Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, August 31, 1913, Image 1

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    THE WEATHER
S OREGON CITY Fair; north- $
S westerly winds.
8 Oregon Generally fair; north- i
westerly winds. ' S
Washington Generally fair; -s
westerly winds. $
8 Idaho Generally fair. $
CLACKAMAS COUNTY
FAIR
CAN BY, OR." '
SEPT. 24, 25, 26, 27.
WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1866
VOL. VI. No. 52.
OREGON CITY, OREGON, : SUNDAY, AUGUST 31, 1913.
Per Week, Ten Cents.
THREE MARRIAGE
KNOTS ARE CUT
FEDERAL
RURAL CARRIERS ! DEAD MAN PARTY
Harry K. Thaw, Who Escaped From Asylum, and
His Wife, Evelyn Nesbit Thaw, Who Feared Attack.
GET
COMING HERE
TO
ORDERS
RSUTS
COMPUUNT
COURT TAKES NEW STEP
GIVING EACH PARENT
A CHILD.
BY
GRANTS DIVORCE: DIVIDES HOME
Desertion an Charges of Cruelty From
Basis for Two More Complaints
in the Circuit
Court.
Judge Eakin announced a new pro
cedure in settling the difficulties in
domestis relations when Saturday he
directed that Charlis H, Shelden, Jr.,
nine years old, should be given into
the custody of the father an that the
daughter, Patricia Hops Shelden, five
years of age, should be allowed to re
main with the mother. Unusually,
both children would be given to the
anther.
Th action of the court was part
of lii.s :le"ioion in the suit brought by
C. H. Sheldon against his wife, Ethel
Sheldon, on thf grounds of desertion.
In the complaint., the plaintiff alleged
that he had moved to Oregon in 1910
and that his wife hud, at that time,
promised to come to this state when
he sent for her.
forts to get her here, she has always
refused to eome an live with him and
an action was finally brought asking
for the decree on the ground of de
sertion. They were married Dec. 31,
1903.
Other Divorces.
The application for divorce of Ger
trude H. Knight against Henry Knight
on the ground of desertion, was filed
in the circuit court Saturday. She
also claimed that he had deserted her
just before the child, John William,
was born an asks for $25 a month ali
mony. They were married May 24,
1911 at Chicago.
Divorces were also granted to Elma
A. Rutt against Lloyd Rutt and Eliza
beth Siemens against Jesse J. Siemens.
Boston Cigarmakers' Union 97, one
of the strongest labor organizations in
the country, has voted not to admit
foreigners to membership until they
have been in America at least one
year. In the past it has been the
practice of the union to admit for
eigners who held union . cards from
their own unions abroad, but the old
er members of the union, it is said,
have discovered that it is becoming
more difficult for them to retain their
jobs or find new ones, while the for
eigners have been given preference in
some of the larerer clirar fartrrioa
THIRTY APPLICATION 1 FOR FIN
AL PAPERS HAVE BEEN
FILED.
GOVERNMENT TO CONTEST OTHERS
December First Has Been Set as Date
for Hearing (Many Hold Only .
First Certificates But
' Can Vote.
Thirty applications for citizenship
papers have already been filed with
county clerk for the hearing on De
camber 1.
Since the government has instruct
ed its agents to contest every paper
that was taken out before 1906, those
who filed their declaration of inter
tion and intent no farther are coming
into the office of the clerk and fil
ing their applications for the final
paper.
Many of the residents of the coun
ty are holders of but the first papers,
alowed to "vote and have almost p.U
of the rights an privileges of full cit
izenship an they have not seen the
necessity of taking out any further
papers tfrom the government. The
authorities, however, plan to contest
every paper that bears a date prior to
1906 ond to make it as har as pos
sible for a would-be citizen to ge'.i
his application approved as they pos
sibly can.
MORE HOBOES ARE
SENT ON THEIR WAY
Twelve hoboes vere marched to the
city limits by' the police Saturday
morning an ordered to keep away from
Oregon City.
Within the last few days, the cops
have gathered in a large number of
hoboes beating their way south and
have taken them to the city jail for
the night.
On the next morning, however,
they have released the tramps on the
promise never to return an have giv
en them an insight of what will hap
pen to them If they are ever seen
around here again.
There are 391,350 government posi
tions now under civil service regula
tion in the United States.
Miss Anna T. Smith left Friday for
Bellingham, Wash., where she goes to
take a position as first grade teacher
in the city schools. Miss Smith is
a competent primary teacher having
specialized in this work for several
years.
GRAND
nounce
I The management ot THE I
wishes to an-
that on next
Tuesday 1
i
i;
They will run
"A Proposal From
the Duke"
Being the first of a series of pictures il
lustrating the story of
"Who Will Marry Mary"?
A Sequel to
"What Happened to Mary"
Which ran in "The LADIES' WORLD"
a short time ago. If you care to follow
' IFjR ' ' ' ; ill J J
- 1 f
Photos copyngni. 19i3, Dy American Press Association.
After Harry K. Thaw's sensational escape from the Matteawan asylunj In New York state, where he had spent
five and a half years, fears were felt for the safety of his wife, Evelyn Nesbit Thaw. The belief was" expressed that
Harry Thaw might attempt to take her life, and she was guarded by police In New York city, where she was play
ing in vaudeville. It was claimed that Thaw's escape .in, an automobile from Matteawan to another state protected
him from being brought back, as he was In the position of being insane in New York, hut sane In any other state.
Latest pictures of Thaw and his wife are here shown, the one of Mrs. Thaw having been taken recently upon her ar
rival from Europe. A general view of Matteawan asylum is also shown.
SUNDAY SCHOOL TO
HAVE PICNIC MONDAY
The Sunday school of the First
Methodist Episcopal church will give
a picnic Monday at Schnore's park.
The officers, scholars and their many
friends who can join them will meet
at the church on the corner of Main
and Seventh streets at 9:30 o'clock.
Take the car at the west end of the
brige at ten o'cloc'.; for Willamette.
The park Ts a dalightful lace for
the children, as there are swings,
merry-go-rounds, tables for use, and
other conveniences. There will Da
amusements of various sorts. The
picnic will be in charge of superinten
dent 5olwand and Mr. HolHngs worth,
his assistant, who will look after the
children and see that they have plen
ty to eat. These gentlemen will be
assisted by the women who are as
sociated with them in Sunday school
work. A good time is assured.
Making Woman's
Work Lighter
Do you know that there ara
something like 50,000 patented
articles, the purpose of each of
which is to lighten soma part of
a woman's work?
Do you know that great com
panies have scores of high priced
experts doing nothing else but
working out new ideas for the
household?
It is an education to walk
through a modern housswara
siore; there Is something new
every day.
Labor saving devices form a
particularly Important part in a
woman's life during the hot
weather.
Merchants and manufacturers
bring these new ideas to public
notice through the advertising
columns of the daily papers.
Watch the advertising in The
Enterprise for suggestions for
lifting some of the burdens.
BOYS TAKE JAUNT UP
il this story, be at j
I THE GRAND
. ; . Next Tuesday 1
We will close all day on 1
- LABOR DAY v
L
We believe in the ob
servance of that day
PRICE BROS.
For Proper Clothes
CHICAGO CUTS OUT
NOISE AND CABARETS
Chicago, Til., Aug. 30. Every day
is to resemble Sunday in Chicago, if
some of the new city ordinances which
came into effect today serve the pur
pqss for which they are intended. Of
most general interest and importance
is the anti-trust law. This is expect
ed to throw the hurly-gurdy players,
organ grinders and mud-gutter musi
cians into 'the discard- and absolutely
prohibits the yells and cries of the rag
pickers, knife grinders and all street
peddlers.
Another of the new ordinances is
the anti-cabaret law. This forbids the
form of restaurant-dance hall enter
tainment which of late has swept like
a great wave from New York to San
Francisco and has probably reached
the zsnith of its popularity in Chi
cago. The law prphibitihg tha cab
aret show makes no discrimination be
tween the cheap music hall and the
fashionable and high-priced restau
rants and hotel cafes.
Thanks to another of the ordinances
put into efect today it will now be
posible for a Chicagoan to use the
telephone without getting Jones' mother-in-law
on the line when he wants
the druggist. Nor will the sweet-voiced
central longer ignore the impor
tunities of the subscriber who gets
hot under the collar after calling a
quarter of an hour in vain for a num
ber. All of these little worries of life
are expected to be abolished as a re-
'suit of the establishment of a new
telephone complaint an service bureau,
for which the city has appropriated
$10,000. The new bureau is expected
to hear every grievance ot once and
give full satisfaction. .
A union of telephone operators, com
posed exclusively of women, has been
organized in Shreveport, La.
; The British Medical association is
seriously considering the ad viability
of organizing as a labor union.
The Western Federation of Miners
reports that it gained $3,244,500 in
wages for its members during the
past year. - -
ANOTHER ONE FOR BEAVERS
Coast League Standing
At Portland Portland 4, Sacramen
to 3.
At San Francisco San Francisco
2, Los Angeles, 0.
At Venice Venice 3, Oakland 2
(15 innings.)
W. L. Pet.
Portland ' 79 59 572
Venice 75 74 503
Sacramento 69 70 497
San Francisco . . : ,72 76 437
Los Angeles 70 76 479
Oakland 69 79 466
The annual convention of the Na
tional Federation of Postoffice clerks
will bsgin its sessions in Indianapolis
September 1.
. . REP. JAMES R. MANN
:
COPYRIGHT HARM A KWtNO, WASH.
Or Illinois. Leader of the'Republi
can minority in the House.
Geo. Bridges and Geo. Ott of Ort-
gon City and Blake Bowen of Willam
ette made a trip up the Willamette riv
er in Mr. Bridges new motor boat,
Eschoal A.
The party left Oregon City oh Mon
day an returned Friday. They went as
far as Salem and stopped at Butter
ville, Wilsonville and other points en
route. -
At one point on their trip they ran
short of gasoline, and it was necessary
to make a landing and go several miles
in search of a new supply.
ONE HUNDRED DELEGATES FROM
ALL SECTIONS OF STATE
- ON THEIR WAY
SESSION HOURS TO BE BUSY ONES
NAME IS INCLUDED IN SUIT TO
QUIET TITLE THROUGH A
MISTAKE OF ATTORNEY
Many Things Will Be Crowded Into
Time Convention is at Work
Speakers to Discuss
Live Topics.
COURT STRAIGHTENS OUT TANGLE
One hundred rural mail carriers
from all sections of the state will
gather in Oregon City Sunday for
their two days' of convention work.
Problems that confront the service
will be discussed and reports of the
committees on various phases of the
associational work will be read. Sun
day, however, will be devoted large
ly to the arrival of the delegations
from the various cities and towns of
the state and to their preparation for
the work on the following.
Meetings of committees will be held
during the afternoon and at night
the association will be the guest of
the Bell Theater. Little actual work
will be done until 8 o'clock Monday
morning when the formal opening of
th convention will be held at the
Commercial club.
Among the speakers who are ex
pected will be Paul E. Keyser, an at
torney in the postal service. He will
make an address of interest and, in
cidentally, will be shown through the
Oregon City postoffice and the needs
of the city for a new federal build
ing thoroughly explained to him.
The day will be a busy one for the
carriers as they expect to crowd in
to the hours of session many impor
tant features of their annual prob
lems. '
Issues Order That .Substitute His De
scendants' in Action by Ab-
stract Company of
:'','- City.
A dead man was a "party to a com
plaint in the circuit court of Glakamsa
county until Judge Eakin Saturday
straightened out the tangle by issu
ing or erder substituting the names
of his descendants.
When the orginal action of th9
Clackamas Abstract & Trust company
against W. D Woodcock and many
defendants was brought to quiet title
to a piece of property in the county,
the name of Joseph Chammess ap
peared in the complaint.
Not until the case was well started
did the attorneys discover that he had
been dead for sometime and asked
ua. i"e cuun issueu ou oruer suubuiu
ing the names of his lieneal descen
dants in the complaint.
"THIS IS MY 48TH BIRTHDAY"
Frank E. Dormus.
The question of removing the na
tional headquarters of the Journey
men Tailors' union from Bloomington.
111., has been left to a referendum
vote of the members.
Timothy Healy, of New Tork, has
been re-elected president of the Inter
national Brotherhood of Stationery
Firemen of the United States and Can
ada. It will be his eighth term in
the office. ...
Frank E. Dormus, the new chairman
of the Democratic vongressional com
mittee, was born in Venango county,
Pennsylvania, August 31, 1865. In boy
hood he removed with his parents to
Michigan and his education was re
ceived in the public schools of the
town of Portland in that state.
In 1885 Mr. Doremus established o
newspaper in Portland and continu
ed as its publisher until 1899. In that
year, after having attended law col
lege, he established himself in law
practice in Detroit. Prior to his elec
tion to congress three years ago he
had served one term in the Michigan
legislature and had filled the posi
tions of assistant corporation counsel
and city controller of Detroit.
Congratulations Too.
Wilhelmina, Queen of the Nether
lands, 33 years old today.
Yoshihito, Emperor of Japan , 34
years old today.
Earl of Shaftesbury, 44 years old
today.
Brig. Gen. Anson Hills, U. S. A., re
tired, 79 years old today.
Rt. Rev. Alfred N. Randolph, P. E.
bishop of Southern Virginia, 77 years
old today.
The official reports show that at the
end of 1912 there were 621 trade
unions in Australia, with a total mem
bership of 433,224, of whom 17,670
were women. All the unions have
made large increases in their mem
berships the past few years.
St. Louis seeks to be the headquar
ters and permanent convention city of
the International Brotherhood of Elec
trical Workers. The headquarters
are now at Springfield, 111. The pro
posal to transfer them will be dis
cussed at the annual convention of
the organization in Boston next week.
tNlnltd READY FOR
RACES AT BIG PARK
Hartford, Conn., Aug. 30. The New
England end oMhe grand circuit will
wind up with the meeting to be open
ed here Monday under the auspices
of the Connecticut Fair association.
During the past two days the stables
at Charter Oak park have filled rapid
ly with the summer campaigners from
the Empire city track and elsewhere,
and the association management is
looking forward to a successful meet
ing.
The big feature of the program wf
be the classic Charter Oak, - $ 10,0
for 2 : 14 class trotters. The oth.
state events of he week will include
the Capital City, 2:08 class trotters,
3,000; th Corinthian, 2:20 class trot
ters, $2,000; the Acorn, 3-year-old trot
ters eligible to the 2:20 class, $3,000;
the Juvenile, for 2-year-olds eligible to
2:30 class trotting, $2,000; a free-for
all pace, $2,500, and the Nuhmeg for
2:12 pacers, $2,000.
r
sk.
The miners' union of Spain has
adopted a programme declaring in fa
ver of an eight-hour day, a minimum
wage, provision for the aged and dis
abled, compulsory insurance, abolition
of all job work, and the abolition of
night duty underground, or, where
that Is not possible, fifty per cent ex
tra pay for such work.
Steam laundries in the United
States employ 109,484 persons.
School teachers of Copenhagen, Den
mark, receive wages jot $320 a year, s
New Denver. Meat Market 7th
, - and Railroad
Special Sale
Pure Pork Lard 12'2 cents per
pound in 3, & and 10-pound pails.
We handle fjrst class fresh and
smoked meats, and give S. & H.
Green Trading Stamps with ev
ery 10c purchase.
1 ............. ............i
i
OUR STORE WILL BE
CLOSED
ALL. DAY
Wl O N D A Ir7'
In Observance of
LABOR OAY
This custom is general
throughout the country.
It is a day set apart for
recreation and pleasure
for people who work
MASONIC TEMPLE BLDG.
OREGON CITY, ORE.