Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, January 30, 1903, Image 1

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    Orog jr, II' l -I I u! riuolcljr
()I
City
ENTERPRISE.
T
iUK(JON CITY, OKKGON, nil DAY, JANUARY .'JO 1903,
ESTABLISHED M;i;
VOL. M. NO. 12
J. W. r-oWKI.I.
NOIIRIS A l'OW KM-
I'hyalilana uil Surgeons
Kooiua 4 ft (I
(tarda Hid.
Oregon City. '"
MMIK PACIFIC MUTUAL
I .IKK 1NSUKAUANCK CO,
KAN KHANCl'CO, CAI.IKOIINIA.
We rlurn Ti Mr mill more money limn
limn you deposit w ! '"'r "ry
log yunr Insurance W years Iree.
IVY PARK
ROOM 6 TlVkN L0.
Oregon City, f-Kjn.
w B 0.&11 0. Bcbu.b.l
U'llKN Sc SC11UE11KL
Attorneys ut Lnw.
JlfUlfdjCV tViltrtt.
Will prat-lice I" U conns, make Collections
Mil wltlailielila nl hsialrs.
Furnish llratis l title. I'l"' y' ""!.)'
nil lnd ymir liiniiry cm llrsl morgans.
Office In Entorprlso BulldlnK,
Oregon Clly, Oregon.
JJOHEUT A. MlI.LKlt
ATTORNl'.Y AT LAW
LmihJ Title nnl Utnil Office
liunitiennii Hpcclulty
Will practice In all Court of the State
Room J, Wriiihsrd Wdg.
ojip. Court lloune, Oregon Cilv. Oregon
JL.FOIITIR,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
sTicTorrsraaTY rcaHisasD.
Offlc tci io Oron Cv Kni rpri'
J EO. C. HKOWSKI.I.,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Oregon City. " "-K,,n
Will practise I" all tlmruurls of IliS state.
Office In CBiillrld timldlng.
(JEO.T. HOWARD
RKAL ICSTATU AND INSURANCE
NOTARY rUIlLIC '
At Red I'rotit, Court Mouse lllock
Oregon City, Oregon
Wll.l.lAU '.t.l.UWV
l! Kvrlrr
I'. 8. l.miil orttrr.
lH HT I.. IlKlriiKa
1 1 KIM IKS it CiAM.OWAY
.AM OKKICK lUMNKSS
Weinhard Building.
JVY STIIT
AlToltNKY at I-aw.
Jilhlli e of the 1'cani.
,lat'cr Wdjr., (hegon Cl'y
T I'.fAMI'HKI.I.,
t)
ATTOKNKY AT LAW,
aaniiN City.
OsanoK.
Will practice In slltliecuurlsuf the Hate. Ol
Hoe. in .life 1 1 '" h"-
y D a d.u la rouHKrra
t
ATTOUSKYS AND '
COl'NSK.LOKS AT LAW
MAIN STHl-ItT OKKIION CITY, OIIKOUH.
ruriilih At.trci ol Till, Usn Mmipy. Fore
elime MnrtiraKea.aiiil trainacl Ueneral
Law Wu. Inf..
Qf A. STFAHT, M- 1).
(itllce In W illnnielie Itliln.
Oregon City, Oregon
Office lioiirn: 10 a m. to VI m., 1 to 4 p, in.
and 7 to 1'.
Becial attention aid to Uhsunisllam aim
Fenials Ihseaaes.
Call answered day or night
rilUE COMMERCIAL BANK
OP OREGON CITT.
Capital,
1100,0
tsanhacth a etsssAkSAsaixa stisissss.
Loam m'lt. Hills (lucoiinted. Make ret
(tenons. Bur" snd aella exebanss on allpoluU
hi the Uulteil Hutea, Etirops suit Hong Kmif.
Iiepoalli reclel stitiJiK't to oheck Bank
opea Iron i. at. to 4 r. a.
D. C. LATOURKTTE, rrealtlent.
F. 1. MKYKK Caikler.
Q W. EARTH AM
ATTORNEY Af LAW
Land Titles Kxamined. Ahftracts Mads,
lleeils, Mnrtgagea Uriiwii. Money Uianed
orrici ovca
Bank ol Oregon City. OmcnoN City, Ok,
E. H. COOPER,
...Notary PuhJic...
Real Iv.tste, Insurniice, Titles lvxumin
ed, Abstracts Made, Deeds, Mortgages
and Etc, drawn.
GARDE BLDQ. OREOAN CITY, OR.
J, W. NuNMia
p F. CAUFIELD,
Watchmaker and Jewsler.
ALL WORK WAHANTF.D
Vatches that others have faileil to timW
run prnoerly, especially solicited.
Opposite Huntley's Drug Store
- Oregon City, - Oregon.
:
WM. GARDNER & SON
WATCHMAKERS
AND
JEWELERS
All work given our prompt
and careful attention. , . .
Price m It en h on a b 1 e
OREGON CITY
F S. BAKER
PROP.
..V
The Quality of Your Bread
Depends not only partly
upon "Thu (Duality of
make the very Lent -
Portland Flouring mills Co.
S lnAlinnr Annnnl niftarance Sale
KRAUSSE
BROS.
la,' -
fexi iv. i: it. i. ti.
rjrjrjrATjrlTjrATATjrjrArjrA tat aajaataatatava.
THE ENTERPRISE
ALL KINDS OP COMMERCIAL
PRINTING
tX)NE IN UP-TO-DATE STYLE
Oregon City Machine Shop j;
Philipp Bucklein, Prop.
Rear of Pope's Hardware Store
Next to Oreeon City Foundry S;
siilMMSSJSBBBTHHMSIiliilHHMBBVB
Ihiilding nnd Repairing of Jrncliinory and Engines of all
kimln. Manufiii'turing us epecinlty the Frt-e Putt-nt
Rotary Enpine. AIho keeping in stock, Shafting !
rul'lics, liclting etc. ... . . .
Orders by Mail or Teh-phone promptly filled,
I'RICF.S MODERATE C.OOl) WORK WARRANTED
H
FAIR STORE
Opposite
PoBtOfTlce
Brunswick House & Restaurant
j Newly Furnished Rooms.
Meals at All Hours. Prices Reasonable.
Opposite Suspension Bridge.
Only Firtst Class Restaurant
In Town.
MURROW'S BARRED ROOKS
Are at the top. Have won at two of the largest shows in the
Northwest, 1901 I'. 102, also at the state fairs. Look up their
record. Some fine breeding cockrels from our prize winning
strain $2.00 and up. Also a few white rock cockrels $2.00. Eggs
$2.00 per setting.
J.' MURROW & SON,
Oregon City, Ore.
Court House Block
ORECON CITY, ORE.
:0
PLANING MILL
All kinds of HuiWing
Material, Sash, Doors
OREGON CITY, ORE.
but altogether upon
Your Flour." We
i 8 n o w o n
I
i' '
isoois ana dixh'h
nt proatly r e -d
u c e d prices.
As our Mr. Win. Kobison has
left for New York to buy our
Spring and Summer goods, we
must clone out as much stock
as possible to make room for
the new goods. It wiil pay you
to call and look over our goods
that are being sold at greatly
reduced prices.
CHARLES CATTA,
Proprietor
PITHE LKUISLATUHE
Fulton Makes a Small (Jain for
I'nltcil States Seiintor.
AMiLSY A r OLYHI'Il.
II la Somnmled in (jnirus Wednfa
lny Ktrninr, All Kpnl)!lcm:
Tall rrl.
Omvi'iiia, WaMh., Jn. 27. The de
feat ol Harold Presion (or the United
State senate, while Ireely admiUeif by
nearly all ol Ida friends, will Dot induce
him to abandon Hie fight, no matter
how hopeless it niy Deem to him. tie
ti an rallied hi support from the virion
anytliiiiif-tietieat-AiiKeity lun-e, and will
I. old on till the end 'comes rialurday
uiitlil or louner.
I'remon Iih h not yet received formal
notice from the menilieri) of hid ileliiia-
tion tliBl, unlef he could how them that
lie rould he elected, they Wuiild not re
iiikiii out of the raticiin later than 8 I'. M
Saturday. Ting m in miMlanee tn mes
Hane reported an t("i rtf to him laHt nitiht.
hut lint until today the notice iixned
hy tne inHiiiljt-r. The Kinx rounty men
have then-fore been die-inclined to ilia
cun the matter, hut tonight tl ey iilale
openly that they will not he held respon
idle for a deadlock, and are prepared to
go into riili'iia and aettle the tenatorial
queaiion and Ket rid of it. With three
weeks of the aeaHion drawing to a cloae,
nnflii.io nl IfiifkrlttncA liaa hMn dullfl.
- a v. r " -,
and Very little can he done until this
matter, which reeminiily overauauowi
all elite, ia out of the way.
fAUM, Or., Jan. 27. Mr. Fulton whs
content today to show merely that lie
had his (ones well in hand. If he haJ
planned sn aaeault iion the entrench
menta u( the opptwition, he abandoned
it before the Joint convention. If he ex
pecta vain tomorrow, his managers are
i-eticeiit about giving names and dttail.
Thev do y, however, that they are cer
tain of one more vote, and they intimate
! that, Governor Ueer in al-o likely to pick
I up oVieof the Ht-attering These reports
cannot be verified from any source, and
they niuit be set down in the category ol
tiling1 tint are important it true.
This is probably the most featureless
senatorial contest in the recent historv o(
the siate. Ihe lobby is smaller, the in
terest apparently less, and the tactics of
the various managers are not spectacular
or pyrotechnic in the faintest decree. It
is a. hard pull all around, and a very
qmet one, though it may be a long one.
Tne joint conventions seem to bave set-
lU.I il.iun m Immilruiii aft" lira There
is no specifying, no enthusiasm.
Oi.yjipia, Wash., San. 28 The great
est feurttorlai tight ever held in the stale
of Washington came lo a sudden end
this evening, when Levi Ankeny received
ti e republican caucus nomination for
United Statea senator. When the term!
' greatest" is used it means considerable j
at Olympia, fur there have lieen some i
contents that w ill live in the political
history of the state, but ad things con-:
fiilered, the h'g tight that was ended to
night lijfl never had an equal.
It Mas the thiid tune ir. Ankeny had
sought the nomination, and he has pro
titled ty the mistakes that have lost him
Hie nomination in the pat. and this
lime came dow n to Olyinpiu with the
lined or;in ZHUun I lint ever assembled
lor the purine of landing a candidate.
The outcome of the tun test could not
well be anything but Ankeny'a election
or a deadlock. This situation, from
w hich there was no escape, was practic
ally iidmilled by his opponents a week
ago. and since that time all of their en
ergies have been centered in trying to
rriug about a deadlock, and once or
tw ice they have come verv close to ac
complishing the end sought. There was
a decided aversion to deadlocks among
some ol t.'ie anti Ankeny men, and the
failure of Preston to tie them up so as to
to complete hia deadlock weakened his
candidacy to such an extent that he has
never been a dangerous adversary si far
as the ossibility of his election was con
cerned. Aided by John L. Wilson and
Governor Moltrnle, however, he has
caused the Ankeny people mauv anxious
moments in the pait two weeks.
Salem, Or, Jan. 2J. Senator Farrar,
of Marion, left the Geer column today
and joined bis fortunes w ith Senator Fill
ton. The total of the Clatsop county
senator is now 33 and he ia still 11 or 12
short of an election, not counting his
own vote. Representative Hume is sup
posed to bave left San Francisco Mondav
for altni, and if he arrive! tomorrow he
will swell the rulton aggregation to 34.
Representative Adams has not come,
and It is not know n definitely when be
will be here, if at all. He ia claimed by
both Fulton and Geer.
If be comes, Adams will relieve Mr.
Fulton of somewhat curious dilemma,
however the Umatilla county represents.
tive may decide to line up. There are 90
members ol the legislature, and a major
ity of all present and voting in joint con
vention is sufficient to choose a United
States senator. If all others are present
and voting, it is obvious that Senator
Fulton loses nothing by absenting him
self, for 89 will be left and 45 will then
he suhVitJut. If Adams remains away,
Fulton can prevent the loss of bis own
vote only by coming in and voting for
himself. In other words, with Fulton
and Adams nut, it will still take 4j to
elect. If Mr. Fulton were then to be
present and vote for a fr iend, he would
ba voting against himself and would int
help to make the number necessary to
make a choice less than 45.
It is not probabable, though, that Mr.
Fulton is at the (present time giving him
himself any great concern about this in
teresting phase of the situation. He can
cross that bridirn when he comes lo it, if
he ever does He thinks if he can ever
get 44 he will have no great trouble get
ting the balance, whether it is 45 or 4d,
and in that event be will not have to
draw on the reserve strength which be
carries in his own vote.
If yon don't get
don't get the news.
the Enterprise you
MIKITKI) COSIEST.
Judgment "f 1 -"..',' Aftalnot Port land
( My k Orrgon Ity. Co.
John W. Nendel, an employe of the
Tortland City A Oregon Kailwsy Com
pany as conductor on deleiidant's car,
lioiia, was, on August 4, I'M, trying to
make a coupling ol this car to one of the
company's trailers near Kirst an Couch
strew s, For land. Mr.v Nendel stepf)d
in between the cars with the coupling
pin in Ins right band, gave the signal to
his moiorman to move ahead very slowly.
The motorman, acting very carefully,
turned on a very little power hut the Car,
or rather the machinery which propelled
the car, was defective and for a long
lime hefoie the accident had been defec
tive, so inxtead of moving forward slowly
the rheostat short-circuited, cm-ing 6MJ
volts of electricity to be uirnedi on at
once. Tnis great voltoge made the car
suddenly lunge and j'iriip forward and
Nendel was cainrhi and jammed in be
tween the cars, suffering a fractured arm
and oilier bruises and injuries on the
b-idv. The company called a diy-i(.ian
and the arm was set. Later. Mr. .Nendel
was taken to Hie hospital, where the arm
w.is again broken and re-iet. The X-ray
diacloned a poor j under of the bones and
the rotary motion of the fore arm was
gone. The car was defective in this, the
rheoHtat was old, burnt and defective,
causing th- car to short-circuit when the
current was tnrned on. This caused the
car to j imp instead of moving forward
gradually when only a slight current was
turned on.
The exe was tried before a jurv in
Multnomah county last Friday and Sat
urday. The plaintiff was represented by
Gilbert L. Hedgea and J. B. Hedges, his
trot her, of this city, and the defendant
by the firm of Dolph, Simon, Mallory &
(iearin, Mr. Mallory conducting the de
fence in court. Ali the evidence was in
and the case submitted to the jur at 12
o'clock Saturday After four hours de
liberation the jury returned a verdict for
plaintiff of 11500. Gilbert Hedges also a
short time ago, with .fudge Bennett, got
judgment agxinst the ti. P. Co. in a dam
age suit for H325.
The Shrr ff Office.
Not Ion; since we published an ac
count of the expenses of the different
ollk-s of the county, -and, among others,
that of SbeiiQ Shaver' was compared
with his predecessor J. J. Cooke. The
Courier retaliates that "Figures will
Some Time L-e if not Properly Ex
plained." Aye there's the rub. The
fieople mav remember tint SberiffCooke
went about the county last spring telling
the good people that Ids office was six
leeiith in the state in the way of expense
to the county. He also told the people
that the coun'y was 1200,000 in debt
when a little later t.ie county clerk made
his report the debt proved lo be but
f 102,000. Who fixed tne figures? In
ot.r recent showing the fids were just as
they are on the County Commissioners
Journal w here anv tax paver mav see
for himself. Quite a number of bills
may tie found that properly belong to
Cooke's adminixtratioii and winch are
suppressed in the Courier's statement.
The fact ol the matter is that Cooke and
Cooper both charged the bills of their
special clerks to "Assessment and Col
lei't'on of Tuxea" in order to mnke it ap
pear that their olli-es were being run
along economical lines They were not
run on the "tell the truth and imthinK
but the truth" principle. The "Bunch
of inspired Figures" given by the
Courier, are "not properly explained"
along these lines. They ted any tiling
but I lie. f.icts.
I'nrle Tom's Cabin.
Leon W. Washburn, with Stetson's
"Uncle Tom's Cabin" Company, conies
to the Shively Opera House on Saturday,
Jan 3Ut, when the patrons of that popu
lar house will see ttiat time-honored play
in all ol its superior attractions. Uncle
Tom is the hero of this purposeful atorv,
which is portrsved bv Mr. Thos. Davis
stetson's original Uncle Tom, probahlv
the best known impersonator of the cele
brated character in the world. There
will be two Topsies and two Marks in the
great doulbe cast. The work of coin pe
te nt players is further enhanced by beau
tiful stage settings and new electrical
devices. Col. Sawyer's celebrated pack
of Siberian blood hounds is one of the
features with this company as well as
the prixe Shetland poniea. New and
novel features are introduced by the Cre
ole ladies' Quartette, John Leary, cham
pion buck and wing dancer, assisted by
Mississippi singer Ln Octette. The Lone
Star Quartette in superb vocalizations
and the grotesque Limber Lee. The
parade on the principal streets at noon
on Saturday will be worth going to see.
It beats a circus. Matinee Saturday af
ternoon, two o'clock.
Died it His Home In George. '
John Paulson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Peter Paulson, died at his home in
George, Friday, January, ltith after a
lingering illness at tbe age of twenty-
four yeara.
He was born snd raised in this com
munity and was highly res,ected by his
friends and neighbors and all who knew
him.
He was bnried last Tuesday, Rev.
Wm. La u be officiating. The whole
neighborhood paid their last tribute by
following his remains to the grave. He
is survived by bis parents, one brother,
Otto, and four sisters, Emma, Irene,
Hulda and Mrs. Henry Johnson.
The most heartfelt sympathy is ex
tended to the sorrowing family.
School Report.
Report of Garfield school Dint. No. 12.
Clackamas Conntv. Oregon, for month
ending Jan. 19, 190:1. The following
pupils were on the roll of honor: Henry
Hoyer, Bulgar Krighatim, Quilla Hover,
Fred Covey. Altha Krigbamn, (His Wag
Viririt Watrner. Curtis Wilcox and
Herbert Huxley. No. of days present,
519; No. days absence, 72; times tardy,
1 ; 0. days laugni, i; average eoron
n.arxt 31 ivprmA ilailv attendance. 27.
Patrjns and friends are cordially invited
. - . : .t l...l
10 visit me biuuui.
! Annie I. Hicinbothsm',
Teacber.
STATE SALARIES
KtijkeiMlall Introduces Jlilln
at Salem.
Ml KISIET'S MRTHDAY.
Celebrated at Canton lij the President
and DisllgnulNhrd Unesti
Tuesday KrrnlKjr.
Sai.cu, Jan. 27. The vote in the joint
seaiofi today did not reveal any ch nge
in strength of the leading candidates.
Mr. Fulton received 32 votes. Mr. Wood
17, and Mr. Geer 17. Thd Multnomah
delegation continned to throw hoquelaat
their friends by dividing their vote.
r-enator Kuykendall, of Lane, intro
duced In the senate this morning two
measures which together are calculated
10 keep the salaries of the governor, sec
retary of stio and ili Mate t easurer
strictly within t ie provisions of the con
stitution and yet provide them with suf
ficiently liberal 'compensation f rr their
services.
The first of these measures provides
for the abolishment of the boards of
trustees of the state reform school, the
blind school and the deaf-mute school,
and the creation of a state board of con
trol composed of the governor, secretary
of state and state treasurer, which shall
goern and control the state insane asy
lum, the penitentiary, the reform school,
the blind school, the deaf-mute school
and the soldiers' home, and this board
of control shall e eras all the functions
and fulfil all the duties of the various
hoards and officers now goveaning those
institutions. An annual appropriation
ol $10 000 is provided to com peusate tbe
board of control for their services.
The second bill provides that the gov
ernor, secretary of state and state treas
urer shall receive annual salaries of $1")00,
$ 1000 and tSOO respectively, these being
their constitutional salaries, and they
shall receive no fees whatever in addition
thereto.
Should these two bills pass, the total
income of the governor from the state
would be about $4,900, that of the seire
tary of state the same, and that of the
state treasurer about $4,100 a year. It
is proposed that the new order of tl ing-i
take effect at the entry to office of the
officers to be elected in 1906.
Canton, 0., Jan. 27. President Roose
velt toniaht participated in a notable
tnbuie to the memory of the late Presi
ded McKiuley. He was tbe principal
orator at a banquet given under tbe aus
pices of the Canton Republican League
in commemoration of the birthday ol
McKinJey. Surrounded by friends,
neighbors and business and political as
sociates of the dead president, he pro
nounced a brilliant and eloquent eu'og-y
noon the life and works of McKinley
a eulogv by many regarded as the u ost
beautiful and heartfelt tribute ever heard
to the memory of the distinguished dead.
The banquet was held in ttie ti-anit
Opera House, the seats being removed
in the pit and the house entirely re
fl iored for ttie occasion. The interior of
the building was beautifully decorated
with flags and tltwers, tbe floral decora
tions being elaborate. Festoons of flags
were arranged about the bali-ouv ami
gallery, and the thirteen great banquet
boards were ra8es ol roees and cm na
tions, inter-peree.1 wit.n smnax ana
ferns. A selected orchestra of iiv-nty-
five pieces furnished niusn: at intervals.
The occasion was the m ef brilliant of
its kind ever witnessed in Canton, and
few banuuets held in Ohio equaled it in
beatuy, elaborateness and inlerer-t.
Among the 4-x assembled atiout tne
boards were some of the most diatin
guiahed men in the civil, public and
political hie. of the country. At the
speakers table, beside President Roose
velt, were seated Judge William K. Day,
who acted as toastinaster ; ?ecreiary
Root. Secretary Cortelyon, General S. B.
1 . . I . .. I I ........ ..I W. I nl.
E. Wright, vice-governor of the 1'tiilip
peane; Surgeon-General Rixey, Captain
W. S. Cowles. the president's naval aid ;
Colonel Theodore E. Bingham, his mili
tary aid ; Assistant Secretary of Agricul
ture Brigham, Representative K. w.
Tavlor, James J. Grant, Myron T. Her
ri c'k. of Cleveland; J. G. Schinidtapp,
H. H. Kohlsaat, of Chicago, ana uiaries
F.mnrv Smith. At the tables through
out the large auditorium were men of
state and national prominence. Gover
nor Nash, ol Ohio, who was expected to
be present to respond to the toset "Ohio"
was unable to leave bis home on account
of illness. His place on tbe programme
was taken by James J. Grant, of dnton.
Smith's Dandruff Pomade
stops itching scalp upon one application,
three to six removes all dandruff and
will stop falling hair. Price K) cent at
druggiBts.
Tbe Enterprise $1.50 per year.
THE OLD RELIABLE
Absolutely Pure
THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE
Wf
J