Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, September 19, 1913, Image 1

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    SSSSS
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CLACKAMAS COUNTY
8 FAIR
CAN BY, OR.
SEPT. 24, 25, 26, 27.
' THE WEATHER
? OREGON CITY Fair and warm ?
S er; northerly winds.
. Oregon and Washington Fair
S and warmer; northerly winds. S
Idaho Fair and warmer.
- EDWARD A. BEALS,
j District Forecaster. S
v $&$SSS3J38
WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1866
VOL. VI. No. 67.
OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1913.
Ppji "Week, Test Cents.
WANTS TO CLAMP
HIS MOUTH SHUT
WIFE ASKS INJUNCTION AGAINST
HER HUSBAND TO KEEP
HlM FROM SPEAKING
CLAIMS HE WAS CRUEL TO HER
(Charges In Complaint That He Beat
and Choked Her When He
Came Home From His
Work Divorce
To prevent him from even speak
ing to her on the street, Lasa A.
Chiles has asked for an injunction
out of the circuit court against her
husband, O. R. Chiles.
. She makes the petition for an in
junction a part of her complaint for
divorce and bases her action on his
acts of alleged cruelty during their
married life. The wife charges the
husband with beating and choking
her at various times and placing her
in fear of her life. She says he called
her vile and abusive names and that
he case aspersions on her reputation.
They have a son, Harold E., for
whom she asks the custody as well
as attorney fees of $75 and $25 court
costs. The defendant is a printer on
the Goldendale Sentinel.
BEAUTIFUL SOCIAL
AFFAIR IS GIVEN
In the beauiiful home of Mrs. H. E.
Straight, an auction bridge party was
given to a number of friends. The
rooms were decorated1 in marigold
and ferns and delicious refreshments
were served. Mrs. George , Harding
won the evening's prize.
Among those present were: Mes
dames E. A. Chapman, O. W. East
ham, George H. Harding, O. H. Huntr
ley, Neita Lawrence, L. A. Morris, L.
L. Pickens, L. L. Porter, W. E. Pratt,
E. P. Rands, W. S. U'Ren, R. R. Mc
Ailpin, J. N. Wifner, Livy Stipp, Henry
O'Malley.
The hostess was assisted by Mrs.
.E. P. Rands in serving the refresh
ments. CHINK HIGHBINDER IS
CONVICTED BY COURT
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 18 Yee
King, a Suey Sing gunman, who fired
the first shot in the Suey Sing-Bing
Kong tong war which resulted in the
death of 13 Chinese before a trues
was called, was convicted today of
murder in the second degree and rec
ommended to the mercy of the court.
Yee killed a half-breed Japanese
known as Big Frank.
The most satisfying and health
giving bread is
"
ROYAL BREAD
FRESH EVERY DAY AT.
HARRIS' GROCERY
Look Around!
Then Come Here
We carry as fine a line
of Furniture, Carpets,
Store and Building Ma
terial, as you will find
anywhere in the Willa
mette Valley. Our stock
is new and clean; our
prices will stand com
parison with all others,
HOGG BROS.
OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE
WE WANT TO SELL
This New Hous
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 Meat
Market
7th and Railroad. We Deliver
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 A133
Law Avengers
Count Ties Like
'Weary Willies'
"I don't blarne the hoboes for catch
ing the first freight that comes, their
way after I had tramped the three
miles from New Era down to Canemah
and slid all over the tracks that had
just been filled with gravel," declared
Chief of Police Ed Shaw, last night.
"I wouldn't walk the rails on a bet
any more, and I've had all that 1
want of it. The next bo thaU comes
along and hikes into the freight cars
will get my sympathy hereafter. I
know now what it is to slide ever
gravel traps and drop back three steps
to every two that you make forward."
Chief Shaw and Sheriff Mass got
the sidelights on the life of a tramp
when they walked from New Era the
other n;ght after a man who had stol
en some clothes out of the Cliff
House. They had received reports
that he had started up the track and
they went out after him.
BOOSTERS BOOST FOR
FAIR AT PORTLAND
Six Drcminent Molalla business
man took c flying trip to Portland
Wednesday and after visiting the
newspaper plants were given a lunch
eon by the Portland Ad Club.
They left early Wednesday morning
by automobile and aftsr a pleasant
trip arrived in Portland. The object
of the trip was to secure the coopsrar
tion of the Rose City papers in adver?
tising the celebration Friday and the
visited their plants as soon as they
reached th3 city. At noon they were
taken to the rooms of the Ad Club
and a luncheon was given in their
honor. Editor Taylor, of the Miolalla
Pioneer, addressed the meeting and
invited the citizens of Portland to
come to Molaila. The party returned
late Wednesday evening.
Those who made the trip were, Geo.
H. Gregory, L. H. Stone, E. Robbins,
O. K. Cole, J. R. Wolf and G. S. Tay
lor, all from Molalla.
HEART OF MAN MAY BE
- REACHED THROUGH COOKERY
CHICAGO, Sept. IS. A plan which
he declared wiV. curb the divorce evil,
improve the digestion, increase the
happiness of Chicago and add $10,000
a year to the county treasury was sug
gested to the county board yesterday
by County Clerk Sweitzer.
Sweitzer pressnted an offer of a lo
cal publishing house to pay the clerk
25 cents each for handing each appli
cant for a marriage license one of its
cook books.
"Many of the prospective brides
have little knowledge of domestic sci
ence, Sweitzer wrote to the board:
"This may be the cause of much do
mestic infelicity and any means that
will aid the new wife in the prepara
tion of mea's should be encouraged
heartily.
"This may be the remedy sought
by various reform bodies seeking a
means of eliminating or at least curb
ing the divorce evil."
He added that tie partnership
would add $10,000 yearly to the coun
ty treasury.
Pendleton East Orsgonian: Indicat
ing that Pendleton's Round-Up is be
coming synonymous with a big crowd
and a big time is the slogan just
adopted by the city of Albany for the
boosting of the U. of O.-O. A. C. an
nual football game, which is played
in the Linn county seat. "Like a day
at the Pendleton Round-Up," is the
cry tf the promoters.
Wwl 'iPw:- Department Store
"OREGON CITY'S. BUSY STORE"
UN
GARDEN
OF GOLDEN WEST
MANY THINGS MAKE ALL OF
WORK TIME PLAY FOR
BUSY OREGONIANS
CUPID'S ARROW FLIES IN HOP YARD
Pretty Stories of Love and War Might
be Told of Harvest of-Valley's
Priceless Annual Hop
- Crops
"That the Willamette Valley is pos
sessed of widely diversified employ
ment for persons seeking pleasant
out-door work in gathering- the vari
ous crops of fruit and products, can
not be gainsaid' says Secretary Frey
tag. - "Beginning in fate May and run
ning through a large part of the sum
mer, there is work for large numbers
of .persons, and work which proves a
recreation for persons who find their
tasks indoors tiresome, and which is
neither arduous nor difficult and
brings the roses to the cheek, and a
healthy and coming appetite.
"Strawberries come firsts and a nor
mal season picking begins the latter
part of May and runs for a month or
six weeks, followed by raspberries
and loganberries, the latter in some
sections of the valley being raised on
comparatively large tracts for can
ning, 'evaporating or drying; a good
trade in Alaska and the middle west
ern states where fruits are not raised
having been established. Other small
fruits such as cherries are carefully
packed and are exported to France to
be made into Maraschino cherries,
some of these cherries finding their
way back to their native heath. The
Royal Anne cherries raised in some
parts of the valley are used exclusive
ly for this purpose. They are pre
served and shipped in large casks to
France, where the final ' process is
completed.
Season's Lull.
"During the lull! between the sea
son of the small fruits and the great
event of the year hop picking, many
persons take a few weeks off- at one
of the beaches, where there is fish
ing and hunting, rock oysters to be
dug, clams and crabs to go after, and
surf bathing and agate hunting to be
enjoyed. Or it may be a trip is made
to the mountains where blackberries
and great luscious huckleberries, big
as cherries, are gathered and canned
ofr winter use. Or some one prefers
a trip up cr :iovn the Willamette or
Columbia rivers. One must indeed be
difficult to please if he cannot find
some delightful trip for the mid-summer.
,
Fall Amusements.
"WTith the opening days of Septem
ber, comes the exodus of town folk to
the hop yards of the Willamette Val
ley for their annual outing, and money
getting feast; for this is one way of
taking a vacation and not coming
home ,'broke as is usually the case
with most vacation trips.
"For long weeks whole families
have been planning for the good times
when hop picking begins; old gar
ments are religousjy put away during
the year to be gotten out and used in
the yard during picking, and as the
time draws near the tents are gotten
out and the rest of the camping out
fit over-hauled in readiness for the
great occasion.
Curley-Haired
Baby Softens
Man's Heart
"I'm ever so thankful to you," said
a pretty little blue-eyed baby girl wkh
the nicest brown wavy hair as she
looked up into the eyes of the make
up man on the Enterprise and thanked
him for returning to her the valuable
necklace of pumpkin seeds that, one
had lost the day before during her
play.
Better than the $50,000 reward that
Mrs. W. K. Vanderjnlt had offered for
the return of her lost necklace were
the words of that little five-year-old
girl as she told the printer just how
much she valued that necklace that
she had strung herself and how it
had broken her heart when she dis
covered that it was' lost.
"The way that she said that to me
and the look that she had in. those
pretty little eys of hers, that were
turned up to mine, was worth more
than any $50,000 reward that could
be given ma," said the printer, as he
told the story afterwards. VI could
not have had a greater reward had
the necklace been the pearl studded
one of the Vanderbilts."
JUST TOO LATE
Just too late to become mixed up
in the county health office muddle,
Dr. E. M. Bond arrived in this city
last week. He had opened offices at
1007 Main stet and is prepared to
take an interest in every important
move made by the city doctors or
Judge Anderson.
Dr. Bond says that, although he has
not looked into the matter as closely
as he will, he believes that both sides
are somewhat mistaken and he
thinks that a peaceful settlement can
be arranged.
The new doctor is a former resi
dent of Philadelphia, and a graduate
of Hahnemann college of that place.
He has made a specialty of children's
diseases, and is considered an author
ity on the subject.
Dr. Bond has had an opportunity
to look, the city over and thinks this
is a growing town with a bright fu
ture. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE
That it pays to advertise and
advertise heavily in the columns
of the newspapers, is shown by
the wonderful increase in busi
ness in tie store of Frank Busch
during the last few days when he
carried large displays in the col
umns of THE ENTERPRISE and
has, in a tactful and forceful way.
presented his claims for business
to the people of the city and
county.
As a result, his store has been
crowded to its capacity and his
clerks have been busy every min
ute of their working hours, dis
posing of the goods that he has
offered and attending to the de
livery of the furniture that has
been bought. The sidewalks have
been lined with his goods ready
for delivery to all paris of the
city and county, bought as the re
sult of the heavy display ads that
he has carried in THE ENTER
PRRISE. Certainly, it pays to advertise.
5$S8SSjSeSS8S
If Thaw never was insane before,
he almost certainly should be now,
with all those muddled lawyers about
him.
GRADS READY
FOR LIFE V
MANY GO INTO FIELDS OF PRO
FESSION AND BUSINESS
FROM SCHOOL
TEACHERS ARE IN THE MAJORITY
Class Sends l.ts Members Into the
Rooms of Several Districts
J. ... While Others Continue
Studies in Colleges
Out of the 27 graduates of t'ue Ore
gon City high school last spring nine
are going to teach, seven to work.,
five go on to college, five to normal
school, one to be a nurse, and one to
be "at home." -
The fact that more are going to
teach is taken by many as proving the.
efficiency of the local schools. It
considered unusual that so great a
percentage, of the graduates should
choose the teaching profession as
their work.
Those who intend to take up this
work are: Genevieve Mlumpowsr,
Hazel Kurr, Clara Rutherford, Echo
Spence, Marie Barber, Grace Snook,
Irene Hanny, John Dambach and.Mona
Reed; while Charles Holmes, Echo
Larkins, Roy Finnegan, Edward Busch
Wallace Papouin, Peter Rotter and
Leonard Wiliams will work. Shelby
Shaver, Lorane Ostrum, Marie Don
aldson, Marie Sheahan, and Joe Shea
han intend to go to college. The five
going to normal school are, Lavern
Fraker,-Adia Mass, Carmen Schimidli,
Sadie Clancey and Lilian Tschigri.
Hazel Mitchell will go to Portland to
study nursing and Louise Huntley
will be at home this winter.
E
OLD RESIDENT
A number of friends gave Mrs. A.
J. Lewis, of Maple Lane, a surprise
party on her fifty-first birthday at her
home on the evening of September
16. Refreshments were served and
a pleasant social chat enjoyed by the
old friends, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis have
lived in Maple Lane for 12 years and
are well known in all sections of the
county, Mr. Lewis having been, at one
time, the county fruit inspector.
Among those who surprised Mrs.
Lewis ware: Mesdames Bess Reyn
olds, Helen Wilcox, Cooke, W. H.
Nichols, C. W. Swa'low, Splinter,
Goldberg and Lawrence Mautz, and
Mr. and Mrs. Gamewell, Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Rumery, Mr. and Mrs. Horton,
15r. and Mrs. George A. Brown.
BEAVERS SKIN 'EM
Portland 12. Venice 1.
Oakland 3-5, Sacramento 2-7 (first,
game 12 innings, second game cal'ed
end of eighth on account of dark
ness). Los Angeles 5, San Francisco 1.
Coast League Standings
W. L. PC.
Portland -91 69 .569
Sacramento 84 77 .522
Venice 89 83 .51?
San Francisco 83 88 .485
Los Angeles ...80 88 .477
Oal:'and . 75 97 .437
VOR
Actor Hikes
To Save For
Wife's Need
A member of a disorganized troupe
that had gone "broke" in Seattle, he
had walked all of the way from that
city to town and was planning to
make the journey to Eugene where
he would meet his wife.
That was the story that a man
whom Night Officer Lee French found
on the track coming into the city told
when the policeman accosted him the
other night. Rather than . spend a
cent for carfare and ha vp hia wifo dif
fer for lack of funds when he reached
home, he intended to walk all of the
distance from Seattle to his home in
Eugene and to turn up there wit,h
every cent saved ready to divide with
her.
HOG FAMILIES WILL
COMPETE FOR
or ssnn :, - .s v.
uver $o00 in cash prizes " will ho
competed for by hogs at the Clack
amas County Fair, to be held at Can-
by, beptember 24, 25, 26 and 27: and
it is expected thafthe displays will
prove conclusively the lleadine rank
of the county in the northwest as a
producer of swine. Clackamas, as a
matter of fact, sends more swine to
market than any other Oregon coun
ty; and hogs bred here are in demand
for foundation stock throughout Wash
ington, Idaho and California. Several
stock farms in the county make a
specialty of blooded stock, and these
will all have representative and valu
able herds on view.
The display will include Duroc Jer
seys, Berkshires, Poland Chinas, Ches
ter Whites, Yorkshires and Essex
hogs, and special, divisions -will be
made for fat barrows, full-growth
boars and sows, little pigs, and vis
families. There will be a number of
sweepstake contests, limited to prize-
wmmng animals in the different
classes, and many special prizes and
banners will be awarded to the win
ners in these extra contests.
NEW HAVEN STOCK LOSES
MILLIONS BY SLUMP
NEW YORK, Sept. IS A break of
'z points in the stock of the New
York, New Haven & Hartford Rail
road on the Stock Exchange today car
ried the price down to 85, a new
low record. - At 85 the stock showed
a loss of six points since the close of
last week. It was 44 3-8 points under
the higli price of the year, reached
on January 10. The depreciation in
market value represented by this de
cline is nearly $70,000,000.
The stock raV.ied a point after
touching 85 and no more offerings
were pressed for sale.
The long decline in the shares, ex
tending back more than a year, grew
out of the various difficulties, finan
cial and otherwise, of the New Haven
system, and the reduction in the div
idend from eight to six per cent. The
intimation given recently by Howard
Elliott, newly-elected head of the sys
tem, that a further reduction might
be deemed advisable, is believed to
have been a factor in the' renewed de
cline. DON'T GET LEFT ON
SCHOOL BOOK EXCHANGE
You can get waited upon in ten min
utes today Monday you may not be
able to get waited upon at all. We
have every book today we may not
have Monday. We have the time to
talk and explain the exchange propo
sition today we won't have Monday.
If yo.u know the grade, we will do the
rest. Com today.
HUNTLEY BROS. CO.
School Book Headquarters
Rev. C. H. Cleaves has been wel
comed to a pastorate at Roseburg, in
a public reception tendered by the
Ministerial union of that city. Mr.
Cleaves had been for five years at
Coquille, where he enjoyed great re
nown as a solemnizer of marriages.
BIG DANCE
September
BUSCH'S HALL
Given FR0ST
First Class Music
Portland Orchestra
Pell Tlneaifare
Commencing
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19
THE BURR0UGHS-H0WLAND
-Players
will present for two nights the most talked
- . . - . -
of play of modern times
MrJlT"TOI13T TnPTrMVTU
A three-act Drama of every-day life '
PRICES - - lO AND 20 CENTS
7:00 P. M. Two Shows Nightly 9:00 P. M.
FIRST TRAIN TO
WHISTLE TODAY
BUNTING AND FLAGS DECK CITY
OF MOLALLA WHEN LARGE
CROWDS ARRIVE ,.
THOUSANDS WILL POUR INTO TOWN
Excursionists From Every Part of
State to Help Celebrate the.
Completion of Line of
New Steel Rails
"On with the dance!
to Molalla a
engers to tJi
Let joy be unconfined."
first train steams over the
ructed road from Canby
and pulls its load of pass-
the little city that is gaily
bedecked with bunting and with flags,
whistles will toot and bells will ring
and' the music of three bands will fill
the air with a cadence that will fit
tingly usher in the completion of the
new iline.
All Molalla will today be a recep
tion committee for the thousands of
visitors who expect to make the town
at its -first great celebration. Business
will be suspended and the citizens of
the community will join with the vis
itors in making the day the greatest
event in the history of the town and
an appropriate celebration of the
city's first outlet to the outside world.
Trains from Portland and from Sil
verton and Salem will bring thous
ands of excursionists to the little city
today. The Canby and Silverton bands .
will assist the Molalla organization
in celebrating the day while the audi
torium will be filled with the thous
ands of visitors who have come to
hear the speeches, of congratulation
that are to be extended to the city on
the day Vof the road's completion.
Robert E. Strahorn, president of the
Portland, Eugene & Eastern, -Governor
Oswald West, E. B .Piper of Port
land, C. C. Chapman, secretary of the
Portland Commercial club, Grant B.
Dimick of Oregon City, and others are
on the . program for short addresses.
In the afternoon, broncho busting
will be one of the day's features. A
bery of cowgirls will ride of the un
tamed bronchos of the plains and will,
exhibit before a vast throng In the
arena. On Saturday, an excellent ex
hibit of stock and farm products will
bp displayed.
The local committees have experted
every effort to make the day the big
gest in the city's history and to en
tertain the trains of .vistiors that are
expected for the celebration.
FIREMAN RUNS AMUCK AND
KILLS WIFE AND WATCHMAN
EVERETT, Wash., Sept. 18. W. R.
Schrader. a fireman, shot and killed
his wife at t.heir home here last night
and then shot and seriously wounded
Patrolman George Tift, who was
called by neighbors to arrest Schrader.
Tift was shot through the neck and
his collarbone was broken. After
shooting the policeman, Schrader es
caped. Schrader was arrested last
week on complaint of his wife. It is
supposed that when he returned home
last night, after serving a brief sent
ence in jail, they quarreled over the
previous trouble.
Early this morning the body of J.
Davis, a shingle mill watchman, was
found, horribly burned in the fire pit
at the mill. A bullet hole was in
Davis' skull, and statements of people
in the vicinity, who said they saw a
man answering, the description of .
Schrader running by there shortly be
fore Davis was killed, caused the po
lice to believe that Davis had inter
fered with Schrader's flight and was
killed by him.
The Moro Observer notes with pride
that according to the assessor's re
turns, Sherman county has more auto
moblies and fewer dogs than in 1912.
20 and 27
OREGON CITY
& EDWARDS
Good Floor Management
Gents $1 Ladies Free
v