"4$8 A THE WEATHER , 4 Oregon City Rain; southerly $ winds. Oregon Rain west,., showers east portion; southerly winds, high southwesterly along the coast. Washington Rain. CLACKAMAS COUNTY FAUR CAN BY, OR. SEPT. 24, 25, 26, 27. WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1866. 4" VOL. VI. No. 56. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1913. Pir Week, Ten Cent! i j NK-UP, OVER 01 JOB ONE DOCTOR REMOVED, ANOTH ER RESIGNS, AND THE REST WON'T TAKE PLACE WANT NORRIS AS HEALTH OFFICER Physicians Ask County Court to Give Office to Man Who Had it For merly Petition Will be Refused W. C. Schultze is not the county health officer. Neither is Dr. J. W. Norris. Though the old board of county commissioners appointed Dr. Schultze as the guardian of the public health in the county, he has filed his resig nation with the county clerk and has not served a single day. At the same time the doctors of the city have .filed a petition with the county board asking for the appoint ment of Dr. Norris to the position and his reinstatement in the office that he held soma time ago. This will not he done. The county board will refuse to grant the petition of the doctors of the city and county and will attempt to select some other man for the po sition that has been made vacant by the resignation of Dr. Schultze. Doctors Sign Petition But, as Dr. Schultze and most of the other doctors of the city have signed the petition for the reinstate ment of Dr. Norris and as there seems to be an agreement that none of them will accept the position, the county board faces an unusual situa tion in attempting to make any ap pointment at all. From the staements of atorneys as to the law, the board will have to se'ect an officer who is a resident of the county seat. The physicians of the county seat have signified their intention ' of refusing to accept any appointment by signing the petition for Dr. Norris. The board will not appoint Dr. Norris and the county health officer's position will probably go begging. The names that are to be found on the petition asking for Dr. Norris' ap pointment are: M. C. Strickland, C. H. Meissner, Guy Mount, Hugh Mount, W. C. Schultze, C. A. Stuart and H. A. Dedman. This list includes the graater num ber of the doctors who are residents of the county saat and who would be eligible under the law for the position to be filled by the board. Indians Now Learning Trades LAWRENCE, Kan., Sept. 4. Nearly 22 new Indian students from the five civilized tribes in Oklahoma enrolled today at the opening of the term at Haskell Institute. The number of ' new comers is considered in excess of any previous year and is taken as an indication that, the Indians are be ginning to appreciate the advatages of a vocational training. I l i l I i l l I I I I I I I I i i hi A Modern Man's Watch kJ it In igersolr Trenton We find that the Ingersoll Trenton Watch is the happy combination of two extremes extreme accu- racy; extreme economy. That is why it is one of our com plete lines of dependable watches. Burmeister & Andresen Jewelers i i r t i 1 1 1 1 Suspension Bridge Corner Oregon City Oregon New Denver Meat Market 7th and Railroad Ave. We handle first class fresh, salt, and smoked meats. WE GIVE S. & H. GREEN TRADING STAMPS WITH EV ERY 10c PURCHASE. Highest market prices for stock . . and poultry. . Phone Pacific 410 Home 4133. FUNNY SKULL BROKEN; LIES IN RAIN SLIPS OFF DRENCHED DECK OF FREIGHT AND IS LEFT UNCONSCIOUS FINDS WAV INTO CITY FOR HELP Walks Unaided from Scene to Get Aid After Accident' Happens on Sharp Curve of Road Goes to Portland Running along the deck of a freight train soaked by several pouring rains as she was swinging around the curve near Gladstone, J. S. Cushing, a "bra kie" was thrown to the ground, left in the dithch for several hours in the drenching rain with his skull fractur ed and his back injured until he re gained consciousness and walked into the city for help. Cushing was a brakeman on one of the freights that passad through Ore gon City Wednesday night. He wa's about 30 years old and unmarried. He was at the rear end of the train as she was making the curve near Gladstone and attempted to reach the head of the freight. . The deck of the train was as slip pery as glass. His feet went out from under him and he droppe to the ground like a bag of lead, struck his head on a roc!, fractured the skull and injured his back. Through the seven hours of the night in the drenching rain he staid there until he regained consciousness and could make his way into the city. He reached the S. P. station here and was placed on board a Portland train that took him to the hospital for med ical attention. WOMAN'S NOTES STIR UP FAMILY TROUBLES Because he received letters from other women couched in the most en dearing and affectionate terms and because she believed that he was "a base deceiver and falsifier", Estella E. Archibald filed suit in tha circuit court Thursday against her husband, Harry A .Archibald. Through her complaint, she refers to another woman who she said wro'e letters to the defendant and signed them "from your loving wife, Anna". She alleges that he persuaded her to leave the state and to take a. visit to Californian points so that he might run down to Portland and Hend the month with another woman whom he knew there. She also alleges that he dw make the trip to Portland and that for the period in which she was visiting in California, he spent his time with an other woman and held her out to the public as his wife. The complaint racites that they were married in Chicago, Mftrch 28, 1911. Other Divorces Henry Fonville brought a divorce against his wife, Iva Fonville on the grounds that she had deserted him though he had at all times been a l;ind and affectionate husband to wards her. They were married at SuVivan, Mo., May 4, 1895. In accordance with the provisions of the stipulations between counsel that had been filed in the circuit court some time ago. the divorce suit of Janette Jaggar against Frank Jag gar was dismissed and the marriage settlement that had been arranged out of court was approved. Other divorces heard and granted bv the court were those of James H. Willson against Bertha A. Willson, and Charles Angier against Nellie Angier. WRECK TABERNACLE "And the winds blew, and the storms came, and the rain fell" and the tabernacle of the First Methodist church blew down Tuesday night pre venting Evangelists James and Es tella Crooks, from holding their revi val services there on Wednesday or Thursday nights. The church services have not bee materially disturbed by the accident, however, for the preachers conducted the revival in the First Methodist church Thursday night before a large congregation, many persons coming from the several other churches of the city to attend the special services. The revival will be continued Fri day night at 7:45 o'clock and the tent will soon be in condition again for the use of the visiting ministers. Statisticians Meet in Vienna VIENNA, Sept. 4. Government sta tisticians and census officials from many countries, including the United States and Canada, met in Vienna to day for the opening of the fourteenth session of the International Statisti cal institute. The institute was founded In 1885 for. the purpose of promoting the progress of administra tive and scientific statistics, and es pecially of securing as far as possible the- comparability of international sta tistics by uniform schedules and com pilation. ... . Inquiry Ordered Into Charges of Bad Food Used at Ellis Island Station. ' ?f " Photo of Ellis island copyright by American Press Association. If allegations made by the bureau of municipal research of New York city are true then the hundreds of thousands of immigrants who land at Ellis is land. New York Iwrbor. each year are badly fed. Their first taste of thinzs American is not what they had thought it would be. It is charsed that rotten fish and meat and bad butter a,-e used tor the immigrants. Secretary of La bor Wilson directed an investigation, and United States Commissioner of Im migration Andrew Cnminetti summoned several Immigration officers to aid him In the probe. The committee was instructed thoroughly to look into the conditions under which the government cares for the immigrants. A picture of Commissioner Caniinetti is shown, with a birdseye view of Ellis Island taken from an Heroplam EXAMINERS FIND NO ONE IS RESPONSIBLE Following the verdict of the coro ner's jury at the inquest over the body of Mrs. John Kelly, which placed the responsibility for MJrs. Kelly's death with the Southern Pacific Co. and charged that corporation with negli gence, the company today issued a statement of the findings of the Board of Inquiry, composed of E.. W .Coch ran, general manager Oswego Lumber Co.; H. B. Bichner, an Oswego mer chant; C. W. Martyn, assistant super intendent; F. M. Surer, assistant sup erintendent, and D. F. Knapp, master car builder. Mrs. Kelly was killed last Monday at Goodin, near Oswego, while re turning from a picnic. She was near the track, when a freight train passed, and several pieces of slab wood fell from a car. and struck a number of p eople. Mrs. Kelly was instantly kill ed and several others received minor injuries. The report of the Board of Inquiry for the Southern Pacific fol lows: Board's Report "At about 5:45 P. M., Monday, Sep tember 1, 1913, Train No. 56, Engine No. 2204, Engineer S. K. Willett. Fire man u. L. Wise, Conductor D. J .Bry an, and Brakemen B. Hamburg, H. Blow and L. C. Bond, passed through Goodin, a non-agency station, running at a speed of not to. exceed 25 miles per hour. It was daylight and tha weather was clear. The deceased was standing within six feet from outside rail, and wa's struck by a piece of slabwood, four feet in length and not more than 15 inches in width and two and one-half inches thick. Approxi mately 15 pieces of slabwood fell from the car, and it could not be deter mined definitely which piece struck her. Death followed almost instantly. "We, the Board of Inquiry, after ex amining car and its load and track conditions at point of derailment, and reviewing statements of train and en gine crews in charge of Train No. 56, find that the accident was due to slab- wood falling from top of car S. P. 78571 as train was rounding curve. We find that there was no individual responsibility." BEAVERS WAKE UP Coast League Standings At Oakland PorT.and 9, Oakland 1. At Sacramento Sacramento 3, Los Angeles 1. W -L PC Portland 82 62 .569 Venice 80 76 .513 Sacramento 73 72 .503 San Francisco 74 81 .478 Los Angeles 73 80 .477 Oakland - ...... '. . 72 83 .465 : Old Man Asks Court : : To Take Name From : : The Charity List : Perhaps for the first time in the records of the county court, a man who has been on the pharity list for a number of years has applied for the removal of his name and the cancella tion of the order that brought him in monthly revenues. f.- .? t n WntAenofor Wm by ! menu, j. j. ocuu, on years oi age, tells the court that he believes he is nowj able to take care of himself and I can support himself without the as I sistance that the county has hitherto given to him. Goes Into He plans to pet Business into busfness for himself and to make his own living j s ordination more than fifty years hereafter. His friends have admired ja" Bishop Moore has been active in his pluck in determining at his age tIle affairs of the Methodist Episcopal in life that he would no longer be a . church. In addition to his 'work as charge upon the county but that he j a Pastor he has served as editor of would earn his living for himself j t?le church publications and as chan The application is a novelty at the cellor of tlle University of Denver, court house for in most cases of thisor some years he was stationed in kind the officers of the court wbu'd i the Far East witQ supervision of the have to remove the man's name over Methodist missions in China Japan his protest and the protests of many oi his mends. The work of checking over the county list each month and determin ing those who are, from their unfor tunate circumstances, entitled to char ity is an undertaking for the counly court and for its officers. But the work has been done of late until the contains only those who are entitled to assistance from the county funds. BANK GETS STOLEN MONEY RETURNED 3. T. M)ass, sheriff of Clackamas county, returned $365 in gold and sil ver to the Milwaukee bank Thursday after Virgil Perrine had been locked behind the bars of the Oregon State penitentiary and the money was no longer necessary as a matter of evi dence. Since last July, when it was found on the prisoner after he had been cap tured in the swamp following his rob bery of the bank, the sheriff has had the money in the county safe and has held it as evidence for the trial that he. thought the young bank robber would demand. ' As Perrine decided to enter a plea of guilty and to take his sentence at once, the money was not needed and it' was Thursday returned to the own er, the bank, through Cashier Bold-stead. TO ADVERTISE ALL . WEST SIDE BOOSTERS ROLL UP SLEEVES AND GET TO WORK FOR IM PROVEMENTS PRINT TEN THOUSAND BOOKLETS Plan to Start General Publicity Cam paign for Growing Towns and to Present Facts to Newcomers From East With every seat in the new Wil liamette school house taken and the people of the west side out in force, the new board of governors and other officers of the West Side Improve ment club were named and steps taken to advertise and boost for the advancement of the communities on the- other bank of the river. Ten thousand eight page folders will be printed and distributed for the benefit of the communities that are scattered along the west bank. Ripe, crisp facts, written in the best and most readable style, will tell the people of other places the truth about the cities on that side of the river and will advertise the various resour ces and advantages that they have that are of interest to new comers in this section of the country. "In unity, there is strength" was the key note of the meeting through the evening. B. T. McBain, the re tiring president, made a strong appeal to the people of those communities to and by each other in the effort to uild up the new cities on that bank. Professor Thompson and C .B. Wil son talked along the same lines. The newly elected members of the board of governors are, J. W. Draper, of Bolton; B. T. McBain, of the West Side, and C. B. Wilson, of Willamette. Six of the members of- the board hold over and were not elected Thursday night. Of the membership of the board G. L. Snidow -was chosen president; J. W. Draper, of Bolton, vice-president; J. Nichols, West Side, re-elected secretary, and M. C. Micheis, re elected treasurer. The treasurer's report showed a bal ance in the Bank of Oregon City of $88.75 and was adopted by a vote of the citizens present. DOCTOR WARNS AGAINST FLY$ To the editor of the Morning Enterprise, Oregon City, Oregon. Sw Yours inclosing clipping relat-? ing to the epidemic of typhoid fever in Oregon City and the re- suits of water analyses that have been made. Have read with deep interest and I appreciate and thank you for the courtesy you S 4 have shown me in this matter. In an epidemic of this kind one 'should not forget that common carrier of disease, the fly, who is credited with having caused the 4 greatest epidemics of infectious and contagious diseases the world has known by carrying the germs of disease to articles of food. I The oft repeated statement that a fly m the milk may mean a baby in the grave is only too true. Again thanking you for the clipp- ing from your valuable paper, I remain, Respectfully, L. VICTORIA HAMPTON Bi6hop More 75 Years Old INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Sept. 4 Bi shop David H. Moore, whose home is in this city attended his seventy-fifth birthday, anniversary today. Since and Korea. Sothern and Marlowe will their season on September 8. open "Years of Discretion" by Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Hatton, is about to be produced in London. jrFIIKII& SIBi(Q)W:l " . at tehs I A it - ;: AGED INDIAN WOMAN DIES LEFT HER TRIBE MANY YEARS AGO AND LIVED WITH INVADING WHITES HAD HOSTS OF,. FRIENDS IN CITY Remained in One Family Twenty-five Years and had been ' in County for Long Time Funeral Services Leaving the people of her own tribe to live among the white invaders, Su san' Klamath, a well known Indian wo man of the city died at the residence of Charles E. Burns, 125 Seventeenth street, Wednesday night and was bur ied in the city cemetery at 2 o'clock Thursday afternoon. The Indian woman, who was. at least 82 years of age, has lived in Oregon City for as lonsr as almost onv of the other residents can remember. for tne past 25 years she has been living with the family of Charles E. Burns and has had a home of her own on the Burns property. For the last few years she has been afflicted with rheumatism but she died from cancer of the stomach. The funeral services were conducted in the Holman undertaking parlors by William Hammond, who read the Episcopal service. Several friends of the old woman attended the funeral and accompanied the body to the grave. Few Relatives Though she had many friends among the Whites, she had. few rela tives among tthe people of. her own tribe that were closely tied to her by blood. "Indian Henry" at Molalla is her cousin and her closest relative. She was a member of the Klamath tribe of Indians but became friendly to the whites in her early days and has associated with them even after the government placed the members of her tribe on the Klamath reserva tion. She was well known through the community and has a gaeat many friends among the whites of the city and. county who were attached to her for the services that she had render ed them at various times in her life. ITS DISPLAY FOR FAIR The people of Gladstone, a thriv ing community two miles north of Oregon City, are so proud of the pro gress they have made since incorpo ration that they are planning to make a .novel exhibit at the Clackamas County Fair, which will be held at Canby on September 24, 25, 26 and 27. The Gladstone exhibit, as plan-, ned, will be unique, and will combine displays of agricultural products with samples of municipal development. Part of the exhibit will be compos ed of maps and drawings of the Glad stone municinal street imnrovement plant, including gravel pit, grading machine, road-oiling plant and stan dard specifications; and accompany ing this will be a map showing the miles of completed street work." Gladstone holds the record for Oregon of having the most economi cal street plant in the state, and is able to improve its highways at a cost of from 65 cents to one dollar a yard, depending on the class of improve ment. . Aside from this display, there will be an exhibit of fruits, vegetables and grains raised in Gladstone, and the management of the Clackamas Coun ty Fair believes that the municipal showing to be made will attract much interest among the fair visitors. EDINBURGH, Sept. 4. The King and Queen motored today from Bal moral castle to Braemar to attend the gathering of the clans, of which event the King is the chief patron. The ga thering is the most important fete day in the Highlands and never fails to attract a brilliant attendance. Tha scene presented of men in tartans and women in smart gowns, sashed with the colors of the different clans is most picturecque. NEGOTIATIONS ARE SUCCESSFUi PORTLAND AGREES TO GIVECIT' A SHARE OF SUPPLY UNDER CERTAIN TERMS ARRANP.FMFNTK NAT MMPIFTFr Before Matter Can be Submitted to People "at ' Election Long Pipe Line Involved After repeated trips to Portland and innumerable conferences with the officials of that city, the members of the water committee from the Oregon City Council have successfully nego tiated the question of securing a sup ply of Bull Run water from the Mount i aDor reservoir Tor tne people ner and have, at last, gained the consent of the Portland board of city commis sioners to the plan of tapping the sup ply at that point. Negotiations for the purpose of agreeing on the terms under which the unlimited supply of water will be furnished to the city will be conduct ed between Portland and Oregon City hv r.nmmisRianir Dalv who has hen authorized to come to a tentative agreement over the matter by his city council. Within the next few days, it is probable that the terms under which the city of Portland would allow Ore gon City to tap the reservoir will be reached and the city council will be notified of the demands that the Bay City will make for the service that is given. - It is understood that Portland wish es to specifically provide in the con tract between the two cities that she mav discontinue the sunnlv at anv time that her own demands are such that tie entire capacity of the reser vois is needed at that place. Though many suggestions, have been made by the representatives of the two cities, no definite agreements have been framed or any positive un derstanding been reached. Council man Tooze Thursday night declared that while they had discussed at the conferences the terms that Portland might insist upon, nothing definite had been framed nor any positive agreement reached as to the way in which this city should receive its new water supply. May Use Meter Among other questions that have been discussed as to the terms of the agreement has been that of installing a meter on the main that taps direct ly the reservoir on Mount Tabor. Var ious other details of the arrangements have been talked over in the confer ences that have been held but noth ing definite even in the way of sug gestions has been received from the city of Portland or any positive under standing made. To construct a pipe line that would tap the reservoir on Mount Tabor would cost the city considerable mon ey as an initial expense, it is said, as the line would have to run approxi mately 10 miles to the point of intake. Under the. plan, the city would con struct its own mains and would tap ! the Portland reservoir at Mount Ta bor where the pressure is such that the present pumps would not be nec essary to carry the water over the hill or to maintain a high enough force of water to meet any emergency in case of fire. Up a Long Time The question of the possibility of securing the Bull Run water supply has been agitating the city council for more than a year. The idea was .first suggested through the columns of the Enterprise about 18 months ciV-. j. -i i o afi ex. i. l uuv Limv au v cated the construction of the city mains to the reservoir on Mount Ta bor and the city council has been making an effort to gain the consent of the council of the city of Portland to the plan before the work was com menced. In order to reach an understanding with that citv. thp mnvnr has nTmnint- ed a water committee that has had the ! matter in its hands since that time and has made great progress in the nego I tiations. From time to time the com j mittee has made reports to the city I council on the work that it has done and has shown that it has been hard (Continued on Page 4.)