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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 28, 1902)
3n .EMPRISE. 1: . . OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1902. ESTABLISHED 1866 :7. NO. 10 e6on City (5 - 1 j'oiiKUT A. MI ATTORNKY AT LAW jn1 '1 lltrnond L,n1 Offloe m. is,. HpecluUy ,., ,!!,( lu nil Court! of the State . ,m 3, Wrlnhard Hldg. 11, iv.nt House, Oregon City. Oregon T. 1IOWAKD Al, r STATU AND INSURANCB Jf NOTARY PUHLIC "! p. 1 l'miit, Court Holme Mock 5n' Oregon City, Oregon in I "" ;iyy HTirr k I Attorney at Law. Cuufinl.l nMj?., Oregon City. --L.- : a hi 11. CAM WELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, .1 u cirr, - (IIIUOK. x,lpr.!llf1n all ilia courts at Hit ilata. Ol- i u cud. la bu.iliuK. Xrl.rOHTKK, K ATTORNEY AT LAW Hi- f,Taan or ronT ruamsiiaD, ! unit t Orun CUT KuUrirl a. " t A I'.C, LATOUKKTia, 'r. fyoUNKYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW ftH urilKtT OHKOOM CITY, ORSGON. iu. l..irrli itfTlile.Loan Money, for- I .,, MortaKa.end irauaact Ueneral I TUU Ineat. i hi H llli O. C. MloWNKLI.. ATTORNEY AT LAW :).,nflty, - r.'Uon " VIII practice in all the courts or tha Hate. Mi o in Canlleld building. rf V. Eastham G. B. Pimick. DIMICK it EASTIIAM Attornevs-at-Law. otrmiiircial, Real Estate and Pro- lata Law, !-K!CiallieH. ( ."iitracti of Title made, Money Loaned j rvgonCity, Oregon, 8. DREHSKR, J ' ATTORN EYAT-LAW. Bee over MvKlltrlrk's Shoe Store, near ; the Jlank ol Oregon City. i OKrnos City, Ohiuon. ,f W.McANULTV JtiHtico of the Peace. 'Ill attend to collections and sell realeitate. Olllreon Main Htreel, Vrr Ja-kHon, llicyrl Shop.opp. llilnlley's Urrgon Clt. '. B- 0. Bohnelnl U'KEN it SC1IUKHEL Attorneys at Law. gcutfVljcv Sibwoliat. i'ill practice in all rnnri. make collections and sett lenirnts of Ksiale . 'urn'sh almtracn ol ntle, lend you money and leml your money on fir! ninrgaga. ifflco In Enterprise Building, Oregon Ciiy, Orexon. r A. STUART, M-D. Olllne In Willamelte Hldg. Orexon City, Oregon inks hours: 10 a ni. to M ni., 1 to 4 p. m. and 7 to 8 p. in. Inil sttniitlon paid to Klieumatlsm ana Female Diseases. Call answered day or night. y, FIUNC1S FItEEMAN, -DENTIST Jradtiate of the NorthwesUirn Univer sity Dental School, Chicago. ilio American College of Dental Surgery, Willamette Block, Oregon City. V. W. ( IIKIHTIE. D. O. C. D. 1.0V I, O. O. CHRISTIE & LiOVB OittopiH Phyalalana . ; i,.:i'piof American School of Osteopathy ' ;.v,-i fully treat all chronic diseases l v mechanical manipulation. Nodnms r Diseases ol women a specialty. i .uiiiiliiBtion and consultation free. hours: to 2 a. m. and 1 to 4 p. m Except Bimu'ayi. )", , li.toms 8 and 4, Hteve ni BUlg.. opp. Bnnk of Oregon City. oufuosCit. - - Omtnoa. Y'i'-Z COMMERCIAL BANK OF OREGON CITT. ,r.! , . - - ( 1100,000 'nrrn a nmriiil sakiiho sttsiksbs. J ",s made. Bllla Uncounted. Makes ool- -iiiv. an'l MflU Ki. liie on all tmluts i ulted Htatea, Europe and Hong Sons. - receded anlijert to check. Bauk a a. m. to 4 r. at. . TOUKITTK, rresHeat. r. i. MEYER Cuhlar. LIGHT AND WHITE BREAD Cannot ho made with an inferior grade flour. That in why Portland Flouring Mills Flour is almost universally used wherever it is known. Ask your grocer fur it. Made by patent process. Our Advantage Comes l From Care In Buying. f women' atxl children's. shoes now the order of the bent. jrArATArArArATArATATATArjrArATATATjrATAYATATATATATA Brunswick House & Restaurant Newly Furnished Rooms. Meals at All Hours. Prices Reasonable. Opposite Suspension Bridge. Only First Clans Restaurant la Town. MURROW'S BARRED ROOKS Are at the top. Huve won at two of the largetst chows in the Northwent, l'JOl li)02, aluo at the Htate fairs. Iook up their record. Some fine hreeding cockrela from our prize winning Btruin $2.00 and up. AIho a few white rock cockrels $2.00. Eggs $2.00 per setting. J. MURROW & SON, Oregon City, Ore. BED FRONT Court House Block OREGON CITY, OREGON. i Cans Salmon .....25 cents 1 Can Syrup 25 cents 2 Packages Jumbo Mush 15 cents 8 Pounds Arm & Hammer Soda 25 cents 0 Cans Sardines 25 cents 1 Botlle Bluing 5 cents 1 Bunch Matches 1 cent 8 Packages Ackerman's Coflee Extract.. 25 cents 10 Pounds Corn Meal 25 cents 1 Pound either Ginger, Mustard, Pepper or Allspice 25 cents 1 oz. Iemon or Vanilla Extract 5 cents 1 Bottle Sperm Sewing Machine Oil 5 cents are fJLmm m you m DEAF? VHiy NOISES? ALL. CASES OF DEAFNESS OR HARD HEARING ARE NOW CURABLE by our new invention. Only those born deaf are incurable. HEAD NOISES CEASE IMMEDIATELY. r. A. WERMAN, OF BALTIMORE, SAYS I Bai.timorr. Md., March jo, iooi. Genttrmrn neinif entirely cured of drafne. thanka to your treatmeut, 1 will now give yon a full histforv of mvcapie, to be lined at votir dincrelion. Abrnit five yeiira ai;o my riKht ear began to aing, and Una kept on getting worae, until 1 Iok iur hearing in tliia ear enlirelv. I underwent a Jrealment fur catarrh, for three montha. without anvauccea. consulted a num ber of phvaicionn. among olhera. the mot eminent far apecialnl of Una city, who told me that only an operation cmld help me. and even that only temporarily, that the head noiaea would then crae. but the hearing In the affected ear would he lout forever. I then aaw vour advertiaement accidentally in a New York paper, and ordered your treat ment. After I had ued it onlv a few Inva according to your directions, the noiseaceawd ana to-dav. afler five week, my hearing in the diaraaed ear haa been entirely restored. I thank you heartily and beg to remain Very truly youra. 7 V. A. WERMAN, 7jo 8. Broadway, Baltimore, Md. Our treatment doe not interfere with your uhhhI orcu tuition. E".r"ree"nd YOU CAN CURE YOURSELF AT HOME Mar.7.,BU INTERNATIONAL AURAL CLINIC, 596 LA SALLE AVE, CHICAGO, ILL Mention the Enterprise when answenng advertisement. New line of spring footwear g Iiih( in anil at, ill COUllnir. Soft il wi for tcn.kr feet. Men'., g Made to wear. Children scnool & day. We are bere to supply the ill a. KRAUSSE BROS, g CHARLES CATTA, Proprietor TRADING CO. STORAGE TANK LOCATED JIEKE Standard Oil Company Will Put i In a Sub-Station. OlLONKCEXr A GALLON CHEAPER Oiwfgo, M.irqupin, Can by, 'ew Era, ami (itlu r Adjacent Tuwus W H Be Hupp led From Ttilt 1'oint. The Standard Oil Company haa ared to oUi'6 Htoraia oil tank in tliia city and locata a circuit ctaiion here for the distribution of oil. The matter waa at flint brought to the attention of the company'! Portland repreaentative, 0orie C. Flanders, by the Uetail Mer chants' Aaaociation and brought forth the following reply : Jan. 7, 1902. We have yotir favor of the IGth int., renrclinu the matter of the Standard Oil Co. putting in a atoiaue tank for oil at John Willis Baer, who will lecture in the f'irst Presbyterian church, at 7:30 p.m. next Thursday evening, is the in ternational secretary of the Endeavor movement. He is making a 16,000 mile trip, on which he started last December and is vibratinir between Canada and Mexico. The public is invited to listen to Mr. Baer. Rev. II. S. Templeton, of Portland, president of the Oregon En deaver Union, will also make an address on Thursday evening. Oregon City. We have investigated this matter very carefully and have come to the conclusion that the consumption of oil at Oregon City and near by towns will not justify our going to the expense of pnttiiw in a sub station at your town. It would be necetsiry for ns to charge at least from lc tola'c per Rallon above Portland price, inorder to run such a station- and this difference will more tliau pay freight from Portland to Oregon Ciiy. This letter from Mr. Flanders to Secretary Schuebel, of the association, seemed to put a quietus on the proposi tion, much to the disappointment of the merchants, who handle oil under a great disadvantage. It is only possible to obtain oil from Portland on Thursdays as the Southern Pacific Kailroad will carry oil on no other day. The Charge is deemed excessive. On a 50 gallon tank there is a charge of 50 cents freight and 12,'a cents cartaise, making the price iaid down in Oregon City, 62j cents on each 50 gallon tank. The merchants also have to staod for the leakage which sometimes amounts to considerable. The Standard Oil Company had evi dently not seen fit to dispose of the mat ter entirely, as earlv in February Mr. Schuebel received this letter from Mr. Flandeis: Feb 3,1902. Refering again to the matter of our maintaining a tank wagon station for the delivery of bulk oil at Oregon City , will you kindly notify the Assn. that our peo ple have advised us they will again con sider the matter of putting in a storage tank at Oregon City, and we expect to shortly be in a position to give you defin ite information regarding the matter. Upon receipt of this letter, the associ ation appointed a committee, consisting of Messrs. Barlow, Grace and D. C. Ely, to communicate with the company's re presentative, with the result that last Saturday the letter was received: Feb. 20. We have concluded to establi-h a cir cuit station at Oregon City if it is possi ble to obtain " piece ol land in which to locate our plant nt a reasonable figure. In conversation some months ago, the writer was advised hy one of your peopie that a piece of ground could be secured very reasonable. Would you kindly give us some intorinatioii on this subject. If you will kindly sncgeet a'time in the near future, our Mr. Flandem will meet your reprentativo and look over the ground. It is stated further that it is the in tention ot the Standard Oil Company to supply from the station besides Oregon City, Oswego, New Era, Canby, Needy, Marqnam and other plates sdjacent to Oregon City as far south as Aurora and possibly still further. By the location of a station oil will be about 5 cents cheaper to the five-gallon can. Hl'tTSFL'L CAS 1)11) ATF.H. Twenty-Two Obtained fosn'j (ertlfl. ta'es tt Tecb trie T ung Idea. County Reboot Superintendent J. C. Ziiiaer l.ai made public the lint of county certificate granted as Niault of the ex aminations held two weeks aifo. Seven candidates were eucceahful in obtaining Hrat grade certificates, nine 'second grade and six third grade. Among the candi dates for stute papers was U. 8. Mc llargue, who has achieved conaiderable notoriety in connection with the Reed ville, Waehington County, scandal. A. D. Moll argue, A. Bernard Herrmann, Hade II. Chase and Aura Thompson alao took the examination for state papers, but the result will not' be known for about six weeks, a the examination pa pers have gone to the state board of edu cation for examination. Those obtain ing county certificates were: First grade Inza R. Thompson, Staf ford ; J. R. Marsh, Molalla; A. C. Stan brouith, Aurora ; E. F. Surface, Garfield; Millard ilyatt, Willamette Falls; Annie I. Hicinbothem, Viola; J. J. Clark, Woodburn, Second grade Del phina L. Haenel, Currinsville; Klnora Ginther, Shubel; Agnes Larsen, Monitor ; Edmund Snyder, Aurora; Margaret Goodfellow, Oregon Jonx Willis Baku, Boston, General Secretary of the World's Christian Endeavor Union. City ; Jessie Humphrys, Oregon City ; Lillian- Gans, Mulino; Cora Thomson, Clackamas; Oertrude Timms, Portland. Third grade Minnie Grace, Clarkes; Frank E. Murdock, Macksburg; Jennie Reichle. Stafford; Bertha Wyss, Port land; Wyona E. Surfus, Elwood; Cora M. Shaver, Portland. F. A. AE1MG DEAD. Pioneer Resident of the County Founder of Sandy. and Friedrich August Meinig died last Sat urday morning at Sandy, aged 56 years. He was born November 15, 1845, in Lim burg, Saxony, Germany, and was a miller by occupation. In 1868 he married Miss Wilhelmine Fisher and three years later emigrated to Missouri with his wife and son Paul. He was a passenger down the Mississippi on October 8, 1871, on the day of the big Chicago fire. For four years after his arrival in Missouri he en gaged in the milling business, and then moved to Sandy, where he resided until his death. Mr. Meinig was a well known and highly respected citizen ot Clackamas County. He aided in founding the Sandy settlement and went there 28 years ago, when there were other settlers for miles. He built a grist-mill, hotel and other buildings. He owned a large store in Sandy. For years his hotel was the stopping place of Mt. Hood tourists. He wfis the leader of the movement to build a wagon road from Pleasant Home to Sandy, providing easy access to the mar kets, and was universally regarded as a man of influence in the community in which be lived. The funeral took place Monday after noon, and was attended by 500 people. Eulogies, touching upon the life of the dead man, were pronounced by Gordon E. Hayes, T. J. Jonsrud and others. y , r a oyaLp sx&v ft) ih l I i LARGE GRANGE ORGANIZATION Patrons of Husbandry Hare 122 Members at Molalla. WILL BLX0ME LAKUEST I.N OREGON Lecturer Buxton an1 Set retary Jtary S Howard Invito ted the Grange. A Hall Will Re Built. What was perhaps the largest clrarter membership Grange ever organized in Oregon was organized at Molalla, Clack amas County, on Feb. 15th and 21st, by Slate Secretary Mary 8. Howard. One hundred ane twenty-two names were enrolled on the charter, and mem bership bids fair to reach one hundred and fifty in the near future, making this the lurgest Grange in the state. The able discourses of the organizers were well received and an interest has been aroused that bids fair to continue. Officers were elected as follows: Master, J. W. Thomas; Overseer, John Cole; Lecturer, George Ogle ; Steward, George Adams; Assistant Steward, Arthur Kay ler; Chaplain, Mrs. Scbamel; Treasurer, M. Bungate; Secretary, Mattie Leavitt; Gate Keeper, Edward Hammond ; Ceres, Maud Rastall; Pomona, Emma Case; Flora, Hattie Miller; Lady Assistant oteward, Eleanor Moody. v A Grange hall is to be built in the near future, nore than 1500 having already been subscribed toward that purpose and a committee on plans and specifica tions selected as follows: Geo. Adams, J. W. Thomas. J. R. Shaver, Albert Moshberger and James Dickey. The next meeting of the Grange is to be on Friday, March 14th. A regular day for meeting has not yet been definitely fixed but will most likely be on first Saturday of each month. Meetings will be he'd for the present in the schoolhouse hall, where visiting members will be wel comed. A very large share of the credit of the organization must be given to the tire less efforts of Master J. W. Thomas, who did the major portion of the work of an vassing the neighborhood. Tourist Excursions To the Eai-t. The travelling public will be interested to learn of the system of personally con- ducted excursion cars operated over the Rio Grande System, popularly known as 'The Scenic Line of the World." They are the regular Pullman tourist or "or dinary" sleepers, provided with comfort able berths, bedding and linen of the Pullman standard. Tbey have separate lavatories, are all well lighted and heat ed and, in fact, are a most successful substitute for the more expensive "stan dard" sleepers, the difference arising from the character of- upholstering fur nished. A colored porter is in attend ance with every car and besides him an excursion conductor, whose sole duty is to look after the pleasure and comfort oLpassengers in his charge. Cars are run through to Kansas City, Omaha, St. Louis and Chicago, making close connections for Boston, New York aod all eastern points. This feature of travel has become so popular that there is now established a regnlar service of nine cars each week, offering a variety of routes, and sched ules so arranged that stop-overs may be made, if desired, at Salt Lake City, Peu ver, or any point between. No extra charge is made beyond regu lar tourist rates. To those interested we will be glad to quote the lowest fares and furnish full information about the scenic beauties of the Rio Grande Route and its superior accomodations, J. D. Mansfield, Gen'l Aet., No. 124 Third Street, Portland, Oregon. Light Biscuit DcIiciotfsCaiie Dabty Pastries Fine Puddings Flaky Crusts