United States, is eheduled to de liver the principal address. : . - ill T ODAY HERS THEREFOR OR- THE LOST ART OF MIND ING ONE'S OWN BUSINESS A PRESENT DAY SATIRE In Two Parts Behold in this film the uplifter, a peculiarity of the human species, quite convinced that every thing that is, is wrong. Forth to the uplift, he minds everybody's business but his own, until that business is as clean, pure and spotless as himself. Verily, in these later days, is there no school of art named "Minding One's Own Business" NEW YORK, Aug. 29. The forty first annual convention of the Inter national Association of Fire Engineers which is to be held in this city the coming week and for which the final preparations have now been complet ed, will bring together the greatest gathering of fire fighters the world has ever seen. Heads of the fire departments of nearly all the leading cities of the United States and Canada will be pres ent. In addition, the attendance will include representatives of many for egin cities. Among the fire chiefs from abroad will be A. R. Dyer, of London; Capt. Vivert and Lieut. LaPoint, of Paris; Thomas Purcell, of Dublin; Col. M. Kirhoff, of St Petersburg; Capt. Por dage, of Edinburgh; F. A. F. Schaen ker, of Frankford-on-the-Main; Felix Mitchel'., of Cape Town; C. E. Bening ton, Of Pretoria; D. J. Stein, of Mel bourne; August Deering, of Honolulu; and C. E. Weidman, of Panama. Present Papers. . The convention will have its formal j opening at the Grand Central Palace I on Monday. Mayor Gaynor will wel come the visitors. At this and the subsequent business sessions a num ber of papers will be presented. Fire Commisioner Johnson and Chief Ken Ion, of the New York department, will discuss "Fire Insurance and Its Re lation to Incendiarism." Chief Henry C. Bunker ana William Clark, direcor of public safety of Cin cinnati', will talk on "The Inspection of Buildings and Contents by Msmbers of a Uniformed Force." Other pa pers will be read by Chief A. V. Brun nett, of Birmingham, Ala., on "Motor Fire Apparatus," and by Charles S. Demorest, of the New York fire de partment, on "The Gasoline Motor Pumping Engine." To Make Tests. Wednesday there will be scientific tests of various kinds of apparatus at the pier at the foot of West Fifty fourth street. Here a grandstand ha3 been erected, from which the visiting firemen can watch operations. A mo tor engine and a steam pump will be placed side by side on the pier. In the first test the motor will be run for six successive hours with 100 pound3 pressure at the pump, the test requir- i ing a certain number of gallons to be ! delivered at the nozzle each minute. For six hours more 150 pounds pres sure will be carried, and the engine will be run steadily with an increas ing pressure of fity pounds -every six hours until a maximum pressure of 300 pounds has been reached. Getting the Most for Your Money Does not always mean buying the cheapest thing. It does mean buying what you actually want at tha time you want it, and buying sure quality at the lowest market price. The advertising columns of The ENTERPRISE, ..are a shopping . guide. They contain the an nouncements of reputable merch ants and manufacturers who are bidding for your patronags. Each advertiser in his way is trying to render you the service you want. Each has faith in his goods or he would not advertise them. A minute's reading put you in touch with the market. It gives you information for to day to-morrow-or . the to-morrows yet to oome. You learn what the world is do ing and you learn the value of a dollar. Get the habit of reading - the advertising. Comparison wi'.l be made with the time consumed by the steam pump in delivering the same amount of water at the nozzle. , Big Parade. Friday will be the day of the big parade. More than 1,500 members of the New York department will take part. There will be apparatus represent ing 150 companies and 3,500 uniform ed volunteers and members of raid departments outside of this city. The parade will, in a way portray the his tory of organized fire-fighting, for ev ery sort of fire-fighting apparatus will be shown. There will be examples of the old hand apparatus. Horse drawn engines will be in line, and as a cli max will be seen the modern motor driven engines and carts. At the conclusion of the parade the firemen will make their way to River side Drive for the dedication of the firemen's monument erected there, The late Bishop Potter suggested the construction of tha monument follow ing the death of Deputy Chief Kruger of the New York department in 1907. TO STUDY CURES FOR ATTI NEW YORK, Aug. 29. For several years the authorities of the city" have continued their warfare ,' against un safe theatres until now Fire Commis sioner Johnson, who has been leading the campaign, is satisfied that the theatres of New York city are about as safe from firs as it is possible to make them. Commissioner Johnson is of the opinion that the danger, if there is any, is not from the possibility of fire, but from panie, which may be caused by any trivial incident, even when there is no fire. He recently held a conference with the managers of the principal theatres of the city with a view of devising means to prevent the outbreak of panics in theatres (Continued on Page 3.) Back to the milk cans of the Star Dairy, the state health board has traced the source of the Oregon City typhoid fever epidemic. Either directly or indirectly every case that has come to the attention of the authorities on public health may be blamed to the colon bacdlli found in the water with which -the dairy washed its milk cans. One third of all of the consumers that the company served have fallen victims to the disease. Out of the 117 persons who are on the regular routes of the dairy, 38 typhoid cases were directly due to the contaminated water that was used.and the remaining nine cases are traced, by round about methods, to the same source. The board also condemned the private wells of the city as dangerous to the public health, declared that bacteriological tests meant nothing as to their condition, prohibited persons who had had the disease from working in dairies for a year; repeated its belief that the city water is the purest in the state, and called upon the people of the community to boil every drop of water that was used and that had not been taken from theity mains. In accordance with the suggestions of the board, Mayor Linn E. Jones issued a proclamation Friday night calling upon the residents of Oregon City to follow the instructions that the health officers had given and warn ing them to carefully inspect the sources of their milk and water supplies. In conference with the council in the rooms of the Commercial club Friday night, the members of the state board laid out the results of. its in- vestigations. It showed that, to date,; there have been 47 cases of typhoid fever in the community. Thirty-eight j of these cases are directly chargable 1 to the contaminated water that the , dairy used in which to wash its milk j cans. I Startling facts are revealed by the ; board's exposure of conditons in the ' city and the investigations that It ' conducted to discover those facts.; One-third of the entire list of consum ers of the dairy have fallen victims to the disease in the weeks that It has raged unchecked in the city. ThoBe cases that the health officers have been unable to directly trace to the dairy are charged against it through circumstantial evidence that leads them to believe that all of the in-; stances reported had the same com- j mon source. Surface Wells Condemned. 1 Surface wells are condemned by the board. Bacteriological tests of well water mean nothing, the physicians told the council.. Well water may. test pure when it is examined in the laboratory of the state and the first rain that comes may send its quota of filth and disease, through under ground channels, back into the well that has heretofore had waters pure and free from the baccilli of typhoid. The doctors declare that there is no sure way of dealing with the wa ters of a well when used for domestic purposes except boiling and they call upon the people who do not get their supply from the city's mains to thor oughly sterilize, in this way, every drop that is used in their homes. " Not only must well water be boiled, but the water that is used in ;the household for washing vegetables: that are to bo eaten raw or that cleanses any of the kitchen utensils that are not afterwards heated to a high temperature on the range must be sterilized in order to afford abso lute protection. City Water Pure. Repeated guarantees of the purity of the city water were given by the members of the board to the city coun cil Friday night. Repeated tests, running over the period since Decem ber 15, have convinced the health of- ( Continued on page 3) Sanaa Be Broadminded. GOME AND SEE THIS SHOW DANCE -TonigKt - - AT - Canemah Park Bowker's Orchestra of Portland New Denver Meat' Market 7th and Railroad Special Sale Pure Pork Lard 12'2 cents per pound in 3, 5 and 10-pound pails. We handle first class fresh and smoked meats, and give S. & H. Green Trading Stamps with ev ery 10c purchase. Benedictine Abbot to Lecture Here NEW YORK, Aug. 29. The Catholic clergy and laity of this city are pre paring to welcome Abbot Gasquet, the head of the English Benedictines, who is to arrive here tomorrow from Eu rope. Abbot Gasquet is a churchman of great distinction and is chairman of the commission appointed by the Pope to undertake the revision of the Vulgate. He is coming over to.deliver a series of lectures in the United States and Canada. Celebrate Pickle Day PLATTEVILLE, Co'.o., Aug. 29. Residents' of Platteville and vicinity suspended business today and joined in the festivities of the annual "Pickle Day" carnival. The festivities were conducted on an elaborate seals, for this year's cucumber crop in this sec tion was the largest on record. BEAVERS TAKE ANOTHER Portland 3, Sacramento 2 (10 innings) :. San Francisco 2,' Los Angeles 1. Venice , Oakland 1. Coast League Standings Portland.- , . . .. . .569 ... Sacramento ..' , ...... .500 . Venice .... ; . . ; r. ........ . . . .' .500 '. Los Angeles .483 San Francisco .". .483 Oakland ......... . . . .469 Exchanges Close Until Tuesday NEW YORK, Aug. 29. The New York Stock Exchange, the Cotton Ex change and virtually' all the other big exchanges in this city closed today for the Labor Day holiday and will not resume operations until Tuesday. IBJ TODAY S RED LETTER DAY Bring your STAMP BOOKS to the Premium Parlor located in our store and receive TEN Zf GREEN STAMPS FREE NO PURCHASE NECESSARY ' Save your soap wrappers, tobacco tags and coupons. We exchange them for stamps 1 Special SALE Today ON SHOES CUT OUT THIS COUPON 10 Extra Stamps Free With each 50c purchase we give 10 extra stamps, upon presenta tion of this coupon. BANNON & CO. Special SALE Today ON REMNANTS SSI SB wl The following Oregon City stores give the famous Hf&C stamps :: BANNON & CO., Department Store DENVER Meat Market, Batchers JONES Drug Co., Druggists PRICE BROS., Clothiers LARSEN & Co. , Grocers 's- M 'S Si J OREGON CITY, ORE. MASONIC TEMPLE BLDG.