V MORNING ENTERPRISE, WEDNESDAY,, SEPTEMBER 10, 1913. CM J QUARREL IS (Continued from pag 1) though the cut on his chest was about an inch and three quarters deep and seven or eight stitches were taken in his hand. The wound in his chin is not very deep, but caused considerable bleeding. Dr. Mjount said that if Rick ard had been left alone he would have died from bleeding. Wheaton acci dentally cut himself with . his own knife in the fight. Has Many Friends" Rickard lives at 604 Water street, on the corner of Sixth. He has lived in this city for about four years and has. many friends. Wheaton was formerly employed by J. F. Hodge as blacksmith. He is re ported as having said, "There will be trouble over this yet" when speaking to friends concerning the blacksmith shop transaction. As far as can be learned Mr. Wheaton has a good repu tation. . As soon as Rickard was' started to ward the doctor's office. Lee French jumped in an automobile and caught up with Wheaton at the corner of Twelfth and Main. Wheaton confes sed that he had stabbed Rickard and was taken to the city jail. OREGON CITY MAN IS MARRIED IN CHICAGO Word has been received here that ' Elmer T. Farr, formerly of this city, secured a" license to marry Miss Mlary White in Chicago Tuesday. Mr. Farr was a butcher here several years ago when he trained a pair of fox terriers to do o high dive of seventy feet. His success with the dogs caused him to be signed up by the Arnold Carnival company and ever since he has been with them. The last visit that Mr. Farr made to Oregon City was three years ago when he camje to visit his mother, Mrs. A. L. Farr, and his brother, Clar ence. Mr. Farr has a large number of friends in this section. FLYER WRECK HURTS 35; THREE KILLED NEW MADISON, Ohio, Sept. 9. The New York-St. Louis Flyer on the Pennsylvania railroad was dsrailed four miles west of here at 9:40 this morning, injuring 35 of the 73 passen gers and fatally injuring three of the crew. Six coaches went into a corn field, on one side of the track, the engine and tender striking a bridge . abutment on the other side of the track and turning the span of the bridge ino he air. ' The rear coach remained on the rails and the next coach, although off . the track, did not overturn. None of the passengers were ser iously hurt, but two firement were so badly crushed and scalded it is be lieved they will die, and a chef in the diner was seriously scalded. The en gineer suffered a severe scalp wound. The wreck occurred on a sharp curve, where the track was weak, the train traveling at a high speed. All doctors of this town were rush ed to the wreck, and the injured were taken to Richmond, Ind. No. 28 REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE FIRST STATE BANK OF MILWAUKIE Milwaukle, in the State of Oregon, at the close of business August 9, 1913. Resources. Loans and discounts , ; $ 47,390 55 Overdrafts, secured and unsecured ' 12.51 Bonds and warrants !.!!!!!!!!!!" 23 145 77 Banking house !!"!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!'!"!! ll'65700 Furniture and fixtures 2,800 00 Other real estate owned 2,700.03 Due from approved reserve banks ...I'.".'.'.". 11,304.45 Checks and other cash items ' 2160 Cash on hand 9,18L30 Other resources ', 455.00 Total $108,668.13 Liabilities. Capital stock paid in ......$ 25,000.03 Surplus fund 1,500.00 Undivided profits, less expenses and taxes paid 994.67 Postal savings bank deposits - 844.54 Individual deposits subject to check 60,806.76 Demand certuicates of deposit Cashier checks outstanding Time certificates of deposit Savings deposits Total $108,668.18 State of Oregon, County of Clackamas, ss.: I, A. L. Bolstad, cashier of the .that tne above statement is true to Subscribed and sworn to before (SEAL) The stronger and rougher whiskey tastes T-the more harm it will do, Why take chances with your nerves, your stomach, your general health. Cyrus Noble is pure, old and palatable ' Bottled at drinking strength. - " Sold all over the world. yf. J. Van Schuyver & Co., General Agents Portland, Oregon UNITES TWO (Continued from page 1) pink charmeuse and carried a shower of pink roses. " The best man was the groom's bro ther. Dr. Guy Mount. Miss Irene Han ney artistically rendered Lohengrin's wedding march. Mrs. J. B. Parker and Mrs. Rebecca Mount were charm ingly dressed in gray silk. The groom is the son of Mrs. Re becca Mount, one of the city's pio neers, the brother of Drs. Guy and Hugh Mount, and ' Judge Wallace Mount of the supreme court of the state of Washington. He has been in practice here for the past six years and, prior to that time, was in eas tern Oregon. He is a member of the Elks and was the Exalted Ruler of that lodge last year. Miss Parker spent some time in Oregon City last year and was prom inent in local society circles during her visit. Among those who attended the cere mony were, Dr. and Mrs. Hugh Mount, Dr. Guy Mount, Judge and Mrs. Wal lace Mount, Charles and Ralph Park er, Miss Irene Hanney, Mrs. Chester G. Howell of Portland, Mrs. John Wbl ford of Silverton. After the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Mount left for a short wedding trip. They will make their home in Oregon City on their return. TARIFF BILL GOES THROUGH SENATE WASHINGTON, Sept. 9 The Dem ocratic tariff revision bill passed the senate at 5:43, 4ff to 37. The burst of applause that swept down from the crowded galleries found its echo on the crowded floor of the senate. Its passage was attended with surprises on th.e final moments of the voting, when Senator La Follette, re publican, cast his vote with the demo crats, and was joined a few moments later by Senator Poindexter, "progres sive". The democrats had counted through out the long tariff fight on losing the votes of Senators Ransdell and Thorn ton, of Louisiana, democrats, who voted against the bill today because it would put sugar on the free list, "JACK-THE-HUGGER" CAUGHT BY CHIEF George Tucker, who has no particu- nlar address, attacked a 65-year old weman at the head of the Fourth stre-et steps Tuesday evening and fol lowing a brief chase by of Police Eld Shaw was lodged in the city jail pending arraignment and trial. Tucker was noticed hanging about the steps near dusk by several wo: men, but made no advances to any of them. Later in the evening Chief Shaw was attracted by screams at the edge of the bluff, and rushing up the steps found Tucker and an aged wo man struggling. As the Chief witness ed the attack, the woman will not be asked to make a complaint against the man, and will thus be spared un pleasant notoriety in the case. 784.00 1.242 38 2,609.19 14,886.64 above-named bank, do solemnly swear the best of my knowledge and belief. - , A. L. BOLSTAD, - Cashier. me this 13th day of August, 1913. H. H. McGOVERN, , Notary Public. CORRECT Attest: JOHN F. RISLEY, PHIL. T. OATFIELD, PHIL STRIEB, F. BIRKEMEIER, Directors. HAY TRADE THAW FOR PAIHURST LONDON, Sept. 9. "Will Mrs. Pankhurst resist the allurements of corn, clam broth and succotash, and if so how will the government of the land of freedom treat her" asks the Pall Mall Gazette, commenting approving ly today on a repcVt that the Ameri can authorities, "very wisely" have decided to arrest the militant suffra gette leader on her arrival in New York in October. The newspaper suggests that the United States government might pro pose to exchange Mrs. Pankhurst for Harry Thaw. JUROR FINDS GUILTY TO SAVE FATHER FEES SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 8. "A ju ror who would vote in favor of a ver dict of guilty against an innocent per son charged .with an infamous crime in order to save his (the dsfendant's) father and mother from a lot of use less counsel's fees,' or for Any other reason, commits a crime against so ciety more iniquitous than that com mitted by Diggs and Caminetti". That was the scathing denunciation voiced today by Special Prosecutors Matt I. Sullivan and Theodore Roche, who secured the conviction of Diggs and Caminetti on white slave traffic 1 t TTT-nj TT.J.l 1 cuarges, agaiusi vv iniiuii neisier, wuo served as a juror in the latter trial and who is quoted as being ashamed of his part of the verdict. , "I voted to find Caminetti guilty to save his father and mother a lot of useless counsel fees, and because the other jurors insisted on a compromise. I regard the verdict as a disgrace to the United States. I believe it should be reversed because the young man is innocent of the charge." That was part of the purported in terview given to a local paper by Heis- ter, to which Sullivan and Roche re plied today. "A juror who would thus express . himself in public , say the government prosecutors in a joint interview, "af ter joining in the verdiet of guilty, disgraces his manhood, .if he has any left, and should meet with universal execration. It is inconceivable that any man should state, with the inten tion of having it published, that 'there was not a man among the 12 who had not at some time in his career done what young Caminetti did.' "By such a statement the speaker, proclaims himself a debaucher of in nocent girls, and puts in the same class as himself 11 other jurors whose reputation in the community is with out reproach. MOVIES GET INTO COURT IN RUSSIAN ASSAULT CASE MOSCOW, Sept. 9. Moving pictures were successfully introduced in court as evidence in the case of 20 peasants who were accused of attempting to murder a company of actors and ac tresses engaged in the production of a film representing an episode in the revolution in the reign of Catherine II. The place chosen for the rehearsal was the village of Krivee Looki, but the villagers conceived the idea that the camera was a machine of the de vil. They asked the actors to make the sign of tlte cross but the latter, having no interpreter, did not under stand what they meant and smilingly shook their heads. This was accepted as sufficient proof of the "deviltry" which was taking place and the villa . gers attacked the astonished company. Actresses fainted, and the male mem bers of the company defended them selves as best they could with the "property" weapons used in the pro duction, but several were seriously injured before the police appeared. The camera operator, however, had taken refuge in a tree and filmed the whole fight, and it was on this evi dence that the peasants were convict ed. All the accused pleaded innocence but the court turned into a picture palace for half an hour and the jury was able to identify them; on the film. The convicted villagers are now more convinced than ever that there was "deviltry" in the camera. F. B. HARRISON. New York Representative Named Governor General of Philippines. PROGRESS. New occasious teach new duties. Time makes ancient good un couth. - They must upward still and on ward who would keep abreast of Truth. - Ia). before us gleam her camp' fires. We ourselves must pil grims be. . Launch our Mayflower and steer boldly through the desperate winter sea. Nor attempt the future's portal with the past'a blood rusted key. Lowell. fst Iff, ' ' JOHN B. STANCHFIELD. One of the Attorneys Selected to Prosecute Governor Sulzer. Photo by American Press Association. TO A SHY SWAIN. Why, look you, sweetheart, how - you limp and halt: Your speeches fall and flounder,' shy and vault: Is love's dear tongue so bard, in sooth, to learn? . His tender graces, then, so hard to arn? . . Is this the best that yon can do ask whether I really think we'll have a change of weather. Then sit in silence twirling at your thumbs Or crush your cigarette up Into crumbs? And all the little precious mo ments flying. And love, disgruntled, in the cor ner crying! Genevieve FarnelJ-Bond. GOULD BUYS AIRSHIP FOR HIS OWN PRIVATE USE NEW YORK. Sept. 9j It was re ported here today, that Edwin Gould brother of George J. "Gould, attracted by the feats of Harold F. McCormick, of Chicago, as a commuter by hydro aeroplane, had ' purchased two of these machines for his own use. Gould recently spent some time studying the mjechanism of McCor mick's flying boat at Lake Forest, near Chicago, and it is said that 'he .decided to place orders for two elab-' orate machines, one built for speed only and the other to be the largest ever built, to accommodate six per sons. . ...... Although Gould could launch his hydro-aeroplanes in the Hudson .near his home in Ardsley, it is said that he does not contemplate making his flight on the Hudson, but along the coast between New ; London and New York. He hopes, it is said, to go all the way from New London to Palm Beach some time next month. $,83S&8&8 $ $ $ "A PRINCE OF EVIL" S S At the Grand Today. . S Lr I - SERVICE FOR CANBY There ' will be no difficulty about reaching the Clackamas County fair, which is to be held at Canby Septemr ber 24, 25, 26 and 27. Arrangements have been made with the Southern Pacific railroad to have southbound morning train stop within 203 feet of the grounds, arriving there at 9:4o in the morning. ' Regular trains make frequent stops during the balance of the day, but for these who desire to remain for the band concerts which will be a regular evening feature of the fair, northbound night train will stop at the fair at 8:50 p-. m. to pick up passengers for Port land and other intermediate points. A special rate of a fare and a third for the round trip has been secured from the Southern Pacific from all points between Salem and Portland during the fair days. This rate will also include points on the Silverton and Mount Angel branches. AMERICANS PROVE THEMSELVES WORLD'S BEST SHOTS CAMP PERRY, OfSo, Sept. 9. With the Pan-American contest, the Camp Perry international rifle tournament closed here today. . The American team still retained possession of th3 Palma trophy, . representing the long range championship of the world. It was defended by a score of 1714. The Argentine team, which was second, scored 1684. A banquet in the fisit ing riflemen's honor will be given to night. . ' . E ARE NOW SIGNED Mayor Jones and Livy Stipp, as re corder, have signed the contracts be tween the Pacific Telephone & Tele graph company, the Home Telephone company and the city that allow the installation of the transmitter boxes in the telephone offices for the new J fire alarm system. Under the terms of the contract the city holds the company harmless from damages in case there should be any error made in the office during the transmission of the alarm. By the middle of next week the system will be installed and will be in working order shortly afterwards. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS .' L. C. Skellenger and wife to Mary Elizabeth Smith, Sec. 31, T1S, R3E, $5000. Alfred I. Olsen and wife to August W. Daum, tract in D .L. C. Andrew Jackson, Sec. 34, T5S, R1E, $1500. Addie J. Brltton to Earl A. Britton, lots 1, 2, 9 ,10, Blk. 1, - Willamette Falls acreage, $1. G. Matsom to Edith Mlatson, 1 acre in Concord, $10. Mary Manske and husband to Ellen Susmingemc and husband 8 and 1-4 acres in Sees. 32, 33, T1S, R2E, $1 Charles T. Tooze and wife to An ton Schauer and wife, E 1-2 S 1-2 D. L. C. A. B. Holcomb, $80. . Joseph L. Y. Udell and wife io Charles T. Howard and wife, 1.75 acres in Sec. 17, T4S, R2E, $1100. C. T. Howard and wife to Lillian F. Howard, tract in Sec. 17, T4S, R2E, $5. Unqualifiedly the Best LEDGER; The De Luxe Steel Back New improved CURVED HINGE allows the covers to drop back on the desk without throwing the leaves into a curved position. Sizes 8 1-4 to 20 inches OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE Headquarters for Loose Leaf Systems E. F. WILLETTS. American Manager of 'Filipino Baseball Team Now In America. Pboto by American Press Association. TRAIN TAKES TOWN TO NEW LOCATION Gladstone has moved four . blocks north. Gladstone is the nearest mumV cipality to Oregon City on the inter urban line, and for some years has been dignified by a little-wooden sta tion bearing the name of thetown. . Monday employes of the Portland Railway Light & "Power company hooked the station onto the rear of a passing train and dragged it four blocks to the north, the center of pop ulation having . moved to what was merely a flag-stop. Permission of the .Gladstone city council was granted for the change. PEAR PRICES DROP; GRAPE TONE FIRM Heavy receipts in the pear market has resulted in a decline in price. Many "boxes of the fruit were sold at less than the quoted market price and the tone was generally weak. The peach market followed the ex ample of the pears and showed a de cline when prices were quoted. The ,W ' " ' . -:, grape supply is limited according to reports, and the tone has maintained its firmness through the day. Other prices held around the recent market figures. . Livestock, Meats ... BEEF (Live weight) steers 7 and 8c: cows 6 and 7c: bulls 4 to 6c. MUTTON Sheep 5 to 6 1-2; lambs 6to 6 l-2c. POULTRY (Buying) Hens 12 and 13c; old roosters 8c; broilers 15c and 16c. WEINIES 15c lb; sausage 15c lb. PORK 9 12c and 10c. VEAL Calves 12c to 15c dressei according to grade. Fruits APPLES 50c and $1. DRIED FRUITS (Buying) Prunes on basis 4 for 35 to 40c ONIONS $1 per sack. POTATOES 70c and 75c. BUTTER (Buying) Ordinary countrv butter 23n to 25c. EGGS Oregon ranch, case count 26c; Oregon ranch candled 27c. Prevailing Oregon City prices are as follows: HIDES (Buying) Green salted, 9c. CORN Whole corn $37; cracked $38. - SHEEP PELTS 75c to $1.50 each. WOOL (Selling) Shorts $27; barn $25; feed bar'ey $30 to $31. FLOUR $4.50 to $5. HAY-(Buying) Clover at $8 and dairy feed $1.30 per hundred pounds." OATS (Buying) $24 and $25; wheat 79c and 80c; oi! meal selling $38; Shady Brook feed $1.3o per cent.; oat hay best $11 and $12; mixed $9 to $13; Idaho and eastern Oregon tim othy selling $20; valley timothy $12 to $15. "Swissco" Did It! Have You Tried It? Brings Back Natural Color to the Hair, and Stops All Hair and Scalp Troubles 25 CENT BOTTLE FREE TO ALL Every one who is bald has tried , by every means possible to restore his hair,' but net until the discovery of the marvelous Swissco Hair and Scalp Remedy has there been anything or sult. fered that would accomplish this re Grows New Hair, Removes Dandruff, Dandruff, Falling Hair, .Sore. .Itchv Scalp Quickly Cured This great remedy cures baldness. Paid spots, falling hair, scabby scalp, sore scalp dandruff, brittle hair or any other hair or scalp disease, and changes gray hair to youthful color and gloss. If you are suffering from baldness or any of the troubles named above , or have gray hair that you want re stored, to youtnrui color, let us send you a 25-cent bottle free for trial. Swissco Hair Remedy is for sale by all druggists at 50 cents and $1.00 a bottle, but the free bottle can only be had by writing direct to the Swissco Hair Remedy Xo 000 P. O. Square Cincinnati, Ohio, encloing 10 cents as an evidence of good faith. The 10 cents does not cover actual postage and packing on the 25-cent bottle we send you. For sale and recommended in "Ore gon City by Jones Drug Co. 5V