THE WEATHER $ Oregon City Fair, with rising s tenoperature; northwesterly wind. 8 lregon and Washington Fair, -witih rising temperature excepts neiir coast ; northwesterly winds. Idaho Fair, cooler in south 3west portion. 3 . CLACKAMAS COUNTY FAIR CAN BY, OR. 8EPTi 24, 25, 26, 27. ' WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1866. VOL. VI. No. 57. OREGON CITY, OREGON, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1913. Ptsr Week, Ten Cents. TELEPHONE EATS GROW WHEN CITY THREATENS COMPANY WILL DECIDES TO INSTALL SERVICE IN CENTRAL OFFICE UNDER CONTRACT WITH CITY COUNCIL PROTECTS IT FROM SUIT Clause in Papers Hold Corporation Harmless if Operator Makes a Mistake in Reporting Fire District The Pacific Telegraph &. Telephone company was whipped into line by the recent ultimatums of the city coun cil and Friday had its district manager on the ground to explain the changed attitude of the corporation and to tell the city council how "de-lighted" it would be to render any service that the city might suggest. Consequently, and as a result' of the decision of the officials of the company to accede to the demands of the city, the new fire alarm system will be installed in the central office of that company here. As soon as the system is ready, the company will al low the officials of the city to have the box placed inside of the office and connected to the operator's exchange board. Has Hung Fire The matter has been agitated by the city council for some time and has been talked over and over again by the council and the company officials for several weeks. In fact, it has been a general topic of discussion ever since the city first determined to have a fire alarm system at all. Though the question has been threshed out time, and again and the city has made demands that the com pany has as regularly refused to meet, it was not until recently that the city fathers "got their spunk up" and told the officers of the concern just what would happen if they did not accede to those demands in short order and with the least possible delay. People Incensed So incensed were the people of the city against the company's obstinate behavior that it is understood a large number of present patrons of the line had agreed to have their phones tak en out and those of the Home com pany installed if the company did not do what the city expected and asked it to do. The members of the council had declared that they would order their phones taken out at once and would use all the influence that they could bring to bear upon their friends to have the same action taken in as many other homes in the city as pos sible. The threat and demand evidently I had its effect upon the officials of the company. At a special meeting I of the council Friday afternoon Dis trict Manager Moore explained that the company was ready and willing to do all that lay in its power to co operate with the city and to help in lae general improvement of the ser vice. He submitted contracts to the I city that will be signed by the mayor and city recorder as soon as the city I attorney nas an opportunity to study taem and to see that the ' city's in terests are therein protected. Protection Offered Through the whole discussion the I city has guaranteed the company from Idanger by the filing of damage suits I because of the failure, neglect, or er- Iror on the part of the operator to properly return the alarm after it had tien given through the central office. In- spite of this guarantee, however, Ithe Company has contended that the I public would hold it to blame were an alarm reported for the wrong district and the firemen delayed in reaching I trie scene witmn a reasonable time. The change of the company's attitude on the matter came only after the cit7 I ft ad made thte threat and given the lofficers 24 hours in which to make up tneir minds as to the action that Iwould be taken. While they were on the subject, the council insisted that certain poles be Imoved tnat were, either in a danger- lous location or were obj actionable to property owners. Former Supreme, Justice Dies BRONXVILLE. N. Y., Sept. 5. Hen ry Billings Brown, retired associate justice of the United States supreme rourt, is dead here today of heart di sease. He was appointed to the su preme bench in 1890, and served until May, 1906. 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. USE ALARMS COMPANY TWO WIVES TALK OF TROUBLES TO COURT Anna E. Rossi won a divorce decree in the circuit court Friday against her husband, Camillo Rossi, on the grounds of cruelty and .inhuman treat ment during iheir married life. The ceremony wa3 performed at Vancou ver, Wash., December 18, 1912. . Gertrude Baker received a decree from the circuit court Friday against Isaac Baker on the grounds of deser tion. They were married at Portland May 30, 1901. MOOSE TO JOIN IN ESTACADA PICNIC More than 200 members of the Oregon City lodge of the Loyal Order of Moose will join the excursion train that leaves Portland Sunday fcr Esta cada to spend the day. Several thousand members of the order and their friends will leave on the special train tthat has been char tered for the excursion and a program that will keep the large crowd amused all of the time has been arranged. It is probable that the Oregon Fife and Drum corps will head the Oregon City party when ic leaves and that the cars will pull out of the city to the music of the fifes and drums. ON HEAVY YIELDS Reports from the threshers of the county show that there will be a bum per crop in every grain this year and that the season will be an exception ally long one. All through the county the threshers report heavy yields and believe that they will be kept in the fields for sev eral weeks yet. The recent rains have had the effect of delaying ,the work in some of the districts but the threshers plan to make up for the lost time when they get started gain with the first drift of clear weather. On one field a gang of threshers made a run of 2200 bushels in one day and have averaged a run of 1700 bushels a day for several days. Sim ilar reports have been brought into the city by the threshers who were thrown out of work for a short time on account of the rain but who plau on going back as soon as the weather again settles. RAILROAD SHOWS ITS INTEREST IN COUNTY Further demonstration of the inter est of the Southern Pacific and Great Northern railroads, with their allied lines, in Clackamas county has been given in the receipt by the Oregon City Commercial club of a massive silver and gold cup, which is offered by the Hill lines as a prize for the best general display of farm products made by any one man at the Clac. a- mas County fair which is to be hold at Canby September 24, 25, 26 and 27. The cup is a beautiful sample of the silversmith's arc, standing 14 inches high, and measuring six inch-as across the top. It is moante.l upon ail ebony base and is to be competed for each- year until won three times by the same farmer, when it is to be come the winner's property. Stimulate Developments None of the Hill lines enter Clack amas county, so the offering of tke cup is all the more remarkable. It is designed to stimulate general agri cultural development in the county, and is a duplicate of the cups that are oeing ottered by the Hill people in states where their roads find an ac tive freight field. It bears upon the front the trade mark of the Northern Pacific in dec orative relief, and is inscribed with a few lines denoting its purpose. valuable Cud There is over $50 wortht of silver and gold in the cup and as a trophy it will be sure to appeal to ranchers and farmers of the section, many of whom are preparing special displays in the hope of winning it. In the opinion of Secretary Freytag, of the Commercial club, however, the cup is apt to be won by some farmer who has made no special effort to cantnre it. but the excellence of whose general crops will appeal to the judges as be ing the best sample of all-around su periority. jtnei L,evy, who has been acting in the English and Centinental music halls, is to have the leading part in a play by Hubert Davies. It will be her first appearance on the legitimate stage. Mme. Pllar-Morin, the celebrated Believe me, Kantippe" has scored a success in New York. Thaw's Chief Counsel and Minister of the Interior Before Whom Final Appeal For Delay May Be Laid. tVj . s mTr A . - J ' Z. f MMMMi ' fit 4- Photos copyright. lDliS, by American Press Association. When Harry K. Thaw was caught in Canada he secured the services of several uoted Canadian lawyers, with J. H. Oreeushields as chief counsel. There was no assurance, however, that Thaw would not change his mind at any moment in restart! to his lawyers.-for he wanted it 'understood that he was directing their efforts to gain bis freedom. A pliotoLM-nph of Mr. Greenshields is shown on the left. The other figure in the Thaw case here shown is J. C. Black, minister if the interior, before whom Thaw planned to take his case iu case the immigration board decided to de port !'!' -'s -:n iiiit'"sr--ili' :Min ' . CHILD TORTURER TO BEGIN ANOTHER YEAR BOSTON, Mass., Sept. 5. Jesse Pomeroy, probably the most notorious life prisoner in the United States, to morrow will enter upon the thirty-sev enth year of his confinement bemna the gray walls of the famous sta .e prison In Chariestown. All of these years have been spent, in solitary confinement. This does not mean, however, that he never leaves his cell. If he so desires he is permitted to exercise in the prison yard outside his call for an hour every day in charge of a guard. But this is while the other prisoners are at work in the shops. He is never permitted to meet or see any parson excepting his mother, who comes to see him once a month, the prison warden and occasionally the governor or members of his counsel. Pomeroy was a boy of sixteen when he was sentenced to prison for life for torturing and murdering little children. He is now well past his fif tieth year. Much of his time has been spent in study and reading and he is said to be well informed as to curren' events. But he has never seen an elec .ric car or automobile, never heard a ihonograph, never talked through a telephone, and has never ridden in an elevator. The resignation of W. C. Schultze as county health officer was accepted by the county court at its regular meeting Friday. The doctor explain ed in his letter to the court that the expense and time thar. tha new posi tion would involve were such as to make it an undesirable one for him and that he would not, feel that he could afford to accept the place. The election that placed Bolton in the new municipality of West Linn took out of the jurisdiction of the coupty court the application of the Portland, Eugene & Eastern for the vacation of certain streets in Bolton as a right of way for that line. - The streets are now in the new town and. the matter will have to come before the city officials there. The appli cation was, therefore, dismissed by the county court. The management of the Cort thea tre, Chicago, is planning to revive "The Double Cross' by George Bron son Howard and Wilson Mizner. The play was first produced four years ago under the name: of "The Only Law" and was the first of the under world plays. Emmett Corrigan is to have the principal part in the revival. A new American farce called "A Run for Your Money" by John Gold ing, is dramatized from a story about "The M)arry Martyr", a new musical play, is to be given first in Boston, Maclyn Arhuckle playing" the leading role of a pompous Spanish provincial governor. 8 Hollyhock Stalk Has $ $ iOA RnHc nn Ono nf 4at UUUJ VII VMIl VI Its Stems With 124 buds on a singla stalk a hollyhock grown by B. F. Kellogg, of Oregon City, breaks the records that have been established by the people ! of the county as far back as the files ! of the Oregon City Commercial club can trace them. Now on exhibition in the office of the secretary is the greatest hollyhock freak that has been brought into the collection rooms. A single stalk measures nine feet and three inches and bears 124 buds. The average stalk of this kind of flower is usually four feet in length and has an aver age of eight or ,10 buds, sometime! even 16, one one stem. WATER TO BE TURNED INTO CULEBRA CUT WASHINGTON, Sept. 5. According to a dispatch received today at the war department from Colonel Goeth-1 als, chief engineer of the Panama ca-1 nal, Culebra cut will be finished Sep- tember 15, and water will be admit ted to the basin by October 0 . Not a Fairy Story Once upon a time there was a shrewd person who want-ad his business proposition! to reach a very influential man. He could not get to see him in person bu.: he learned that he was a constant, reader of a certain newspaper. So the man who wanted some thing wrote an advertisement stat ing uis proposition and worded in the way he believed would appeal to the ONE MIAN he wanted to reach. He put it in a prominent place in the newspaper read by the ONE MAN. Ha kept it there and before many days rolled around it did just what he hoped it would, brought him to the attention of tthe customer. Both profited for this is a true advertising story. Now the point to you lies in the fact that there is probably some message in the advertising of today's . Enterprise that is -written expressly to ycu. Are you a reader of the adver tising so you can catch the mes sage?. It may be important. The third season at the playhouse in New York has been, inaugurated with "The Family Cupboard", by Ow en Davis. Elsie Ferguson has a new play called "A Strange Woman", written by William .1. Hurlbut, author of "The Mentina Hodr " i Silk Booted Hose 1 TA Regular 35c . . ... I Ob Ladies Knit Underwear . 1 A A Reg. 50c to 75c suit 1 1 II per garment 1 UU Ladies Regular 15c ft Knit Vests UU 500 yds. Dress Goods ' 1 ft worth regular up to I SI 75c lUU 25 Shirt Waists IQf up to $1.50 lOU nun 111 w 111 1 m. ! DAY .Tft.iL ULU2UL AND 'YOU MI'I! II JTZf tt'l.U II XWV Uy,J jTMmfS J II. . , -m fZr Mill r. s I IM 11 only, pu wjj SALE I Silk Booted Hose 1 J" A Canvass Gloves ft I Regular 35c lOu Regular 10c .......... UU SFECIjAlL-I Ladies Knit Underwear . t A A Mens Hose Q A I prarme .?..S.T.t.... lUu Regular 15c pair . OU 5 A. T jH ' 1 b.,,i, is,. r-n . Mens W,ork Shirts Ladies Regular 15c ft Extra quality full f(JA 1 v -f Voota till width, 36-in long I XI 1 Knit vests vv & 65c shirt tUU On Aluminum and Granite Ware Mill 500 vds Dres Goods 1 ft Overalls OTA nd hundreds of other items too worth regular up to I l XSI M I 75c 1UU Regular $1.0o OlU numerous to mention. Come, don't 25 Shirt Waists ' I ft A Mens Silk Hose 0C0 " meanS money to you" I I up to $1.50 46u Regular 50c ZDv 1 J , ELLIOTT BROS'. Department Store PERRINES PALS STILL AT SHERIFF BELIEVES ROBBERY AT CANBY MAY BE TRACED TO HIS FRIENDS MEN REMAIN IN THIS NEIGHBORHOOD Officers Cannot See Their Reason for Staying in Vicinity of Oregon City When They are Wanted Here Traces of an attempted robbery of the general store at Canby the o,ther mgnt leal tne sneritls office to be lieve that "Wisconsin Dick" and John Homer, pals of Virgil Perrine, are still in the neighborhool and that they are! hanging around the vicinity of the county seat with some definite pur pose in view. A carefully planned attempt to rob he general store was frustrated when the night watchman caught the men as they were trying to make their way into the building and drove them off the grounds. The circumstances surrounding the case lead Sheriff" Mass to believe that the pals of Parrine are still in tha vicinity and that they are planning to make other robberies and hold up other places close to Oregon City. Just what their purpose may be in this has been a mystery to the office but the- facts are such that the offi cers are still on the lookout for the men. ' Their descriptions have been scat tered broadcast through the county and the other sections of the state and the officers are expecting, within the next few days, to have material that will end in the apprehension of the men for whom they have been look ing since the saws were slipped through the doors of. the jail to Per rine. SCHOOL PRIZE LIST IS NOT YET READY In the richest district of the county, the committee having charge the work of raising the premium list for the juvenile fair is meeting with the strongest opposition and is having the the most difficulty to get the prizes that it has planned to offer. At a meeting of the committee Fri day, the difficulty that the members had experienced was reported and the (Continued on Page 4.) Canvass Gloves ft Regular 10c UU Mens Hose AA Regular 15c pair UU Mens Vork Shirts Extra quality full f ft ft width, 36-in long I XI a 65c Shirt tUU Overalls 0L"O Regular -$1.0o OUU Mens Silk Hose 0C0 Regular 50c LUU WORK A f m - . 33 i 1 COUNTY MUST RETURN FUNDS CIRCUIT JUDGE ISSUES ORDER COMPELLING COURT TO GIVE MONEY BACK CITIES TO GET ALL ROAD LEVIES Cannot Use Taxes Collected for High way purposes on Other. Districts Must be Given to City Wher Raised The city of Gladstone will, hereaf ter receive all of its road money rais ed within the limits of its own dis trict. The county of Clackamas, the mem bers of the county court, and the coun ty treasurer have been mandamused by Circuit Judge J. U. Campbell, re quiring them to return to the . city treasury of the city of Gladstone the sum of $1232.86 that has been retain ed from the money raised in that dis trict during the year 1911 for road purposes. The circuit judge holds that the city . is entitled to all of the money that it gets for the road purposes and that the county officers cannot take the funds that are raised inside of incor porated cities and towns and use them for the general county benefit. Old System Under the old arrangement the city was receiving 60 per cent, of its road taxes after they had been collected but suit was brought to have the coun ty treasurer instructed to return all of the money collected from cities and town3 that are incorporated. The petitioners, through their attorneys, H. E. Cross and John Seivers, won their request and the city officials were ordered Friday to make the res titution. During the years 1911 and 1912 the county court levied a road tax of" eight mills and collected from thu ' city of Gladstone the sums of J2568.9S in 1911 and $2695.60 in 1912, of which $1336.12 has been returned. Under the instructions of the court the re mainder will be given back into the city treasury for use in the improve ments that are contemplated there. BEAVERS GIVE WALLOP At Oakland Portland 10, Oakland 0. At Venice San Francisco 1-5, Ve nice 0-1 (first game 11 innings). At Sacramento Los Angeles . 9, Sacramento 3. W. L. PC. Portland 83 62 .572 Venice 80 78 .506 Sacramento 73 73 .500 San Francisco 76 81 .484" Los Angeles .-...74 80 .481 Oakland .. ..72 84 .461