THE WEATHER e S OREGON CITY Fair, follow- $ S ed by increasing cloudiness, with 4 unsettled and threatening weath- S 4 er; cooler; winds, shirting to 4 4 westerly. 4 - Oregon and Washington Fair.4i 4 east and fair west. S ' SS4&'3,& 4?"$ $ J. . ". s If people should give extended ? S thanks for prosperity, those of 3 Orpffnn nrari tr strand a larsrft nor- 6 $ tion. of their time giving thanks. WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1866. VOL. VL No. 73. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1913. Per Week, Ten Cents. OREGON CITY DAY SEES RECORD CROWD AT FAIR BARBECUES ARE GREAT CROWDS ATTEND ALL OF THE DISPLAYS AND SPEND TIME IN FUN EXHIBITS ATTRACT GIANT THRONGS City Has Large Delegations on Hand " rfhd Trains Are Filled Shows Illustrate Growth of the County During Year CANBY, Ore., Sept. 25. Two barbe cues, an elephant and a baseball game, along with other features, marked "Oregon City Day" at the seventh an nual Clackamas county fair Thursday, and over 3,000 persons turned out to see the offerings of the occasion. The barbecues were a success from every viewpoint in fact the morning one was so good that popular demand made the afternoon one necessary. The elephant was a late arrival, and belonged to ft. carnival company thai got lost on the way here. When- the company, and the elephant arrived there was panic among the race j horsese until the big pachyderm had passed. As for the baseball game, it was between Hubard and Mt. Angel, and was won by the former to the j tune of 4 to 0- Big Success. All these things, and others, helped make Oregon City Day a genuine suc cess, and practically everyone on hand got his or her money's worth. Some later exhibits arrived during the pre vious night and were put in place to add to the attractions. Among these was the display -of fruits, vegetables and grains put up by Secretary Frey- tag, of the Oregon City Commercial club. This exhibit bore no name to identify it, and was only discovered by Oregon City folk after a good deal of sleuthing. But it made them feel proud when they finally discovered what it was. The social hygiene ex hibit of th9 Oregon Social Hygiene society was also put in place ,and at tracted many visitors. Livestock Show. Judging of livestock and of part of the juvenile and general display be gan Thursday, but owing to the close rivalries that developed in the differ ent classes, was not completed, and will be continued Friday. Some idea of the trouble experienced by the judges may be gained from the state ment that it took Judge Cleveland 15 minutes in one case to pick winners in a display of but six Polan China pigs, so. near to standard were all the ROYAL BREAD The best that money and human skill can produce Fresh every day at HARRIS' Grocery 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 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 DROS. OPPOSITH COURT HOUSH POPULAR PLACES entries. Incidentally Judge Grant B. Dimick' pigs carried off a majority of the awards for Poland Chinas. Horse Display. Judging of draft and driving horses was completed Thursday, and as the prize winning animals were led about in impromptu parades by their own ers they arched their necks and pranc ed in apparent prids. Detailed lists of -the prize winners in all classes will bnrejdy for publication the latter part of the fair, after the results have been tabulated and tbe sweepstakes settled- Among the special exhibits viewed by the judges Thursday was the mini ature shoe factory maintained as a part of the exhibit of L. Adams & Co., of Oregon City, where several pairs of shoes are manufactured daily in plain view of all who care to stop and look:. This exhibit won the first prize an award of $25 for the best working exhibit and display at the fair. Crowds stood about the booth all day watch ing the transformation of raw leather into serviceable boots and shoes. School Children Rivalry. Considerable rivalry has developel among the school children who have giant pumpkins and squashes on dis play. There are over an acre of these big gourdlike vegetables, ail of which have been "fattened" on milk and oth er special "waterings;" and the judges were in dispair as to which should have the prize. It was finally deter mined to have some special expert pass upon the big exhibits, to deter mine the relative merits. Much rivalry has also developed among the individual exhibitors as to who shall win the magnificent $50 sil ver cup offered by the Northern Pa cific railway. This cup is at present reposing in the place of honor of the Molalla booth, and is finely set off by its surroundings. Always before it is to be found a gathering of farmers and ranchers, each of whom hopes to gain the trophy, and all of whom are figuring whether or not it will look best in the parlor or in the dining room. The cup is to he awarded the exhibitor who, in the eyes of the judges, has the best general display of farm produce of all kinds. It is to be competed for each year, but if won three years by an one man, will be come his property. Cup For Fruit ' The Southern Pacific has also of fered a silver cup for the best display of fruits, and this is also eagerly sought by the exhibitors- Both cups will be awarded on Saturday, the las; day of the fair. Saturday, in fact, will be a sort of gala day all around, and exhibitors expect to have their winning displays decorated with rib bons and trophies at that time. Friday will be "Mofalla Day" at the fair, and in anticipation of a record breaking crowd from the upper part of the country, special preparations are being made to entertain all com ers. A program of attractive events has been prepared, and several of the displays will be rearranged, so that the exhibits "may he shown to the best of their advantage. This was done in many instances between the first and second days of the fair, and the change in position ond grouping of the displays not only added to the in terest of the showing made, but also served to keep people who visited the fair the sscond time from finding things monotonous. Use New Road. Molallans will turn out strong at the fair, and wild make the journey down to Canby over their new rail road, the Portland, Eugene & Eastern, which inaugurated its service just in time to catch the holiday crowds. Holi day crowds is quite .the correct term, for people who visited the fair on the opening day nave found its' attractions so alluring that many of them have not only returned, but have gone camp ing in the grove to the northeast of the grounds, there to spend the re mainder of the week. BOYS' FEET HAVE WINGS- ESCAPES Albert Kidder, who was sent to the reform school for running away from home with a stolen horse and buggy and who escaped from that institution last Monday, was found Thursday evening by Constable Jack Frost at his home in West Oregon City. The 10-year-old boy slipped away from the Salem school last Monday and walked all the way to his home here. The constable was informed of the runaway the same day of the escape and since has been waiting for his return. The boy will be taken back Friday morning. PLEADS FOR CHAIR OF LOGGING ENGINEERING SPOKANE, Wash.,- Sept. 25. Rec ommendation that $600,900 be raised by the logging interests of the Pa cific northwest for the endowment of chairs of logging engineering in uni versities of Oregon, Washington, Cali fornia, Idaho, Montana and British Co lumbia was made in the report of Sec retary George M- Cornwell, Portland, read here last night before the fifth annual Pacific Coast Logging con gress. Cornwall declared that there is need for better logging engineering and urged that aside from the endowment logging interests offer prizes to em ployes and others for inventions that will improve logging machinery and help improve knowledge of logging. He lauded the workmen's compensa tion law and declared for the better ment of conditions effecting employes in logging camps. - Won't some story' writer write one in which all the male characters, and most of the female, do not smoke ci garettes nearly all the time - ' Characteristic Pictures of Late Mayor W. J. Gaynor, Who Died at Sea and Body Shipped to America. Suf if ii af i ) r .ja?js&u- v i t- ixrf I i I 1 -wW-: MPS:1 Mf' ' ? v ' - f j , , Jfeifer - ' ,? !fNQ Fgti if rl3 - W id! cl? 'Jf iLil i fll" is I & - , AVjiC, juwuwu aui j...m . Pi f I . - xksL. BSErrr" s . ss ; - j Photo copyright. 1913, by American Press Association " While the body of Mayor William J. Gaynor of New York city was being brought to America on the Lusitania expressions of sympathy were received by the family from all parts of the country. Mayor Gaynor was beyoud doubt a national figure Not only was he widely known because of the attempt to assassinate him three years ago, but because his name was mentioned as a possible candidate for tbe Democratic nomination for president be fore tbe Baltimore convention nominated Woodrow Wilson. These characteristic pictures of the dead mayor" ars , interesting, particularly the one with the spade, which was taken at the time he accepted the independent nomina tion for re-election as mayor just before he sailed on what proved to he his death voyage. PARENTS-TEACHERS' CLUB GETS TO WORK The Parant-Teacher's club of Ca nemah will entertain the teachers at the school house Friday afternoon at 2 : 30 o'clock. Mrs. Fred J. Tooze and others will give a talk and refrash ments will be served. The club was organized about a year for the purpose of bringing the parents and teachers together for the benefit of the pupils. Last year was considered a very successful one but plans are being mad a for a still better season this winter. Enterprise advertising pays. BRiTlSH Cop jUa Sffls H 111 The speedy British motor boat Maple Leaf IV. which won the recent in ternatloual motor boat races in Eng land, defeating American a ud Ftench contenders for' the Harms worth Cup. " This type f toat ha.? rcminetalr revolutionized the building of high speed boats. The boiiom has the ap pearance of an inverted stair-case which standing settles intu the water. 4s the boat gradki w i Uj-j speed she rises but of the water her i lanes gliding along the sor.'a- j of :he water, until when at op -o-ol rh litter r.liy skips in lerps and bounds; in this way overcoming 'he .eaistanee formerly caused by plowing 'a-rigi the ater. - , - . . ; . Not m-. v.-a's i.u; or fifteen miles an hour was considered fast for a motor boat, but now this type of boat has attained speed equal to that of a railway train. .' - Justice Won't Let Him Have One Little Glass of Beer "Not even one little glaap of beer, Judge?" 1 ( "Not a drop!" sternly replied Jus tice Servers. "If I 1st you go and you get out of. that sentence, you've got to put in three months of hard work and support your family during that time. If you don't promise me that you will do that, into the county jail you go." And the promise wasn't long in com ing when the stern justice of the peace 'banded down his ultimatum nor did the doors of the Clackamas county jail MOTOR BOAT WINNER OF INTERNATIONAL RACES. yright'by International News Service). clang shut behind Clarence Hauld chafer and his brother-in-law, Lester Smith, Thursday. All the trouble arose over the fact that Hauldchafter wanted" a sack of flour and rifled the store of H. YV. Streibig to get it. Unfortunately, there was a hole in the ack and the little flakes of flour dripped gently out one by one to the ground and left an unmistakable trail from the store to the' home. The officers found one sack, investi gated, and located the other at the home of the brother-in-law. Coast League Standings W. L. PC. Portland ........94 72 .5C? Sacramento 87 81 .518 Venice 91 86 .514 San Francisco 87 91 .488 Los Angeles .'83 92'.474 Oakland , 79 99 .445 SIXTY APPLICANTS FLOOD CLERK FIRST PAPER HOLDERS POUR IN TO OFFICE TO CLEAR UP ' RECORDS GOVERNMENT AGENTS STIR THEM Work of Slueths Result in Filing of Lorge Number of the Petitions " " y for Final 'Hearing . ' . in Court Naturalizations - are coming in from all parts pf? the county to the office of the county clerk, 16 having arrived Thursday. The flood of applications is due to the activity of the movement agents and their'threat to make it as uncomfortable and troublesome as pos sible to get the papers through unless all of the work is cleared up before Saturday nighL So many of the residents of the county have taken out only their first papers and have gone no farther with the process that numbers of applica tions have lain dormant for years and no further steps been taken in the courts. . The government has deter mined to Clear up all of these and to see that the first applicants finish the process and receive their final papers as soon as their applications are ap proved by the courts. BAPTISTS TO BEGIN I In the lecture rooms of the Baptist church, Sunday evening at 6:30 o'clock, there will he held the first of a series of meeting of .special interest to young people. This meeting is under the direction of the missionary committee of the B. Y. P. U. and marks the opening of the fall work. A quartet consisting of Miss Ona Kenner, Miss Humstock, Mr. Lylie Kellog, and Mr. John Etchi- son, will render a selection and assist the chorister, Mr. Conklin, in the singing. Mftss Humstock and Miss Renner will sing a duet- A letter from Mliss Purcel . is ex-, pected, telling of th ework among the- Japanese in Seattle, where she is lo cated. Dr. Latourette will explain just how missionary work is carried on in China. The meeting October 5 will be under the management of the new officers and committees and arrangements are already under way for one of the best programs of the year. PORTLAND STEPS UP Portland 4, San Erancisco 2. Los Angeles 7, Sacramento 0. Oakland 5, Venice 4. COUNTERFEITER'S WIFE A DIVORCE The wife of a convicted counterfeit er applied in the circuit court for a divorce Thursday, alleging as the grounds for the action that the hus band had deserted her after he had completed his six months' sentence in the county jail in Canada. Annie Mf Her brought the suit against William Miller. They were married at Drayton, province of On tario, dominion of Canada and the de sertion is alleged to have occurred at Montreal- She asks in the complaint that her maiden name of Annie At kinson be restored. Another desertion case was filed when Ira A. Mallory 'brought the ac tion against his wife, Hilda Mallory. They were married in Douglas county, Oregon, July 8, 1906. CLATSOP COUNTY MAY VOTE ON BOND ISSUE ASTORIA. Ore., Sept. 25. The pro gressive citizens of Clatsop county, not to be outdone by others in the lower Columbia river section, are now agitating the question of voting on a $400,090 bond issue for good roads at the November election. The principal object in the move is to as sist the Columbia Highway association in establishing the proposed highway from Portland to the sea via Astoria. To construct the highway through Clatsop county it is necessary to issue bonds to raise the required funds, and petitions are , now .being circulated throughout the county to put the ques tion on the ballot. The petitions must be filed by October 1, otherwise the election will- be illegal. The plan of those behind the move ment is to issue a series of 2o year bonds, which willl draw 6 per cent in terest. The first series is to be for $100,000, and will be placed under the direction of' the Clatsop county court, while the actual construction work will be under the supervision, ol the state highway commission. ' COP PINCHED WHEN SHOT KILLS A BYSTANDER CHICAGO, Sept. 25.A bullet fired by Policeman William Allen at three highwaymen early today struck an iron trolley pole, deflected and killed William Lorimer, a tobacco agent. Three friends who were talking with Lorimer when he was shot seized the policeman and took him to the sta tion, where he was placed under ar rest. Another pq'.iceman heard the shots and arrested one of the rob bers. - " - Fred Schafer, a farmer and saw mill man of the Molalla district, came into Oregon City Thursday. FACTORY WON'T GO TO ALBANY DELAY IN , PRELIMINARY WORK " PREVENTS LOCATION OF WOOLEN PLANT CANNOT SECURE ENOUGH WOMEN Business Men Plan Spring' Campaign to Get Branch House Erected " There Next Year. When Outlook is Better The garment factory which the Ore gap City Manufacturing company re cently proposed to establish in Albany will not be located there, at least this year acording to a circular letter which has been sent to residents of that town, informing them that the money which they subscribed to the proposition has been cancelled by or der of the, Albany Commercial club. The large local plant found it im possible to secure enough -women to handle the product of a garment de partment, and looked over the valley towns for a suitable location, with the result that Albany was choosen. It made arrangements with the bus iness men under which Albany would secure land and erect the building costing $10,090. The arrangements have been completed but because of the time required in finishing the plans, and Some disagreement as to the cost of the building, it has grown so late in the season that it will be impossible to build the factory thi3 year. The Albany business men are making plans to renew the campaign in the spring. NEW ILLUSTRATED BOOK ON PANAMA No simi'.iar book ever published will be so widely read as "Panama and the Canal in Picture and Prose," which tbe.-JSnterprise presents to its read ers on the plan explained "dsewhere in this issue- It is a great big, beau tiful volume, twice the size of an or dinary novel, and contains the com plete story of the Panama canal in picture and prose. - Willis J Abbot, the author of this book, has for many years been a writ er on international topics. Tnia has not only fitted him for handling the subject in question, but has given him a large acquaintance among officials who have been instrumental in build ing this mighty interoceanic water way. Bo the story is complete, from the time when Columbus sought for a natural water course to the Pacific ocean, up through the centuries of rev. olution and warefare, and on through' to the realization of the erenteHf achievement of this day and age. It tells of the people and the country; the various strange modes of life; the occupations, sports and pastimes of the natives; how they live and dress; in fact, it is filled with local and heart interest set forth in a chatty style that at once grasps and holds the reader to the very end. Such a work cannot help to be of vast importance in the education of all who would desire to keep abreast of the times. The old as well as the young will find information of rare ed ucational value throughout this vol ume. The illustrations cover every subject treated. They consist of more than 600 photographic reproduc tions, and include numerous full page in colors that portraws the richness of the scenery in this great tropical garden. No similar work was ever so profusely and expensively illustrated. The Enterprise wants every one of its readers to have a copy of this beautiful new illustrated book, and to that end a certificate is printed daily in these columns, six of which enable the bearer to get it when ac companied by a small expense fee to cover the actual cost of the various items of distribution. This is all ex plained in the Panama certificate. - BUY SUPPLIES HERE The Indians from the Warm Spring reservation are in Oregon City on their, return from their annual trip to western Oregon. Every fall they come to this city with great quantities of huckleberries which they sell to local merchants ami then they scatted to neighboring hop fields. On their way back they stop here and buy supplies for the winter. FLAGS DIP ON ALL OCEAN - VESSELS ON PACIFIC OCEAN SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 25. Over the Pacific ocean today there went radiating from San Francisco a wire less message which reached every ship with wireless apparatus, and ask ed it to dip its flag in honor of the four hundredth anniverary of the dis covery of that great expanse of water by Balboa. The message was sent by the Mar oon! Wireless Telegraph company and was picked up and relayed from ship to ship until within a short time every vessel on the Pacific had received it. The message read: "Dip flags. Pacific ocean discover ed 400 years ago today by Balboa. Pa cific coast celebrates anniversary in the Portola Festival at San Francisco October 22-25. Portola Festival com mittee sends greetings." The poet who in autumn wrote: "The- melancholy days have come, the saddest of the year," must have had dyspepsia or hookworm or something.