.THE WEATHER OREGON CITY Fair and not 8 so warm; northerly winds. . Oregon Fair, except 'thunder storms south portion, cooler west continued warm east portion; $ northerly winds. Washington Fair north winds. CLACKAMAS COUNTY FAIR CAN BY, OR. $ SEPT. 24, 25, 26, 27. . - ; WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1866. VOL. VI. No. 66. OREGON CITY, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1913. Pkr.Week, Ten Cents. BOY SWALLOWS POISON TABLETS CLIMBS UP TO HIGH SHELF AND FINDS BOX OF STRYCH NINE PILLS TWO DOCTORS WORK FRANTICALLY Efforts of Physicians Fruitless and Child Dies Within an Hour Is Rushed to Hospital In Auto Within an hour after the 18-months'-old son. of Mr. and Mrs. James Patter son had climbed up to a high shelf in tha family home at Scotland, near Gladstone, and had taken 10 strych nine tah'ets, he died in the Oregon City hospital in spite of the strenu ous efforts of two physicians. The mother had placed the medicine on one of the shelves where she believf ed that it would be out of the child'3 reach. He managed to climb to the point, however, and swallowed 10 of the tablets. Two doctors worked over him for awhile and then rushed him in an automobile to the hospital here where they again went frantical ly to work in an effort to save the child's life. They were unsuccessful, however, and he died within 20 min utes after he went into the room. Had the boy taken the entire con tents of the box, it is possible that his system would have revolted at the shock and his life would have been saved. He took just enough of the medicine, however, to thoroughly poison himself and the efforts of the physicians were unavailing. Miss Helen Sprague, a graduate of Oregon Agricultural college and fcr two yeais instructor in Latin in the Cervallis high school, has gone to New York to enter Columbia univer sity, for advanced work. Look Around Then Come Here We have as fine a line of furi ture, carpets, store and building .material, as you will find anyw l.ere in- the Willamette valley. Our stock is new and clean; our prices will stand comparison with anyone. OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE Sales People Wanted At once. Apply at ELLIOTT BROS ' This Morning School Books Exchange The exchange of school books this year, makes waiting upon our customers a very slow affair With all our available force and room at your disposal, Monday, we can't wait upon mora than 1-3 of the Oregon City scholars. You can avoid the rush and tiresome wait by buying yo'ur books now. We know the books used for every grade. Do it now. HUNTLEY BROS. CO. School Book Headquarters WE WANT TO SELL This New House Vi block from Barclay school on Mladison street. 5 rooms, bath, . electric lights. Paid $1750 for one year ago. All street assessment paid. Will take $1450 part cash, bal ance monthly. P. O. BOX 6, MOLALLA, ORE. New Denver Market Meat 7th We and Railroad. We Deliver - 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 A133 T DEAD; MAN IS HELD FIRST CASE OF KIND TO COME ' BEFORE JUSTICE COURT IN NEXT FEW DAYS DEPUTY GAME WARDENS ARE BUSY Officers Scouting Around Over Coun ty in Effort to Catch Hunters With Bags of Prohib ited Birds Charles B. Straight is under arrest for the alleged shooting of Chinese pheasants before the opening of the season. The complaint was signed by J. B. Ackley, special deputy game war den, and is the first case of the kind that has been brought before Justice Seivers in many months. From the informion in the hands of the officers, Straight has bagged a number of pheasants in the last few weeks and has told several of his neighbors of the number that he has ki'led. The season does not open un til October 1, and las's through the month. Because of the scarcity of the birds, the law has allowed none of them to be killed for three years, 'and even now the season does not open in some of the counties of the s'ate where they have not multiplied as rapidly as in' others. S I - V. L. MULVEY Clerk of Clackamas county, and vies president of County Cierks' Asso ciation of Orerjcn. BEAVERS GRA3 GN2 Por'land 6, Venice 1. Sacramento 4, Oakland 1 (10 inniugsi Los Angeles 5. San Fr&nctsco 1. Ccast Leagu-; Standings Vv. L. FC. Portland Sacramento Venice San Francisco . . . . Tjos Anaeles Oakland . . .90 69 .561 . . .S3 76 .522 . . .S3 S2 .521 . . .83 87 .488 . . .79 88 .473 . . .74 93 .433 PHEASAN ill ' ll " " ' - . I SUITS - COATS I IJ AND - " . 1- WRmm - department; STORE . j j 1 ' ' -J "OREGON CITY'S BUSY STORE" - DR. WASHINGTON GARDNER Michigan Editor Talked ' of For New Commander, G. A. R. vC" Vv STRANGER RIFLES ROOMS OF CLOTHES During Wednesday afternoon, a stranger entered the rooms . at the Cliff House and rifled several of Ihem of the lothes that were hanging there. Chief of Police Ed Shaw and I Sheriff E. T. Mass went in an auto to I New Era and wa'ked back along the I track in the hope of finding .he man who had taken the goods, j Four suits of clothes were taken I from the place besides a number of pairs of shoes. The police at Port land were notified to watch for a mar. with bundles under his arms should he attenpt to make his way there cn the car. OFFICERS AND MEN KILLED r.. IN BATTLE WITH ARABIANS EENGAZI. Tripoli, Sept. 17 Th? Italisn' commander, General Tcr.;lli and 33 I.aiian officers and men were ki'led in a battle yesterday with Arab tribesman. The news reached this city today. The Italian list of wound-. ! ed includes 75 officers and men. The i Arab losses are not stated, but were ; undoubtedly very heavy, j The Italian column, which had been j operating for some time against th ; j tribesmen, found them strongly en j trenched on a height commanding the ' Valley of Tecniz. Tilt Italian artil I !ery finally compelUd the Arabs co ! retreat, to the desert. ' General Torelli fell at" the head of :bis troops while urging them on to : the nttack: i Catherine Ncdine of I.anglois ho'ds ! the woman's championship in the wildcat-killing class cr if no:, who des? 'She recently collected bounty a Gold : Beach on 17 scalps of beasts she had . killed in five months wit; the held of a notable cat-fighting dog. r. .. 1- t 14 ? : ... . POPULATION, j BREATHLESS, GAZES, A WED .i Out at Mfrlalla they have discovered j something new. There one can see a crowd of eager-eyed people, both j young . and old, intently watching j w orkers put up a tent and arrange : mysterious planks and still more mys-' terious figures, until there shall be j completed something never before! seen in Molalla. People are talking and watching closely ever movement ' of the men And now and then one can hear some citizen say, "I wonder how it works," or, perhaps, the speaker with some little insight into machinery will mutter something to himself about engines, or wheels, or track. Out at Molalia they are putting up a merry-go-round, the first one ever in that city. It came Wednesday morning over the new railroad, and for the first time in their lives many persons saw an amusement device that seems never to grow old. C. H.. Packer, of Portland, was ar rested at a local hotel by Ed Shaw, chief of police, and turned over to a deputy. Constable of Multnomah county on a warrant issued under a complaint charging the taking of money under ialse pretenses. It is said that Packer had taken $80 from the complaining witness under a scheme that afterwards proved fraud ulent it is alleged. The man was tak en back to Portland last night by the deputy. RICHARD J. BUTLER. Ex-Assemblyman of New York Charged With Aiding Thaw. i Almost any person can "get mar ried." There's Manuel of Portuga', for instance. Not very many, comparatively, care how much they tax incomes of over ?1 00.000 a year. MAY Y0HE. It Was Reported Actress May Rewed Lord Francis Hope. L I JOLLY BUNCH GETS TOGETHER FOR FUN A jolly party of twenty-one made the trip from Damascus and Oregon City to Wilhoit last Sunday in the big au o truck owned by J. C. Elliott. Arriving at Wilhoit at 10 o'clock, a delicious lunch was served under the husre fire trees in the grove. On the return trip a stop was made at the famous Wright's Spring for an other spread, returning to Damascus at 7:30 o'clock. The party consisted of: Mr. ?nd Vrs. A .W. Cooke. J..C. Elliott, Frank Papsc'n. Mr. and .Mrs C. F. Eckert, C. F. Benl e, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Corbin, Mr. and Mrs. RaT Dallas, Mr. and "Mrs. Perry Hunter, Rita- Hunter, Henry Rock, Dfnascus; E .P. Carter, Glad stone; Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Walker, Miss Anna Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Cooke, Oregon City. SUNDAY SCHOOL LIFTS CHURCH DEBT In order to pay the church debt and to meet the expenses that have be-n incurred, the Sukday School of the Christian ch-jrch of Gladstone, wil! give an entertainment in Miller's hall Friday night. After an interesting program thai has been arranged, a cafeteria lunch will be srvld by the members of tha school. The affair is planned to meet the debt that was crea'ed by the church and is under the supervision of the workers in the- Sunday school. V-- "SB i ED ON i JM CHARGE! Mmmf4 MOLALLA CROWS ITSELF HOARSE TRUMPETS TO BLARE AND ALL WHISTLES TO TOOT WHEN FIRST TRAIN PULLS IN THOUSANDS ARE COMING TO FAIR Specials Gather up Throngs From All Sections of State to Help Town Celebrate Its New Road Five thousand visitors from all parts of the state will help Molalla celebrate Friday when the first train over that branch pulls into the station and the new line is opened. Gigantic preparations for the en tertainment of the crowds are going on in the little city and the buildings are being gaily decorated with bunting and flags. All over the town new .life has shown itself in the activities of the people who are about to be con nected with steel rails with the larger cities of the state. Crowds from Oregon City, Portland and many of the other towns and cit ies of the state are to pour into Mo lalla and Canby on "the day that the first train will s'eam over the recently laid rails and will pull up beside the depot that has just. been finished. In anticipation of the road connec tion, many new buildings have been erected, and some of them have not yet had their first coat of paint. The people of the city, however, have dec orated them with, flags and bunting, and will have their little town in its gayest dress when the trains bring into the place the loads -of visitors that are coming from all parts of the state. Special Trains Special trains are to be run over the road to Canby and will there take the Molalla branch line just completed. For the past few months loads c gravel and dirt and thousands of pounds of steel rails have been carried over the road by the construction trains that have worked seven days a week to get the track laid and bal anced on the day of the fair. Speeches will be made at the cele bration by several of the prominent persons of the state. President Strat horn of the line, and many others are on the program. It will be the biggest day -in the ilistory x fthe town. It is an epoch dn the city's life. A full realization of the importance of the connecting line has been brought .home to the people of the city and they are planning their celebration on a magnificent scale in proportion to its importance to their commercial prosperity. i-i j L. W. ROBBINS Head of one of the leading mercantile firms of Molalla, which will receive rail connection Friday. AURORA POSTPONES ITS JUVENILE FAIR The Aurora Juvenile Fair has been postponed from September 20 to Oct ober 11. The dedication of the new high ' school will occur on the same date. The state and county superintend ents wii'l be present, and Prof. Griffin, of the Oregon Agricultural college, will deliver an address and act as judge. More than $o00.00 in cash and com modity prizes will be awarded. Clack amas county juvenile exhibitors are invited to exhibit at the Aurora fair. Yet the first prize eugenic baby may as an adult be outstripped by many who could get no prize. Dell TlheaLte Commencing FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 The BURROUGHS-HOWLAND Players Will present for two nights the most talked of play of modern times RETRIBUTION" A three-act drama of every day life PRICES - - 10 AND 20 CENTS 7:00 P.M.' Two Shows Nightly 9:00 P. M. HIGH PRICES SCARE FACTORY, PLAN TO ERECT PLANT PUT ON SHELF UNTIL LAND BE COMES REASONABLE OWNERS ARE GREEDY IN DEMANDS! Hold Property at Exhorbitant Figures! When Industries Want to Buy Must Come Down Off Their Perch Soon E. E. Emmons, who has nioney and other backing to start a manufacturine enterprise, and who has been mak ing his headquarter in Portland for tne past several weeks while he has been looking for a suitable site for a northwestern branch of a large east ern concern, does not .thing much of tne "Dooster spirit ' ot Oregon He las sought to purchase land suitable for his enterprise at 'Portland, in St Johns,, near Milwaukis. and in the neighborhood of Gresham. but finds that everywhere property own- ersare noiding at prohibitive prices. tie nas tried to buy river front land near Oregon City and has had no bet ter results. Prices Too Hiqh. 'People out here seem to think that manufactories ought not to be established at all," he said. "I have been trying for the past two weeks to get some suitable property, either on the river bank or adjacent to suitable transportation lines, for the erection of a factory that will em ploy between 150 and 200 persons. Everywhere! have gone to Commercial club members have assurred me that they would give me what aid they could; but whan I have asked prices on available land, the owners have named figures that were exhobitaht and prohibitive. The company that T rertrpRPnt has nnlv sn mnnh mnr, o v to spend on erecting a northwestern plant, and the only place we have so far been able to get land such as we need at a reasonable figure is to the nortn of Seattle. . "We desire, however, to locate near er Portland, as it is a better shipping point for our line of goods. Inability to procure land at reasonable prices in the Portland territory will prob ably force us to go to Seattle, or to abandon our plan of erecting a north western, plant. It seems -to me that some of the commercial bodies might ies and to the state at large if they would conduct campaigns to combat horbitant values for property suitable ers are ready enough to invest cap ital in the West; the- thing that is holding back the development of the West is not the timidity of eastern capita)1, but the selfishness and greed of western land owners." mis HOWD Y COUNTY CLERKS Will L. Mulvey, county clerk of Clackamas county has been elected vice-president of the County Clerks' Association of Oregon. The idea for the organization was born at a. ban quet of a score or more of the county clerks at Portland, and John 13. Coffey of Multnomah, was chosen president, W. b. Mulvey, vice-president, nd Max Gehler, of Marion county, secretary. During Rose Festival week the asso ciation will hold its convention in Portland and will fight all freak legis lation that imposes further unneces sary duties upon the county clerk. The clerks assesbled in Portland to taiK over me suojeci or uuuonu ac counting and all of them agreed that a better system was needed in checks ing over the expenditures of public money. " . - Before the association holds its first, convention, a program will be drafted by the president and the con stitution and by laws framed for adop tion. Medford Sun: The fair is over. All in all, it was a success from every standpoint, but it should only impel the management toward renewed ef fort next year. As soon as it can be afforded, there should be some one un usual attraction staged that will bring people from all over the state. Of course, another round-up is not feasi ble, but an aeroplane flight or a para chute drop or something beside horse races should certainly be secured for 1914. - 3m : :