THE WEATHER OREGON CITY Fair; north- 4 erly winds. - S $ Oregon and Washington ai.il $ Idaho-Fair; north to east ? winds. ' - EDWARD A. HEALS, 8 District Forecaster. 5 ' - ' But it isn't blind if it is self S love. fc . WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1866. VOL. VI. No. 77. OREGON CITY, OREGON; WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1913.' Per Week, Ten Cents. u LIVE WIRES TALK WATER SOURCE BELIEVE CITY HAS HAD BAD AD VERTISING ON ITS TYPHOID FEVER TROUBLE BULL RUN ONLY "BLACK-EYE" CURE Regardless of Guilt of Germs, Town Must Have New Supply to Get Itself Straight, is Con tention Water boiled, filtered, or chemi cally injected was the main subject of discussion by the Live Wires at the regular weekly meeting in the rooms of the Commercial club Tues day noon. In spite of the assurances that not a single disraasercarrying germ had ever been found in the city water, test votes at the meeting showed that only a small percentage of the city's population there repre sented uses the water without boiling it, and a large percentage does not use it under any circumstances. Speakers threshed out the question of water from every angle. Most of them declared that, regardless of the chemical and other tests that the state board had made, the city had received adverse advertising as to its water supply and the only way that this effect could bo met was by the securing of another water source. That water source ought to be Bull Run, according to the general sentir ment of the meeting. The Live Wires believed that the advertising the city would receive if it were generally known that the water supply came from that source would be such that the present black eye would be cured and the city put again on the health list. Reports Offered. Reports from Councilman Tooze and Commissioner Joseph E. Hedges along the line of work done during the investigations of the water were made and the councilman promised further reports as soon as the nego tiations with Portland are completed. F. A. Olmstead, a chemist, declared that Dr. Smith of the state hoard of haalth said, that, in addition to the typhoid germs, the water may carry germs of six other disease and he assured the Live Wires that he was deathly afraid of the others re gardless of the purity of the water from typhoid contamination. Mr. Hazel and B. T. McBain advo cated a new water supply on the ground that the present system ts giving the city a black-eye whether it deserves it or not and that the only way out of the muddle is a new source of supply. (Continued on Page 4.) ROYAL BREAD The quality and full loaf may be imitated, but never equaled 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 STAMP8 WITH EV ERY 10c PURCHASE. Highest market prices for stock . . and poultry Phone Pacific 410 Home A133 TODAY -AT THE- m. If you want to enjoy yourself, be sure to see "The Suffragette Minstrels" Just a little spicy "Father's Chicken Dinner". Is another jolly one x "The Line-Up" A swell Football picture in two parts Absolutely a 'Good to Finish CLARK CHARGED WITH SHERIFF FILES COMPLAINT HIM SELF AND MAN IS ARRAIGNED PRELIMINARIES HAVE BEEN WAIVED Does Not Insist Upon Right and Goes Calmly Back to Jail to Await Action of Grand Jury on His Case Harry Clark is now held in the Clackamas county jail ,by Sheriff E. T. Mass under a committment follow ing the filing of a formal complaint charging him with murder. The complaint follows the finding of In dian Henry Yelkis dead in -the road out "of Molalla more than a week ago and the discovery, that Clark was lost with the msgi before his death. For nearly a week, the sheriff has held the man in jail pending the in vestigations surrounding the death of the old Indian chief. Several trips have been made through the country and the sheriff has gathered evidence in connection with the case. The complaint was sworn to by the sheriff before Justice John N. Seivers and Clark was immediately arraigned and waived the usual preliminary hearing. He has been committed to await the action of the grand jury. COURT REFUSES TO T The Clackamas Southern injunc tion to restrain it from constructing a line across his land was refused to George Lamers by Judge Campbell in the circuit court Tuesday on the theory that th3 agreement had been made in good faith for a right of way and that the railroad had already gone to considerable expense in the matter of improvement on the basis of that agreement. Though, under fhe law, the convey ance of real estate by a verbal agree ment is void, the court held that the owner of the property hadx given up his rights to assume that position be cause he had permitted the company to use' tie land and to grade for the road bed. Nearly 200 feet of fill has baen made on the property under the verbal agreement that was made be tween the owner and the railroad. Lamers asked for the restraining order, but. after hearing evidence for a short time, the court refused the application. COIN OVER COUNTER Believing that October 1 was the last day on which taxes could be paid before they became delinquent, a mass of property - owners swarmed through the sheriff's office a day ahead yesterday .and met their assess irients. The office was busy all day taking in the county mbney though the tax payers still have until next Monday night on which to pay -their taxes be fore the time has expired. After that time, they will become delinquent and will be entered on the county records The law reads the first Mbnday in October instead of October 1, as many of the property owners seemed to be lieve. MURDER A Kf nx Show from Start Columbus Caravels Now on Way From Chicago to San Francisco National Columbus Monument. '" " ' ! '"'-X-' ' ' s.f7yvws - n, XI b X i ue famous Columbus caravels are on tJieir way iigtiiu iunt twenty years ago in Spain, these replicas of cue three ships in which Christopher Columbus and his voyagers crossed the Atlantic and discovered America were brought to this country and exhibited at the World's fair at Chicago. They have been anchored there ever since. Now they are manned by llarvard students and are on their second voyage, this time through the great lakes, down the St. Iawrence river, along the Atlantic-coast through the Panama canal and up the Pacific to San Francisco, where they will be exhibited at the Pnnnum-Pac-iflf exposition. The three ships, the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria, are here shown. The national Coin minis monument at Washington, which is of interest as Columbus day, Oct 12, approaches, is also shown. . LAZY APPLICANTS APPEAR TOO LATE Many applicants who failed to file their requests for final papers are now having to go through the process all over again and, for the second time, have declared their intention to become citizens of thy? United States. Several of them have lived in the state for a number of years but have never taken mors than the first pa pers. As they are, under the law, en titled to vote and to exercise other rights of citizenship, thay have no'j found it necessary to go any further with the process. The action of the government of cials is rounding up the greater num ber of these dslinquenis has cleared the records of the county materially and many of those who have let the papers wait for them for several years will soon b-3 full-fledged citi zens of the country of their adoption. TAKE ANOTHER LIFE Mrs. Mb,ggie H. Davies, wife of David H. Davies, died at hsr resi dence in Oregon City, 801 Madison street, Sunday evening at 9 o'clock. She had been ill for the last year, and for the last few months had been suf fering severely from cancer. She was born in New York City, April 30, 1846, and in 1853 she went to Wisconsin, where she married D. H. Davies in 1867, at Wautomjar. The family came to Oregon City to reside in September, 1911. Besides her husband she leaves two daugh ters, Mrs. Marian- Shover, of Salem, and Miss Ethel B. Dovies, of Oregon City, and asister, Mrs. E. B. Evans, of Wild Rose, Wisconsin. The fu neral will be held from the family residence Wednesday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock, and the interment will be in Mountain View cemetery. Living By Serving That is the motto of the mod ern merchant. He knows his business will grow exactly in the proportion of his ability to make it useful to the public. The better he can make him self known for character, for courtesy, for fairness in ' price, the larger will be the measure of his success. The modern merchant believes in taking the public into his con fidence. He believes people are interest ed in the sources of merchandise its purpose its character, as well as its fineness and price. He classes these things a legi timate news of his store. He tells this new through the advertising of live daily newspa pers like Thj3 ENTERPRISE. v He feels It is part of his serv ice to keep the public informed. And because of this intensely human purpose advertising is such very interesting reading notonly interesting -but helpful andprofltable reading. STOCKHOLDERS MUST PAY BILL CANNOT CHANGE .MINDS AFTER AGREEMENT HAS BEEN MADE WITH COMPANY DECISION PLEASES THE RAILROADS Officials Consider it of Moral in. Work of Extracting Funds From Other Holders of Stock Blocks Subscribers to railroad stock must, hereafter, pay up. In a decision in the circuit court Tuesday, Judge Eakin held that John H. Vick would have to pay the Clack amas Southern railroad $473.36 as the balance due on the $500 worth of stock that he bought some time ago. Since that time, the Portland, Eugene & Eastern has also passed close to the Vick property and h,a has dater mined not to pay for the stock that he held in the other line. Promptly, suit was brought by the company for the remainder of the amount and the case carried into the circuit court when Judge Eakin heard the testimony and handed in his de cisions in the case Tuesday morning. He also gave the defendant the usual 30 days in which to file a motion for a new trial. ' The decision of the court is conr (Continued on Page 4.) I STTAEL TlfflEATHtlE;; Starting Tonight for 4 Days THE FRANK RICH COMPANY (Eastern Original Company) Tonight's Play PLENTY OF GOOD WHOLESOME COMEDY TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY - - - - - Don't Forget the Chorus Girls' Contest Friday Night COME CALLED -IN TO PORTLAND The local committee and members of te Oregon State Hy genie society will have a dinner and conference at 6o'clock October 7, in the Portlaul hotel with the delegations from other sections of the state to talk over mat ters of common interest and to dis cuss plans and programs for addition al work. The organization has been formu lating plans for a furtherance of its policies and program for several weeks and a general call has been is sued to the commttees in different parts of the state to gather in Port 'and for this conferenca. A. C. How land has received a letter from E. J. Cummins of the general office ask ing all of the committeemen, at least, to attend. Following are the members of . the local delegation: C. H. Caufield, Dr. U A. Morris, E. K. Stanton, J. E. Hedges, Dr. H. S. Mount, Prof. A. O. Freel, John W. Loder, Prof. T. J. Gary, J. W. Moffatt, William Sheahan, Chis Schuebel, A .C. Howland, Harvey Cross, Dr. J. A. VanBrakle, W. A. Huntley, M. D. Latourette, F. J. Tooze, William Andresen, B. T. McBain, L. E. Jones. DEPUTY RETURNS Miss Iva Harrington, one of the deputies in the office of County Clerk Will L. Mulvey, has returned from her vacation, part of which she spent at the Round-up in Pendleton. The Fol de Rol club will give a dance on October 17th, in Busch's hall. Further plans will be announced later. THEY VR - - AT "The Girl From Panama" PRICES 25 CENTS H0LM11 BOOMERANG RETURNSWITH STING AUTO PARTY RETURNS T Three cars, belonging to E. J. Daul ton, A. W. Cheney, and M. D. Latour etti3, filled with 13 Oregon City per sonsMr. and Mrs. E. J. Daulton, Misses Helen and Bessie Daulton, Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Latourette, their son Edward, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Cheney, and their son Orin, have returned from a trip to th Round-up and other points. The party went by Mount Hood and through the towns of Shaniko, Fossil and Condon to Pendleton. About the only trouble experienced on the trip outside of punctures was at Fossil, whata the gear of the car of M. D. Latourette was stripped. The injured car was towed by the others to Con don, where they were delayed for seven hours for repairs. They report good roads all the way except between Sandy and Govern ment Camp. CARRIER AND SHIPPER MUST BE FAIR TO EACH OTHER SALEM, Ore., Sept. 30. "The car rier should be allowed fair compensa tion, and the shipper should be charg ed only what he can reasonably afford to pay for the services performed." Because of . the above intsructions given to a jury by Circuit Judge Wil liam Smith of Baker county in the case of Service & Wright Lumber Co. against the Sumpter Valley Railway company, appellant, the supreme court today reversed' the lower court and laid down a rule for the relation of carrier to shipper. From 1903 to 1906 the lumbar com pany shipped 897 cars of lumber and other timber products from a point on the railroad company's Whitney to Baker branch. The shipments aggre gated 913 tons and the number com pany was charged $2 a ton freight for a distance of 23 miles. The lumber company alleged that it ' had been charged a discriminatory rate, which was unreasonable and excessive. It alleged that a just rate would have been 65.8 cents per ton. Suit was brought for $12,255.90 rebate. "If it were unjust for a carrier to demand special rates from an . indi dividual shipper higher than those awarded to his competitors, it would be equally unjust for an individual to demand for himself lower rates than those demanded from his competit ors," says the supreme court's opin ion, written by Justice Burnett. "It is wrong for the carrier to charge as freight all the traffic will bear, and legislation has restrained such greed. It is quite as reprehensible for the shipper to demand of the carriar all its service will bear. "The law wisely fixes reason and fair dealing as the standard govern ing the demands of both parties What the individual can afford to pa is not the standard by which the mat ter of freight charges is tt be judgea. If that principle be admitted, discriir. inating would be cannonizec: and uni form treatment of shippers would automatically cease, yet the court virtually enunciated that principle and repeated it in the excerpt quoted." Harry Young, a young man. from I Portland, who attempted to paddle up the Willamette to Oregon City a week or so ago, will attempt to make the entire trip Saturday or Sunday if the weather permits. BEAVERS FAKE ONE Xt Portland Portland 3, Oakland 2. At San Francisco- -San Francisco 4, Sacramento 1. . At Venice Los Angeles 3, Venice 1. Coast League Standings W. L. PC. Portland . '.': 73 .568 Venice ..05 S3 .519 Sacramento S& pi .514 San Francisco S9 92 .492 Los Angelas" Sb 94 .47S Oakland SO 104 AM E THE IK! E R CATCHY MUSIC CLEVER - " - - - - ANY SEAT DICK HAS H S l AT BAT FIRES BACK CHARGE THAT COUN CILMAN MADE ON THE DAY BEFORE TWO MEN ARE CENTER OF INTEREST Side Lights of Trial Focused on Them When Charges and Counter Charges Fly Thick and Fast "All of the testimony that Holman gave here on the stand was a false hood -and he knew that he falsified when he gave it," declared Judge Grant B. Dimick, in the case against the city for the injunction restrain ing the officers from paying E. L. Shaw his warrants, as "keeper of the city jail" or chief of police, depend ing on the side that one takes in the contention. The declaration of the former may or came as an answer to the same charge that Holman had made on the stand the day before. Dimick claimed that Holman's tastimony on the reso lution creating the new officer of city jailer was false. Holman had, just the day before, declared that Dim ick's charge that he and other mem bers of the council had entered a con spiracy to hold up all Dimick appoint ments, was- a falsehood. Trial Exciting. Intense- feeling seems to prevail at the trial. The center of the excit ment focused on the member of the council and the former mayor. Coun cilman Tooze and Albright were on the stand to tell about the passage of the resolution. v Tooze claimed that it had passed on February 10, 1912, while the records showed that it had not been presented until February 13 of that year. The counsel for the plaintiff claimed that as a ground for assuming that the council had passed so many resolutions at just that time that there, was no record kept of this particular one and that it had never pasad; though it was admitted to have been introduced. Shaw Befuddled. Another feature of the trial was the testimony of Chief Shaw who, it is said, told that he had never been chief of police during that year and that his official title was keeper of the city jail. Counsel for the plain tiff introduced his answer in which he is said to have claimed that he was performing all of the duties of that office. It was said that he was un able to explain this difference be tween his testimony on the stand during the trial and the answer that had been filed. The case was before Judge Eakin all day and the testimony is now in. The court allowed each side 10 days in which to file wriften briars and it will probably take 10 days more be fore a decision is reached, in all a pariod of about one month. Both fac tions have determined upon carrying the casta to the supreme court of the state for final settlement and have been particular about the record as it is made from day to day in the cir cuit court. The attorneys involved are, for tha plaintiff. B. N. Hicks; for the defend ants, C. D. Latourette, Joseph E. Hedges and William Stone. MACCABEES PLAN TO HAVE MANY DANCES The local order of Macabees ' gave their first dance of the season at thp I. O. O. F. hall Tuesday evening. The K. O. T. M. orchestra furnished music. This is but the first of a series of dances and social functions to be giv en by the Macabees to extent througj the winter. Plans are being complet ed for a busy year by the order. . E DANCING 7:00 P. M. 9.00 P. M m MATINEE SATURDAY