V Oregon lir rrr 7 V -:ATnninio"0'o VOL 20. NO. TO. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1895. ESTABLISHED 1866 ISE 1 1 s OOttllTH. Olroult finurt cnnvenea Hml Monday u No- unit wuuunjr in Aril, (lowmliilimrricmirt mi flrat Wolurlr tfltir Mnl Uhii.I.h i.l ....I. . ' ..... ...... in iiwii nnMiwi, Q KO. 0. HINKAIIHON, ATTOUNKY AT LAW. Will practice In all cmiru of the etsta, Onirp In Jaiucr lltilldlug iiipinlt0 Court llouae. Q OIIDDN K. 1UYKH, LAWYER. All legal mattera attended In promptly, AY r II I'OMVNH, ATTOUNKY AT LAW. OANliv. "KKciON, Will practice Min nil courla, Insurance wrlltn In nil Wlliif oninpaulna. OUR CARPETS win on sight. The merit of a carpet i l matter of material mid pattern, whatever the material of any carjmt we oiler mav ho, II I emphatically a good value. Anything ituri.'liuwil from us has the quality of wear in It, That roumi from the mimrlorlty of IIih material. In paitorn we select the crtn of the season' production aii'l show many exclusive design. Kor that reaaon our curpi't exhibit in better worth examina tion than any other In town. You mie so much t hat you can't aee elsewhere that ynu at oni e ace the advantage of ptirraaing from na. W are now selling Ingrain Carpet for 'h cent a van), and upward. DELLOMY & BUSCH. GK0 . I.. MTOIIY, ATTOUNKY AT LAW. t'patalra nppuuli. Court llntiae. Tlllea examined unit alxtraota mail. Money Loaned, MorttKrt lorm'loatMl anil a general law bu.lur... M o'xaii.l. J. t Mxuoaa. nr. TiioarwiN T. OHirriTii O'NKll.L, II KIXiKH. THOMPSON a omrmii. ATTOUNEYH AT LAW. Ofllecelu Hark ley llulldliig, irr.n City, and A U V. W. Temple, l'orllatiil. Do Urniiral limine... Ien Money, t'rge Collntlloiia. "J J T HI.APK.N, NOTARY I't'llMC ami CKNVKYANCKIt. Heel eafata bandied, lu.tiranc written In the llartlnrd. ot llartloril, I'ala'lnn. North Jlrlllih A Mnrraullle, Hamburg ol llretnati Offlee with II. K. i:ne, Oregon Cllv, Oregon 0 I.AC KAMA 8 A1IH1IIACT A TKl'HT CO. Ab.tracta nl Clackamaa county prorty a apeo tally, OothI work, reasonable rlierirea, Work guaranteed, (live u a trial . C UloiiiTlte, K. K DoiialOaon, J. T. ( lark, Ulrwiora. oaaoo city, .... oaooK. PureDrus In a iinmcriptiiin arc of bh much valuo.in HicknoHB an ukillnd medical attendance. 7th. St. Drug Store. MakoH a upccialty of enrrying a Htock of pure drugs and all prcHcriptionn are carefully compounded. Dr. L. M. Andrews- o w amiuiKD m. a Johnson JINNAIHl) A JOIINHON. CIVIL KNOINKEItH AN1 Ul'KVEYOKH. Hallway laoatlon and pomtriirllon. brldgna plain and estlnialaa lor water iupply. Dralnai and atrcet lmiroremeut ol town. flpaelal altanllon lvn to drauthllui and blue prin u "y CARK Y JOIINHON, LAWYKR. Corner Klght aud Main atrreu, Orrfon City, Oreon. KKAI. KHTATK T0UKI.L AN D MONEY TO LOAN. J U rOKTER. ATTORNKY AT LAW AiaTaacTaorraoraaTY rt'Niiin. ' Offloa neil to Orefou City bank on 8th atreol. O. T. W II. I.I AMU, Rf!AL K8TATK 7si 1A3AH AOKNT. A food Una of btialneaa, residence and luburbau rroperty. Farm Property In trarta lo mlt ou eaay trrroa. Onrraapnndenra pi Heat door to Caufleu HJlflLlDlIilliiij ...WILL FIND THE... Ablo to give PriccB and work Equal to the best to bo had in Portland on Doors, Sash, Blinds and in side Finishing. House Bills a Specialty. Orders for Turning Filled. Robbins & Lawrence, Prop. Shop on Main and Eleventh Street. romMlr anawerod. Oram. d a Huntley drill (lore. Q U.AD.C. LATOUKKTT&, ATTORN KYH AND COUNRKIiORH AT LAW main tfTaasT, oaxooN city, okkuon. Fumlih Ahilraota of Till, Loan Money, Fore- cioaa aortiaxoa, ami irauaacl Oeueral Law Uualneaa. J J K. CHtlHg, ATTOUNKY AT LAW. Will Prucrira im All CottaTa or ma Btati Real Katate and Inauranre. Office on Mdo Btr et lieL Blxth aud Boventh, oaaoon city, oa. II, DYR, ATTORNKY AND COUNHKLOR AT LAW Office over Oregon City Dank. oaaooH city, oaaaoN oao. c. RHOWNXLL. IKOWNELL A DIIF.HHKR a. a. DRKaaxa. ATT0UNEY8 AT LAW, OBKOON CITY, ..... OnXOON. Will practice In all the courta of the atate. 01 flce, next door to Cauflold A lluntluy'a drug (lore. milB COMMERCIAL BANK, OF OREGON CITY. Capital, 1100,009 TaAKHACTi A aXNXRAL BANIINO RtKINKIia. Loana made. II 1 1 1 ev dlicouuted, Mukei col lootlona. Buya and aella exchange on all polnta In tli United Btatca, Europe and Kong Kong, DopoilU rece("cd aubjoot to check Inleruatat uanal ratea allowed ou time dcpoalta. Hank open from (U. at. to 4 r. a. Saturday evonlngi Irom 6 to 7 r. M. D. C. LATOURETTK. Prcaident. V B DONALDSON, Caahlor OREGON CITY IRON WORKS. New and Enlarged Shop with all appliances for MACHINE WORK & CASTING. All work executed in the best manner possible. Promptness guaran teed on all orders. RBPA1BING A - SPECIALT Y. Prices the lowest to be had in Portland. Shop on Fourth Street, near Main, Oregon City, Oregon. L ROAKE & CO., Proprietors. -ow you Can Save Money When your children need a laxative or stomach and bowel regulator, buy BABY'S FRUIT LAXATIVE. Fifty doses for twenty-hve cents. The season for colds and coughs is upon us. In order to be pre- pareu ur an emergency, get a bottle ot Baby's Pectoral Syrup, The best in the market. Price 25 cents. For sale at the CAN BY PHARMACY, Canby, Or. DR. J. H. IRVINE, Proprietor. JJANK OF 0KKOCN CITY, Oldest Banking Hesse in ine Cltr. Paid up Capital, M),000. PBKHIDXNT, VICK PRBMDENT, CAHItlltll, MANAOKR. TIIOI. CltARMAM 0KO. A. II A Kill NO. K. O CAIIF1KI.D. CHAXI.Kfl H. CAUPIKLD, A general banking IiuhIih'sh trnimRctod. Uepoalta received aubjont to check. Approved bllla and notca dlacounted. Count; and olty warrants bnught. Loana mvlo on available aocurlty. Exchange bought and (Old. Collection made promptly. Drafta told available In any part of the world Telegraphlo exchangea aold on Portlaud, San Fraiolaco, flhlcaga and New York. Intereat palj on time depoalti. ..ub Areuuof THE LONDON CHEQUE BANK. Do You Need a Legal Blank? Tho ENTERPRISE has the only complete stock in Clackamas county. Nearly 200 Different Blanks to Make Selections From. Every kind of a blank needod by a Judge, Jus tice, Lawyer, Real Estate Dealer, Farmer or Mechanic. One or a Quantity Sent potsage paid at Portland Prices to Your Address. OUR INDUSTRIES. Mil!; Factory and Dwelling Im provement Under Way. 0RKU0 CITY STEADILY liKOWINU Nearly :!00,00) Now Reins; Expended fur llulldliiira and Mmhluery in and Around thla ( Ity. In apite of the general complaint of financial di-preeeion Oregon City con-1 tin uee to fluri8l and grow. The nulla and fiictoriea areaddingto theircapadty preparations' are under way for the con airucuun 01 anoiner oriea block, new j dwellingN and btiHineaa bouwa have re- cently been completed, and other are under way, and plana perfected for ! more later in the aeaaon . The otitlook Iwht-n compared with the present con Idition of other town in the Willamette valley, is, indeed, encouraging. ! I'OKTLAND OXNkKAL ELIiCTBIC COMPANY. ' One of the moet gigantic enterpriaea in : the f tale of Oregon, ia the electric power ' plant and atationa of the General Klec- trie Company. Tide company own the I lock and large tract! of landa on both aide of the river, and are conHeqtienlly j iutereated in the development ol Oregon j City. Till company not only fm nisb all : the electric liuhi and power for Portland. and for Oregon City, but furnish power , lor 0eraUng the Kant Side Railway Company to Milwaukee and light and power for intermediate point. The ; company also oerate an electric line to Willamette Falls, mile aouth, on the w;at aide of the river. a ne ueneral J-Jectrtc Company wae ; I orgitnixeu aomettung over two years ago with a capital etoclc of $4,250,000, and purchaaed the entire water power em j braced in the rail of the Willamette at I this city, 12 miles above Portland. P. JF. Morey, of Oregon City, is president; II. W. Goodo, of Poitland, general man ager ;C. H. Caufleld.Sec;W. C.Chenej. electrician, and T. W.Sullivan. engineer. This comtmny have already expended co less than 1,SX).0()0 on the immeiiae pewer stations and other improvements j here, and the contemplated cost of com pleting this plant, which will be the largest and moot complete electric gen erating plant on the Coast, and one of the largeet in the United States, will be about :00,000 more. Ileretolore the lights and power for the city of Portland have been ftirnisl ed from the east nide station, but two years ago the com puny began the construction of one of the greatest electric power station in the world on the edge of the locks canal. This structure, when fully completed, will have an ultimate length, parallel with the river, 6f 3t4 feet, and the wid'h of the building is 38 feet. The eaves are 77 feet above mean low water mark, and the entiie structure is most solidly built of concrete, Btone, iron and brick. The almost unprecedented high waters of the past two years have materially hindered the progress of the work, and the great freshet of last June did aauch damage to some of the partially completed improve ment. The maximum capacity of the station as completed at the present time is 6000 horse power, but this will soon be increased to 12,000 horse power. The canal side of the building wiil form one wall of the great locks canal when fully widened. Only one of the 600-horse power dynamos has been put at work as yet. but another one is being placed in position, and Manager Goode says that within 00 davs they will be operating 4500 horse power. The electric machinery for this station was designed by Mr. A. Eckstrom, one of the best known practical electricians in the United States, and was built under his supervision at the works of the General Electric Co., at Lynn, Mass, Mr. Eckstrom is busy making tests witb the new electrical machinery, and every' thing is proving yery satisfactory. Con nectiona have been made with Portland, and every article of electrical appliance and apparatus placed in the building are under the critical supervision of Mr. Eck strom, who has long been connected with the manufactures of the latest im proved electrical appliances for light and power, now in use. The following inter esting account of the transmission of the first current sent down to Portland the other day is taken from the Oregonian, and the disposal of the current, was man aged by Mr. Eckstrom : ' "Any one who thinks it is not practi cable to cook with electricity should in spect the apparatus used in the station of the Portland General Electric Com pany, to make a load for the current sent down from the big dynamo started at Oregon City Saturday. It appears to be necessary to have something for such a current to do, or the consequences would be serious. A three-phase motor was hitched on to be run by the current, but this was only a trifle for it, so a dozen whisky barrels were filled with water, and some salt put in the water to make it a better conductor, and then plates of metal were suspended in the water and the current turned into them. Only one acquainted witb the ways of electricity can explain this arrangement sensibly, but any one could see that the corrent kept the water boiling, and it kept a man busy with a hone pouring cold water in to the barrels, one after another, to keep the water from alllioiling out of theia. Jalk about cooking! Meat, potatoes, cabbage, etc., for an army could have been boiled in thoae barrels, and inch a current as was going through them would have heated water to scald all the hogs killed in Chicago." The pumps, vertical turbine water wheels and the intricate connecting ma chinery are from the Stilwell-Bierce 4 Kniith-Vaile Company, of Dayton, Ohio. Mr. George W. Bowie, of this company, uerintcnds the arranging and fitting in position the water wheels, pump and machinery, and is assisted by Master Mechanic Charles J. Spink, of the same company. Timothy Flaherty is the boiler maker, and rivets iron fastenings wher ever required. There are now running two 15-inch wheels in the pump-room, operating a circulatingpump for water, and hydrau lic Dump, which uses oil to sustain the weight of the armature and shaft and automatically regulates its own pressure by controlling the speed of the turbine wheel from which it derives it power; also one 42-inch wheel and one 60-inch wheel connected with the armature shaft, and a 43-inch wheel, which runs the exciter. There are high and low water wheels, and the middle floor is lighted through circular openings in the wall, four feet in diameter, but which terminate on tbe in side with a bull's-eye sash and glass, three feet in diameter, and made to close water tight, like the port holes in the sides of ocean steamers. These are de signed to protect the interior during ex cessive periods of high water. The water wheels and machinery are so constructed that all the power furnished by the water is utilized without waste, and by the ar rangement of pnmps and hiirli and low wheels, excessive high or low stages of water do no effect the workings of the plant. The dynamos and attendant electrical apparatus are placed in position above the biuhest water ever known. A visit to the lower floors where the pumps, wheels and automatic machinery, as arranged under the supervision of Mr. Bowie, are in active operation, reveals the fact that the bearings, etc., of the in tricate mechanical arrangement works so noiselessly and perfectly as to excite the admiration of the beholder. With the 12,000 horne power to be fur nished by this station when completed. in addition to the old station at the npper end of the falls, the facilities will be almost unlimited for furnishing power for faclorie at Portland, Oregon City and intermediate points. Since the Portland General Electric Company has pur chased the canal and the locks, they have widened all the upper part of the canal from 40 io 120 feet, and replaced the old wooden wall with one of solid masonry, four feet wide at the top, as far as the improvement has been made. The entire canal will be widened all the way through witb a wall of substantial con crete masonry, which will be as high as 34 feet. This improvement has already greatly facilitated easy navigation of the canal, as two steamboats are now enabled to pass each other where it has been widened, and where only one boat could move before, and, besides it has also greatly increased the volume ol water carried by the canal, which has largely added to the available power furnished from tliis source. THR CROWN MILL. The Crown Paper Company is ex pending $100,000 this year in adding wood and sulphite pulp mills. The wood pulp mill is almost completed, and will be in successful operation by June 1st, and it is expected to have the sulphite pulp mill in successful operation by August 1st. The completion of these pulp mills will enable the company to add about thirty more hands to their work ing force. The pulp mills will be con structed in connection with and abjoin ing their paper mill, and will have a capacity of working up four tons of wood pulp and five tons of sulphite per day of twenty-four hours. Sixty-five men are now employed in the mills, and every thing is a scene of busy activity in and around the place. They are now run ning principally on fruit paper, and they have an order from one firm of fruit growers in California for 87 tons of paper, and expect to manufacture at least 500 tons of rruit paper this season, They have been making fruit paper for the past two years, and it is in great demand. Besides fruit paper they manufacture ex tensively manilla, straw, sheeting and roofing paper, as well as druggists fine wrapping and and book paper. W. P. Hawley is superintendent of the Crown mills, Noble Heath is assistant superintendent and M. Rosenbaum is manager and book-keeper. These men all thoroughly understand their business and are wide-awake to the best interests of the company. These mills excel in the manufacture of special linesof paper nd their products are in great demand, especially in California. The business of the company is steadily growing, and they are adding to their facilities. Tin wii.LAMrrra pulp papk compart. This company, with its extensive sul phite and wood pulp mills and paper I mills, runs day and night, and gives em- ployment to abont 150 hands, while aboot 50 more additional men are bnsy in the forests lining the bank of the Upper Willamette and Lower Colombia rivers getting out the timber which tiimishea the raw material. Cottonwood and white fir are used in the raannfactore of the best grades of white newspaper, of whicl immense quantities are exported, TUB WOOLEN Kill,. The woolen mill is one of tl oldest factories in the state, and gives employ ment to about 300 bands They are now adding to the capacity of the mill and several new looms have been ordered. It Is the intention, se the Ekiibprihi has been informed, to add twenty new looms iu all to the woolen factory this year, which will materially add to the output of manufactured goods. Additions and improvements have been added to the soap factory, and a pulling machine is being put in to take the wool from pelts. These Improvements will cost at least $10,000, it bas been estimated, and the company have purchased a large number of sheep pelts in the S in Francisco mar ket, as wool growers were late in getting; their shearing done. OTHEB IKOCSTBieS. Among the other industries of Oregon City are two flouring mills with a -capacity of 800 barrels per day. The Oregon City Iron Works, owned by Itoake 4 Sons, are one of the solid in stitutions, and do moulding, casting and make to order anything that can be man ufactured out of iron or steel. H. P. Bestow now runs his door and sash factory with electric power, and re cently moved into a large and commo dious new building, to meet the demands of bis increasing business. Messrs. Robbins & Lawrence are the wrestling proprietors of the Mechanic's Mill. They work five men and do all kinds of mill work, and their business is constantly growing. Two large sawmills give employment to a large number of men the Gladstone Sawmill Company, and George Brough ton's Mills. The Excelsior Works, A. W. Howard, manager, ship their product to all parts of the Coast. Smith 4 Lovett are proprietors of the largest artificial ice works on the North west Pacific coast, and their enterprise is well patronized. The shoe factory at Willamette Falls gives steady employment to fifteen men. It is one of the infant industries of Ore- gon City and its business is growing. T. E. Hatch and J. H. Hoffield operate a rustic fnrniture factory, and are meet ing with flattering access in the manu facture of furniture from hazel brush. Two brick yards give employment to a number of men. The other industries above mentioned are generally in a prosperous condition and their business is increasing. In the aggregate they give employment to a large number of men. Oregon City needs more of tbase small manufactures. Mothers. "One good mother is worth a hundred schoolmasters," said George Herbert. Men are what their mothers make them. But if the mothers are peevish and Irrita ble, through irregularities, "female weakness," and kindred ailments, they find no pleasure, no beauty in the care of their babes. All effort is torture. Let all such, who feel weighed to the earth with "weakness" peculiar to their sex, try Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. They will find the little one a delight in stead of a torment. To those about to become mothers it is a priceless boon. It lessens the pains and perils ef childbirth, shortens labor and promotes the secretion of an abund ance of nourishment for the child. B. II. Bowman; Pub. Enquirer; of Bremen, Ind., writes: Last week our little girl babv, the only one we have, was taken sick with croup. After two doctors failed to give relief and life was banging on a mere thread we tried one minute One Minute Cough Cure and its life was saved. 0. G. Huntley, druggist. Wanted. All parties owing Hamilton Bros,, Red Front Store, to call at once and settle their accounts and thus save further trouble. Jas. Shaw, Agent for Mortgagees. Ormion City, May 8, 1895. Our patrons will find De Witt's Little Early Risers a safe and reliable remedy for constipation, dyspepsia and liver complaint. C. G Huntley, druggist. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder Award! Cold Medal Midwinter Fair, Saa Fraotiaco.